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Sanctification - Part 5 Radio Broadcast
Message No. 95023
"Victorious Christian Living"
Sanctification - Part 5
By P. G. Mathew, M.A., M.Div., Th.M.
Copyright © 1995 by P. G. Mathew
Let me conclude this subject of "Victorious Christian
Living," otherwise known as sanctification. I want to deal
with the means of grace. You know, what we need is grace. Isn't
that true? We need grace to live a holy life. We need grace every
day, because every day we face conflict. The sin in us tells us
to sin, and the Holy Spirit in us tells us exactly the opposite.
We need grace in order to obey, not the flesh, but the desires of
the Holy Spirit that register in our consciousness. So God in his
mercy has given us means by which we may receive grace that will
enable us to say "No" to ungodliness and to say
"Yes" to the Holy Spirit of God.
The first means of grace is prayer. Jesus Christ, the Son of God,
the fullness of deity, became perfect man and he practiced prayer
on a daily basis. He prayed and prayed and prayed. He always
prayed, and he received the grace of God. How much more must we,
who are sinners saved by grace, pray! I praise God for you who
come here at 6:30 in the morning and pray. Don't ever think that
is a useless effort. It is a wonderful effort, because through
prayer we receive what? Grace. Jesus Christ received grace, and
every man and woman of God who ever lived in this world received
grace. Martin Luther, in that great conflict during the time of
Reformation, prayed for many hours that he may receive grace to
engage in the real and serious battle for truth. And he was given
grace. He was upheld by God.
In Luke 22:40, Jesus Christ himself spoke about this as he taught
his disciples. "On reaching the place he said to them, 'Pray
that you will not fall into temptation.'" Notice, "that
you will not fall into temptation." We all are going to be
tempted every day, but the issue here is what? Pray that you will
not fall into temptation, that you will not yield to temptation,
that you will not be defeated. You know what happened to Peter.
He didn't pray. He was sleeping. And Peter and all the disciples went
away from Jesus Christ. Peter particularly, as a representative
for the rest of us, denied Jesus Christ three times. The reason
was that he did not pray.
How many battles could you and I have won if only we had engaged
in serious prayer! Why? Because prayer is a means of grace. When
we commit sin, we do this because we are graceless. That doesn't
mean you are without charm. That is not the meaning of that word.
Grace means divine ability given to us who are nothing. It is
divine ability.
So why did we commit that sin? Why did we yield to that
temptation? We were what? graceless. We were paupers in grace. We
were without grace. We were not rich in grace, because we refused
to pray. We slept.
Prayer means communing with the living, infinite, personal,
almighty God. It is conversation, like a child conversing with
the father. There is an exchange of ideas and abilities. And we
give him all our weaknesses, and he gives us all his strength. We
give him all our ignorance and he gives us all his enlightenment.
That's what prayer is. When you really pray in faith, you come
out built up in your inner man, able to endure hardship and face
trials and temptations. That's the excitement of Christianity. It
is an arena of battle.
So I urge that we engage in serious and focused prayer, that we
wrestle with God, as Jesus Christ himself wrestled in prayer in
the garden of Gethsemane. He prayed and prayed and prayed, and
God sustained him, we are told. In that strength he was able to
go to the cross and die for us, thus obeying God the Father
totally and completely.
The second means of grace is Bible study. We ought to know what
the will of God is all about. And where do you find the will of
God articulated? Not in the daily paper. Not in any other book.
There is only one book that records the will of God infallibly
and that is the Holy Scriptures - the Old and New Testaments.
Everyone who wages battle and wins victory in this conflict is a
person who prays and also reads the Holy Scriptures, that he or
she may know the will of God.
In the high priestly prayer of Jesus Christ in John 17, verse 17,
we read, "Sanctify them by the truth; your word is
truth." God's word is truth. It is that which cleanses our
spirits and our minds. We must spend much time in real study and
meditation of the word of God, until we understand what the will
of God is. Then we can speak clearly as to what God is saying and
as to what the world is saying. We need the ability to
discriminate. Unless we know truth, we cannot discriminate
between all kinds of ideas that are popping into our minds.
Psalm 1 addresses this issue. It says, "Blessed is the man
who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked or stand in the
way of sinners or sit in the seat of mockers. But his delight is
in the law of the Lord, and on his law he meditates day and
night." Because of his mediation upon the word of God day
and night, this man is able not to walk in the counsel of the
wicked or stand in the way of sinners or sit in the seat of
mockers. Because he delights in the will of God, he is able to
live a clean, righteous, holy life. He knows the way of the world
is the way of death, wickedness, and destruction. The way of the
Scripture is the way of life, righteousness, peace and joy.
Look at Deuteronomy 11:18: "Fix these words of mine in your
hearts and minds." You know, I don't even watch the news
anymore. Sometimes it makes me so frustrated, I have to turn it
off. What you get is the way of the world. But here we are told,
"Fix these words of mine in your hearts and minds. Tie them
as symbols on your hands and bind them on your foreheads. Teach
them to your children, talking about them when you sit at home
and when you walk along the road and when you lie down and when
you get up."
So the mind and heart of a child of God is completely focused,
not upon the nonsense that is dished out every day on television
or in the papers and magazines. A child of God focuses himself
upon the very word of God, which is spirit and life, and which
has the power to sanctify us and gives us the power to do his
will.
The third means of grace is fellowship. We need to fellowship
with the people of God. The greatest relationship we can ever
have in this world is fellowship with the people of God, which is
a greater fellowship than fellowship with our own unbelieving
relatives, who mock Jesus Christ and treat him with contempt. We
need to understand the importance of daily and weekly fellowship
with the people of God, because they have received grace from God
for you, and you have received grace from God for them. When we
come together we are receiving and giving the grace of God, and
our life is built up. Read the book of Acts and notice how the
believers, in love and unity, lived in fellowship, joy, caring
and sharing. And their spirits were being built up, and they were
enabled to engage in the battles of the world.
Fellowship is important. It does not mean that you just come to
church and then go home without speaking to anybody. If you do
that, you don't know what is going on. Relate to the people of
God. Receive from people of God. Counsel them in the way of God.
Rebuke them, if needs be, when they are wandering and say,
"Brother, that is not the way to go." It's important to
have such connectedness with God's people who receive grace from
God.
The fourth means of grace is Christian service. We need to engage
in Christian service. We need to proclaim the gospel. Whether or
not that person to whom you shared the gospel is saved, you
receive grace when you engage yourself in disseminating the
gospel of Christ. God saves all those whom he has chosen from the
foundation of the world, and he saves them through your preaching
and witnessing of the gospel. You and I are agents, rendering
service to bring to pass God's eternal purpose. You must
minister. You must witness.
Included in Christian service is generosity. We ought to be able
to be generous toward people. You are supposed to share, and that
is part of the means of grace also. It's a grace to part with a
dime or a dollar to assist somebody else in trouble or
difficulty. In this church I am very happy to say that we do that
without being told. That tells something about the vitality of
this church. But we need to engage in evangelism and generosity
toward others, because that activity is also a means of grace for
you.
The fifth means of grace is recognizing the second coming. We
need to focus our attention upon the second coming of Jesus
Christ. There are people who would say, "Let us build three
tents and let's dwell here," and "It is so nice and
wonderful here." Oh, no. Here was not what the early
Christians thought about. They focused their attention on the
coming of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. 1 John 3:2 says,
"Dear friends, now we are children of God, and what we will
be has not yet been made known. But we know that when he appears,
we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is." And
now he says in verse 3, "Everyone who has this hope"
that is, the hope of the second coming of Jesus Christ, when
Christ will destroy all rebellion and Christ will save his people
- "Everyone who has this hope in him purifies himself just
as he is pure."
In other words, it is a means of grace to focus our attention in
the eternal kingdom of God, not on the things of this world. We
must understand this world is going to be burned up. We should
not be like Mrs. Lot, who put all her hope in things temporal. I
don't think she was a born again person. She trusted God for
temporal things. How many people today in the Christian church
believe in God for temporal blessings? They have no clue as to
what eternal reality is all about, what the kingdom of God is all
about.
But if you are truly born of God, then you are focusing your
attention on Jesus Christ, who is seated on the right hand of God
the Father, and who is going to come again. So our prayer is,
"Maranatha, Lord come!" That's what we understand as we
study the New Testament, because this faith in the second coming
of Christ has a way of purifying ourselves and keeping ourselves
from being entangled with all the affairs of this world. We are
able to discriminate and say, "Not that, not this, not that,
not this! I want to engage my energy and attention upon that
which promotes the interest of the kingdom of God alone."
The sixth means of grace is to practice Christian confession.
What is the Christian confession? That Jesus Christ is Lord. That
is the Christian confession. There are people today who would
say, "Well, don't worry about this idea that Jesus Christ is
Lord, that he is sovereign and wants to rule your mind, your
thought and your will. That is what 'Jesus Christ is Lord' means.
It means he is sovereign, that he has absolute and total control
of your mind and your thoughts, and that he must rule you. Well,
you know, that seems pretty hard, so why don't you just receive
him as Savior?" This lowers biblical standards to keep them
in harmony with the experience that we put up with. We would
prefer to say, "Jesus Christ is Savior but he allows me to
live in my sin. Isn't that wonderful?" No! If you confess
with your mouth Jesus is Lord, and believe in your heart that God
raised him from the dead, you will be saved. We are not saved
because we said "Jesus is Savior." We are saved because
we acknowledge Jesus as Lord of our lives, and with all our being
we believe that he was raised from the dead.
In other words, practicing this confession means we must daily
allow ourselves to be ruled by Jesus Christ in our thoughts, in
our speech, in our actions, in our expenditures of money, in our
work and in every way. We say, "I am a Christian, and I am
to please Jesus Christ who is my Lord."
Now, I want to tell you this: No temptation is irresistible.
Every temptation a Christian faces can be resisted successfully
by you as you are enabled by the Holy Spirit of God. God never
leads you into a situation which is overwhelming for you. Read 1
Corinthians 10:13. In every temptation God gives you an exit, a
way out, in order that you may abide and endure that temptation
successfully.
Now, that doesn't mean men won't kill you. Job was tempted. God
put limits, and the limit was, "Don't kill him." But
let me assure you, in our case, God may say, "Go ahead -
kill him too." Paul was killed. Peter was killed. Stephen
was killed. But if we are killed, God will give us a way out,
which will be the sufficiency of his grace to die. By the
sufficiency of his grace you are able to suffer even martyrdom
while confessing Jesus Christ is Lord. Understand that!
Finally, we need to be be filled with the Spirit. You know, Acts
5:32 tells us the Holy Spirit is given to those who obey him and
St. Paul tells us in Ephesians 5:18, Be being filled with the
Spirit. What does that mean? It means to be under the complete
control of the Holy Spirit of God. Isn't it wonderful that when
we go to God and say, "O God, fill me with the Holy
Spirit," he does fill us with the Holy Spirit. And then you
can resist every temptation successfully.
Every temptation is an opportunity for you to demonstrate to the
world that you belong to Jesus Christ. It is an opportunity for
you to show to God your love for him by obeying him rather than
Satan. May God help us to live victorious Christian lives in this
world, as we look for the coming of our Lord and Savior Jesus
Christ. Amen.
Scripture taken from the HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL
VERSION. Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984 by International Bible
Society. Used by permission of International Bible Society.
"NIV" and "New International Version"
are trademarks registered in the United States Patent and
Trademark office by International Bible Society.
Grace and Glory features Biblical teachings of the Christian
faith with P.G. Mathew, Bible teacher and former professor in
Greek and theology. Audio
cassettes are available for $3.00.
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