Stand Firm In His Love

“…but with great compassion I will gather you….
…with everlasting love I will have compassion on you,”
says the LORD, your Redeemer.
“For the mountains may depart and the hills be removed,
but my steadfast love shall not depart from you,
and my covenant of peace shall not be removed,”
says the LORD, who has compassion on you.
– Isaiah 54:7-8, 10

God offers us great compassion. Not just a little. Not just some. Not just the leftovers. God offers us great compassion.

God shows us everlasting love. Not just occasional love. Not just temporary love. Not just conditional love. God shows us everlasting love.

On the cross he showed that love. And on the cross he paid the price to bring us peace with God (53:5). And this covenant of peace cannot be removed, it cannot be cancelled, it cannot be annulled.

And so, even if the mountains and hills in all their stability were to disappear, he will not remove his love from us. He will yet have compassion upon us. Because of Jesus, nothing can separate us from his great compassion and everlasting love.  So stand firm in his love.

Stop fretting that you will somehow lose his love – it cannot be removed.

Stop working, trying desperately to earn his love – he already loves you.

Stop grumbling about your life as though he doesn’t love you.

Stop sinning against this God who loves you so much.

Stop caring what world thinks of you – what does it matter if God himself loves you.

Stop looking for love in all the other places our world looks for love – you have already found the fountain of all love.

So stand firm in God’s love.  Rest in his everlasting love & his great compassion.

The God of universe loves you.

So stand firm in his love.

Passion Points

Here are some good posts for your weekend reading:

“May I Go In There?” – Jared Wilson

5 Resurrection Realities That Reorient Our Evangelism – Steven Lee (TGC)

5 Reasons to Rejoice in Persecution – Tim Challies

Don’t Follow Your Heart – Jon Bloom (DG)

Hope you have a great Lord’s Day following your Lord who died and rose again so you might draw near to Him!

Current: Indiana RFRA

By now you must have heard about Indiana’s new RFRA law, but if you listen to the media’s portrayal, you probably think it has to do with discriminating against homosexuals. But of course, it really has nothing to do with discrimination, and everything to do with protecting our religious freedom. Joe Carter has a helpful post that summarizes What You Should Know About Religious Freedom Restoration Acts.  If you want the quick version, check out this helpful visual.  Even some, like Stephen Prothero and Douglas Laycock, who support same-sex marriage argue that that the law is not about discrimination but religious freedom. In Laycock’s words:

The critical fact with respect to all the hysteria over Indiana is this: No one has ever won an exemption from a discrimination law under a RFRA standard. Few have tried, and none have won. There is absolutely no basis in experience for the charge that these laws are a license to discriminate.

Despite having nothing to do with discrimination, many called for boycotting the state of Indiana. Aaron Earls points out that If You Are Boycotting Indiana, Here’s Where Else You Need to Boycott – including many other states with similar laws, our country with a similar federal law, and many other nations with much less friendly attitudes toward homosexuality.  But as Earls points out again, the laws really have nothing to do with homosexuality, and everything to do with religious freedom.  So boycotting Indiana really means one is opposing religious freedom.

And one wonders if that isn’t, after all, the point. How do we explain all the freaking out over this law that we have recently witnessed? Did the media and many political leaders, business leaders, entertainment leaders, and sports leaders simply act out of total ignorance of what the law says (raising serious questions of their competence)?  Or is there a growing opposition to religious freedom that the law seeks to protect?

Albert Mohler points to recent editorials in both The Washington Post and The New York Times that seek to redefine religious liberty, desire to give the government the right to infringe on religious liberty, or simply demand that religions bow “to the enlightenments of modernity.”

Meanwhile Russell Moore writes:

Many of those leading the discussion of religious freedom have little or no understanding of what motivates religious people…. If one cannot empathize with why defying conscience on a matter of religious exercise is a life-or-death concern, then one is free to impute all sorts of evil motives….  This is particularly problematic when widespread ignorance of religious motivation is joined with a zealotry that can only be called religious: for the stamping out of all dissent against the sexual revolution.

In our culture’s headlong rush toward so called “same-sex marriage,” it seems that many are willing to steamroll right over religious freedom.  Indeed, Frank Turek argues that “Same-Sex Marriage” Is Becoming the Established Religion. He writes:

Forget tolerance. This is well beyond tolerance. Now, if you don’t agree to celebrate same sex marriage, the established religion will commence an inquisition and, without a trial, punish you for heresy. That’s why this legislation is necessary.

So how should the church respond?

First, the church needs to stand firm on the Bible’s teaching on homosexuality and the definition of marriage no matter how unpopular it may be.  We are not in a popularity contest, and we seek to please God, not men.

Second, the church needs to continue to fight for religious freedom. We need to make our case in the public square for the freedom to believe, and to practice what we believe.

Third, the church needs to look past this looming issue, and continue to do what the church is always called to do – love God with all of our being and love our neighbor as ourselves.  Jesus said the world would know we are Christians by our love.  We need to counter our culture’s impression of hate with the true practice of daily love – even toward those who oppose us.

Finally, the church needs to remember what we celebrated only a few days ago.  Our Savior is risen.  He ascended into heaven and reigns at the right hand of the Father.  We need not freak out. The sky is not falling.  Our God is still on the throne.

Book Look: What The Bible Really Teaches About Homosexuality

Kevin DeYoung’s new book What The Bible Really Teaches About Homosexuality is a short, yet incredibly helpful, book written for Christians to better understand the Bible’s teaching on homosexuality. In a world opposing, ridiculing, and often attacking the Scripture’s teachings, this book is a much needed resource for the church.

Part One looks at many of the most relevant verses related to homosexuality. He happily begins with Genesis 1-2 which is foundational for the Biblical understanding of homosexuality as it defines how God designed humanity, sexuality, and marriage (chapter 1).

He then goes on to look at Genesis 19 (chapter 2), Leviticus 18 and 20 (chapter 3), Romans 1 (chapter 4), and I Corinthians 6 and I Timothy 4 (chapter 5). Each chapter addresses the basic issues and shows how the text supports the traditional interpretation. I particularly found his connection of the words used in I Corinthians 6 and I Timothy 4 with the words found in Leviticus 18 and 20 to be quite helpful and conclusive.

Certainly more could be said for each passage, but overall DeYoung does an admirable job summarizing the main points in an accessible way for the every-day Christian. The chapters taken together provide a good case for the traditional Biblical understanding.

Part Two addresses common objections to the Biblical understanding of homosexuality. In chapter 6, he shows that the Bible really does take homosexuality, and indeed all sexual sin, very seriously (this is not an irrelevant issue). Chapter 7 points to the widespread homosexual activity in the Greek and Roman world that counters the often heard argument that Paul wasn’t talking about the same homosexual behavior we see today. In reading this chapter and the earlier one on Romans 1, I was reminded that we are quickly returning to the religious climate of the early church, and that we shouldn’t be surprised by the rise of homosexuality as our nation veers further and further from God.

Other chapters helpfully address the necessity of repentance for the Christian and the church, and the folly of the “wrong side of history” argument. I thought he drifted a bit in chapter 8 as he dissected the sin of gluttony, and again in chapter 12 as he discussed the church at Thyatira in Revelation 2, but perhaps these have been important points in experiences he has had on this issue.

Meanwhile, chapter 11 was spot on as it addressed the objection that the Bible’s position on homosexuality just isn’t fair. He treats the struggle of having homosexual desires, the necessity of celibacy in connection to those desires, and the misery many feel because of the struggle. Here DeYoung moves from scholar to pastor, and addresses these real feelings with both grace and truth. This chapter alone is worth the price of the book for any Christian with friends or family members who identify themselves as homosexual.

All in all, the book makes an excellent resource for any Christian who wants to better understand the Bible’s teaching on this important issue. As a pastor I can see myself recommending it to people in my church and using it as a resource in my own teaching.

Disclaimer: I received a complimentary copy of this book in exchange for my honest review.

Sermon Songs: Isaiah 53:10-12

MusicNotes

Jesus came to do God’s will
Ancient prophecies fulfill
There upon Golgotha’s hill
Hallelujah what a Savior

Our iniquities bearing
For our guilt an offering
That we might be his offspring
Hallelujah what a Savior

Jesus rose in victory
Conquered sin and death for me
This my song eternally
Hallelujah what a Savior

– From a sermon on Isaiah 53:10-12
(To the tune of the “Hallelujah What A Savior”)

Consider His Victory

Yet it was the will of the LORD to crush him;
he has put him to grief;
when his soul makes an offering for guilt,
he shall see his offspring; he shall prolong his days;
the will of the LORD shall prosper in his hand.
Out of the anguish of his soul he shall see and be satisfied;
by his knowledge shall the righteous one, my servant,
make many to be accounted righteous,
and he shall bear their iniquities.
Therefore I will divide him a portion with the many,
and he shall divide the spoil with the strong,
because he poured out his soul to death
and was numbered with the transgressors;
yet he bore the sin of many,
and makes intercession for the transgressors.
– Isaiah 53:10-12

Consider Jesus Our Savior. Consider his victory. Jesus rose victoriously. It is not stated in so many words in these verses, but is everywhere implied. After he has made an offering for guilt (by dying), he yet will see his offspring, his days will be prolonged, and the will of God will prosper in his hands (v10). Again, he will see and be satisfied (v11). And then he will receive the victor’s prize in v12. All of these things require his resurrection in order to happen in any realistic meaningful way.

And yet his victory is not simply found in his resurrection, but in what he accomplished through his death and resurrection:

  • By making an offering for guilt, he brings about an offspring (v10), a people for God who have had their sins paid for so that they might have a relationship with God.
  • By his perfectly righteous life, death, and resurrection, he makes God’s people to be accounted righteous (v11), so that there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.
  • He intercedes on our behalf (v12), through his payment of sin on the cross, and now in heaven, so that no accusation of the devil against us can stand.
  • Finally, he conquered death and lives forevermore (v10), that in Christ we too might have the sure hope of our own resurrection someday through him.

Consider Jesus our Savior. Consider his victory in his resurrection and for our salvation.

Father, thank you for the good news of the resurrection of Jesus.
May we live in gratitude and hope as we ponder the many saving benefits
of your salvation purchased for us.

Consider His Sacrifice

But he was pierced for our transgressions;
he was crushed for our iniquities;
upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace,
and with his wounds we are healed.
All we like sheep have gone astray;
we have turned—every one—to his own way;
and the LORD has laid on him the iniquity of us all.
– Isaiah 53:5-6

Consider Jesus our Savior. Consider his sacrifice.

Like sheep, we had all wandered away from the Shepherd to do our own thing. We chose the path of selfishness instead of loving God and people. We rebelled against our Creator and King. We chose what was evil and wicked. And all of our sins were laid on Jesus.

Jesus took our sins upon himself there on the cross. He paid the price for our sins. And consider the price for our sins. He was wounded. He was crushed. He bore our punishment, and the stripes we deserved. For us. In our place.

He bore the chastisement that we deserved to bring us peace – peace with God. In Jesus, we are reconciled to God. In Jesus, we can have a relationship with our Creator. We can draw near and commune with him as his children. We can know his daily presence in our lives, and the joy he alone can give.

And by his stripes we are healed, healed from the infection of sin and all its dire consequences. We are healed from the guilt of sin which was paid on the cross. We are healed from the power of sin, so we can live a new life with Jesus. And we will one day be healed from the presence of sin and all of its results. When Jesus returns, there will be no more sin, no more sorrow, no more sickness, no more suffering, no more pain, no more death.

Consider Jesus our Savior. Consider his sacrifice to pay for our sins to bring us peace with God and healing from sin.

Father, thank you for Jesus who paid the price for my sins.
Help me to live in the peace and healing that was purchased for me,
even as I look toward the day of final healing when Jesus returns.

Sermon Songs: Isaiah 53:4-9

MusicNotes

All like sheep we’ve gone astray
Each one turned to his own way
For each sin Jesus did pay
Hallelujah what a Savior

Bore our sins upon the tree
Fully paid the penalty
Crushed and wounded all for me
Hallelujah what a Savior

My salvation He did win
Freely I may enter in
Full redemption from my sin
Hallelujah what a Savior

Fully innocent was He
Perfect Lamb of God to be
Stricken and oppressed for me
Hallelujah what a Savior

With the wicked made His grave
Buried in a rich man’s cave
All of this for me to save
Hallelujah what a Savior

– From a sermon on Isaiah 53:4-9
(To the tune of the “Hallelujah What A Savior”)