Thursday, April 23, 2009

The Deceitfulness of Sin
























Sin is a liar.

This is a lesson I have been trying to learn for many years. I have known the truth of this statement since I first became a believer, but yet, I find that I must struggle daily to remember that it is true. It is not a difficult concept to grasp. It is not some "secret knowledge" that one must possess. Rather, the fact that sin is a liar is revealed on almost every page of scripture. And yet, I am too often led away by its deceitfulness.

The writer of Hebrews understood this truth. In 3:12-13 he says, "Take care, brothers, lest there be in any of you an evil, unbelieving heart, leading you to fall away from the living God. But exhort one another every day, as long as it is called 'today,' that none of you may be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin." The writer understood that the deceitfulness of sin was a real and present danger for his hearers. If we, as the body of Christ, do not exhort one another daily, we will become gullible, believe the lies of sin, and harden our hearts to the truths of the gospel.

I believe that the number one reason I sin, the number one reason you sin, is because I am so incredibly gullible! I do not preach the truth of the gospel to my own heart. Instead, I allow sin to whisper lies into my minds all day long. Sin promises pleasure, fulfillment, comfort, security, ease, joy, renown, recognition, friendship, LIFE. Sin promises your best life now! Why wait? Why put of "pleasures" in the here and now in the hope that you will receive them in the next life? Sin can deliver them right this moment!

But this is sin's biggest lie of all. Sin promises life, fulfilled life, your best life now! But what does Scripture say? "For the wages of sin is death..." (Rom 6.23), "If you live according to the flesh you will die..." (Rom 8.13). The truth of Scripture blasts darkness dispelling light into the deceitful promises of sin. Sin tells us, "Indulge in me and you will know what it's like to live!" Scripture tells us, "If you live according to the flesh you will die, but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will live."

Remember our first parents next time sin tries to deceive you. The serpent promised life and knowledge. But what did they get? Death. Oh sure, they got knowledge, but not the kind they were hoping for. They wanted the knowledge of good and evil in a hypothetical sense. What they got instead was the knowledge of good and evil in an experiential sense! Remember the lie of the serpent. Remember he told Eve, "you will not surely die," even though he knew full well that sin would ultimately result in death. Remember that next time sin comes to call at your door. Remember that it cannot fulfill its promises. Remember that sin is a liar.

The Wretchedness of Sin

“Suppose a man should come to his dinner table, and there should be a knife laid down, and it should be told him, ‘This is the very knife that cut the throat of your child!’ If the man would use this knife as a common knife, would not everyone say, ‘Surely this man had but very little love to his child, who can use this bloody knife as a common knife!’

Look upon the cross on which Christ was crucified, and the pains He suffered thereon—and the seeming sweetness which is in sin, will quickly vanish. When you are solicited to sin, cast your eye upon Christ’s cross; remember His astonishing sufferings for your sin, and sin will soon grow distasteful to your soul. How can sin not be hateful to us—if we seriously consider how hurtful it was to Jesus Christ?”

—Thomas Brooks, “The Golden Key to Open Hidden Treasures”

Tuesday, April 21, 2009

John Piper is NOT your Pastor!

This post from the guys over at Pyromaniacs really hit the spot for me today. We need to remember that we have been given real, flesh-and-blood shepherds over us to whom we are to look for pastoral leadership. We shouldn't seek to fill that spot with dead men, or pastors from around the country who don't know us from Adam.

I only wish I'd learned this lesson sooner! How different things might be...

Monday, April 20, 2009

Quote de Jour

"By itself the privilege of close contact with God's word is no guarantee of blessing; what is needed is a continuous exposure of the heart to it and a continuous response of faith." -Andrew T. Lincoln

Lincoln's words concerning the Word of God could not be truer.

The Word is a sword (Heb 4:12) that will judge men, either by cutting them asunder in condemnation of sin (John 12:47-8), or by cutting out, as a surgeon's scalpel, the heart of stone and replacing it with a heart of flesh (Ezk 36:25-7).

Where do you stand under the sharp blade of the Word?

MacArthur Speaks Out

My pastor from home alerted me to the following articles by John MacArthur concerning Mark Driscoll's sermon series on the Song of Solomon. I recommend them to you as a sober analysis of the plague that is sweeping through the evangelical world.

Part I

Part 2

Part 3

Part 4