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13 In
Him, you
also, after
listening
(AAPMPN)
to the
message of
truth, the
gospel of your
salvation --having
also
believed,
(AAPMPN)
you were
sealed
(2PAPI)
in Him with the
Holy
Spirit of
promise,
14 Who is
(3SPAI)
given as a pledge of our
inheritance, with a
view to the
redemption
(apolutrosis)
of God's own
possession,
to the
praise
of His
glory
15
For this reason I too,
having heard
(AAPMSN)
of the
faith in the
Lord
Jesus
which exists
among you and your
love
for
all
the
saints,
Would you turn with me to Ephesians 1 as we
continue in our study of this wonderful, wonderful book. We’re looking at The
Marvel of our Redemption (Ed note:
Click here for in depth word study of the Greek
word for redemption =
apolutrosis)
Earlier we looked at the
sphere of our redemption. Who all is involved? God did not exclude the
Jews. Oh no! The key is, He included the Gentiles, and we are so grateful that
He did. All that believe in Christ, whether Jew or Gentile, now have been made
one in Him. We are heirs in the Lord Jesus Christ. Again the Phillip’s
translation puts it this way, "...in all which will one day belong to him
[speaking of Jesus] we have been promised a share." That ought to already
make us begin to praise God for what He has promised us in our inheritance in
Him.
Now we continue to look at the marvel of our
redemption. We want to look at the standard of our redemption. Is there a
standard that we who have been redeemed by the blood of Jesus go by? Often
somebody may come around us and say, "Oh, I have been born again. I am a
Christian. I am a believer." Is there a standard that helps us measure those
people who are quick to say, "I know Christ," but their life does not back it
up? I believe there is. Some people say, "Well, Wayne, isn’t it enough to come
down the aisle? Isn’t it enough to cry and be remorseful over sin?" Well, it
might be, and it might not be. What is the standard that we have to measure
those who are claiming to be redeemed? Well, there are a lot of things, but I
think we’ll see in our text two that must be there.
I want us to look at that in Ephesians 1:13:
"In Him, you also, after listening to the
message of truth, the gospel of your salvation --having also believed, you were
sealed in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise..."
Now what is in this that might help us have a
standard to measure those who claim to be redeemed? As we marvel at our
redemption, let’s remember there are certain things that must be in place if
that redemption has taken place in our life. It says, "...after listening to the
message of truth, the gospel of your salvation."
THE GOSPEL HAS TO BE HEARD
The first thing I want you to see is that the
message of
truth,
the
gospel of your
salvation,
has to be heard. Now let’s break that down and look at it. When he says the
phrase "after listening to the message of truth" the word for
truth
there is the word that means "that which is absolute truth
and has nothing in it which is error, nothing whatsoever." It has a definite
article in front of it which means "the"
truth. It’s obviously speaking of the Word of God. The
word for message there is
logos.
It refers to a message, a thing that is communicated. However, again, the
definite article is in front of it which means literally "the"
word of
"the"
truth. Implicit in this is the Word of God. You see, hearing starts with the
gospel, the Word of God, with the truth that is without any error.
I have many people say to me, "Well I can
receive Christ perhaps, but I don’t believe that the Bible is the inspired Word
of God." Well, that kind of bothers me a little bit, because if that’s the
standard, and the Bible speaks, who is man to say that it is or it isn’t. In
other words, we’ve got to accept that it is truth without error.
What he’s talking about here is not just
truth. He’s talking about the gospel of your salvation. "In Him, you also, after
listening to the message of truth, the
gospel of your
salvation
—..." That word "gospel"
is the good news of your salvation. In other words, the seed which must fall
into the human heart in order for salvation to take place is the Word of God.
It’s not just truth, but the truth about our salvation, about what Christ has
done for us.
What is the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ? Look with me in
1 Cor 15:1-5..Paul is speaking of what the
gospel is, and he gives the definition as he speaks to the Corinthians there.
This is what the Word of God, the word of truth without error, says the gospel
is. He says,
1
Now I make known to you, brethren, the gospel which I preached to you, which
also you received, in which also you stand,
2 by which also you are saved, if you hold fast the word which I preached to
you, unless you believed in vain.
3 For I delivered to you as of first importance what I also received, that
Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures,
4 and that He was buried, and that He was raised on the third day according to
the Scriptures,
5 and that He appeared to Cephas, then to the twelve.
In
these 5 verses you have the crucial ingredients of the gospel which are
that Christ came to die for our sin, that He was buried, but on the third day He
resurrected according to the Scriptures. So therefore, the gospel is what the
Word of God says about what Christ has done for you and me. It’s the good news.
It is truth without any error. So many folks think that a person can get saved
by just hearing a testimony. No, he can be inspired, he can be convinced, he can
be moved emotionally, but until the Word of God, falls into that heart, how can
there be any salvation? That is the key.
In the
parable of the sower there are several kinds of soil. The key there is
not so much the sower, but it’s the soil that receives the seed
the sower is scattering. It says in the parables in Mark (4:13-20),
Matthew (13:18-23)
and in Luke (8:11-15)
that
seed is the Word of God. It falls into the human heart.
Only one of the soils was saved, and that is the good soil, which
received the seed and held on to the seed, as one of the gospels said, and then
produced fruit as a result of having received the seed. Those are the ones who
have truly been saved.
Look at
1Peter 1:22. I want you to see again how that
the Word of God is the seed. It is the truth of God. It is Scripture which
speaks of that which Christ has done for us. That’s the gospel, the truth of
your salvation. In this passage Peter reminds the believers in Asia Minor who
are going through the awful persecution,
"Since you have in obedience to the truth purified your souls for a sincere love
of the brethren, fervently love one another from the heart."
What he’s saying is, when you get saved, you have a potential that you didn’t
have when you were lost. The Holy Spirit of God comes into your life. Now you
have a love in you, wrapped up in a person that needs to be released to other
people. Jesus said,
"By
this all men will know that they are My disciples, if you have love for one
another." (Jn13:35)
Peter is reminding these believers of that and then says,
23
for you have been born again not of seed which is perishable but imperishable,
that is, through the living and abiding word of God.
24 For, "ALL FLESH IS LIKE GRASS, AND ALL ITS GLORY LIKE THE FLOWER OF GRASS.
THE GRASS WITHERS, AND THE FLOWER FALLS OFF,
25 BUT THE WORD OF THE LORD ABIDES FOREVER." And this is the word which was
preached to you.
So
when we’re talking about salvation, what are the standards of measuring people
who say, "Oh, I’ve been redeemed. Oh, I’m a Christian. I’ve been born from
above."? Well, it starts with how it all happened in your life. The Word of God
is that seed. It is what God’s Word says about Christ. It is what God’s Word
says in reflection of your own sin that must be received before salvation can
take place.
Now if it’s got to be heard, then somebody has got to be telling it. Look at the
verse again. "In Him, you also, after listening to the message of truth,..."
Somebody has got to be telling it if they’re listening to the message of truth.
Let’s think for a moment about when you got saved. Who was it who came and
shared it with you? Who opened the Word with you? Who helped you understand your
condition and what Christ did for you, and why it was necessary in your life?
Somebody did. Somebody has got to be telling it. Look in
Ro 10:14. There’s a beautiful thought here that
comes out of simple observation when we’re dealing with our salvation:
"How
then will they call on Him in whom they have not believed? How will they believe
in Him whom they have not heard? And how will they hear without a preacher? How
will they preach unless they are sent? Just as it is written, "HOW BEAUTIFUL ARE
THE FEET OF THOSE WHO BRING GOOD NEWS OF GOOD THINGS !"
You see, this was Paul’s mission. What he was
doing with the Gentiles was to take the Word of God. By the way, he did not have
all that we have today. All he had was the Old Testament and the gospels. He
would take that to the people and document who Jesus is, the fact that He came
and lived a sinless life, the fact that He went to the cross and died for their
sins, resurrected the third day and that it was all according to what the
Scriptures had to say. That’s important. As he told it they were able to listen
to it. That’s what missions is all about, folks. Salvation starts when the truth
is preached, when a person hears the message of Jesus Christ and the gospel of
your salvation. You see, the first key is they’ve got to hear the message of
truth. They’ve got to hear the gospel of their salvation.
The word "listening "
there is an important word. It’s the Greek word
akouo.
It means "to hear." That’s why it’s translated "listen" here. It means "to
hear with an understanding." You see, there can never be a response to the
gospel unless the
person who is hearing understands what
the gospel is saying in their life. God’s truth of the gospel must be heard with
understanding. Basically, man cannot do that. It’s through the work of the Holy
Spirit of God that a man hears and understands.
I
believe this is why Paul said something in
1 Cor 2:1. You see, he understood as an
educated man. Let’s remember that. Paul was the most educated man aside from
Jesus Himself in the whole New Testament. You’ll not find anybody who could
touch him. "You can tell sometimes," Peter said of Paul, "that old boy is so
intelligent some of the things he writes, they’re hard to understand." He had
submitted his heart to the Lord Jesus Christ. Look what he says to the
Corinthian church as he writes to them. "
And
when I came to you, brethren, I did not come with superiority of speech or of
wisdom, proclaiming to you the testimony of God." [or "the mystery of God which
is the gospel"].
He
said, "I didn’t come with eloquent words. I didn’t come with superiority of
speech." Paul had the education. He had the vocabulary that he could woo and wow
and convince any audience. Paul understood that when you preach it’s got to be
under the anointing of the Spirit of God. If not, people may hear but they won’t
understand.
So, the first common denominator that has to
be there for all the people who claim to have been redeemed, is they have heard
with understanding the truth of the gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ. They have
heard it from God’s Word, and they understand clearly that Jesus is God’s Son,
that He came and lived a sinless life. Why did He go to the cross? Because all
men under Adam are doomed to hell unless they are reborn and adopted afresh back
into the family of God. We must understand that or how can we be saved? The seed
that falls in the heart is the Word, the truth of God, the gospel of our
salvation.
WHAT CONSTITUTES GENUINE
"BELIEF"?
Secondly, not only
hearing and understanding it, but responding to it with belief. That has got to be there.
There may be other essentials that are parts of this standard, but I know that these two
parts are there and must always be there. The gospel must be heard with understanding
which is the work of the Holy Spirit of God. But not only that, there has to be a response to
what we’ve heard in what we call belief. Say John 3:16 with me again. "For God so loved the
world, that He gave His only begotten Son, that whosoever believeth in Him should not
perish but having everlasting life."
Let’s look at
Ephesians 1:13 again and look at the tense of "having believed." "In Him,
you also, after listening to the message of truth, the gospel of your salvation—having
also
believed" That’s
an aorist participle
(5660). In other words, at the same time that you were listening to it,
something was responding to it within you. There was a response coming back to it. It wasn’t three
weeks later. It wasn’t five days later. The aorist tense means that in a specific time there
was a response back to what you clearly understood coming from the Word of God. Something
inside of you was responding, and that response is called "belief." It says, "...having also
believed..."
Now what does it mean to believe? I wish just for the sake of
argument we could go up and
down the rows during any church service and ask you what you thought it meant to
believe in the Lord Jesus Christ. Then you would understand why I’m taking some pains to try to
understand this. So many people think that belief is only associated with understanding. No,
we’ve already covered that. You hear it with understanding. When you believe, you respond
in belief. Well, what is that belief? First of all the word "believe" is
pisteuo. It comes from the word
pistis which means "faith." In other words, pisteuo,
believe, means "to put your full trust and your full faith into Jesus
Christ," the Jesus Christ who is God’s Son. The Scripture clearly brings that
out in the gospel of our salvation. But what does that mean? This is where we’re left
hanging.
Pisteuo, to
believe, means "to put your faith into, to put your trust into."
Well, let’s take it
one more step.
Pistis
comes from the word
peitho.
I think this begins to help us better
understand. The word
peitho means "to be firmly persuaded to the point that you’re willing to
abandon and surrender and obey that which you’ve heard." What does it mean to believe?
Does that mean I just simply believe what you say? I understand it, and I believe what you
say? No. It’s more than that. Having heard the message we’re so persuaded by it that
we’re willing to turn and surrender to it. How do I receive the Lord Jesus Christ? By
opening myself in full surrender and by believing in Him. That is the way I receive Him into my
life.
Let me give you some
examples of that. It might help us a little bit more than what I’m saying here. Look at
Js 2:14-26. This is the passage that nobody likes to deal with. It’s so controversial,
and a lot of folks just don’t deal with it. He talks about three kinds of faith. Only one of
them is saving faith, but each of them has a part of the other. There are three areas to each of
us. There is the mental, that which we understand with. There’s the emotional, that which
we feel with. And there’s the volitional, that which we surrender with, that which we commit
to, that which we decide with. That’s what we want to look at because all three of these are
brought out. Which one is the real faith?
Well,
first of all he mentions dead faith in verses 14:
"What use is it, my brethren, if someone says
he has faith but he has no works ? Can that faith save him?"
Now what is the work he speaks of? He
uses the illustrations of Abraham and Rahab. It has to be the work of obedience, that
which shows and expresses what has taken place on the inside. If I believe who Jesus is,
if I believe the truth of the gospel, my response to it is to bow down to Him and surrender
myself to Him and be willing to obey Him. Now I may not understand all that at this time, but
somehow it all works itself out.
If there’s a root,
there’s going to be fruit. The root is the willingness to surrender and abandon myself to Him.
He is God. He stands before me. He’s worthy to be served. A six-year-old can
understand that. How? By the anointing of the Holy Spirit of God. A sixty-year-old can understand
that. How? By the anointing of the Holy Spirit of God. I can never make you
understand it. It’s something that happens when that message comes into your heart. When the
Word of God is preached or shared the Holy Spirit grabs hold of that thing, and you see God
like you’ve never seen God. You see yourself like you’ve never seen yourself. You
fall down before Him. Your attitude is an attitude of being so persuaded that you’re willing to
give yourself over in obedience.
"If a brother or sister is without clothing
and in need of daily food, and one of you says to them, "Go in peace, be warmed
and be filled," and yet you do not give them what is necessary for their body,
what use is that? Even so faith, if it has no works, is dead, being by itself."
James 2:15-17
That’s DEAD FAITH. Maybe your name is on a church roll, and you’ve heard all
your life about Jesus Christ. You’ve understood it. You could tell people better than I’m
telling them, but you have never responded to what you understood in belief. You’ve
never fallen down before Him and been so persuaded by what you understood that you’re willing to
surrender yourself to the one the Bible has clearly brought forth.
But secondly, not only
does he speak of dead faith here, he speaks of DEMONIC FAITH in verse 18-20. There
was somebody going around during that time trying to comfort everybody. James was getting on
people’s case. They didn’t like James. James was saying, "Hey man, listen, talk
is cheap. Show me by your life." He’s the kind of guy that nobody likes to hear. He’s
saying, "I’m tired of hearing your talk. Show me by your walk whether or not you’ve been
redeemed." Well, someone’s going around trying to make everybody feel better. "Oh,
don’t worry about it." He puts it in such a way that sometimes we get confused:
James 2:18a: "But someone may well say, "You have faith and I have works"
He’s not talking about the someone.
He’s referring back to James because James is writing this. In other words, "Hey, don’t
worry about old James. He’s always trying to tell you there’s got to be some fruit in your
life. Oh, no man! If you just do certain things, if you say it the right way,
you’re okay."
James
says,
James 2:18b: "show me your faith without the works, and I will show you my faith
by my works."
In other words, "I don’t have to tell you. Live with me for a week. Watch me live, and
I’ll show you that my faith is real."
Then it says in verse
19,
You
believe that God is one. You do well; the demons also believe, and shudder
(bristle, stiffen, are struck w/ extreme fear & are horrified)."
You see, this is where sometimes we lose it. The Jews of that day had a
confession they would make in the morning and one in the evening. Do you know
what it was? "We believe that God is one." They’re still doing that today. As
long as they were saying it right, this old boy says, "Hey, that’s okay. You
believe that God’s one, you’re saved. James has his works. Let the old boy
suffer, but we’re alright as long as you confess it in the morning and as long
as you confess it at night. You’re saying it right. You’re saved."
James says,
"You believe that God is one. You do
well; the demons also believe, and shudder."
Uh Oh! "You mean to tell me I’m no better
than a demon at that point." Folks, you don’t think the demons knew who Jesus
was? You see, folks, in the dead faith you can have mental acceptance. You can
understand. In the demonic faith you can have feelings, and they get all worked
up. Technically He died for all, but the last step is that volition when you
surrender your will. How do you know somebody surrenders their will? You don’t
know right when they’re praying. They may not have the same emotion that
somebody else had, and they didn’t even get saved when they prayed. How do you
tell? You watch their life down the road. If there’s a root of belief inside of
an individual, there will be the fruit of that belief in obedience to the One
Whom they have bowed down to.
If there’s a ROOT of
BELIEF...
there will be the FRUIT of that BELIEF in OBEDIENCE...
I John 3
says there’s no possible way a person can claim to be
saved and live like he wants to Monday through Saturday. You cannot live habitually
lawless before God and claim to be a believer.
James uses the
examples of Abraham and Rahab. Just take Abraham for instance. How do we know that
Abraham was saved? How do we know that he was justified? V21 says:
James 2:21: "Was not Abraham our father justified by works when he offered up
Isaac his son on the altar?"
Now careful, careful. He’s not saying what Martin
Luther accused him of saying. He’s not saying that by a man’s works he’s justified. Oh no!
What he’s saying here is he was
shown to be justified
back there by the fact
that he was willing to obey over here. That’s what he’s saying. That’s all he’s
saying. He’s not contradicting
anything Paul said. He’s just simply showing the fact that if a man’s saved, he’s going to
live like it. Now he might get off track, he may have a sin that bothers him, but he can never again
live habitually lawless before God. That is not the heart or character of a true believer, a new
creation in Christ.
He gives Rahab as an
example. I like those two examples because Abraham had a lot of information, and he
responded to it. Rahab had a little, and she responded. Both of them were brought in.
It’s not how much truth you’ve heard added on to what you needed to hear. It’s whether
or not you’ve responded in belief to the critical gospel of your salvation. Let me show you this
over in 1 Thess 1:3. If there’s a root, there’s going to be fruit. I can hear
people now saying, "I’m going to take this home, buddy. I’m going to check this out." Well,
I hope you will. Please do because I’m checking it out myself as I go through. Paul was in
Thessalonica three weeks. That’s all, just three weeks. Look what happens. He
says,
1Thes1:3: "...constantly bearing in mind your work of faith..." (Ed
note: Gk = "ten pisteon") There’s the definite article ("ten")"...and labor of
love and steadfastness of hope in our Lord Jesus Christ in the presence of our
God and Father,"
Well, what does he
mean by work of faith? I just want to show you that one in verse 9. He’s talking about how
others are even talking about the Christians there at Thessalonica:
1Thes1:9:"For they themselves report
(proclaim, make known openly) about us what kind of a reception we had with you,
and how you turned to God from idols to serve a living and true God"
Oh that’s so important. It’s not that you turned from idols to God. You turned to
God from Idols. "What’s the difference, Wayne?" Listen, it’s not what you’ve come from
and what you’ve gone to that necessarily saves you. Some people have come off of
one high and gone into another high. They’ve missed Jesus in the process. They didn’t turn away
from their idols to God. They turned to God away from their idols. The focus of
your turn is all the difference in the world. He says, "I see that in you, the work of faith.
There was a root of belief. Now there’s the fruit that you turned to God away from the idols of
your life."
We’ve got to see that
folks. We are living, I think, in the Laodicean age when people have joined the church
and missed Jesus (Rev
3:14-22). We’ve got people on church rolls everywhere. They don’t know the
Lord. How do you know that? Only by the standards set forth in Scripture. If there is
not fruit showing, there’s not a root of belief in their life. I’m not trying to make it "works
salvation." I’m just trying to understand that word "believe" in Him. Let’s go back to
Ephesians 1:15.
Ephesians 1:15: For this reason I too, having heard of the faith in the Lord
Jesus which exists among you and your love for all the saints
Oh! Oh, are you kidding me? That’s
what Jesus said, wasn’t it? Hey, he said, "By this shall they know you’re my disciples,"
whether or not you truly bowed to me. That’s all I’m saying. You don’t understand
everything I’ve said when you get saved. It’s something you understand later on. But hey
folks, it’s all built into it when that surrender comes to that Deity who Christ is.
One of the first
things you’ll note and the world notes is when we love one another. If there’s a root,
there’s going to be fruit.
There are two things.
First, it must be heard and understood. It must be what the scripture says about
Christ. That’s the seed, the gospel of our salvation. But secondly, once it’s understood,
there’s got to be a response, and that response is the response of belief.
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EPHESIANS 1:13-15: THE SECURITY OF OUR
REDEMPTION
["Can a believer lose his
or her salvation?]
by Dr. Wayne Barber
Return
to Top of Page |
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13 In
Him, you
also,
after
listening
(AAPMPN)
to the
message
of
truth,
the
gospel
of your
salvation
--having
also
believed,
(AAPMPN)
you were
sealed
(2PAPI)
in Him with the
Holy
Spirit
of
promise,
14 Who
is
(3SPAI)
given as a pledge
of our
inheritance,
with a
view
to the
redemption
of God's own
possession,
to the
praise
of His
glory
15
For this reason I too,
having heard
(AAPMSN)
of the
faith in the
Lord
Jesus
which exists
among you and your
love
for
all
the
saints,
We’ve been talking about the marvel
of our redemption. It appears to me that what Paul is doing in the book of
Ephesians is very unique. As a matter of fact, you have to study it all the way through to catch
the flavor of what I’m about to say, especially chapters 1, 2 and 3. He’s trying to let the
Gentile believers understand that they didn’t get anything different than what a Jewish believer
got when he got saved. In other words, sometimes the Gentiles would think, "Well, the
covenants were not for us, the promises were not for us, therefore, somehow maybe we
didn’t get everything the Jewish believers got." Well, Paul is assuring them that everything
that he got as a Jewish believer they got as a Gentile believer when they received the Lord
Jesus Christ.
Let’s say that a friend of yours
bought a Toyota, and the Toyota factory has just come out with a warranty on all Toyotas.
That’s why he bought one, because that warranty is like no other warranty. It covers the car
for the life of the car no matter how many miles, anything that breaks down, even a flat tire.
It was really exciting to him to find that out. Well,
something he didn’t know and something that folks hadn’t said a lot about was
that warranty not only covered his Toyota but it
covered any kind of car that Toyota helped make. So, you go out and buy a Geo Prism.
Now you didn’t know and the friend didn’t know that Toyota helped make that car along
with General Motors. You buy it at a General Motors dealer. You go home thinking that you
just got the car and whatever warranty they gave you, but you did not realize that
everything the Toyota owners got you were going to get because Toyota helped make that car.
Well, one day you get a letter, and in the letter it says, "All the terms that were good
for Toyota owners are also good for you, because Toyota helped in making the car that
you bought." Well, that would be a joyous day, wouldn’t it?
Well, what Paul is saying is, "You
Gentiles, you got everything the Jews got. When you receive Christ and the Jew
receives Christ it is the same. You’re made one in Him, and the promises are the same. You
don’t get more because you’re a Jew when you become a believer than you do when a
Gentile becomes a believer." He has assured the Gentile believers of the marvel of
their redemption. He’s writing to a Gentile church, and he makes certain that you understand
that in chapters 1, 2 and 3.
Let me go back and review quickly. We saw the sphere of our redemption. We saw that not only were the Jews
included, but the Gentiles were not excluded. That’s the beautiful thing. If you
take a look at verse 11 he says, "also we have obtained an inheritance, having been predestined according to
His purpose who works all things after the counsel of His will, to the end that
we who were the first to hope in Christ should be to the praise of His glory." Those Jews
hoped in Christ before He came, but after He came we have an inheritance. Look what he
says in verse 13: "In Him, you also, after listening to the message of truth, the gospel of your
salvation—having also believed, you were sealed in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise,
who is given as a pledge of our inheritance." In other words, the Jewish believer got an
inheritance. Paul says, "but also you Gentiles have been sealed in the Holy Spirit as a
promise of that same inheritance. What we got you got. You didn’t get any more or less than
what we got when we received the Lord Jesus Christ." The sphere of our
redemption. He did not exclude Israel, but that’s not the point. He included the Gentiles.
Well, secondly, we looked at the
standard of our redemption. It’s in verse 13. "In Him, you also, after listening to the
message of truth, the gospel of your salvation..." First of all, the standard is, we must hear it and
listen to the truth of the gospel of our salvation. That’s the Word of God. You may hear
somebody’s testimony. If they do not include God’s Word then you may be inspired to want to
get saved. You may be convinced that you need to be saved, but you’re not going to get
saved just by their testimony. The Word of God is the seed that must fall into our heart.
That’s what convicts us of sin in our life. We hear the gospel: that Jesus came, lived a
sinless life, went to the cross for our sin, and rose the third day, ascended and was glorified. That
convicts us of being sinners. We need to hear the truth of the gospel.
He
goes on to say,
Ephesians 1:13: "having also believed, you
were sealed in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise"
Now what does it mean to believe? (see
previous sermon)
Well, we’re going to come back to that in just a second when we get to our third
point. There will be two parts to my third point. We’ve looked at the sphere of our
redemption: He did not exclude Israel, but He included the Gentiles. We’ve
looked at the standard [of redemption]: after hearing you believe the
truth of the gospel.
But I
want us to look at the security of our redemption. There are many people who believe
that you can lose your salvation. They say, "God will not walk away from you, but you
can walk away from Him." I believe there is a problem with that view. I believe that is
contrary to Scripture, and I want to try to prove that to you in the statement that "you have been
sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise." Let’s look at verse 13 one more time because that
phrase is powerful. "In Him, you also, after listening to the message of truth, the gospel
of your salvation—having also believed, you were sealed in Him with the Holy Spirit of
promise."
Now why do some people believe that
you can lose your salvation? Personally, I think part of the problem is what we
have just addressed, and I’m going to go back over it a little bit. It’s an erroneous view of
what salvation is. A lot of people who think they have lost their salvation never had it to
start with. You know, particularly as Baptists we’re known by other denominations to have
a weakened, watered-down view of salvation. That may be true or not depending on the
church that you grew up in.
I happen to come from a liberal
church in Virginia. As I grew up, I heard God loves you, yes, God has a wonderful plan
for you, yes, Jesus is God’s Son, yes, but I never understood repentance and what belief
really was. Nobody ever taught me what it meant to believe in the Lord Jesus Christ.
When I was nine-years-old I ran down the aisle because I didn’t want to go to hell. What
nine-year-old wants to go to hell? I did whatever they told me to do. I was baptized in
the church. I was told by the preacher, "Yes, you’re saved." I was thirty-two-years-old
before I came to understand the gospel, the truth of the gospel from the Word of God. When I
saw that, I saw myself, and when I saw myself, I understood my problem. Had it been
presented correctly to me earlier, perhaps that would have been different, maybe I would
have been receptive to it.
What does it mean to believe?
Pisteuo
is the word "believe." What does it
come from?
Pistis,
which means "faith." When I believe, I put my belief, my trust, in somebody and what they’ve done and who they are.
What does it mean to put your trust into someone? It comes from the word
peitho, which means "to be
persuaded to the point that I’m overwhelmed to surrender." Surrender is built
into the word. It doesn’t mean you understand at the moment that you receive Christ,
but God looks at your heart. Man looks on the outside. When a person is
overwhelmed by the Deity of Christ then he is brought to a place of bowing and surrender. Until that
happens there has not yet been belief. Belief is more than the intellect. Belief is more
than emotion. Belief has something to do with the will of an individual.
Isaiah saw the Lord in
Isaiah 6. What did he do? He fell to his knees and said, "I
am a
man of
unclean
lips."
You cannot see who He is as revealed by the Holy Spirit to your heart until
you’re willing to surrender. When you see Him you bow, and that bowing is what
that belief is all about. The way I receive Him is by surrendering myself to
Him. You see, Jesus is not just the truth. He’s not just the life. He is the
Way. When we come to Him we realize our way has been wrong.
What are we saved from and what are
we saved to? Those are questions we must ask. One of the problems with people
believing they can lose their salvation is a watered-down plan of salvation. It’s not biblical.
Therefore, they don’t know what believe means. They come out with all kinds of ideas
about it. Certainly I can understand why some people would say, "Well, that person
must have lost his salvation because no Christian could live that way." That’s the
first point. But I want us to go much deeper than that. Let’s look here in verse 13: "you
were
sealed
(5681)
in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise."
Now this is what I’ve been wanting to
get to. What does it mean to be
sealed
in Him with the Holy Spirit of promise? The word
"sealed" is
sphragizo.
It’s in the aorist passive.
Aorist tense
(5681) means at a specific
point and time. [see
RWP,
Torrey's Topic]
It agrees with the participles used earlier, "having believed" and "having
listened." It all happens almost simultaneously. A person hears it. That word "listen" doesn’t
mean just to hear. It means "to hear and understand with a willingness to cooperate," and
when that person hears it, and that person believes it, at that very moment the Spirit of God
examines that man’s heart and seals him in the Holy Spirit of promise. It all happens at
the very moment of belief. When I’ve heard and under-stood, I’ve received, I believed, that
sealing takes place right then.
The process of sealing had three
basic meanings throughout Scripture. Later we’re going to look at those three and show
you how the Holy Spirit, who is the seal, does all these things.
SEALED WITH
THE HOLY SPIRIT OF PROMISE
1) First of all, it was
done to confirm that something was genuine.
I was reading a magazine this past
week. In the magazine there was an article about a Rolex watch, a presidential Rolex
Watch. While I was looking at it I was thinking, "Wow, those things cost thousands and
thousands of dollars, they tell me." Then I looked at what it said at the bottom of it. It said,
"Originally advertised at $99.99, but on this sale alone it’s for $20." I thought to myself, "Wait
a minute. It’s a Rolex, a presidential Rolex. It costs more that $99, I know." Then I looked
at the bottom. It said, "Exact replica of a Rolex. It even fools the Jewelers." I got to
thinking. Anything man seals can always be duplicated. But what God seals, friend, you
better pay attention to. When God seals something, it’s proven to be genuine.
2) Secondly, it means to mark as your
own property.
In other words, if you had your seal stamped on it, it meant it was yours.
There was an official ring that the king would have, and he would put his seal
on things. It was official property, a piece of one’s own possession.
3) Thirdly, it meant to make sure that
something was secure.
I can’t wait to show you this in Ephesians chapter 4. It means to
make sure that something was secure. It’s sealed, not by man, but by the Holy Spirit of
promise.
Before we draw any more conclusions,
I want to show you something here. It just emerges out of the text. He says,
"you’re sealed." What is the seal that God puts on us when we believe after having heard
the gospel of Jesus Christ? The seal is the Holy Spirit of promise.
Now when was the Holy
Spirit promised and who was He promised to? Turn with me, if you would, to
Jer 31:31. Let me read for you Jeremiah 1:16 while you’re finding your place. This
is what’s going on at the time these words are spoken. God says through His prophet,
"I will
pronounce My judgments on them concerning all their wickedness, whereby they have
forsaken Me and have offered sacrifices to other gods, and worshiped the works of
their own hands."
This was a terrible time in the history of God’s people. The tribes had split
under Rehoboam’s reign. Ten tribes had gone North, and were called Israel. Two tribes
had gone to the South, and they are called Judah. In the midst of all that calamity, about
to be overtaken by the Babylonian empire, about to be taken out of their land for seventy
years, God promises something that we need to pay close attention to.
A NEW
COVENANT
Look at
Jer 31:31:
"Behold, days are coming," declares
the LORD, "when I will make a
new
covenant with
the house of Israel and with
the house of Judah." (Click
for summary of
covenant
in Scripture)
Israel has already been taken into captivity by
the Assyrians. Judah is left, and yet God has not forgotten His people. He says to
Israel, the ten tribes of the north, and to Judah, the ones that are about to be overtaken by
Nebuchadnezzar, "I will make a new covenant with you." Now what He’s saying is, "I’m going
to do something radically different inside you, not outside you, but inside you." Every
covenant they have been under, the covenant of law, had to do with their works on the
outside. It could not do anything to them on the inside. God says, "I’m going to give you a
new covenant and when that new covenant comes, I’m going to do something within you.
It’s not going to be like this any more. It’s not going to be like my people running off to
other gods, running off and rebelling and not wanting to even mention my name. No sir! I’m
going to make something different with you. I’m going to change you from within instead of
without."
So,
the promises of the new covenant begin to unfold. Look in verse 33. He promises,
"But this is the covenant which I will make
with the house of Israel after those days," declares the LORD, "I will put My
law within them and on their heart I will write it; and I will be their God, and
they shall be My people"
God says, "I’m going to change you so
radically inside, I’m going to write my Law on your heart." Listen, this was written at a time
when they had lost His Law. As a matter of fact, when they came back from the Babylonian
captivity they found the law. Nehemiah read it at the Watergate, and when he read it, the
people fell down and prostrated themselves before God and said, "Oh God, how could we
get this far away from your Law?" (Neh
8:9-12) So they came up with two groups of people, one the
scribes and the other the Pharisees. The scribes were to continue to read that Law so the
people couldn’t stray so far the next time. The Pharisees were their police force to make sure
the people did what the scribes came up with. God said, "It’s not going to be like
that anymore. You’re not going to be able to walk away from it. You’re not going to be
able to just turn your back on it. I’m going to write my Law within you. It will be written on
your heart." What a radical difference for Israel. You can walk away from church, folks, you
can walk away from your Bible, but if you’re in the new covenant, you can’t walk away
from the Law of God. It’s inside of you, written on your heart. You cannot sin and continue to
sin and continue to sin. God’s Law is written on your heart.
Verse
33 goes on to say something that I think is very, very important. It says, "and
I will be their
God,."
Now you may think that’s insignificant. Who was their God right now? Things made by human hands. What is
God saying? "There’s going to come a day when I’m going to do something so radical
inside of you, I’m going to change you so that you won’t be chasing after other gods,
and if you do it won’t be for long. You’ll be so miserable you’ll run back to me. I will always
be your God." But He goes on to say, "and they shall be My people. They won’t be ashamed
of Me anymore. They won’t be like Jonah, on a boat, who was ashamed to tell them
that he was a Hebrew and a servant of God running from his own God. No, it won’t be
like that anymore. They will be my people. I will be their God. Israel, Judah, look up. I’m
promising you a new covenant. I’m going to do something radically different within you that’s
going to change you from the inside out." God says, "I’m going to do something
brand new with you. I will never turn My back on you to do good to you." In other
words, God says, "I’ll have such a relationship with you that you can trust Me all the days of
your life that whatever I do in your life is good. It will never be for harm because we’ll have
a relationship that we don’t really have right now. It’ll
be from within, not from without."
Well, let’s turn to
Ezekiel 11:19 and
find something else about the new covenant that was promised to Israel and to Judah.
These are two of the specific prophets God used to tell them of an upcoming covenant
that was absolutely brand new, a radical new covenant. The word
chadash,
[for a real blessing see 6 uses
Psalms in & 8 in
Isaiah] means "brand new,
never before understood nor seen."
[Ed note: Greek for "new" =
kainos] If you’re in the old covenant, yes, you can
"prove" that
you can lose your salvation, absolutely. But because of the new covenant you can’t do it.
It’s brand new. God’s doing something from within. In
Ezek 11:19
it says,
And I will give them one heart, & put a NEW
spirit within them. And I will take the heart of stone out of their flesh & give
them a heart of flesh,"
What He’s doing here is so beautiful
if you can see it. He’s contrasting something. How yielding is stone? Stone doesn’t
yield. It’s hard. It’s unyielding. How yielding is flesh, a piece of soft flesh? You know what
soft flesh feels like if you’ve ever handled a piece of raw meat. It says, "I will give you a
brand new heart. This heart within you will be changed so that you will want to obey Me. [see also
Ezek 36:26-27]
You
will not be like you’ve been up until now with hearts of stone. You’re going to have hearts
that are yielded. I’m going to put a brand new spirit within you. Oh Israel, Judah, I’m
going to do something so radically different you’ll never again be the same. I’m going to
change you."
Who was it first promised to? It was
promised first of all in the new covenant promise to Israel and to Judah. Once He comes
into a person’s heart, He radically does some house cleaning. He runs the devil out
of here. The blood of Jesus has already cleansed the vessel, and now the Holy Spirit
has moved in. When He moves in He says, "I will cause you to walk in my statutes."
Remember this. The Holy Spirit is not
an "it". He’s a "He". He’s a person. The person of
the third person of the Trinity is going to come into our lives and will bear
out all the promises God made in the new covenant. This is
why the Lord Jesus had such a hard time with His disciples. They were slow to
understand what Jesus was telling them. Jesus sat down with them and said, "Look guys, I’ve
got to go back to the Father." They were looking at Him and asked, "Why do you have to go
back to the Father?" What is the whole new covenant hinging on? The Holy Spirit coming to
live in our lives. He says, "If I don’t go back, then the Comforter can’t come."
[Jn14:25-27] The
Comforter coming is the beginning of this new covenant that He promised to Israel and Judah.
Look in John 14:16. Jesus is trying
His best to help them understand why He’s got to go back to the Father which includes
going to the cross and dying for our sin. Obviously, He has not been there, yet.
Verse 16 says,
"I will ask the Father, and He will give you
another Helper, that He may be with you forever."
The word "another"
[allos] means "of exactly the same kind." He’s going to be the Spirit of Christ. Some people
say, "Yes, I received Jesus, but I haven’t received the. Holy Spirit." Folks don’t make three
Gods out of Him. He’s one God in three persons. You can’t receive Jesus without receiving
His Spirit. They’re synonymous. That’s the mystery of the Godhead.
Jn14:16-17
"I will ask the Father, and He will give you
another Helper, that He may be with you forever. 17 that is the Spirit of truth,
whom the world cannot receive, because it does not see Him or know Him, but you
know (5719) Him because He abides with you and will be in you"
When was He promised to be in
you? "I will put My spirit within them, saith the Lord." Look
in
John 16:7.
It says,
"But I tell you the truth, it is to your
advantage that I go away; for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to
you; but if I go , I will send Him to you."
Now do you understand what took place in Acts 2:1-2? Here are the disciples, waiting, and all of a sudden the Lord
comes and speaks to them and says, "In a very short time you will receive power."
[Acts1:8] Then
chapter 2 talks about the Holy Spirit of God coming. What a historical event. It
was first promised to Israel and to Judah, a promise of the
new
covenant
. It was the inauguration of
the
new
covenant. Jesus was the
Lamb sacrificed. Until His blood was shed and He had
gone back the Spirit could not come. Now the Spirit comes at Pentecost, and when He comes
He comes to dwell in the hearts and lives of those who believe. That was the
inauguration of the new covenant. It was promised to Israel and promised to Judah.
How in the world can the Gentile be a
part of a covenant promise to Israel and to Judah? You’ve got to remember that He
promised to Abraham that Israel was for a reason. They were to protect a seed that
would come through them, through Judah, through David and on down finally to be the Lord
Jesus Christ. That
Seed, Galatians 3 says, is Jesus.
(Gal
3:16) It’s through Jesus that all the nations
now are allowed in. Look in
Eph 2:11. He says,
"Therefore remember that formerly you, the
Gentiles in the flesh, who are called "Uncircumcision " by the so-called (5746)
"Circumcision..."
These were those Jews who, at the time Paul was writing this, got on
his case when he went over to Jerusalem, because he even told the Gentiles they could be
saved. He even told the Gentiles they could be allowed into covenants. They accused him of
defaming the Jewish nation, defaming the temple, and defaming the law. They
were just jealous because they didn’t want anybody else to be allowed into what God had
promised. It says,
Ephesians 2:11b-12a:
"which is performed in the flesh by human
hands— remember that you were at that time separate from Christ, excluded from
the commonwealth of Israel, and strangers to the | |