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We would like to read from God's
Holy Word, two portions of Scripture. First, Mark 9, 43-50, which is
our text this evening, and then from Romans 7. Mark 9, 43-50.
And if thy hand offend thee, cut it off. It is better for thee to enter
into life maimed than having two hands to go into hell, into
the fire that never shall be quenched. Where there worm dieth
not, and the fire is not quenched. And if thy foot offend thee,
cut it off. It is better for thee to enter
halt into life than having two feet to be cast into hell, into
the fire that never shall be quenched, where there worm dieth
not and the fire is not quenched. And if thine eye offend thee,
pluck it out. It is better for thee to enter
into the kingdom of God with one eye than having two eyes
to be cast into hell fire, where there worm dieth not and the
fire is not quenched. For every one shall be salted
with fire, and every sacrifice shall be salted with salt. Salt
is good, but if the salt have lost its saltness, wherewith
will ye season it? Have salt in yourselves, and
have peace one with another." And now Romans 7. 14-25, Romans 7, 14. For we know that the law is spiritual,
but I am carnal, soul unto sin. For that which I do, I allow
not. For what I would, that do I not, but what I hate, that
do I. If then I do that which I would
not, I consent unto the law that it is good. Now then, it is no
more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth in me. For I know that
in me, that is in my flesh, dwelleth no good thing. For to will is
present with me, but how to perform that which is good I find not. For the good that I would, I
do not, but the evil which I would not, that I do. Now if I do that
I would not, it is no more I that do it, but sin that dwelleth
in me. I find then a law that when I
would do good, evil is present with me. For I delight in the
law of God after the inward man, but I see another law in my members
warring against the law of my mind and bringing me into captivity
to the law of sin which is in my members. O wretched man that
I am, who shall deliver me from the body of this death? I thank
God through Jesus Christ our Lord. So then, with the mind,
I myself serve the law of God, but with the flesh, the law of
sin." Thus far the reading of sacred scripture. Dear congregation,
too many people today think that Jesus Christ is soft on sin. Because of his mercy, his love,
His gospel grace, very few people realize that no one talked about
the radicality of sin, the consequences of sin, the heinous nature of
sin, and hell that results from sin so much as did Jesus. I read this past week of a scholar
who counted 1,870 verses. that Jesus spoke directly in
the Bible in his earthly ministry. And he reckoned that 13% of them
dealt with judgment or hell more than any other topic that Jesus
addressed. Jesus Christ hates sin. It caused his death. He sees
sin as something radical. And tonight, I want to bring
you a few of the words that he uses when he talks about sin
to motivate not just unbelievers, but especially believers to understand
the necessity of killing, remaining, indwelling sin. With God's help, we want to look
at Mark 9, verses 43 through 50. I'll read again only verses
43 and 44 at this time. And if thy hand offend thee,
cut it off. It is better for thee to enter
into life maimed than having two hands to go into hell, into
the fire that never shall be quenched, where the worm dieth
not, and the fire is not quenched. Our theme tonight is Killing
Remaining Sin. And with God's help, we want
to look at three thoughts. First, our problem. The problem
of remaining sin. Second, our duty. Our duty to
kill it. And third, our encouragement
to do so. Killing remaining sin. Our problem,
our duty, our encouragement. The words of our text tonight
were spoken to the disciples, not to the world. So they are
not, in the first place, an evangelistic word. The Lord Jesus is not explaining
here to His disciples how to become Christians. These are
men who have spent two years already with Jesus. These are
men who are looking forward to reigning and ruling with Him
in His Kingdom. And Jesus speaks to these men about the dreadfulness
of their sin, about the struggle they have with themselves. Now,
Jesus, of course, has warned His disciples about other problems. He's warned them about external
persecution. He says, men are going to revile
you, persecute you, say all manner of evil against you, falsely,
for my sake. Later on, he warned them about
Satan and how Satan wants to put them in his sieve and destroy
them. But here, here Jesus is talking
about an inevitable battle that his disciples will have all their
lifetime to their dying breath with themselves. A battle that
is the daily experience of every believer. The battle against
our own sinful nature. Now, Jesus brings, of course,
a full salvation. Through His blood, we are saved
from the condemnation of sin. And by His indwelling Spirit,
we are delivered from the domination of sin. And yet, God's way of
redeeming us does not include deliverance from our problem
of indwelling sin. Before we die, God does not come
in the moment of regeneration, when a person is made from dead
to alive and becomes a child of God, and extract sin from
that newborn babe's life the way a dentist extracts decay
by extracting a decaying tooth. Rather, the forces of decay remain
in the hearts and minds of every believer. And these forces need
to be resisted. They need to be shrunk. Every Christian gathered in this
building tonight knows exactly what I'm talking about now. You
have all, and I too, been jolted time and time again with the
sudden force of remaining sin. You know what I mean. Times of
humiliating episodes where you say to yourself, did I really
say that? Did I really think that? Did
I really act that way? And if I had acted that way,
or spoken that way, or thought that way, how can I still be
a Christian? Oh, wretched man that I am! Every
true believer, you see, will be groaning Paul's cry even unto
the day of our death. And it's this, you see, that
makes the believer feel how little progress he has made in his sanctification,
in his Christian life. And yet here in our text, the
implication is there that the Christian life is always going
to be a struggle. Not only with the world and Satan,
but here also with ourselves and in ourselves. The Lord is
telling us here that we must fight against that sin that lies
in our own heart, in our own mind, in our own body, our hands,
our eyes, our feet. It must be put to death. Well, that's a stressful message
to hear. I don't suppose anyone wants to hear a sermon on this
topic. We'll try to do anything, congregation, before we declare
war on ourselves, on our own indwelling sin. We're always
looking for ways to discover some other way of growing as
a Christian than through self-denial and putting sin to death. We'll
take shortcuts. We don't want to put sin to death. But there are no shortcuts. Jesus
has made plain, the whole Bible has made plain, that God has
two means for victory over remaining sin. The first means, you all
know these of course, is that we look to Jesus by faith. And
the second means is that we repent. We kill sin by repenting of sin. Faith and repentance are God's
double way, the two-sided coin of Christianity, of genuine mintage
that God uses to gain the victory over sin. And so in every Bible
book, you're going to read these two exhortations, Believe and
Turn. And this is the daily life of
the Christian. Faith and repentance. Looking to Jesus. Laying aside
the sin that so easily besets us. Trusting in Jesus and putting
sin to death. Putting on Jesus and putting
off all kinds of sin. Well, that's what Jesus is talking
about here. Our problem. Our need to kill. To mortify. Sin. Now this subject of killing sin
or mortification, which among the reformers and puritans was
a very common subject, has actually been marginalized in most churches
about 150 years ago. And since that time, the church
has become characterized by the rise of holiness and perfectionist
movements. The Pentecostal churches, Assembly
of God churches, have gained an inheritance more than anyone
else. And these churches, which detest
our subject today, teach so often that the Christian life is not
really a struggle. It's a mere letting go and letting
God. Letting God go to work quietly
in our lives. Then we can avoid the battle. Just this past week, I received
a letter from a man I never heard of. He just read my new book,
Overcoming the World, and he wanted me to know that though
there were some things he agreed with in the book, I made Christianity
too hard, he said. I've learned to just let go and
let God. And that's all there is to the
Christian life. And he said, I'm not going to worry so much
about sin, because Jesus has died for that. I'm just going
to let God do His work, and I'm going to relax. That's so common in Christianity
today. In effortless Christianity, you
rest in Jesus and all is well. The hard, sweating work the Puritans
spoke of in the way of sanctification, the spiritual warfare, the putting
to death of sin, is not necessary. Peace. Peace, they cry. But there is no peace with sin.
Jesus says, if your hand offends you, cut it off. If your eye offends you, pluck
it out. If your foot offends you, cut
it off. This is a problem. And it's a
problem with every true believer. There's no believer sitting here
tonight that doesn't have a struggle. within-dwelling sin. Paul makes
that so clear, crystal clear in Romans 7. And listen to the
words that Paul uses to describe it there in Romans 7, or look
at it with me if you will. Verse 23, he refers to this as
the law of sin. Romans 7.23, the law of sin,
which is in my members. Verse 24, the body of this death. Verse 18, my flesh. Verse 17, sin that dwelleth in
me. And in the next chapter, verse
2, the law of sin and death. You see, there's still so much
flesh, Paul is saying, sinful nature, living within me, even
after I've become a true believer. And we display those works of
the flesh so often, don't we? Every time we show self-pity.
Every time we are full of bitterness, every time we are tempted to
retaliate, or when we lust, or when we are covetous, or unforgiving,
or deceive, or are proud, or hate, or are angry, indwelling
sin is springing up. Did you ever wonder why Paul
refers to this as a law? Isn't that a strange word? Paul uses the word law to show
the power that sin still wields in our lives. It's a good word because it exposes
the struggle. You see, the law says, thou shalt
not commit adultery, for example. And it demands our obedience.
But indwelling sin cries out. Go ahead and flirt a little bit,
and obey the desires of the flesh, and go with the flow, and why
be different? Fulfill your lusts. And that struggle is like a law,
like a law of gravity. Gravity is a force that makes
us obey it. Well, sin is sort of like that.
Sin is a force that says, I will make you obey me. I will threaten,
or I will make sin sweet. One way or another, I'll constrain
you to do what I want you to do. And so the evils that those of
us who are believers do not wish to do, Paul says, the law of
sin constrains us to do. It's like there's a law inside
of us. Even though it doesn't dominate us, thanks be to God,
it's still very powerful. If you try going all day without
eating, there's a law of hunger that kicks in. And your body
cries out for something to eat. Well, still, Paul says, still
in the believer, there's a law inside of him. There's something
inside of him that says, feed my desires. And you see the power, the problem
of this problem is that it's an internal problem. I have to
go inside to find it. That's the problem with so many
Pentecostals today, so many holiness movements. They teach the perfection
of man, but they teach that sin is nothing but external sin.
They don't probe the heart. But when you go in, and in, and
in, and you probe the depth of your heart, the depth of your
soul, the depth of your flesh, you find that this problem afflicts
you from within. And that compounds the whole
problem. Because sin is like a raging
river carrying us along. We fight against it. But sometimes
we feel helpless in that battle. Now, the unbeliever, of course,
has a conscience, but he doesn't fight against sin the way a believer
fights. The unbeliever is prone to go with the flow. But the
believer, you see, fights this. It's like people, children, it's
like people on the upper Niagara River, going along with the flow. The next bend is the Niagara
Falls, but they don't know it. They're ignorant of it, and so
they're enjoying themselves in the boat, and even if they get
bumped out of the boat, they still think they're enjoying
the water. It's not so bad. It's not so dangerous. But the
believer realizes that flirting with sin, tampering with sin,
indulging in indwelling sin, is like going down the river
fast with the Niagara Falls around the corner. He knows the danger. the consequences of sin. Now, Paul will tell us that the believer
knows this problem best when he is at his best. That is to say, when we want
to do good, then evil is present with us. When we are closest
to God, Evil is there. It's when the disciples were
in the service of the Lord Jesus, seeking to do His will, seeking
to minister, that they would find the laws of cowardice and
pride and retaliation and brashness and hatred working within them. And so Paul says, when I want
to do good, I feel the power of evil within me. That's the
pattern. That's the problem. When I would
do good, evil is present. Now this law of sin never takes
it easy, never takes a vacation, never has a Sabbath rest. It
is a permanent guest in our hearts. There are times in the struggle,
and you know what I mean believer, where you wish there would be
a break. You wish that sin would pull back so you could refresh
yourself, so perhaps you could call a truce. But sin never calls
a truce. Sin is always on duty. Sin is
always subtly and persistently opposing us. It's always there to wreak havoc.
So you feel an urge to pray. The law of sin interferes and
opposes it. You decide, oh, I'm going to
go to the prayer meeting tonight, something comes up and the law
of sin says, well, that's really not an absolute necessity, and
you end up not going. You're going to call and encourage
a friend who's in need, but at the moment the desire stirs up
within you to do good, sin comes along and somehow opposes it,
and your plans go awry. And a thousand, thousand other
ways, you see. We are in a constant tug of war
against the law of sin and death. Do we want to pray? Sin imposes. Do we want to meditate? How many times do you really
meditate on the Word? You want to many times, but how
often? Something comes in the way. Sin
is always there. Sin is our enemy. And the strength
of sin is that it does all of this within us as easily as a
fox catches rabbits or a flycatcher catches insects. It's the nature
of sin to do this. Sin is an expert in destroying
us. You don't have to instruct sin
how to sin. It doesn't need an apprenticeship. Sin so easily
sins that the Bible speaks of the sin that easily besets us. Easily besets us. And when that
happens, well, we get mad, or we get resentful, or we feel
sorry for ourselves, or bitter, or lustful, or stingy. Whatever
sin it may be, sin in us makes us act in all kinds of ways. that are offensive to God. So
that's the problem. Now, secondly, Jesus tells us
our duty is to resist sin to the point of death. Our duty
is not to lay back and say, well, this sin is such a terrible thing,
and it's so powerful that I just must let go and let God, and
I'm just going to forget about it, forget the struggle, and
go with the flow. No, the Bible says everywhere,
and that's the heartbeat of our text tonight, kill sin, mortify
sin. Paul says it in Romans 8.13,
if ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, you shall
live. And in Colossians 3 verse 5,
mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth, fornication,
uncleanness, inordinate affection, evil concupiscence, and covetousness
which is idolatry. So what is indwelling sin? Well,
Paul is specific here. He's saying it's sexual immorality,
it's impurity, it's lust, it's evil desires, it's greed. All
the sins that belong to our earthly nature. They are latent in every
regenerate heart. You see, we can boast that we
wouldn't sink so low, but Paul built his life and his strategy
against sin on the fact that these things were there. He built
his strategy against sin on the fact of his own infirmities. And when Jesus approaches us
in this text, He is teaching us that it is wise for us to
build our lives upon the same platform. The platform of a recognition
of our spiritual weakness and our temptability, our remaining
temptability. And so Paul says, and Jesus says,
Jesus says it graphically, picturesquely, kill, sin, cut it off. Don't explain it. Don't condone
it. Don't nourish. Don't cherish.
Don't tolerate. Terminate. Destroy. Sin. You are indwelt by Jesus Christ,
dear believer. You are a new creation in Him.
You are a son of God. Be what you are. Reckon yourself
dead into sin, fight against sin, live according to what you
are called to be. You see, the background of this
whole portion is this, that we have no right to live like someone
over whom the Lord Jesus Christ has no influence, if we are true
believers. I don't have a single right to
condone the smallest sin, the smallest indwelling sin, when
I have such a Savior as Jesus. And when Jesus says over and
over again here, cut it off, cut it off, cut it off, He's
saying give no quarter to sin. Give no mercy to sin. Make no
truce with sin. How can you, transformed from
sin by the death of the Lamb of God, continue to make excuses
for sin? It is illogical. Sadly, it happens. And you know, you know the process.
You try to rationalize it in your own mind, your own thinking
patterns. Well, maybe this isn't too bad, or maybe that's not
so bad. So-and-so's doing it. No, says
Jesus. Starve it to death. It wants
a little tidbit here. It wants a little touch here.
A little taste there. A little morsel to feed its self-pity,
or its resentment, or its lust. Just a little bit to keep it
from dying. A little bit of food. No, says
Jesus. Kill it. Starve it. Show it no mercy. So that's our duty. It's a relentless
duty. It's an ongoing duty. It's a
lifelong duty. By hand, offend thee. Cut it
off. If thy foot offend thee, cut
it off. If thy eye offend thee, pluck
it out. What does Jesus really mean by
this? Of course, He doesn't mean that we get out a knife and cut
off our hand physically. But He's referring spiritually
to what we do with our eyes. and our hands and our feet as
a reflection of who we are inside and what we must do with those
sins. He's talking about a hand that slips into a purse or a
wallet or a till and takes our money. A hand that forms a hard
fist. A hand that caresses the flesh.
A hand that picks up a stone to stone a woman caught in adultery.
A hand that is raised high in voting for the punishment of
the innocent. A hand that in temper, fit of temper, slaps
a child too hard. A hand that picks up yet another
glass of whiskey and drinks it. A hand that switches on the web
and guides the mouse to an immoral channel. Cut your hand off, Jesus says.
Cut that sin off rather than let your hand act like that.
Don't feed that sin. It is better for you to enter
life maimed than with two hands to go into hell where the fire
never goes out. Then Jesus speaks about our feet.
Our feet causing us to sin. He's talking, of course, about
pushing your foot down on the accelerator in a busy road. Or
tripping up a boy in school you don't like. or treading on someone's
toes, or running along with some gossip to a friend's house, or
walking with a pounding conscience into places and relationships
that cannot please God. If your foot causes you to sin,
cut it off. It's better for you to enter
life crippled than to have two feet and be thrown into hell. And then finally, Jesus talks
about the eye which causes a person to sin. He's talking about the
eye that looks away when there's a cry for help. The eye whose
eyelids fall and slumber when there's work to be done. The
eye that shows admiration for what is carnal and materialistic
and worldly. The eye that wanders around the
congregation when the sermon is about our need to repent and
to be saved. The eye that speaks murder The
eye that dodges duty. The eye that seeks the place
of prominence. The unforgiving eye. The lustful eye. The eye
that lingers upon immodest magazine covers at the grocery store.
The checkout lane. The eye that lusts. The eye that
covets. The eye that disdains. The eye
that hates my neighbor. The eye that rolls itself in
a sense of superiority. looking down on others. Cut it off. Pluck it out. Don't go on this way. Oh dear congregation, what do
we do with our feet and our eyes and our hands? What do your eyes
see and read and gaze upon? What videos do you rent? What
websites do you visit? How many chapters of the Word
of God do you read? Are you starving sin and promoting
righteousness? Are you engaging with all the
power given to you in dependence upon the Holy Spirit, using the
resources of Jesus to fight against sin? Or are you coddling it? Or going
with the flow? Jesus says, if your eye offends
you, pluck it out. It's better for you to enter
to the kingdom of God with one eye than to have two eyes to
be cast into hell fire. How do you do it? It's so hard. How do you kill
sin? Remaining sin. Well, the Puritan
John Owen wrote a whole book on it, but let me condense it
down into three thoughts that he gives us that are very valuable,
I believe. The first is, he says, we are
to weaken our lusts habitually. We are to weaken our lusts habitually. Let me just read a paragraph
here from Owen because it's so good. He describes it like this. He says, When a man is nailed
to a cross, he at first struggles, strives, and cries out with great
strength and might. But as his blood and spirit waste,
his strivings become faint and seldom, his cries low and hoarse,
scarce to be heard. So when a man first determines
to conquer a lustrous sin and to deal with it in earnest, it
struggles with great violence to break loose. It cries with
earnestness, impatience, to be satisfied and relieved. By mortification,
that means to kill sin, the blood and spirits of it are let out.
It moves seldom and faintly, cries sparingly, and is scarce
heard in the heart. It may sometimes have a dying
pang that makes an appearance of great vigor and strength,
but it is quickly over, especially if it is kept from considerable
success. Then he goes on to say, this
is what Paul describes in Romans 6. He says, sin is crucified
by being fastened to the cross. And why? Well, he says, so that
the body of sin might be brought to nothing. So Owen's thought, you see, is
this, that the power of sin is weakened and abolished little
by little, that we'd be no longer enslaved to sin, when we starve
that sin, so that sin does not become our master and control
us as before. And Owen concludes, this includes
not only our fleshly desires, but also those of the mind and
the will which are in opposition to God. Secondly, we are never
to give up resisting against sin. We are never to give up
resisting against sin. We are always to remember sin
is our enemy. And we have to destroy it at
every possible way and through every possible means. And the
more we get to understand the devices of Satan, get to know
the ways of sin, how sin attacks us, what its strategy is, to
be ready for it, the better. I'll tell you what Owen says
again. This is how men deal with their enemies. They search out
their plans, they ponder their goals, they consider how and
by what means they have prevailed over them in the past, so that
they can be defeated. Continue to attack your lusts
every day. You see, one of our problems
is we... well, sin is like a monster, and once we think we killed that
monster, boys and girls, And we see it laying at our feet,
and we've had a little success. We tend to relax. And we think
the battle is over. But suddenly, before we know
it, that monster gets up on his feet again and attacks us again.
He was dormant, but he wasn't dead. And we've let down our
guard. Owen puts it this way, even when
we think that a lust is dead because it is quiet, we must
labor still then to give it new wounds and fresh blows every
day. This is a battle. This is a holy
war. Today, there are so many people
that still don't understand that we're at war with terrorism.
They don't understand it. They think this is all just George
Bush activity. And so, all these people are
killed in London a few weeks ago and, well, they still say
it's George Bush's fault. They shouldn't have started this
war. The problem is terrorism, senseless murder, sin. We're at war, congregation. This nation is at war. Your relatives,
many of you have relatives that are at war in Iraq. They're laying
down their lives. Some of them are in danger of
laying down their lives for our sake so that we can go free.
We're at war. The Christian is at war. We can't let down our
guard. Thirdly, we have to gain strength
to defeat future temptation by defeating present temptation
now. You see, if we fail now, we're
going to fail easier tomorrow. If we are successful now, by
the grace of the Holy Spirit, it's going to be easier to fight
temptation tomorrow. A poet put it this way, yield
not to temptation for yielding is sin. Each victory will help
you, some other to win. You see, we weaken our lust,
not only by starving them, but by encouraging those graces that
stand in direct opposition to that lust. May I repeat that? I believe
that's a very important thought. We weaken our lust not only by
starving them, but by encouraging those graces that stand in direct
opposition to that particular lust. You see, what best weakens pride
but growing in humility? What best weakens anger but growing
in gentleness? What breast weakens irritability
but growing impatience? As you grow in purity, your uncleanness
is weakened. We'll never be at a point prior
to our death where the battle is completely over, but the graces
of the Spirit help us weaken the lusts that fight against
us. And those graces are strengthened by a constant looking to Jesus
for strength and for courage. And so we need to look at the
positive graces. Plead them, seek to live them
out, seek to feed them to ourselves through the Word rather than
feed our lusts through sin. And then Jesus in our text gives
us a very strange encouragement to pursue this duty. Now the
Bible speaks a great deal about a number of encouragements for
us to exercise self-denial and mortification against indwelling
sin. And we could actually have a
series of messages, a profitable series of messages on these various
encouragements. We could talk about how keeping
the Lord's Day holy encourages a dampening of our lusts and
the promotion of the positive, motivating energy. We could talk
about how fellowship and communion with other believers strengthens
us. Or the biblical ministry we hear
each Sabbath. Or we could talk about Paul's
motivation of the constraining power of the love of Jesus Christ.
It's that motivation that motivated Joseph, kept him in the house
of Potiphar. He said, how can I do this great
wickedness and sin against God, who's been so good to me, and
whom I love? We could talk about the need
and the blessing of keeping a good conscience. One that is sensitive
to the guilt and the danger of certain sins. We could talk about
the danger of places of temptation, the power of the modern media,
and how we ought to urge one another to avoid occasions that
make us more vulnerable to sinning in these areas. I think here
of Herod who said to his soldiers, kill the child, but one day he'll
be a man and he's going to come back to kill me. Well, that's
how ruthless we must be, of course, in our war against our baby lusts. If we don't kill them when they're
babies, they'll come back to haunt us and destroy us. But
most of all, of course, we would talk, if we had to talk about
these encouragements, we would talk about mortifying sin by
looking to Jesus. That's the strongest encouragement
of all, isn't it? That He is with His people. He
has power over temptation. He's endured all temptation.
He, by His Spirit, gives you strength to endure temptation.
No one who's ever fought this battle has looked to Him in vain. All fullness of grace is found
in Him. And He can do everything. He
can do abundantly, exceedingly above all that we ask or think.
Go to Jesus! And all these answers would be
good answers. But none of these answers are the encouragement,
the kind of motivation Jesus gives us in this particular text. What's His motivation here? He brings the fear of hell to bear upon his own disciples. I say that's surprising. Don't
you think? His disciples are saved. They're
not going to hell. But three times, he's talking,
remember, to his disciples. Cut off your hand that offends. Lest you go into hell, where
the fire will never be quenched. Cut off your foot. Lest you go
two feet into hell, where the fire will never be quenched.
Pluck out your eye. It's better to do that than have
two eyes to be cast, thrown into hell fire, is the original grief. We lay a baby in a crib, don't
we? Tenderly. That's not the way
we go to hell, congregation. God on the day of judgment will
not lay us tenderly in hell. If we refuse to cut off our lusts,
God will cast us. These are Jesus' words, not Jonathan
Edwards' words, not John Calvin's words, not my words. Jesus' words.
He will throw us into hell. Jesus brings the doctrine of
hell to his own people. And the word he uses here is
not Hades, which sometimes refers, as you know, to grave and other
things, but it's Gehenna, the word that always refuses, always
refers, rather, to hell. Gehenna is derived from Gehinnom.
It's a place south of Jerusalem. It became known as a place of
fire. That's where the children are roasted to death as sacrifices
to Moloch in the time of Ahaz and Manasseh. And later it became
the place where the city's garbage was burned. There was always
a fire going there. And gradually, that word, Gehenna, or Gehennan,
became synonymous with hell. And whenever it's used in Scripture,
from there on in, it's always used to refer to that hell where
soul and body are cast away into the infernal pit of everlasting
darkness, separated from God's mercy. which will happen to all
those who refuse to believe the gospel and refuse to repent before
God. Well, what an amazing encouragement. You say encouragement? Yes, encouragement. God can use this to motivate
us. And anything He uses to motivate
us is an encouragement. You see, these words that Jesus
uses here are used back in Isaiah 66, verse 24. Jesus, just repeating them, He
wants to remind us that people are to be cast into a hell where
the worm does not die and the fire is not quenched. There will
be no end to the judgment of those who refuse to believe the
gospel and those who didn't resist their sins, who allowed their
hands and eyes and feet to do whatever pleased them. This is
what Jesus says. And my conviction to bring that to
you and to me tonight is precisely because it's He that says it.
A Christian is someone who must mortify the lusts of his hand
and his foot and his eye, and the whole totality of his life.
Because the hand stands for what we do, the foot stands for where
we go, and the eye stands for what we see. And so I ask you tonight, I ask myself
tonight, are you crucifying yourself? Are you killing the lusts of
the flesh? Are you serious in this battle? Those who are never serious in
this battle will end in hell. With both eyes. And both hands. And both feet. And there says
Jesus three times over, the worm will not die. And that worm is of course our
conscience. We will remember everything. Hell will be a foul
place. where our conscience will endlessly
be gnawing at us, eating away, devouring, giving us no rest. In this life, you often hear
of people whose consciences drive them mad. Sometimes people have
escaped from being arrested for many years, sometimes for decades,
and finally their conscience has been so speaking for so many
years, they turn themselves in, they can't stand it anymore.
The conscience is driving them crazy. Well, hell is like that. People today go to therapists,
psychoanalysts, psychologists with their troubled consciences.
Many of them need help in various ways, yes. But a good number
of them, I'm sure, need Christ more than they need therapy.
They need a clean conscience. But they can't find it. Well,
in hell, the conscience of the damned will be sensitized. It
will be reawakened. But there's no way of undoing
the wrong. In fact, in hell, we will go on
sinning because we will never be at peace with God. John Flavel writes, conscience
which should have been the sinner's curb on earth will become the
whip that will lash his soul in hell. That which was the seat
and center of all guilt will now become the seat and the center
of all torment. Oh, my dear friend, whether converted
or unconverted tonight, if you come to hell, if you refuse to
cut off your lusts, and you live the way you want, doing what
you want with your hands and your eyes and feet, Jesus says
you will be thrown into hell. And when you are thrown into
hell, every prayer your Father uttered for you, every family
worship, every plea, every example, every church service, everything
will come back to you. Your memory will be perfect in
hell. and will be there gnawing away like a never dying worm. You will never be dying and yet
never dead. Oh, what an awful thing. Now, does
that mean that God's people will end in hell? No. No. They won't. But Jesus uses warnings
like this. to reawaken us. He uses other
motivations. He uses all those motivations
I just told you about. His love, His power, His grace.
But He also uses the warnings. Ninety-six verses in the book
of Hebrews alone of warning to believers not to give up the
battle. Not because they will give up
the battle, but because warnings are one of the motivations Jesus
uses to encourage us not to give up the battle. When our children were very young,
there on Leonard Street, I can still see my wife, so insistent
with each child, make sure you don't go anywhere near the road.
You can't go beyond the food bank in the garage there. You
can't go beyond that. Because if you go to the road,
the cars, well, they can kill you. She warned them. But at the same time, she never
let them beyond her eye, beyond that food bank. That's what God does with us.
He warns us even as He protects us. But He uses the warnings
to help us protect ourselves. It's His gift. His warning is
His gift. What would you think of my wife
and I if we never said to the children, don't worry about the
road. Go play wherever you want to play. We wouldn't love them. God loves
His people so much that He warns them of the dangers of hellfire. He warns them. He warns us tonight. Kill sin or sin will kill you. Gouge it out of your life. Sever
it from you. It must be a decisive work. It
must be a complete work. It must be perfect, as your Father
in heaven is perfect. Will we ever be perfect? Of course
we won't ever be perfect. But if that is not our goal to
be perfect, we will not be living Christian lives. Too many Christians
say, I'll never be perfect anyway. So I know this is wrong, but...
But what congregation? We are never to excuse sin. Oh,
as soon as you feel that language arise in your mind, you say to
your own mind, Oh, what a fool I am. Do I not remember what
sin has cost my Savior? It has cost Him the cross. How
can I sin against God? Cut it out. Cast it away. Now we need to do this by the
Spirit's power. The battle for purity is serious
and lifelong. Thank God it is not one we have
to fight alone. Thank God the Holy Spirit is there to help
us. It is by the Spirit's power we mortify the deeds of the flesh. He will help us. He will impel
us. And yet we must do it. He gives
us the strength to do it, but we must do it. He's not going
to do it for us, as if we're somehow another person beside
us. He gives us the strength to do
it, and we must carry it out. Sinclair Ferguson, in one of
his books, says this, there can be no reconciliation between
the Christian and sin, no platform for negotiation. If we don't
engage in the effort to conquer sin, we may be sure it will conquer
us. We must put out the flames of
hell in our hearts, or we will find ourselves exposed to the
flames of hell and separation from God permanently. Well, dear congregation, Do you
know there's a war going on? During the Second World War,
there was a London minister whose home was hit by a bomb. When
he got out of the air raid shelter, he saw his home go up in flames.
He had nothing left but the shirt on his back. And that day he
went to a store and he bought some clothes with the help of
a friend. He bought a suit, Bought some
shirts, socks, ties, sweater. And the lady that was waiting
on him got a little nervous and a little upset with him. And
she said to him, getting a bit irritated, Don't you know there's
a war on and you're buying all these things? There was a war on. There is
a war on. And that war will last all our
lifetime. It will never end. We don't know
when the war with Iraq will end. We hope soon. But this war, we
know when it will end. It will end, dear believer, on
your last breath. And until then, you will be salted
with fire. That's what Jesus goes on to
conclude in verse 49. For everyone shall be salted with fire, and
every sacrifice shall be salted with salt. Well, what does that
mean? Well, in the Old Testament, the
sacrifices were salted with salt. But in the New Testament, those
whose lives are living sacrifices presented to God are going to
be salted, Jesus says, with fire. There's going to be fiery trials
on the way to glory. And we have to pass through them.
And it says we pass through them that that war kicks in more intensely
than ever. God designs trials to come at
appointed times in our lives. And through those trials, He
enables us to kill sin. Those trials are actually good
for us. And so when people sympathize with us in our trials, we ought
to say to them, it's alright. Everyone will be salted with
fire. There's no other way to enter the Kingdom of God, but
then to come in through great tribulation. Count it all joy
when you are salted with fire. So there's a war going on. There's
two forces at work. God is at work in our world. His people are to line up behind
Him. Forces of evil are at work in this world. And there is no
time, no place for self-indulgent worship, for self-deceiving spiritualities
that make the Christian life to be nothing more than coming
to church and perhaps reading the Bible now and then. No. We
must declare an all-out assault against sin. If we will not mortify
remaining sin, can we be Jesus' disciples? If we live our lives
in such a way without saltiness, how will we make them salty again? He says in verse 50. You see,
there's a war going on. The Kingdom of God is coming.
Sacrifices have to be made. We have to say no to certain
things. We have to cut out certain things.
If we're going to be salt in the world, if we're going to
be the flavor of the world. Salt also stings of course, and
the saltiness of the lives of God's people stings the world.
That's why Jesus says at the end of this chapter, be at peace
among yourselves as believers, yes, but to the world we must
sting like salt stings. Have salt in yourselves and have
peace with one another. Well, how is it with you and
me tonight? Let me close by asking a few questions. Am I at war
with sin? The sin that I find in my own
heart, my own bind, my own body. Am I serious about this battle?
Or am I treating sin casually? Am I using the gospel in any
way to minimize the dread character of sin? Am I prepared to be cleansed
with fiery trials, if this is God's will? Am I longing for
this congregation to be salt in the earth? Longing for God
to deal with the blandness and decay of the world around us
and among us, which is without Christ, am I maintaining a loving relationship
with fellow believers, at peace among one another, even as we
seek to be salt in the earth. To kill sin is absolutely critical. The sacrifices it takes are well
worth it. The resulting transformation
into more love and gentleness and humility and strength is
worth every sacrifice we make. Especially because one day we
know all these fiery trials will make us more like our Savior.
And one day we will go to be with Him and to be like Him And
then the good fight, the fight of faith, the holy war will be
over. May the Lord make us all victors
in this conflict. Amen.
Killing Remaining Sin
(1) Our problem; (2) Our duty; (3) Our encouragement.
| Sermon ID | 71705135928 |
| Duration | 59:18 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | Mark 9:43-50 |
| Language | English |
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