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COLLECTIONS
Commentaries, Word
Studies, Devotionals, Sermons, Illustrations
Old and New Testament. |
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COVENANT:
A WALK INTO DEATH
|
GOD'S
PROVISION
IN THE OLD TESTAMENT |
GOD'S
PROVISION
IN THE NEW TESTAMENT |
GOD'S
REQUIREMENT |
DEFINITIONS
AND SYMBOLISM |
|
As
background look at Genesis 12:1, 2, 3
- What had
God promised Abram at age 75?
A Land (cp Ge 13:15)
A Great Nation
A Blessing
"in you all the families
of the earth shall be blessed"
|
Compare
Ge 22:18
God speaking to Abraham
promises that "in your seed (singular in Hebrew) all the nations of the earth shall
be blessed, because you have obeyed My voice." |
Where is
first record in Scripture of cutting covenant by passing through pieces of
flesh, which we have referred to as a "walk into death"?
Genesis 15:18
What
were
the circumstances?
In Ge 12:2 we see that God promised that Abraham will be the
father of a great nation. At this time in his life Abram still has no heir.
|
Explanatory Note:
Chronology of Abram/Abraham:
Age 75 (Ge 12:4) (Sarai =
65). God told him He would make Abram a father of many nations.
Age
86 (Ge 16:16) Abram
was 86 years old when Hagar bore Ishmael to him. Still no
child of promise.
Age 99 (Ge 17:1,17)
Now when Abram was 99yo Jehovah appeared to Abram and said to him, "I
am
God Almighty;
Walk before Me and be blameless. Isaac the child of promise would be
born one year later (Ge 17:21)
At age 86 Abraham went into Hagar who gave birth to Ishmael, the product of the
flesh not of the promise--the flesh can never please God! So God
appears to Abram whose body was as good as dead and He tells him that He
is his
El Shaddai and ''I will establish My covenant. I am your all
sufficient One. Quit seeking other ways. Rest in Me. Trust Me.''
Where
do you run when you need help? Run to the
Rock that is higher than
you and exchange your weakness for the strength of
El Shaddai - God Almighty. |
What
is Abram's question
and then his immediate
answer (before God even
had time to answer) to the fact that God's promise was not yet fulfilled?
Genesis 15:2, 3
Q: O Lord GOD what wilt Thou give me since I am childless
A: Eliezer born in my house is my heir
|
Explanatory Note: One of the customs of that time was for a
childless couple to adopt a trusted slave to be their heir. Eliezer
was born in Abram's house, but was of Damascus. |
What
is God's answer
in
(Genesis 15:4)?
Eliezer will not be your heir; but one who shall come forth from your own
body, he shall be your heir
GOD'S PROVISION
BEGINS WITH GOD'S PROMISE
What does God promise in
(Genesis 15:5)?
"Count the stars, if you are able to count them.
So shall your descendants be."
Who initiated the
Covenant
with Abraham?
(Genesis 15:18)
On that day the LORD made a covenant with Abram
God initiated the covenant
Who walked between
the pieces of flesh?
(Genesis 15:17)
God walked between the
pieces
symbolized by
"a smoking oven & a flaming torch"
God Alone made
"The Walk into Death"
|
Explanatory Note:
"Smoking oven &
a flaming torch" in context clearly symbolizes Jehovah by Himself
taking the "walk into death" because Abram was asleep! In another passage symbolic of the
presence of God Moses records that Jehovah "was going before (Israel
in their wilderness wanderings) in a pillar of cloud by day to lead
them on the way, and in a pillar of fire by night to give them
light, that they might travel by day and by night." (Ex 13:21).
Moses associates the presence of God with smoke in his description of
Mt Sinai writing that the mountain "was all in smoke because
Jehovah descended upon it in fire and its smoke ascended like
the smoke of a furnace, and the whole mountain quaked
violently" (Ex 19:18) |
What
is the significance of the fact that it was God Alone Who cut covenant?
God Alone binds Himself
Unconditional
Immutable
To summarize, what was God's
provision in the OT?
HIS PROMISE of a SEED who Paul explained is the CHRIST or the MESSIAH
ABE BELIEVED IN THE MESSIAH
LOOKING FORWARD
to the fulfillment of God's
PROPHETIC PROMISE
on the Cross
|
Does a
believer ever pass thru the "pieces of flesh" symbolically taking a "Walk
into Death"?
(First we must understand the provision in order to
understand if and when we walked thru the pieces)
Who is our Provision
according to (Is
42:6)
and (Mal 3:1)
Jesus = Covenant
Messenger of the Covenant
How did John the Baptist
describe our Provision?
(Jn 1:29 cf
prophecy Is 53:7)
Jesus = Lamb of God
Who takes away the sin of the world = Savior
|
Explanatory Note:
Here we find the fulfillment of the answer that Abraham had given to
Isaac many years earlier when Isaac asked “Behold the fire and the
wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?" And Abraham said
"God will provide Himself the lamb for the burnt offering my son” (Ge 22:7,8) John
recognizes the Messiah as the prophesied Lamb of God, the Sacrificial
Lamb Who is the Savior of the World for He takes away the Sin of the world.
|
How
does
Paul identify the Lamb of God
(1Co 5:7)?
Jesus = Passover
(Lamb)
Jesus = Sacrifice
|
Note: Passover
is Greek
pascha,
which is the transliteration of the Hebrew word
pesach
(from verb pasah meaning to leap or to pass over as God passed
over and spared from death the houses marked by the blood of the
Passover lamb Ex 12:13)
("Pesach" is the name Jews ascribe to the Passover
feast)
and depending on the context signifies (1) the festival commemorating
Israel's exodus and liberation from Egyptian bondage (King Josiah
"commanded all the people saying, "Celebrate the Passover to the LORD
your God as it is written in this book of the covenant." (2Ki
23:21)
(2) the lamb sacrificed for observance of the Passover (Ex
12:21)
(3) the Passover meal and (4) in later Christian usage the
Easter
festival. See table on
Passover Lamb |
When did Jesus the
Covenant and the Messenger of the Covenant institute the New Covenant
(Mt 26:17, Lk 22:7)?
The Passover Meal
(His "Last Supper")
1st day of Unleavened Bread
Explanatory Note:
The instructions for the first Passover were that "they shall eat the
flesh (of the lamb) that same night, roasted with fire and they shall eat it
with unleavened bread and bitter herbs." (Ex 12:8, 12:15, 12:20,13:3,6, 7) Moses (Ex 12:46)
said that the Passover was "to be eaten in a single house;
you are not to bring forth any of the flesh outside of the house,
nor are you to break any bone of it", This was fulfilled
in the crucifixion - "these things came to pass,
that the Scripture might be fulfilled, "NOT A BONE OF HIM SHALL BE
BROKEN." (Jn 19:46 cf Ps 34:20) |
How
did Jesus symbolize the institution of the New Covenant
(Mt 26:26,
27, 28)?
Bread Broken = "My body"
Wine = "My blood of the covenant"
Poured out for many for the forgiveness of sins
New Covenant in My blood
|
Explanatory Note:
Jesus in a sense "transformed" the Passover Meal into the New
Covenant meal using the bread that had represented the
Exodus in the Passover supper celebration to symbolize His body.
The Passover meal normally consisted of 4 separate cups of wine,
each with specific significance. Jesus took the third cup, the
"cup of thanksgiving" using it to represent His blood,
specifically the "blood of the new covenant". So just as this
third cup represented the blood of the Passover lamb (that had
been
smeared on the doorposts and lintels of the Israelite's homes),
this cup Jesus now used to represent the blood
of the Passover Lamb of God, Who takes away the sin of the world.
While, the
Passover meal symbolized deliverance from bondage in Egypt to
freedom in Canaan, the New
Covenant meal signified deliverance from bondage to Sin to salvation,
from death to life, from Satan’s domain of darkness to Christ's
kingdom of light. In
initiating the New Covenant, Jesus transformed the
Passover meal into the Lord’s Supper. |
When did Jesus die?
When did the sacrifice for the New Covenant take place?
At the
Passover:
Jesus is the Passover Lamb and the Sacrifice of the New Covenant
|
Note:
The Lamb of God transcends time and eternity...
1) Ge 22:7 ‘Where is the lamb?’
2) Jn 1:29 "Behold the Lamb!"
3) Rev 5:12 "Worthy is the Lamb!" |
Now for background let's look at the
Holy of holies in the Old Testament.
What separated the "Holy
Place" from the "Holy
of holies"?
(Diagram)
The Veil
For over a 1500 years,
the veil had separated the
priests and the people from the Holy of Holies and the Ark of the
covenant, which represented the presence of God. The fact that the veil was torn from top to
bottom now indicated that God had made a way through the veil, "the Way"
opened by the tearing of the flesh of His precious Son, Jesus Christ!
|
Note:
According to He 8:1, 2, 3, 4, 5
the tabernacle was made according to the pattern of the real
sanctuary of God in heaven. Only once each year on the
Day of Atonement (Lev
16:34) was the
high priest
allowed to go into the
Holy of Holies and put the blood of
the sacrifice on the
Mercy-seat
(or
click here,
literally "the place of atonement" = place where God was
propitiated or satisfied by the blood which "covered over" the
sins of the people) of the
Ark of the Covenant (Lev
16:14).
The Ark of the Covenant represented the THRONE OF GOD. The people themselves could never enter into the
Holy of holies into the
very presence of God as manifest by the "Shekinah"
glory cloud, for the
VEIL
shut them out. |
What
happened the moment Jesus "yielded up His spirit" on the Cross (Mt
27:50, 51)?
Behold ("Pay Attention")
The Veil (katapetasma
[word study])
of the temple was torn in two from top to bottom
The earth shook
The rocks were split
How did Jesus describe
Himself in (John 14:6)?
"I am the
WAY
and the truth, and the life
Note: Greek has
definite article before "way", "truth" and "life". So what? Point is
that Christ is not just "a" way (not one of many ways as Jehovah's
Witnesses teach, but "the [only] way" - this is clear from an honest
appraisal of the Greek. Note also "no one" = Greek word meaning
"absolutely no one" = in other words there are no exceptions. Jesus is
the exclusive, the only Way to the Father.
No one comes to the Father but through Me.
|
Explanatory Note:
He 9:8
is a parallel verse adding that "The Holy Spirit is signifying
this, that
THE
WAY
(same Greek word
hodos
as in Jn 14:6) into the holy place (in context this refers
to the holy of holies into the very presence of Almighty God) has not yet been disclosed, while the
outer tabernacle is still standing"
At the time Hebrews was written (before destruction of Temple in 70AD), the worship of God was limited & common folk had
no immediate access to God. The people could come only so close.
The whole picture was meant to prove that without a Redeemer,
without a Messiah, without a Savior, there was no access to God.
The Holy Spirit was teaching the impossibility of access to God
without a perfect priest, a perfect sacrifice, and a perfect
covenant. By allowing the people to go no further than the outer
court, He was illustrating that thru Judaism there was no
access to Him, only a symbol of access. As long as that part of
the Levitical institution was still in effect, Israel was to
understand that the way into the presence of God had not yet been
opened. The division of the tabernacle into the Holy Place and the
Holy of Holies showed the limitations of the Levitical system, and
kept the people from coming directly to God. The Holy Place barred
both priests and people from the Holy of Holies. |
How can a sinner
now enter into the presence of a Holy God (He
10:19, 20, cf Heb 6:19)?
By entering thru the
Veil = Jesus' Flesh
The veil that hung in the temple represented the Lamb of God - the
Covenant Sacrifice slain, laid out, divided for you and for me!
A New & Living Way
(Way =
hodos
same as Jn 14:6)
|
Explanatory Note:
Arthur writes: "As I read this passage in
Hebrews through the understanding of covenant, my heart shouted a holy
YES! It is a covenant walk into death that leads to life,
bringing us into oneness with God-uniting us with Him in His death and
resurrection to walk in newness of life, "having our hearts sprinkled
clean from an evil conscience." (Hebrews 10:22)
(Our
Covenant God) There are some fascinating Greek words in
Hebrews 10:19, 20:
Confidence
= literally "all speech" and describes the attitude of openness that
stems from freedom and lack of fear. Now we can boldly enter His Holy
presence into the very Throne Room of Almighty God!
"New"
originally referred to a newly–killed animal or man; hence,
of flesh just killed, fresh meat, or of fresh vegetables just picked.
Here it is figurative and indicates "fresh" not only in the sense that
it is a way which was before unknown but also one that retains its
freshness and cannot grow old.
"Inaugurated"
conveys the idea of introducing something new, to initiate with the ideas
of inauguration and dedication being closely related. When Jesus
entered the "walk into death" He opened or dedicated
THE WAY,
treading it Himself for the first time, that we might follow in His
steps!
In a parallel passage,
Paul explained that when we are "justified by faith (when we
entered the New Covenant), we have peace
with God through our Lord Jesus Christ through Whom ("the
way" in is
"through" His "flesh"!) also we have
obtained our (hold pointer over)
introduction by faith into this grace in which we stand;
and we exult in hope of the glory of God." (Ro 5:1, 2) |
How might you describe this entering bolding by the new and living way,
through the veil which is our Lord's flesh?
Our Walk into Death
When did you walk through
the pieces of His flesh?
When you entered into the New
Covenant
You walked through the Veil
His flesh
When did this event take place?
The moment you placed your
faith in Christ |
What was Abraham’s response?
(Genesis 15:6)
Abram believed in the LORD and He
reckoned it to him as righteousness
|
Explanatory Note:
The righteousness of God could be succinctly stated as all that God
is, all that He commands, all that He demands, all that He approves,
all that He provides (through Christ cf 2Cor 5:21, 1Co 1:30) |
Abraham did not simply give assent
intellectually or mentally to God - He made an unqualified commitment
|
Explanatory Note:
"Believed" = Hebrew verb
'aman (see word study)
has a root meaning
which conveys the idea of certainty. Therefore in Genesis 15:6
'aman
conveys the notion
of being certain of what God had promised. It's the idea of an unqualified committal of
oneself to another. Belief, contrary to popular opinion, is not a blind
leap into the dark but a confident commitment to the One about Whom
abundant evidence bears ample testimony of His absolute
trustworthiness in regard to His promise to justify (declare
righteous) those who believe
in Him. It is interesting to see how the Rabbis have twisted the truth
of this Scripture, remarking that Abraham’s faith is better
translated as
“faithfulness” which they ascribe to him as one of his "works". |
What does
Ro 4:1, 2, 3
teach?
Abraham believed God
Was
justified by faith
Not by works
He was declared righteous
|
Explanatory Note:
"Believed" is
pisteuo
(verb used in the
LXX
translation of believed
in Ge15:6, and for believed in Gal 3:6, Ro 4:3)
which is more than
mere mental assent. According to W E Vine Biblical belief
[genuine saving belief] has 3 main components (from Vine's definition
[ref] of the related noun
Faith =
pistis)
(1) Firm conviction producing a full acknowledgement of God's
revelation or truth
(2) Personal surrender to Him
(3)
Conduct inspired by such surrender.
The Greek translation of
Hebrew OT (Septuagint
= LXX)
with rare exception uses
pisteuo
to translate the Hebrew verb
'aman. |
What
did Abraham
believe?
(Remember that the best commentary on Scripture
=
Scripture)?
What was the object of his belief in Galatians 3:8?
The gospel
Abram believed the "good news" that all the nations would be
blessed in him
"And the
Scripture,
(personified as a preacher) foreseeing that God would justify (declare
righteous) the Gentiles by
faith (pistis), preached the gospel beforehand to Abraham, saying, "ALL THE NATIONS SHALL BE BLESSED
IN YOU."
What
is Abraham called
in Galatians 3:9?
Abraham, the believer
(Believer = trustworthy, dependable, reliable, faithful)
What additional truth does Ge
22:18
add in regard to God's promise to Abraham in
Genesis 12:3?
"In you" is expanded to "in
your seed (singular in the Hebrew) all the nations of the earth shall be
blessed, because you have obeyed My voice." (Note once again the association
of faith with obedience)
What is meant by this promise of
the
Seed
according to Galatians 3:16?
Christ = Seed of Abraham
|
Explanatory Note:
Paul explains that "the promises were spoken to Abraham and to his
Seed. He does not say, "And to seeds (plural)," as referring to
many, but rather to One, "And to your Seed (singular),"
that is, Christ".
"Christ" =
Greek "Christos"
corresponds to the Hebrew word
Mashiyach
transliterated into English as "Messiah", the Anointed One. The
Seed was the Messiah first prophesied in God's
promise
to Adam & Eve in Genesis
3:15
to bring forth the Messiah Who
would bruise the head of Satan. When
God made a covenant with Abraham, He promised him a Seed (Ge
22:18)
explaining that through his Seed all the nations of the world
would be blessed. So the promise that God made to Abraham was
ultimately the promise of a Savior Christ Jesus, and this is the One
in Whom Abram placed His faith.
Salvation in the OT was always by faith looking forward to the
Cross. In the NT it is by faith looking back to the Cross.
OT look >
# < NT look
|
What is
faith
inseparably related
to in the Scriptures?
Faith is related to
obedience
What one Believes is
demonstrated by how one Behaves
For example:
"obedience
that comes from faith" (NIV) Romans 1:5
(cf disobedient and unbelief in Heb3:18, 19)
Faith that saves is faith that
brings a response to what one hears. Faith takes God at His Word, believes
Him, and responds accordingly. Where there is true faith, there is a
commitment of oneself to what one believes. Note that faith alone saves, but
the faith that saves is not alone!
To reiterate, how can a
sinner walk through the veil, His flesh?
All must walk through, the way,
the veil, His flesh
BY FAITH
No one comes into the Father's presence
without going through this Veil (cf John 14:6)
What have we learned
about the commitment that entering into a covenant calls for in Scripture?
Death to all relationships
Death to our own life
Death to our own interests
Death to independent living
Our
covenant relationship with God supersedes all other relationships
How does Jesus address
this issue of commitment in (Mt
10:37, 38 39)?
We must love Him more than any other
relationship
We must be willing to take His cross and
follow Him
We must be willing to lose our life for
His sake in order to find it
The Cross is speaks of shame and death
Death is a self-denial
Having entered by the "walk of
death" we are now called to daily "die to self" in the the everyday
circumstances of our life.
How does Jesus address
this issue of commitment in (Mark 8:34, 35, 36, 37)?
Note Jesus was addressing not just His
disciples but the multitude
Jesus calls us to
Deny self
Take up His Cross
Follow Him
If we try to save our life we will be
lost
Now comes the most remarkable profit and
loss statement in history!
If we lose our life (in His life) for His
sake and the gospel's we shall save it
The context is that Jesus is speaking of the eternal destiny of our soul
It is a bad bargain to gain the whole world, and forfeit
one's soul
|
Explanatory Note:
Be aware that some commentators like Constable attempt to "soften"
Jesus' stern warning explaining that He is saying "that living
for oneself now will result in a leaner life later whereas denying
oneself now for Jesus’ sake will result in a fuller life later"
(Expository Notes on the Bible)
J.
Vernon McGee on the other hand interprets it more literally
warning that... "The person who will not assume the risks
involved in becoming a disciple of the Lord Jesus Christ will, in
the long run, lose his life eternally. The opposite is also
true. At Christ’s second coming all accounts will be settled and
everyone will receive his proper rewards." (Thru the Bible
commentary)
Wycliffe Bible Commentary agrees...
"He who is unwilling to assume the hazards involved in being a
disciple of Christ will ultimately lose his life eternally."
KJV
Bible commentary:
"Lose his own soul means to lose one’s life and perish."
Bible Knowledge Commentary (Dallas Theological Seminary)... "One
who decides to maintain a self-centered life in this world by
refusing Jesus’ requirements (Mk 8:34) will ultimately lose
his life to eternal ruin. Conversely a person who will
“lose” (give over, “deny himself”) his life... in
loyalty to Jesus and the gospel by accepting His
requirements (8:34) will actually preserve it forever" |
Who is Jesus addressing issue in (Lk
14:25)? Is
He addressing just His disciples?
He addresses "great multitudes...going
along with Him"
How does Jesus address
this issue of commitment in (Lk 14:25, 26, 27)?
What does He mean by "hate his..." relatives, his life?
Love for Christ must surpass all
other loves which are hatred by comparison
Christ-centered lives must
replace selfish lives
Jesus adds in Luke 14:33
that "no one of you can be My
disciple who does not give up all his own possessions."
Do your possessions in fact
possess you?
Death takes place when we enter the New Covenant
How did Paul
describe His walk into death in (Gal 2:20)
and his commitment to live in spite of death?
When Christ was crucified, he was
crucified (Ro 6:6).
He gave us his right to independent living ("it is no longer I who live")
He acknowledged that he now wore Christ's
robe of identity ("Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the
flesh I live by faith in the Son of God"
In covenant you no longer live for
yourself. There is a Covenant Partner to consider, and you must be true to
that Covenant Partner. Covenant is a bond that commits you to another.
In order for us to have this new life a death had to
take place...this is a picture of our so great a salvation as viewed through the
lens of covenant.
|
The goal is to give each person a
deeper understanding of their salvation.
What are the two Hebrew words for cutting covenant? Can you see how this
week's lesson intertwines with these definitions?
Beriyth = agreement made by walking
between pieces of flesh
What did the exchange of robes between Jonathan and David symbolize in
regard to their identity?
Exchange of Robes
Symbolically taking on the identity of your covenant partner =
Death to self
Two become one
End to independent living
Covenant was..
the closest,
the most indissoluble
compact known
What did the
covenant between Jonathan and David involve?
Absolute surrender
Merging of one with other
How do we see this
truth paralleled in this weeks study?
Absolute Surrender
Indissoluble merging
Beloved, have you walked through
the veil of His flesh?
Are you daily, boldly walking
through His veil into God's Throne Room?
Are you reflecting your covenant
partner by your attitudes and your actions?
Will you give your Covenant
Partner your strength -- live for Him?
Will you stand against His
enemies?
Are you willing to die to
independent living, to lose your life for His sake and the gospel's?
Do you have a better grasp of the
serious, binding nature of the covenant commitment that results from
entering into the
New Covenant by grace through faith?
|
Explanatory Note:
George
Barna has a word of warning writing that in... "Studies we have conducted over the
past year indicate that a majority of the people who made a
first-time "decision for Christ were no longer connected to a
Christian church within just eight weeks of having made such a
decision!" (The
Second Coming Of The Church) In this same
section of his book Barna goes on to say that in most cases these
people are not moving from "decision" to "conversion."
The question one dare
not ignore asking is "Are those who make "decisions" really entering the small
gate, the narrow way into the new covenant by walking through the
rent veil of Jesus' flesh or are they among the "many" Jesus
warned would be on the broad way that leads to destruction?" (Mt
7:13, 14)
and who would one day hear the somber words "I never knew
you; DEPART FROM ME, YOU WHO PRACTICE (present
tense
= habitually, as a lifestyle) LAWLESSNESS." (Mt 7:23) |
In light of the entree
provided by the rent veil of Jesus' flesh, "let us draw near with
a sincere heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled
clean from an evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water.
Let us hold fast the confession of our hope without wavering, for He
who promised is faithful; and let us consider how to stimulate
one another to love and good deeds, not forsaking our own assembling
together, as is the habit of some, but encouraging one another; and all
the more, as you see the day drawing near." (Hebrews 10:22, 23, 24,
25)
My Hope Is Built
(The Solid Rock)
1My hope is built on nothing less
Than Jesus’ blood
and righteousness;
I dare not trust the sweetest frame,
But wholly lean on Jesus’ name.
2 When darkness veils His lovely face,
I rest on His unchanging grace;
In ev’ry high and stormy gale,
My anchor holds within the veil.
3 His oath, His
covenant, His
blood,
Support me in the whelming flood;
When all around my soul gives way,
He then is all my hope and stay.
4 When He shall come w trumpet sound,
O may I then in Him be found,
Dressed in His righteousness alone,
Faultless to stand before the throne.
Chorus
On Christ, the Solid Rock, I stand; (Mt 7:24, 25, 26)
All other ground is sinking sand,
All other ground is sinking sand.
"Christ died that I might
live. I must die that Christ might live in me." (First part =
position; Second part = practice
(Bob Roe, Peninsula Bible
Church) |
|
ADDITIONAL
NOTES |
|
Bob Roe alluded to this "walk of death" when he said...
"Christ died that I might live, I
must die that Christ might live in me."
Ray Stedman explains the
power of this walk of death...
The authentic Christian life is
essentially and radically different from the natural life lived by a
man or woman of the world. Outwardly, it can be very much the same:
involved with making a living, going to school, getting married,
raising children, mowing lawns, buying groceries, getting along with
neighbors. But inwardly, the basis of living is dramatically
different. Christ is a part of all these things! He is the motivator
of every wholesome action, the corrector of every wrong deed or
thought. He is the giver of every joy and the healer of every hurt. He
is no longer merely on the edges of life, acknowledged on Sunday but
absent through the week. Christ is the center of everything. Life
revolves around him. As a consequence, life comes into proper focus, a
deep peace possesses the heart, strength grips the spirit despite
outward trials, and kindness and joy radiate abroad. This is really
living! (From his recommended book -
Authentic Christianity)
Mark 8:34-38
COMMENTARY
Mark 8:34 And He summoned
the multitude with His disciples, and said to them, "If anyone wishes
to come after Me, let him deny (Greek verb conveys sense of "disown" -
same thing Peter did 3x before the cock crowed) himself, and take up his cross, and
follow Me.
35 "For whoever wishes to save his life shall lose it; but
whoever loses his life for My sake and the gospel's shall save it.
36 "For what does it profit a man to gain the whole world, and
forfeit his soul?
37 "For what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?
38 "For whoever is ashamed of Me and My words in this
adulterous and sinful generation, the Son of Man will also be ashamed
of him when He comes in the glory of His Father with the holy angels."
Who is Jesus calling to Himself?
Not just the disciples but the multitude, . He then opens this
"invitation" even wider declaring "if anyone". The verb "summoned"
(proskaleomai from prós = to + kaléo = to call) means to call to
oneself, to bid to come. It can also mean to urgently invite someone
to accept responsibilities for a particular task, implying a new
relationship to one who does calling.
Recommended Resources:
Steve Kreloff's
sermon on Mark 8:34
(Mp3 only but worth listening to as
this message is not frequently preached today). (Note: Denial
of self is not the same as self denial - the latter is man centered
and merges with asceticism - giving up things, pleasures, activities.
Denial of self = a definite act of turning away from the idolatry of
self-centerness. To reject the old way of life in Adam, with it's self
preoccupation and self interests.).
W A Criswell...
One of the apparent paradoxes of
Scripture relates to the voluntary sacrifice of a man's life for the
cause of Christ. The verse does not demand martyrdom in order to
secure life. However, the passage does establish that men coming to
Christ must give Him their lives in such totality that they retain no
claim upon them. Having placed themselves forever in the hands of
Christ, they immediately possess the abundant life.
Dr Charles Ryrie...
The verse means this: Whoever would
save his life (by renouncing the gospel and thus avoiding the risk of
martyrdom) will lose it (eternally, because he has not believed the
gospel); but whoever is willing to lose his life (as a martyr for
Christ) will save it (i.e., will prove that he is a follower of Christ
and an heir of eternal life).
NET Bible note
The point of the saying whoever
wants to save his life will lose it is that if one comes to Jesus then
rejection by many will certainly follow. If self-protection is a key
motivation, then one will not respond to Jesus and will not be saved.
One who is willing to risk rejection will respond and find true life. |
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