Monday, February 7, 2011

To Tell You the Truth

(The audio files of this message are not available due to technical difficulties.)

This is the ninth sermon in a ten-part series on the attributes of God. This message concludes the category of attributes that some theologians refer to as Moral Attributes, and it discusses the attributes of truth and sovereignty.

Written Excerpts:

Exodus 34:6 “And the Lord passed by before him, and proclaimed, The Lord, The Lord God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abundant in goodness and truth.”
Introduction:
We are nearly finished with our series of messages on the attributes of God. Today, I expect to finish speaking about the attributes of God, with a possible final summary message to wrap up the series next week.
Remember that our aim in getting to know God is to take the information we have learned and use it for meditation. Meditation is more than simply casual review, but truly “ruminating” [chewing] on it, thinking of all implications and ramifications, and then applying it personally to my own life.
Let us continue our discussion of the “moral attributes.”
III.       Moral Attributes
Defined as those qualities in the nature of God that He shares with moral beings who are created in His image, and those qualities that refer to His government over free, intelligent and moral beings.
A. Holiness, Righteousness and Justice.
We talked about the holiness, righteousness and justice of God; the absolute purity of God’s nature.
B. Love, Mercy and Grace
We also spoke about His everlasting love that prompts Him to freely give mercy and grace. Grace means giving of favors that we do not deserve, and mercy means withholding of punishment that we do deserve.
C. Truth
Today we are going to speak to you about God’s nature of truth.
Truth is another of those words that has endured a great deal of decay and manipulation in meaning. I read a little story that sort of illustrates the kind of thing that has been happening.
1. Definitions of Truth
(Ronald Nash, Life's Ultimate Questions) “…a property of propositions [claims] that correspond to the way things [actually] are.”
Someone else has said that truth is: “The best explanation of the facts that exist.”
Truth is the quality of being consistent, genuine or authentic, and without contradiction.
(J.I. Packer, Knowing God) Truth in the Bible is a quality of persons primarily and of propositions secondarily: it means stability, reliability, firmness, trustworthiness, the quality of a person who is entirely self-consistent, sincere, realistic and undeceived.
(H.O. Wiley, Christian Theology) Truth includes both veracity and faithfulness.
2. Observations about the truthfulness of God from Scripture.
a. Truthfulness is essential to the nature of God.
Exodus 34:6; Numbers 23:19a; Deut. 32:4; Ps. 31:5; Daniel 4:37; Romans 3:3-4a
These and other passages found throughout the Scriptures teach us that the very nature of God is truthfulness and all His actions and works are consistent with His nature, and therefore are also true. His nature is consistent and without contradiction. There is no insincerity, hypocrisy, or deceit in His divine nature.
God is often described in stark contrast to the sinful, fallen nature of man who is prone to deceitfulness and lying. This trait started in Adam and was passed on through generation to generation.
The Devil is a liar and the father of lies. (John 8:44)
b. Truthfulness is eternal (just as God is eternal).
Exodus 34:6; Psalms 57:10; 100:5; 146:6
There is as much of a chance that God will cease to be true as there is for God to cease to exist. Remember that God is immutable (unchanging) in His essential nature.
c. God’s commands are true. (Packer)
Ps. 119:151 “Thou art near, O LORD; and all thy commandments are truth.”
Everything God requires of mankind in the form of commands and ordinances are exactly consistent with the divine nature of God and the nature of man as we were meant to be.
Dr. James Packer says that the commandments of God are defined as truth for a couple of reasons:
1) God’s design for human life and behavior as defined in His commandments will never deviate. In other words they possess a permanence about them.
2) The commandments tell us the unchanging truth about ourselves.
He goes on to explain that by following the commandments of God, which are truth, we develop our souls and lives into the moral image we were created to be. But, if we do not follow His commandments we destroy our souls and character until we de-humanize ourselves in spiritual death.
d. God’s judgments are true.
Romans 2:2 “But we are sure that the judgment of God is according to truth against them which commit such things.” [i.e. those things described in the closing verses of chapter 1.]
When anyone chooses to violate the commandments of God, then judgment is proclaimed and executed in exact accordance with the nature of the offense and the nature of God who has been offended.
e. God’s promises are true. (Packer)
This aspect of truthfulness has more to do with the idea of faithfulness which we already discussed in an earlier message.
To review, however, let me just say that God can no more fail to keep His promises than He can cease to be God. Truthfulness and faithfulness are two aspects of the same character trait or attribute.
f. Truthfulness is expected of God’s people.
Exodus 20:16 “Thou shalt not bear false witness against thy neighbour.”
I will probably come back to this point again in some future sermon, but let me just say that God expects truth in His people. That means there is no place in the Christian’s life for any hypocrisy or insincerity regarding the practice of faith and obedience.
D. Sovereignty
The final attribute of God that we wish to briefly discuss today is the attribute of sovereignty. We are including this under the heading of moral attributes as well, because it relates to God’s rule or government over the creation and over free, intelligent, moral beings.
1. Definition
Sovereignty is related to the attribute of omnipotence or almighty power that we discussed several weeks ago. It simply means that God is the only absolute ruler over all of the universe.
Ex. 15:18 “The LORD shall reign for ever and ever.”
2. Observations
Based on several of the previous attributes and qualities we have already studied about God, and in conjunction with them, we believe that the sovereignty of God means that:
a. God does not control nor decree everything that happens.
We really do not have the time to dig too deeply into this issue today, but we believe the Scriptures proclaim that God made man in His image, and that image includes the aspect of free-will. Therefore we believe that God voluntarily structures His sovereign rule and control in such a way so to allow mankind the ability to exercise free choices.
b. God does know everything that happens.
We have already talked about the omniscience or unlimited knowledge of God. There is nothing that free individuals can do that is outside of the scope of God’s infinite knowledge.
Yet, we have clearly stated that God’s awareness of everything actual and everything potential does not cause it to take place. He does not exercise control in that sense. 
c. God never loses control of His overall purposes for the world and mankind.
Even though individuals who are created with a free will in the image of God do sometimes make decisions and choices that are opposed to the will of God, yet none of them can frustrate the overall plan and purposes of God for the world and for the rest of humanity.
For example, there is no human being that had the ability to thwart God’s plan of redeeming fallen humanity. There is no human being who has the ability to thwart God’s coming judgment day. God is truly the only absolute ruler of the universe and He is still in control today.
God isn’t wringing His hands and worrying about what the Republicans or Democrats are going to do that might mess up His purposes.
God has repeatedly shown throughout Scripture and human history that He has the ability to take really messy situations and the horrible choices and actions of wicked, disobedient people and turn them completely around and use them for something beautiful and good in the long run or in the final analysis.
I’m happy to know that I serve the Lord God, who is the creator, sustainer and ruler of this entire universe. He is not only my sovereign Lord, but He is my Savior, Redeemer and Friend!
Conclusion:
As I stated at the beginning of the message, I plan to finish this series of messages next Sunday by summarizing what we have been learning and making some final applications.
But I hope this message today has helped you to better understand the nature of God. I hope something was said to not only enlighten your understanding, but to encourage your heart in faith.
The final sermon in this series is: The Pursuit of God (link is available in the blog archive on right)

Worship Methods Do Matter (31mb)



(To download an MP3 file of this sermon, click on the title above. To listen now online, click on the play button of the audio player shown above.)

This sermon is the third in a series of messages on the Ten Commandments. This message discusses the second commandment, "Do not make any graven image."

Written Excerpts:

Exodus 20:4-6 “Thou shalt not make unto thee any graven image…”
John 4:24 “God is a Spirit: and they that worship him must worship him in spirit and in truth.”
Introduction:
Let me just offer a reminder from our introduction a couple of weeks ago… God’s Word says that His law is what makes us aware of our need for Christ and the power of His Spirit. So, as we go through this ongoing study on the Ten Commandments, let us keep our minds and hearts open to anything that God wants to point out to us about our lives. Let us be alert to any areas we need to confess. That is, areas where we have failed to live up to His standard and His will, and then let us ask for His power and grace to enable us to live pleasing to Him.
In our last discussion we addressed the first commandment in which God established who we were to worship or who is to be the focus of our affections and lifestyle. Today we are going to address the question of how we must worship the Lord.
II.     Thou Shalt Not Make Any Graven Image
A. Negative Meaning: Do not use material objects to represent God.
Let me give the definition of some words that are used here as we explain the negative meaning.
(v.4) The word “graven” is - pesel: A noun meaning idol, a graven image. This word comes from the verb pāsal, meaning to hew or to cut, which was done to create an idol. (The Complete Word Study Dictionary: Old Testament – QuickVerse)
The word “likeness” a Hebrew word meaning likeness or similarity. (The Complete Word Study Dictionary: Old Testament – QuickVerse)
[The word] applies to any real or imagined pictorial representations of deities. (Walter C. Kaiser, Jr., Toward Old Testament Ethics)
(v.5) “bow down” – A verb meaning …to prostrate oneself, to crouch, …to humbly beseech, to do reverence, or to worship. The primary meaning of the word is to bow down. This verb is used to indicate bowing before a monarch or a superior and paying homage to him or her.     (The Complete Word Study Dictionary: Old Testament – QuickVerse)
So the command is literally forbidding the use of any images carved in the likeness or similarity of anything in heaven or earth and meant to represent God as a means to facilitate our worship.
The classic violation of this command is the worship of the golden calf that was crafted by Aaron while Moses was up on the mountain. They bowed down before this idol that they watched Aaron create and they said, “These be thy gods O Israel which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt.” (Ex. 32:4)

It seems that they really were giving credit to the Lord, but they wanted a material, tangible object that they could see. They apparently didn’t like the idea of an invisible God.

B. Positive Principle: External worship is sacred.
As we have already stated earlier, this command does not refer to the object of our worship (i.e. other gods, or false gods). That issue was already addressed in the first commandment. Rather, it has to do with the manner of our worship to the true God.
The positive principle I mentioned a moment ago, “external worship is sacred,” means that each one of us needs to periodically evaluate whether anything we are doing in worship is distorting the true nature of God and leading us down the path of eventually placing more emphasis on the form than we are on God Himself.
C. Exposition – Now for the exposition of the commandment.
How are we to understand the meaning and apply this command in everyday life? What are the lessons we need to learn?
1. The command does not forbid pictures or items that symbolize various aspects of our faith.
God Himself gave instructions to Moses for the creation of artistic representations on the veil in the Tabernacle (W.C. Kaiser). There appears to be a distinction and sometimes a “fine line” between the use of pictures, sculptures and images to represent and symbolize key aspects of our faith, versus using them to represent deity in our worship.
(Beacon Commentary) Sculptured work was used in the Tabernacle… and in the first Temple… Idolatry consists in making an image an object of worship and ascribing to it the powers of the god it represents. If pictures or images of people [or any other beings/objects] are looked upon as possessing divine powers and are adored, they become idols.
Even in the New Testament, the emblems used in the Lord’s Supper were commanded by our Lord as an ongoing memorial of His sacrifice. I acknowledge that fact that the bread and the juice are not “carved images.” They are real food. However, it is possible that one could begin to think of the emblems as representing the Lord Himself rather than something the Lord has done.
Incidentally, I think this might be a possible argument to support the Protestant view of communion over the Roman Catholic view (transubstantiation).
2. Images distort our perceptions of God and what He is like.
Images cannot properly represent “spirit,” omni-presence, infinity and other qualities of God.
(Beacon Comm. – quoting Rawlinson) As the first commandment asserts the unity of God, and is a protest against polytheism, so the second asserts His spirituality, and is a protest against idolatry and materialism.
Is. 40:18 The prophet asks, “To whom then will ye liken God? Or what likeness will ye compare unto him?”
This is a rhetorical question that has no answer. God is so far above anyone or anything we know that there is nothing that could adequately represent His being or likeness.There is nothing that represents His spirituality. There is nothing that can adequately represent His infinity. There is no possible way to materially represent any of His divine attributes.
3. Images require worship to be limited to certain locations.
It doesn’t have to be a carved idol in order for this error to occur. Many people fall prey to this error in other ways as well.
I’ve already mentioned the misunderstanding that some have regarding communion. They act as though they are in the presence of God at the Lord’s Supper, but not at other times or places in their lives.
It can be: church buildings, certain people, or specific objects that “make us feel closer to God.” Whatever that “image” is, it can be a violation of the second commandment if it makes me think of God in terms that are not consistent with His true nature.
God is everywhere at all times and He is Spirit, so that means I can be in His presence and communicate with Him anywhere at anytime. This was the error Jesus addressed with the Samaritan woman at the well when she asked Jesus which was correct, worshiping God in the mountain or in Jerusalem.
4. Images can become so important that they eventually become the object of worship.
It truly appears as though the Lord is trying to get us to realize that even though the carving of an image or idol seems innocent enough at first (after all, it’s only for the purpose of helping me worship God better), it is inevitable, over time, that the image will become so important to us that it becomes the object of our worship and adoration. This can also be true about rituals and forms that have become more important than the Lord Himself.
5. This command can apply to false mental images.
(David Bubb, Living Life At a Perfect Ten) “This principle deals with your picture of God which affects the way you worship God…. This second commandment shows us that as we worship, we must never reduce God to some figment of our imagination or to some distorted view.”
Some people can honestly say that they have not carved out or molded any kind of image and bowed down to it. But, they have images and concepts in their mind about God that are nothing like what the Bible says God is. They too have violated the spirit of this commandment.
Conclusion:
Dear friends, God declares that He is a jealous God. We talked about that in our discussion of the first commandment. He won’t tolerate a divided affection or loyalty in our heart. Our heart and soul must be wholly committed to Him.
Neither will He tolerate our worship being directed to Him through a man-made image. The stated reason is because He is a jealous God. Nothing can compete for our worship.

The next sermon in this series is: Words Mean Things (link available in blog archive on right)

Friday, February 4, 2011

O How He Loves You and Me (32mb)



(To download an MP3 file of this message, click on the title above. To listen now online, click on the play button of the audio player shown above.)

This sermon is the eighth in a ten-part series on the attributes of God. This message continues the category of attributes that some theologians refer to as the "Moral Attributes" of God. The topics covered in this sermon include: love, mercy and grace.

Written Excerpts:

1 John 4:16 “God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him.”

Introduction:  There are a number of words in our vocabulary that have changed in meaning over time – some with little consequence and others with a great deal of consequence. A word that I believe has changed in some pretty significant ways over the course of time is the word “love.”
Far too many people have a distorted concept of love. Some, if they were honest, would admit that they see love as synonymous with lust. Others think of love as a warm, fuzzy, emotional feeling that inspires thoughts of admiration, etc. towards another person.
As we continue to study about the nature of God and the qualities that are attributed to him in the Bible, we find an abundance of passages that speak of the love of God. Yet, many people today have a rather unbiblical and misinformed idea of God’s love.
In our discussion of the love of God, we are going to also include the concepts of mercy and grace.
III.       Moral Attributes
A. Holiness, Righteousness and Justice.
B. Love, Mercy and Grace
Today, we are talking about attributes that we could say are the exact opposite of those discussed last week.
1. Definitions of the terms.
Love – Have affection for; take pleasure in; be devoted to, with the result of benevolence (i.e. gifts or favors).
Mercy – The quality of love demonstrated in the withholding of judgment that is deserved.
Grace – The quality of love demonstrated in the granting of favors, gifts or blessings that are not deserved.
Both mercy and grace are rooted in the Love of God. It is because of His love that He gives grace and extends mercy.
2. Important Observations from Scripture.
a. Love, like holiness, is what God IS, not what He HAS.
Last week we read the scripture where God declares, “Be ye holy for I am holy.”
Today, I would point out two verses in 1 John where it says God is love. (4:8, 16) “He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is love…. God is love; and he that dwelleth in love dwelleth in God, and God in him.”
Some theologians have even stated that the core of God’s nature is holy-love and everything else springs from that absolutely perfect balance of holiness and love.
b. God’s love is universal. That is, He loves everyone in the entire world.
John 3:16; 2 Peter 3:9
If God’s love is universal, meaning that no one is left out, then it must also be..
c. God’s love is unconditional.
That means we do not have to measure up to certain requirements in order to get Him to love us. Romans 5:8.
d. God initiates love before receiving any love in return.
That is, He makes the first move toward us without waiting for us to come asking for His love.
1 John 4:10, 19
Squire Parsons wrote the song titled, “He Came to Me.”
The gulf that separated me from Christ, my Lord,
It was so vast the crossing I could never ford;
From where I was to His demands, it seemed so far;
I cried, "Dear Lord, I cannot come to where you are."

He came to me, O, He came to me.
When I could not come to where He was, He came to me.
That's why He died on Calvary;
When I could not come to where He was, He came to me.
e. God’s love is costly.
It is a costly love because it is a self-sacrificing love. John 3:16 “God so love the world that He gave….”
A self-sacrificing, costly love is also a principled love. That is, it is a love that calculates the risks, but is demonstrated and expressed anyway because it is worth the cost.
f. God’s love is a jealous love.
Exodus 34:14. In the context of this verse, the Lord warns against intermarrying with the Canaanites and adopting their worship of idols and pagan gods. As He gives this warning, the sin of idol worship is described as “playing the harlot” – terminology used to describe marital / sexual unfaithfulness.
Deut. 4:24. We tend to think of jealousy as a negative quality; a trait that has negative connotations or meanings. Yet, the Bible is describing God as a jealous God.
If you stop and think about it, it makes complete sense. If there was no level of jealousy at all then there would be a positive reason to question the amount of love the person has.
There is an exclusiveness about love that is God-given and the way God created it.
g. God’s love is constantly in tension with and in harmony with His holiness.
There is never any contradiction between the holiness and love of God. Yet, it is difficult for us to understand the harmony between them.
Over emphasis on the holiness of God; excluding his love leads to a view that sees God as a tyrant, or harsh dictator that can never be satisfied or pleased. Over emphasis on the love of God; to the exclusion of His holiness leads to the idea that God is tolerant of everything and permissive.
The Apostle Paul addresses this tension even as he exhorts believers to “Let [your] love be without dissimulation [hypocrisy]. Abhor that which is evil; cleave to that which is good.” (Romans 12:9) If someone does not have the capacity to hate what is evil, then it is doubtful they have the capacity to love what is good, or to even love at all.
For love to be genuine, it must seek to conquer all enemies of love that would seek to destroy it.
Conclusion:
So, what does all this mean? Why is it so important to know that God loves me?
1. To really grasp the full meaning of God’s love for me should motivate me to respond by loving Him in return.1 John 4:19.
My back was turned to Him. I didn’t know Him or want Him, but He sought me and came to me and died for me.
2. I should love those that He loves.
1 John 4:11. My love for others needs to have the same qualities that God has for me.
It cannot be based upon their “worth” or “likeability” but base upon the love of Christ working through us.
Remember, the kind of love I’m talking about here is not warm, fuzzy emotional feelings, but a principled compassion that recognizes how much God loves us and wants to pass that on to others.
There are a lot of people who have never known or sensed the love of God, because they have never felt it or sensed it from any of God’s people. This is the kind of love that will do the right thing and what is needed whether I feel like it or not.

The next sermon in this series is: To Tell You the Truth (link is located in blog archive on right)

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Our Gloriously Holy God (38mb)



(To download an MP3 file of this message, click on the title above. To listen now online, click on the play button of the audio player shown above.)

This sermon is the seventh in a ten-part series on the attributes of God. This message begins to discuss the category of attributes that some theologians refer to as the "Moral Attributes" of God. The topic covered in this message is the holiness of God including His righteousness and justice.

Written Excerpts:

Exodus 15:11 Who is like unto thee, O LORD, among the gods? Who is like thee, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?
Introduction:
Remember that I stated at the outset of this series that we were going to be learning more about God so that the knowledge we gain will lead us to a personal and intimate knowledge of God.
In order for that to happen, it will require for us to do some thinking, meditating, and studying on our own. It will require us to spend time dwelling on His perfections and then worshiping and adoring Him as He is.
Today we are going to begin talking about a new category of attributes – Moral Attributes.
III.       Moral Attributes
Moral Attributes are those qualities that are not only true about Him, but they are qualities that He shares, in some degree, with mankind, who was made in His image. They are qualities that refer to God’s governance over free and intelligent moral beings.
A. Holiness, Righteousness and Justice.
It appears that these qualities are very closely related to each other, so we will consider them together.
1. Definitions of the terms.
Holiness – Supreme moral excellence; the absolute exclusion of every conceivable principle of moral evil, and the possession, in an unlimited degree, of every conceivable principle of moral good.
Exodus 15:11 “Who is like unto thee, O LORD, among the gods? who is like thee, glorious in holiness, fearful in praises, doing wonders?”
Righteousness – God’s attribute of holiness considered as the standard for all His actions.
Ps. 145:17 “The Lord is righteous in all his ways, and holy in all his works.”
Justice – The administration of God’s holiness in the form of rewards and punishments.
Ps. 9:7-8 “The LORD shall endure for ever: he hath prepared his throne for judgment. And he shall judge the world in righteousness, he shall minister judgment to the people in uprightness.”
2. Important Observations from Scripture.
a. The holiness of God is underived.
In other words, just as we said previously about other attributes of God, He does not conform to some outside standard of holiness; He IS the standard of holiness.
Exodus 15:11 “Who is like you O Lord…glorious in holiness….”
Lev. 11:44 “…You shall be holy; for I am holy.”
In the Exodus passage, the implication is that God stands alone in regards to holiness, just as He stands alone in all of His divine perfections. There is no one or nothing that measures up to His holiness.
“Glorious in holiness” – has been translated by some scholars as “glorified in holiness.” I understand that to mean that God’s holiness, moral perfection, or infinite purity is the thing that causes His name to be exalted, glorified and adored by the hosts of heaven and the entire creation.
In the Leviticus passage, God is telling the people of Israel that the underlying reason they need to be holy is because He is holy; He is the standard. (I’ll have more to say about that later.)
b. God’s holiness is the principle for His own activity.
Everything He does is ultimately an expression of His holiness.
Ps. 145:17 “The Lord is righteous in all his ways, and holy in all his works.”
God has manifested his holiness in various ways throughout the history of mankind as recorded in scripture.
For example:
·          The giving of the Law; including the content of the Law, as well as all the circumstances surrounding that event. (Fire, smoke, thunder, warnings of sudden death, etc.)
·          In the various ways that God punished the wickedness and evil of the heathen as well as the unfaithfulness and rebellion of His own children (Israel). (Uzzah and the Ark of the Covenant)
·          In the death of His own Son, Jesus Christ, on the cross.
c. God’s holiness is the standard for His children.
Peter quotes the passage we referenced earlier in Leviticus when he says, “But as he which hath called you is holy, so be ye holy in all manner of conversation; because it is written, Be ye holy; for I am holy.” (1 Pe. 1:15-16)
Please notice and understand, dear friends, that God did not say, “Be holy because the world is so wicked.” That statement would imply that the world’s wickedness is the standard that we should measure ourselves by, and as long as we are better than the rest of the world, then we are doing quite well.
No. God said we are to be holy because He is holy. HE is the standard by which we must constantly measure ourselves.
If we keep comparing ourselves with ourselves, then our attitudes, behaviors and lifestyles will eventually become as corrupt and immoral as the “wicked” people were a decade or two ago,.
Why is this trend inevitable? Because we tend to become desensitized and accustomed to evil the longer we are around it.
We are a lot like the wicked that God addresses in Psalms 50:21 “These things you have done, and I kept silent; You thought that I was altogether like you; But I will rebuke you, And set them in order before your eyes.”
It’s no wonder that Isaiah’s experience is described the way that it is in Isaiah 6. After he had a revelation of God “high and lifted up,” and the angels crying “Holy, Holy, Holy;” his response was a passionate “Woe is me!”
For many people today, whether in the church or out, when they are asked about their conduct or their attitudes, they are apt to reply that they are as good as (or better than) most other people. Well, dear friends, that is the problem. We must not compare ourselves with other people. The real question is, how do we measure up with the holiness of God?
We may be tempted to feel like there is no hope; there is no use trying; we can never measure up. That certainly would be true if we were left to our own efforts. But God has provided a remedy! The plan of redemption is adequate!
1 John 3:8b “For this purpose was the Son of God manifested that He might destroy the works of the devil.”

I’m not implying that we will be or can be absolutely perfect, or reach the point where we never make mistakes or can never succumb to a temptation. I am saying that the remedy for sin and impurity that was accomplished through the shed blood of Jesus Christ is sufficient for the problem we have.
That means we must not make excuses for sin! We must not justify it, nor condone it.
To be holy, means that we are repulsed by sin just like He is. It means that our supreme desire in life is to be like Jesus.
d. God’s justice is based on His holiness and is administered in truth.
Again, we have become so accustomed to perverted justice in our courts and governments. Sometimes the innocent are convicted and the guilty go free. This will never happen with God.
The Psalmist says His judgments are “true and righteous altogether.” (19b)
The justice of God knows all things and judges all things not according to our perspectives and our “excuses,” but according to His truth and especially according to His provisions that He has made to overcome all sin.
We might have an excuse when we stand before God, if there was no Calvary. We might have an excuse, if there was no empty tomb. We might have an excuse if there was no Pentecost; no Holy Spirit to bring God Himself into our very own hearts and lives.
But there is a cross and an empty tomb that testify God has done everything that is needed for us to be redeemed, forgiven, cleansed and delivered by His blood and power of His resurrection.
He has given us His Holy Spirit to live within our hearts and lives enabling us to be holy and righteous before God.
Conclusion:
I hope that your heart has not only been convicted this morning, but inspired and challenged to seek after God.
I hope that the Holy Spirit has created within your spirit a discontent for living according to the status quo of this world and its standards.
I hope that He has inspired a passionate desire in the depths of your soul to constantly seek and exemplify the holiness of Christ in attitudes and in conduct.

The next sermon in this series is: Oh How He Loves You and Me (link available in the blog archive on the right)

God Is So Good (31mb)



(To download an MP3 file of this message, click on the title above. To listen now online, click on the play button of the audio player shown above.)

This sermon is the sixth in a ten-part series on the attributes of God. This message continues to discuss what some theologians refer to as "Relative Attributes" and specifically covers the wisdom, goodness and faithfulness of God.

Written Excerpts:

Currently we are discussing the…
II.   Relative Attributes – Those aspects of God’s being that directly relate to His creation and His interaction with it. They refer to God’s mode of operation and activity within His creation and with His creatures.
Last Sunday we tried to cover the topics of Omnipotence; Omnipresence; and Omniscience.
A. Omnipotence – God is unlimited in power, might and ability.
B. Omnipresence – God is present in all space at all times.
C. Omniscience – God is infinite with regards to knowledge and understanding.
Today we will continue by looking at the attributes of Wisdom; Goodness and Faithfulness.
D. Wisdom – In general, wisdom is the adaptation of knowledge in order to achieve desired ends.
In regards to God, we understand God’s wisdom to be the use of infinite knowledge within the context of eternity to achieve goals and purposes that glorify God.
1. Wisdom operates without restrictions of time.
Job 12:12-13
Job seems to be comparing the wisdom of God with the wisdom of old men who, in his day, lived to be hundreds of years. In spite of all the knowledge and wisdom they would accumulate in their long lives, God’s wisdom is greater.
The message in context seems to be that their long life is nothing compared to the eternal God, who has a view and perspective infinitely greater than theirs.
We have the ability to compare situations and events with others that exist in our short memories, but God has the ability to orchestrate events and situations according to His eternal perspectives and His eternal purposes.
2. Wisdom is active in all God’s works.
Ps. 104:24; Ps. 136:5
God does everything from creation of the world to working out little details of our lives with infinite, eternal wisdom that is geared to accomplish His eternal purposes and promote His eternal glory.
3. God is the source of wisdom.
Prov. 2:6
The book of Proverbs is full of verses that exhort us to seek and get wisdom from the Lord. In fact, there are many verses written in such a manner to portray God as the personification Wisdom.
The goal for each of us as Christians should not be simply to have extensive knowledge of truth, but to have God’s wisdom to know how best to apply the truth in accomplishing God’s purposes.
As we are trying to apply God’s wisdom to the situations we face in life, we always need to remember that God’s point of view is far better than ours. James 1:5
E. Goodness –
Exodus 34:6  (see Ex. 33:19)
(Packer) Within the cluster of God’s moral perfections there is one in particular to which the term “goodness” points…. That is the quality of generosity.
Ps. 84:11 “For the Lord God is a sun and shield; the Lord will give grace and glory; no good thing will He withhold from those who walk uprightly.”
1. The goodness of God is underived.
Since God is eternal and infinite in all His divine perfections, then “goodness” as described already above, is also eternal and infinite. Therefore, God’s goodness is inherent within His own being and He does not gain goodness from anyone / anything else.
God does not conform to some independent standard of goodness in order to be considered good. God IS the standard of goodness.
2. God alone has the unique perspective to know what is truly good and what isn’t.
As mentioned earlier with regards to the subject of wisdom, our perspective is so limited in time and scope. We tend to judge the “goodness” of something based upon situations and events that are somewhat isolated. But, God has the unique perspective of eternity.  
We’re not the only ones that are observing the activity of God. All the heavenly created beings are also watching and observing the activity of God within this world and throughout the universe.
3. God is not the originator of evil.
There is a passage of scripture that declares, “I form the light, and create darkness: I make peace, and create evil: I the LORD do all these things.” (Is. 45:7)
However, the context here denotes “evil” as disaster or calamity in the natural world.
(John Wesley) “Why is evil in the world? Because man was created in the image of God; because he is not mere matter, a clod of earth, a lump of clay, without sense or understanding, but a spirit like his Creator; a being endued not only with sense and understanding, but also with a will exerting itself in various affections.
 “To crown all the rest he was endued with liberty… of choosing good and evil. Indeed had he not been a free as well as intelligent being, his understanding would have been as incapable of holiness or any other kind of virtue, as a tree or a block of marble. And having this power…of choosing good or evil, he chose the latter, he chose evil. Thus sin entered into the world.”
This same freedom of will and ability to think, reason and choose was apparently also once afforded to angels who rebelled against God even before Adam and Eve. Thus, the origin of Satan.
4. Our goodness is derived from God and we are to do good unto others.
None of us have any inherent goodness in ourselves. Any ability or desire for goodness that we have is a gift of God’s grace.
As Christians, we are urged to perform good deeds and acts of kindness and generosity to others. Why? Because that is the nature of God, whom we are to imitate.
F. Faithfulness
Hebrew root from which the words translated "faithful" and "faithfulness" in the Old Testament are derived means "to prop" or "stay" or "support." The word "faithful", as applied to a person, means someone a person can safely lean upon. The Greek word used in the New Testament means trustworthy or to be relied upon…. (This definition taken from: Whatthebibleteaches.com)
Deut. 7:9 “Know therefore that the Lord thy God, He is God, the faithful God."
The faithfulness of God is inseparably connected to all His other perfections (as we have been emphasizing about all of them), but especially seems related to His immutability.
The very reason that God can be ‘leaned on’ or trusted is because His nature never changes.
1. God is faithful to His own nature
2. God is faithful to His children.
Again, we must remember that when men “judge” God and declare that God let them down and wasn’t there when they needed them, they do so because of their limited perspective on life.
They cannot see what God sees.

The next sermon in this series is: Our Gloriously Holy God (find it in the blog archive on the right)

The Sanctity of Human Life by Bonnie Schaefer (37mb)



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On January 30, 2011 our church had a guest speaker in observance of the Sanctity of Human Life Sunday. Our guest speaker was Bonnie Schaefer who is the Director of the Slippery Rock Pregnancy Center located in Slippery Rock, PA. This message focuses on the pro-life message, specific testimonies of past SRPC clients, and current needs of the center.

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

The Omni Traits of God (32mb)



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This is the fifth sermon in a ten-part series on the attributes of God. This message begins the category of attributes that some theologians refer to as "Relative Attributes," and it focuses on the attributes of omnipotence, omnipresence and omniscience.

Written Excerpts:

Today, we are going to continue our study by moving into the next category of attributes.
II.   Relative Attributes – Those aspects of God’s being that directly relate to His interaction with the creation. They refer to God’s mode of operation and activity within His creation and with His creatures.
The six attributes we will be talking about in this category include: Omnipotence; Omnipresence; Omniscience; Wisdom; Goodness and Faithfulness.
I plan to try to cover three of these today and the other three next Sunday.
As you may have noticed, the first three of the six attributes I mentioned a moment ago all started with the prefix “omni,” which is the reason I chose the title for the message that is printed in the bulletin.
According to the dictionary, “omni” is a prefix that means “all, everywhere.”
Taking the terms in alphabetical order, we will try to explain each of the three terms that all begin with “omni.”
A. Omnipotence – God is unlimited in power, might and ability.
Jer. 32:16b-17 “…I prayed to the Lord, saying: ‘Ah, Lord GOD! Behold, You have made the heavens and the earth by Your great power and outstretched arm. There is nothing too hard for You.”
Psalm 115:3 “But our God is in heaven; He does whatever He pleases.”
The putting these two verses together led one theologian to explain:
Omnipotence is “that perfection by which God is able to do all that He pleases to do.” (H.O. Wiley)
1. Expressions of God’s power
God expresses His power in creation.
Jeremiah 10:12; Psalm 89:10-11
These and many, many other verses reveal the unlimited, unimaginable power of God that is displayed in creation. When we look around us at the wonders of nature, it certainly reveals the power of God.
God expresses His power in sustaining creation.
Take a good look around at the world of nature here on earth and in the larger picture of the starry heavens, then turn your eyes away from the telescope and look into the microscope.
Our study of molecules and atoms in the tiniest realm of nature demonstrates the unbelievable complexity and design. But it also reveals the awesome power in holding it all together.
Hebrews 1:3
God expresses His power in miracles.
Abraham & Sarah giving birth at their old age; Crossing of the Red Sea (Both of these O.T. examples are used many times in Scripture as the classic examples of God's power in the O.T.)
2. Distinctions about God’s power.
God will not do anything against His own nature or will.
For example, since He obviously created mankind with a free will, He evidently restrains His own power in order to allow humans to exercise their freedom with which they were created.
We believe that God certainly has the power to prevent any human decision or action from thwarting His overall will for things like redemption and the culmination of earthly life (i.e. return of Christ, judgment of mankind, etc).
Yet, we believe that man, being created with freedom to choose either good or evil; right or wrong, can make decisions and take actions that are contrary to the will of God. This is only possible as long as God chooses to limit His sovereign power.
God gives power to His creatures, but He never gives it away.
If His power is infinite, then He cannot relinquish any of His power. It is never diminished. He can do anything as easily as everything else. All of His actions are done without effort. He expends no energy that must be replenished. (A.W. Tozer)
B. Omnipresence – God is present in all space; He is not bound by limitations of space. Last week we spoke of His immensity, which emphasized the “distance” of God beyond the bounds of space. Now, we are emphasizing the “closeness” of God within all space.
You and I cannot go anywhere to “escape” the presence of God, or to suddenly find ourselves beyond the “reach” of His “hand.”
Classic passages on this topic: Psalm 139:7-10; Jer. 23:24
God is not present in the same manner in all places.
Isaiah 63:15 “Look down from heaven, and see from Your habitation, holy and glorious.
Isaiah 64:1 “Oh, that You would rend the heavens! That You would come down!
 “The omnipresence of God with finite beings or things must ever be different from His presence with Himself in His Glory.” (H.O. Wiley)
C. Omniscience – God is unlimited and infinite with regards to knowledge and understanding.
Psalm 139:1-6
1. God’s knowledge is infinite.
Psalm 147:5 “Great is our Lord, and of great power: His understanding is infinite.”
Therefore… He possesses perfect knowledge and therefore has no need to learn… He has never learned and cannot learn. (A.W. Tozer)
He knows everything actual and everything possible. (A. Pink)
God not only knows every choice we will make, but every alternative choice we could have made. (Dale Yocum)

2. God’s knowledge is founded in eternity.
Acts 15:18 “Known unto God are all His works from the beginning of the world.”
Since God’s knowledge is founded in eternity, which is outside the bounds of time, therefore we affirm that God’s knowledge is not “causative.”
How can God know something for certain without causing it to come true? I believe the answer is because His knowledge is founded in eternity. That means, even though God created time, and He certainly can relate to time, and go with us as we mark off time, yet He is also above all restraints of time, and can see and know past, present and future all at once.
He can obviously see every event and detail that is yet in the future as if it was in the present. To explain how he can know for certain what is going to happen without causing it to happen, let me say it like this:
I know with absolute certainty that each of you are sitting here listening to my sermon in the sanctuary of Wayside Community Church. The reason I know it with absolute certainty is because it is presently happening. But, I didn’t cause you to sit here and listen to me. You made that choice and decision yourself.
In the same way I believe that God knows with absolute certainty every person that will be saved and every person that will be lost, because He sees the future as well as the present. Yet, He can still give us the choice to accept or reject His grace and the plan of salvation He provided.
To the Christian, it is a great source of comfort to understand that God knows all about us. He understands our deepest desires and motives even when we are misunderstood by others.
“He knows our frame and remembers that we are dust.” Ps. 103:14
To the unbeliever and the hypocrite, it should be a source of great discomfort.
Hebrews 4:13 “Neither is there any creature that is not manifest in His sight; but all things are naked and open unto the eyes of Him with whom we have to do.”
Conclusion:
As we bring this message to a close I just want to emphasize that each of these traits we have discussed today truly reveal the awesomeness of our God. My mind cannot fully grasp or fathom the reality.
When we begin to meditate and dwell on each of them we can certainly understand how comforting and disturbing these thoughts can be, depending on whether we are saved or lost.

The next sermon in this series is: God Is So Good (listed in blog archive on right)