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Well, it is an honor for me to
be here in this capacity this morning. I have to say that the
last couple of weeks as I've prepared to preach, my mind and
heart were flooded with fond memories of my time here on the
pastoral staff of 10th with Phil Reichen and Jonathan Olson and
Marian Clark and others. Second thing I would say is I
noticed that they removed the clock at the back. So I take
that as a sign I have unlimited time. You can cancel your Monday
appointment. But my greater honor is that
by God's grace, I have been chosen to communicate this morning the
most glorious message you could ever hear. You and I will never outgrow
the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. There will never be a
moment when it is appropriate for you to hear again the simple
message of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. No matter
how long you've known the Lord, no matter how deep and expansive
your theological knowledge is, no matter how great your biblical
literacy, It is important for us to return again and again
to the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. As my experience, as
I've been called by God to be in churches around the world
and cultures around the world, that I've experienced something
there that has caused for me concern. that often people have
a fairly clear understanding of salvation past, and a fairly
clear understanding of salvation future, their destiny with Christ. But they're not so clear about
the present benefits of the gospel right here, right now. what I would call the now-ism
of the gospel. No, it's not a word. I made it
up. The gospel right here, right
now, in all of its transforming power. You see, the reason this
is important is that everyone in this room is a philosopher. Everyone in this room is a theologian. Everyone in this room is an archaeologist,
and you will dig through the mound of your existence in order
to make sense out of your life. Human beings do not live life
based on the facts of their experience, but based on their interpretation
of those facts. And so, you are always preaching
some kind of gospel to yourself. Yes, it is true. There's a preacher
that you listen to more than anyone who is on this platform,
and that preacher is you. And you're either preaching to
yourself the true gospel of Jesus Christ, or some false gospel
of your independent self-righteousness, or of a God who's distant and
uncaring. And so it's very important for
us to, again, root our thinking and root our living in the glorious
message of the gospel, not just then and not just then, but right
here, right now. Turn, if you would, in your Bibles
to Galatians chapter 2. The verse I'm going to read is
in the midst of a discussion where Paul is speaking as a Jew,
arguing with Jews that Justification never happens by means of keeping
the law. And in the midst of that discussion,
he speaks quite autobiographically. But in speaking that way, he
speaks for every believer in Christ. I have been crucified
with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but
Christ who lives in me. And the life I live, I live in
the flesh by faith in the Son of God who loved me and gave
himself for me. I have been crucified with Christ. Right here, right now, the gospel
for you and for me is first an identity. Good gospel theology doesn't
just define who God is and what He has done, but it redefines
who we are as the people of God. And that identity is rooted in
a redemptive historical act. Paul says, I have been crucified
with Christ. What incredible words. Paul wants
you to understand that Jesus didn't purchase on the cross
savability. He didn't purchase the possibility
of being saved. Jesus took names to the cross. I want to say that again. Jesus took names to the cross. Now that should not surprise
you because if you've read your word, you know that your name was written in the
book of life before the foundations of the world. God carried your
name in that moment when He said to Adam and Eve that He would
crush the head of the serpent. He carried your name when he
made his covenant with Noah after the flood. He carried your name
when he made his promises to Abraham that through his descendants
all the nations on earth would be blessed. He carried your name
when he redeemed Israel out of slavery and gave them a land
of promise. He carried your name when He
brought them back out of captivity, preserving the line of Judah.
He carried your name when He sent His Son to earth. Jesus
carried your name from His birth. He carried your name through
every righteous act done on your behalf. He carried your name
to the cross. He carried your name out of that
empty tomb in victory. He carried your name as He rose
in His royal priestly reign in His ascension. He carried your
name. He carried your name. He carries your name. And if He carried your name to
the cross, would He abandon you in this moment? The fact that the cross is personal
and effective for all who believe means there are four freedoms
that we can live in right here, right now. The first, I love
talking about these things, the first is freedom from the penalty
of sin. Jesus bore every aspect of our
penalty for our sin. so that we would never again
have to sit under the weight of God's condemnation and His
wrath. When Jesus said, it is finished,
He meant it. I'm free from that penalty. That has practical implications
right here, right now. Brothers and sisters, I'm happy
to say that your sickness is not God punishing you for your
sin because Jesus carried your punishment. Your hardships that
you face are not God punishing you for your sin. God looks on
you with favor because Jesus canceled the written code that
was against you, nailing it to the cross. Beautiful words of
Paul from Colossians 2. But not only a penalty of sin,
you have freedom from the slavery of sin. Paul says in Romans 6, sin shall
no longer be your master. You're not under law, you're
under grace. Sin enslaves. Sin addicts. Sin makes us captives. And on
the cross, Jesus broke the power of sin over us. That is wonderful
news because in that breaking of that power, in the breaking
of that mastery, we now have the ability to say no. I'm gonna
say more about that. It's a glorious truth. Third
freedom is freedom from the shame of sin. Jesus shamed shame on
the cross. carrying its scorn, Hebrew says. That means I don't have to hide
in fear. I don't have to try to minimize
and deny my sin because I'm afraid of God. I don't have to live
like Adam and Eve in the garden, hiding from their Lord. No, no
longer. Here's the good news. There's nothing that could ever
be known or exposed about you that hasn't been covered by the
person and work of the Lord Jesus. Come out of the hiding. Come
out of denial. Come out of minimizing. Come
away from protecting yourself by preaching your righteousness
and the unrighteousness of somebody else. Step into the gospel. Confess the shame has been broken. But also, freedom from the exclusion
of sin. Sin separates us from God. There
is no more horrible human condition
than to live separate from God. without hope, and without God
in the world, Paul says in Ephesians. On the cross, the most painful
moment for Jesus was not physical torture. Although he was experiencing
torturous things, the most painful moment on Jesus' cross was relational. When God turned his back on the
Son and Jesus cries out in torment, my God, my God, why have you
forsaken me? Jesus endured that moment for
us. He was taking every ounce of
our rejection so we would never see the back of God's head. In
your worst week, In your worst moment as a husband,
worst moment as a parent, worst moment as a worker or neighbor,
God will never turn His back on you. Jesus carried your rejection. Praise God. And He looks at you through the
perfect righteousness of Jesus Christ given over to your account. This identity is rooted in a
historical redemptive act, but that's not all. Paul says, I
have been crucified with Christ. It is no longer I who live, but
Christ lives in me. What a statement. It is no longer
I who lives, but Christ lives in me. Now you know he's not
talking physical here. He's not saying he's physically
dead because he wouldn't be writing this. He's talking about something
very, very important to understand. Paul is saying the thing now
that animates my life, that gives me hope and courage, that animates
the things I say and do, that animates my values, is not my
strength, not my righteousness, not my wisdom. It's Christ. It's Christ in me, the hope of
glory. I get up in the morning like
you do, and I face all the weights of life in this fallen world.
And sometimes that's like putting on a backpack of stones. But your hope is not your weakness. It's not that you've grown an
exotic wisdom. It's not your righteousness,
it's Christ. It's a beautiful thing to think
about, that Christ lives in me. And with Christ comes His power. Think about this. I love how
Paul captures this in 2 Corinthians 7 when he says, we have this
treasure in jars of clay to show that the all-surpassing power
is from God and not from us. Now, that means we're the jars
of clay and that's not a compliment. Because if you put pressure on
clay, if you drop it, guess what happens? It shatters. It's a picture of power inhabiting
weakness. Isn't that beautiful? That God blesses us with the
power of His Son. Think about that. That means
if you're in one of those arguments in your marriage, Please don't
look at me like you don't know what I'm talking about. And you can think of the things
you'd like to say to this person. All of a sudden, love isn't in
your mind, but winning is in your mind no matter what. And
you're about to say, oh yeah? You have the power in Christ
to turn and go in another direction. and be a more loving and understanding
and forgiving spouse. When you're about to march down
the hallway because your children are misbehaving, and let them
know what a mess they've made of your life, and say things that you shouldn't
say and do things that you shouldn't do, you have the power in Christ
to turn and be a nurturing, loving, instructing, godly-disciplining
parent. If you are sitting with your
computer open and you're tempted to look at things you have no
business looking at, you have the power in Christ to say no
and turn and go in another direction. If you're about to destroy your
relationship with your neighbor because you're so irritated that
the rosebushes has grown over into your property, you have the power to say no
in Christ and love your neighbor as you love yourself. If you're about to compromise
your Christian convictions at your
school, at your university, in order to gain acceptance from
someone, you have the power to say no. If you're about to carry
some gossip to somebody else, about to destroy somebody's reputation,
You have the power to say no and turn and go in another direction. Christ lives in you. But not only does He come with
His power, He comes with His provision. Peter captures that in 2 Peter chapter 1, where he
says, we've already been given everything we need for life and
godliness. I don't know if you've ever wondered
why Peter uses two words. Why didn't he just say, we've
been given everything we need for life? I think because Peter,
under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, knew his audience.
And he knew if he said, we've been given everything for life,
we would think, oh yes, eternal life, we've been given everything,
so somehow, someway, I arrive there with my Lord in glory.
And that's true, but that doesn't happen to be Peter's topic. That's why I use a second word,
godliness. What is godliness? It's a God-honoring
life. Between the time I come to Him
and the time I go home with Him, it's a right here, right now
thing. I've been given everything I
need, right here, right now, to be what God has chosen me
to be and to be what God has called me to be in the places
where He has sovereignly placed me. That's good news. I'm not left to my small bag
of resources. I may be a collection of weaknesses
held together by cords of grace, but I have everything I need. At the end of that chapter in
2 Peter, Peter says that there are people
who are ineffective and unproductive in their knowledge of the Lord
Jesus Christ. Now, when you read a diagnostic
like that in Scripture, you ought to immediately ask why. Why are
these people who really do know the Lord, why are they ineffective
and unproductive in their knowledge of the Lord Jesus Christ? And
Peter says, they're nearsighted and blind,
having forgotten they've been cleansed from their past sins.
The issue is identity. The issue is right here, right
now, gospel amnesia. You see, when you forget who
you are in Christ, you quit pursuing what belongs to you in Christ.
Let me say that again. When you forget who you are in
Christ, you quit pursuing what belongs to you in Christ. The
gospel's identity, rooted in historical redemptive fact, rooted
in present redemptive reality. But the gospel's a second thing.
The gospel is a lens. Paul says, the life I live, I
live by faith in the Son of God who loved me and gave himself
for me. Faith in the gospel should be for us like a pair of glasses
we put on. It becomes the way, the gospel
becomes the means by which we make sense out of life. There's
no more trustworthy, no more accurate interpretive tool that
a human being could ever use than the gospel. And I want to just share with
you five foundational gospel themes that you should carry
with you As in your place in the world, you seek to make sense
out of your life. First theme is there is a God
of awesome, incalculable glory who sits on the throne of the
universe and rules everything, everywhere, according to the
power of His will. This life that we're living is not first
about us. It's first about Him. It's not
first about our glory. It's about His glory. You could
argue that the four most important words of the Bible are the first
four, in the beginning, God. Romans 11, 36 says, for from
Him and through Him and to Him are all things. To Him be the
glory. At the center of the story of the cosmos is
not us, it's God. And to help us to remember Him,
He's created a world, a created world that speaks of His existence.
I like to say it this way, you can't get up in the morning without
bumping into God, because His glory is everywhere visible. So we would not forget that life
is about Him. There's a second theme. People
who were made in His image, made to live for something vastly
bigger than themselves. What is that thing? Made to live
for God, made to live for His kingdom, made to live for His
glory. It is so easy. to slip into being a glory thief, to slip into making life about
me, to shrink life down to the claustrophobic confines of my
wants, my needs, my feelings. You do what brings me pleasure,
I'll be nice to you. You don't, and I will punish
you. That's glory thiefery. It's tempting to make it about
us. And we're meant to live for His
glory. So everything I do in my marriage, everything I do
at my school, everything I do at my job, everything I do with
regard to my parents, everything I do in my sexual life, everything
I do, in my life of entertainment is all motivated and shaped and
directed by a desire that God would get glory by everything
that I am and everything that I think and everything that I
desire and everything that I say and everything that I do. Third theme, it is the horrible,
horrible tragedy of sin. Sin is the ultimate inescapable
human disease. The greatest, darkest pandemic
that's ever infected humanity is not COVID. It's sin. No one ever escapes it. Sin is a liar. It makes promises
it can never keep. And although we have been fully
forgiven of our sin, our sin is not yet eradicated. There's sin that still lives
outside of us and sin that still lives inside of us. And your problem is not just
temptation. Because it's the sin inside of you that hooks
you to the evil outside of you. That's why monasticism doesn't
work. So I have to everyday acknowledge
that I'm not a grace graduate yet. That there is still this thing
inside of me. I have to acknowledge that sin
is seductive and deceptive, that it blinds me, that this is not yet peacetime. I
still live in the midst of a spiritual war, and that war takes place
in all those little mundane places I live every day. And that reality, brings us to the
fourth gospel theme. It's the existence of great and
glorious, forgiving, justifying, empowering,
transforming, delivering grace. That no one lives beyond the
reach of this grace. And that grace is not just forgiving
grace, that grace is empowering grace. Maybe you've been listening
to me and saying, Paul, the life you're describing is impossible.
You know what I'd say to that? You're right. In and of yourself,
it's impossible, but you're not left to yourself. Because God has unleashed His
grace on His people. Last theme. is the theme of destiny. The gospel would teach us that
every human being is marching toward a destiny of some kind,
and there are only two options. You're either sadly marching
toward a destiny that's eternal separation from God and torment,
or you're marching toward that glorious destiny in the new heavens
and new earth where peace and righteousness reign forever and
ever. Now, I think we have a problem
when it comes to eternity. Ecclesiastes tells us that God
has hardwired eternity into our hearts. That means all of us
have a longing for paradise. And so many of us make the mistake
of trying to turn this into paradise. I just want to help you here.
You will never have a paradise marriage. May you have many blessings
and much joy, but you'll never have a paradise marriage. You'll never parent paradise
children, in case you haven't figured that out. You'll never
have a paradise ministry. You'll never go to a paradise
church. You'll never have a paradise job. Because this isn't our final
destination. This is not all we have, praise
God. This is a preparation for a final
destination. And if you try to turn this into
a paradise, you'll end up in all kinds of frustration, and
hurt, and anger, and ultimately you'll doubt God's goodness. I have good news for you. Persevere. Paradise is coming. And you'll look back and say,
every hardship we faced, every loss we faced, every pain we
faced, every disappointment we faced, every struggle we faced
was a small thing in comparison to the glory we are now experiencing. It was enough. We're so thankful. And when you're in glory, you
won't look back with, if only, And what ifs? Because your heart will be fully
satisfied with a paradise that is now yours because of Jesus.
The gospel is an identity rooted in historical redemptive fact,
rooted in present redemptive reality. The gospel is a lens
that you can look at and make sense out of life. Last, the
gospel is a lifestyle. Paul says, the life I live, I
live by faith in the Son of God who loved me and gave himself
for me. The gospel is meant right here,
right now, to form for you a way of living. I love the book of Ephesians. It has been a dear friend to
me. And the first three chapters
of Ephesians is one of the most glorious gospel explanations
in all of Scripture. My crass way of saying it, it's
probably Paul's best gospel rant. It's just beautiful. And it'll
take you to gospel heights that you couldn't imagine without
those words. But this is how he begins, chapter
four. I therefore, prisoner of the
Lord, urge you to walk in a manner worthy of the calling which you
have been called with all humility and gentleness and patience,
and it goes on. Paul says, my prayer is and my desire for you
and my exhortation to you is that you would now live in a
way that flows out of the gospel that I've just given you. And then what the rest of the
book does is it applies the gospel to all the various dimensions
of human life. Paul applies the gospel to your
your part in Christ's church, he applies the gospel to marriage,
he applies the gospel to parenting, to your communication, to your
emotions, to the way you use your money, and to spiritual
warfare. The gospel is meant to form the
way I live in all of those dimensions of everyday life. Because the gospel is meant to
be transformative. The gospel is an identity. I don't have to shop for identity
horizontally anymore. I don't have to hunt around horizontally
for meaning and purpose. I found it in Christ and His work on my behalf. and is dwelling within me. I know who I am in Christ, and
I know what it means for my everyday living. The gospel is a lens I don't
have to live in confusion, because the foundational truths
of the gospel help me to understand life. And the gospel's a lifestyle
I don't have to wonder how to live. The gospel forms that for
me. And I want to ask you this morning, is the gospel that for you? Would you fire your inner lawyer
for a minute and examine your heart? Does the gospel form your living,
propel the things you say and do? Where in your life would
you have to say, Lord, there's times when I do forget who I
am and I forget what I've been given, and I live as if my life belongs
to me? Well, I'm happy to tell you,
you don't have to fear that question. God harnessed the forces of nature
and controlled the events of human history, so at a certain
point in time, His Son would come and live on your behalf a righteous
life that you could have never lived, and died as your substitute,
an acceptable death, satisfying God's anger. And He rose again, conquering
sin and death, and ascended in His royal priestly reign to the
right hand of the Father, so that you right now could enter
His presence and come weak, come failing, come broken. And He will not turn you away. Confess, I've forgotten you. I say and do things I shouldn't
say. I live in places for my own glory. Please rescue me from me." Your Lord will always hear and
answer that prayer. Maybe you're in this room this
morning, and you would say, Paul, I don't
know this Jesus. And I don't know this life. I shop around for identity all
over the place, and it just leads to disappointment, aloneness,
and alienation. I do things I know I shouldn't
do, and all I live with is guilt and shame. I want to plead with you. Don't
leave this room without giving your heart and
life to Jesus. If you don't know how to do that,
grab somebody you don't know and ask them. You don't know
how to do that, grab somebody at the back of this room. Don't
leave. There is no life more glorious
than what we've talked about today. and it's yours in Christ. Run to Him. Let's pray. Lord, how beautiful, how blessed
the life is that we have just described, that you have poured
down on us in the generosity of your love and your mercy and
your grace. Oh, we don't want to live as gospel amnesiacs, so meet us in our weakness, meet
us in our blindness. Open our eyes and our hearts
again Lord, in this moment, it's right
to say that we love you, and we do. But the greatest, fullest,
deepest joy of our lives is that we've been loved by you. You
are a rock and a fortress. You are the sun and shield. You
are life and health and peace and truth and reconciliation
and redemption. We do love you, but the greatest
Joy of our lives is that we've been loved by you. Thank you. We thank you in the sweet and
strong name of Jesus, our Redeemer and friend. Amen.
The Danger of a Gap in Your Gospel
| Sermon ID | 817252323182888 |
| Duration | 39:35 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - AM |
| Bible Text | Galatians 2:20 |
| Language | English |
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