Foundation
for Living
Lesson
4
October
30, 2005
And this is the record that God has given to us eternal
life, and this life is in his Son. He that has the Son has life; and he
that has not the Son of God has not life. 18He that believeth on him
is not condemned: but he that believeth not is condemned already, because he
has not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God. For there is no
other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved. 8 For by grace you
have been saved through faith, and that not of yourselves; it is the
gift of God, 9 not of works, lest anyone should boast. 38
For I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities
nor powers, nor things present nor things to come, 39 nor height nor
depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love
of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord. 36 For of Him
and through Him and to Him are all things, to whom be glory
forever. Amen.
Prayer
Father, again we
thank you that you have provided a place for us to meet, Father, due to your grace, we have the
resources to do this and we express our gratitude. That gives us information on how to live
our lives, that you might be honored and glorified in time and eternity. Challenged by the things that we study we pray this in Christ’s name. Amen
Open your Bibles to 2 Corinthians, Chapter 12. We are going through the Foundation for Living
which is focusing on the skills for the spiritual life. This is the 2nd part of a 2 part
series that dealt first of all with the Foundation for Life, which had a focus
more on salvation oriented issues, and basic doctrines related to God, and
Jesus Christ, and Jesus Christ's work on the cross. In this series we are looking at things that
pertain more to your spiritual growth and spiritual advance, and that which provides
a foundation for our spiritual lives. As
such, we are looking at the foundational spiritual skills in these first 5
lessons. These foundational spiritual
skills must be mastered as we grow out of spiritual infancy, and through spiritual
childhood. The first is confession of
sin, recognizing that every time we sin it breaks fellowship with God. The
Scripture says, if I regard iniquity in my heart, the Lord will not hear. Therefore, we must have a solution to post
salvation sin, and that is confession. We
admit or acknowledge our sins to God. At
that instant we are restored to fellowship.
God the Holy Spirit’s sanctifying ministry can continue. It is stifled, or
squelched, or
quenched during our time of carnality. And so we can begin to walk by means of the
Holy Spirit, and His filling ministry is again operational as He uses His word
to fill us, to fill our thinking, and to strengthen us in our spiritual advance. This works together with our faith, such that
we not only walk by means of the Holy Spirit, we walk by means of faith, and
not by sight. We looked at the faith rest drill last time and what is involved
in mixing our faith with the promises, principles and procedures that are
outlined in the word of God. And that
takes us to the next basic spiritual skill, which is grace orientation. What you see is, as we look at walking by the Spirit, we
talked about walking by means of the Spirit, then we looked at the faith rest
drill, that we walk by means of faith, so obviously these work together with
one another. Then when we get to grace orientation
in some our opening verses, you will see that there is a connection between
recognizing the sufficiency of God’s grace in providing everything we need to
handle any circumstance in life, and what He has provided for the faith rest
drill in terms of His promises. So all
of these basic skills overlap and are interconnected. As I thought through how we could take these
basic skills, and my approach in this study, is to try to take these skills,
and rather than to teach them in simply abstract form, focusing on basic
principles, or basic definitions, I want to put some flesh on these spiritual
skills so we can see how they work in real time situations in individuals
lives. And perhaps the clearest passage
that deals with this is in 2 Corinthians 12.
This is a passage that is familiar to many people, because this is where
Paul talks about the thorn in the flesh and how he responded to it. So we have to look at this passage because it
gives us an idea of how the apostle Paul dealt with a particular kind of adversity
which he identifies as a thorn in the flesh.
And in that adversity we see how he uses the grace of God to handle the
external pressures of adversity that he faced in his life. This section begins in
verse 7, Paul says, 7 and lest I should be exalted above measure by the
abundance of the revelations, a thorn in the flesh was given to me, a messenger
of Satan to buffet me, lest I be exalted above measure.” Now let’s take a minute just to focus on the
context. In this context, Paul has been
talking about the fact that he was caught up into Paradise, that is
heaven. Paradise, prior to Christ’s work
on the cross was not located in heaven, but it is now. Jesus Christ took captivity captive, took the
Old Testament saints into heaven. So the location of Paradise is now in the
third heaven. And there he received
certain revelations. God disclosed
certain truths to Paul that he was to reveal in his teaching and in his writings
in the New Testament. And of course,
this would be quite a heady experience.
And it is likely that someone who had gone through that kind of experience, who was given the kind of gifts Paul
was given, had the kind of talents and
education that the Apostle Paul had
could easily succumb to arrogance. And
you have numerous references in this passage to boasting. If you just look back at the last Chapter, he
talks about boasting in the verses from 16 to 21, he mentions boasting 2 or 3
times, he mentions boasting in verse 30, in Chapter 12 verse 1, he mentions
boasting twice in 12:5, he mentions boasting again in 12: 6, he mentions
boasting again in 12:11. So obviously, there
is a context here of dealing with
arrogance because of who he was and what he had in natural abilities. So in the context of teaching him not to rely
upon his own talents, his own abilities, his own strengths, his own
intellectual skills, which were powerful, the apostle Paul was one of the most
brilliant men in history. Just in terms
of his native intellect, he was one of the most educated men in his
generation. It would be very easy for someone
of his talents and abilities to try to live the Christian life, to try to
execute the ministry that God gave him, just on the basis of his own education,
ability and talents. So God sent him a
particular test which is classified in verse 7 as a thorn in the flesh. People have tried to identify this thorn all
kinds of different ways over the years. Some
have said it was his health, others have said it was his eye sight, because in
Galatians he talks about “see with what large letters I write” that he
obviously had some sort of eye problem.
Whatever it may be, I think that many people ignore the context of Chapters
11 and 12 where he talks about this thorn in the flesh. It seems to me that the thorn in the flesh
that he mentions in verse 7, contextually, has to do with the constant
antagonism, the constant persecution, the constant rejection that the apostle
Paul faced. Think about it, here is a
man who has been taken into the Paradise of God, into heaven, and who has
received direct revelation; who knew more about God and His plan and purposes
for human history, had a better grasp on the dynamics of the cross, than any
other human being in history. That would
be something that would give him tremendous pride and arrogance. But every where he went, knowing he had the
truth, he was persecuted in incredible ways.
In the immediate context of verses 7-10 in Chapter 12, he concludes by
saying, after he recognizes the principle of grace, he concludes by saying in
verse 10, 10 Therefore I take pleasure in
infirmities, in reproaches, in needs, in persecutions, in distresses, for
Christ’s sake. For when I am weak, then I am strong.” That is his conclusion; that is the lesson he
learns from understanding grace orientation. That comes at the end of this
little paragraph that focuses on being a thorn in the flesh. But if we look at the overall context, go
back to the last paragraph in Chapter 11.
And there, he also outlines these persecutions and this rejection that
he encountered. In verse 22 of Chapter
11 he says, 22 Are they Hebrews? So
am I. Are they Israelites? So am I. Are they the seed of Abraham?
So am I. (He is talking about the rejection he has received at the hands
of his fellow Jews.) 23 Are
they ministers of Christ?—I speak as a fool—I am more: in labors more
abundant, (this
is where he starts to outline the adversities he has encountered and gone
through as a minister of the gospel, as an apostle.) He says: in labors more abundant, (he has had to labor; he
has labored as a common laborer in his tent making business, as well as one who
is involved in the sale and promotion of those tents.) In stripes above measure, in stripes, he is talking about being
whipped, being beaten) in prisons more frequently, (more frequently than any of the
other apostles) in deaths often. (In other words, he was threatened with death
more frequently.) 24 From the Jews five times I received forty stripes
minus one.
The Jews did not believe they should give 40 lashes, they thought that would
kill somebody, so they stopped at 39, instead of going to forty, just in case
somebody miscounted. That was at least
one of the benefits of legalism, you did not have to go to 40, the rabbis were
afraid if you went to 40 it would break the Mosaic Law, so just to make sure
they did not miscount, they only gave 39 lashes.) 25 Three times I was beaten with
rods; (beaten
with sticks, canes, bats, whatever.) once I was stoned; three times I was
shipwrecked; a night and a day I have been in the deep; (in other words, he
was stranded at sea, floating along in the water for a day and a night.) 26 in journeys often,
in perils of waters, in perils of robbers, in perils of my
own countrymen,(where his life was threatened) in perils of the
Gentiles, in perils in the city, in perils in the wilderness, in
perils in the sea, in perils among false brethren; 27 in weariness
and toil, in sleeplessness often, in hunger and thirst, in fastings often, (and that is not a self
imposed fast, he was with out resources, he went without food, he missed a few
meals) in cold and nakedness— 28 besides
the other things, what comes upon me daily: my deep concern for all the
churches.
So all this went beyond all the normal travails of life, the normal struggles
we have just living in the devil’s world and dealing with the normal
adversities and discomforts of life. And
he says, 29 Who is weak, and I am not weak? Who is made to stumble, and I
do not burn with indignation? ” He enumerates here,
and several times throughout 2nd
Corinthians, he makes reference to the fact of how many times he goes through
different adversities. This is the most
detailed list. And it is the middle of
these two statements about this adversity that he talks about how God was using
this to limit his arrogance and to teach him complete dependence upon God. In verse 7, he says, 7 And lest I should
be exalted above measure by the abundance of the revelations, and his
responsibilities in everything that God gave him a thorn in the flesh was given to me, a
messenger of Satan to buffet me, literally, that word for messenger is the
Greek word aggelos. Which could be translated an angel of Satan, and I believe that what he
is referencing here is that all these persecutions that were stirred up against
him were ultimately energized by demons in the angelic conflict. The solution is not to go try to cast out
the demon, or claim dominion over the demon; if you’ll notice that
is never mentioned in that passage.
There are many Christians who try to take that approach. But that was not the biblical approach that
was not Paul’s approach. He recognized
that we are in a spiritual battle, spiritual warfare, and many times there are
dynamics going on in the immaterial angelic, demonic realm, that are having a
cause and effect relationship on the opposition to us, and it is not just
people, it is ultimately a spiritual battle.
In verse 8 he says, 8 Concerning this thing (the thorn in the
flesh, which I believe contextually, refers to all of this opposition and
adversity, persecution and rejection that he faced) I pleaded with the
Lord three times that it might depart from me. The idea there is that he went into
intense prayer on three different occasions pleading and begging with God,
building a case for why God should take this away so that he would be able to
preach the gospel, proclaim the truth of God’s word with out the distraction of
the rejection and persecutions. And this
was God’s response, verse 9. This is the
heart of understanding grace orientation.
9 And He said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for My
strength is made perfect in weakness.” What God was teaching Paul was that, despite
all of our natural enhancements, despite our high IQ, education, strengths,
whatever our strengths might be, whatever it may be what we think gives us some value, and some edge in the
Christian life, God is teaching us that you cannot rely on that. Because that is just the work of the flesh,
wood, hay and straw with no eternal value.
We have to learn to rely exclusively on the sufficiency of God’s
grace. Because it is only when we are
utilizing God’s grace and in dependence upon God’s grace that God’s strength is
made perfect in weakness. Now what does
that mean? First of all, when the text
says, My grace is sufficient, this is the Greek word arkeo, which means, it is enough. It is all that is needed. God gives us everything we need to fit the
particular situation, no matter how overwhelming it may be. No matter how many times we may be facing
these things, His grace is always enough.
It has always provided everything we need to handle the situation, the
circumstances, whatever it may be. It is
enough. It is sufficient; it is adequate
to the task. It, that is God’s grace and God’s grace alone, is all that we
need. So we see that God’s grace is sufficient
for us, “for
My strength (that is God’s omnipotence) is made perfect in weakness.” The next key word we
see in this statement is the word for ‘make perfect’ and it is the word teleo, a word familiar to
us, and it means to bring something to completion. Not perfection in the sense of flawlessness,
but to bring its intended end, to bring it to completion, to bring it to
maturity. This is from the same word
group that we saw in over in Galatians 3:3 and Galatians 5:16 that we are to
walk by means of the Spirit, and we will not bring to completion the deeds of
the flesh. In Galatians 3:3 Paul said, 3 Are you so foolish?
Having begun in the Spirit, are you now being completed, or matured, by means
of the flesh? No, of
course not. Then we looked at James
Chapter 1, talking about how tests and trials are used to perfect us, or mature
us. And it the same word group. So this is a crucial word group for
understanding the dynamics of Christian growth.
It is gods grace that provides some
it
is God’s grace that provides something for us.
It is almost presented here as if it is a power in itself. It is not a power, it is presented that way,
it is God's grace that stands behind everything He delivers to us in our
Christian walk to enable us to handle all the adversities that come our
way. Once Paul understood God's grace he
concludes: Therefore most
gladly I will rather boast in my infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest
in me. So now, rather than emphasizing his own strength, his own education, his
own skills, his own training, his own intellect, and the focus is on what god
has provided for him rather than his own ability. He understands the principle that the
Christian life is a supernatural way of life and can only be completed on the
basis of supernatural powers. We cannot
do it on our own; we cannot pull ourselves up by our own spiritual boot straps. Therefore in verse 10 …..he concludes, he
takes pleasure in the adversity he faces. 10 Therefore I take
pleasure in infirmities, in reproaches, in needs, in persecutions, in
distresses, for Christ’s sake. For when I am weak, then I am strong. That is, when I recognize that it is not up to
me, that God’s solution is
the only solution, then I am strong.
That is grace orientation. Let’s
take it apart in about 12 points to understand what grace orientation is.
First
of all, what is grace? We need to define
it. We have two key word here, grace and
orientation.
Grace
has to do with undeserved favor or unmerited kindness. It is gods plan for dealing with fallen
man. He is going to supply what man
needs. Not on the basis of who we are,
what we have done, what our talents are, what our
strengths are, but on the
basis of His character and on the basis of the work that Jesus Christ did on
the cross. It is undeserved. It is not based on who we are at all. We have
to learn to get that notion behind us. It is not dependent on who we are. It is
dependent on who He is. So the first
thing we understand is that grace orientation relates to underserved favor and
unmerited kindness. To understand grace,
we have to begin at salvation. It is by
grace that we have been saved, through faith.
It is God’s love that provides the solution for our salvation. So we understand grace a t salvation. And that begins to attack our arrogance. Because the opposite of grace orientation at salvation
is arrogant dependence on our abilities.
That some how, we can do something.
We can engage in some
ritual, we can go to church enough, o enough good deeds, somehow that impressed
god. so we begin to see that arrogance,
and emphasis on self is the opposite of grace orientation. As we get beyond salvation, we begin to
understand that the Christian life is based on understanding the sufficiency of
gods provision. This is a verse we look
at last week for the promises of God. But it is also part of grace that God’s divine
power has granted to us and it is that word, granted to us, that giving to us,
everything that is the focus of grace.
In the post salvation Christian life, God's power has given us, not some
things, not most things, but everything related to life and
godliness. And those two words, life and
godliness, incorporate everything. Life is bios, which is the Greek
word from which we get biology, and it refers to physical life issues. So that is basic logistical grace. god is going to take care of our
physical needs. It doesn’t mean you
won’t go hungry at times. It doesn’t
mean you may not be thirsty at times. There
is room within the plan of God that includes testing in those areas. But, God is going to provide for us; overall
he is going to provide for us He is
going to take care of those needs. There
will be enough to keep us alive. There
will be enough to take care of all those physical needs. There may not be as much as we would
like. Remember, the Exodus generation
went through the desert for 40 years and they wore the same clothes they left
Egypt with. Now, if right before you
left Egypt, you went to Target instead
of Neiman’s, well, you had to
spend 40 years wearing those same old shoes that you got at Target, but they
did not wear out. But you got stuck
wearing those shoes from Target. God provided everything they
needed. He did not give them a second,
third or fourth wardrobe, He made what they had last, it never wore out. Their shoes did not wear out, their pants did
not wear out, nothing wore out. It
lasted the whole time.
The second category here is godliness, which
is the Greek word eusebeia, which refers to our
spiritual life. The totality here is
that gods has given to you at the instant of salvation everything you
need. The potential to handle every
situation in life. Primarily that
comes through the Spirit of God and the word of God.
And
we have that. It is up to our volition to learn the word of God, to walk by
the Holy Spirit and that turns the potential of what we have spiritually to actual
spiritual growth. And part of this, of
course, starting in verse 4 has to do with the promises, and that relates to
the faith rest drill. Another passage
that describes the sufficiency of what God has given us is in Ephesians 1:3 3 Blessed be
the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with most spiritual
blessings, some spiritual blessing, no, every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places
in Christ,
In 2Peter He has given to us all things that pertain
to life and godliness
and here he has given us every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places. God is not a tightwad; God has
given us everything we need. He has
been is generous. This is based on His
grace and his goodness. He is generous
with us He gives us everything and what we have to do is to learn to align our
thinking with what God ahs given us. and that is what
orientation is. For those of you who
spent some time in the military, you remember back before they had satellites
and GPS, and all the fancy technology they have today, we used to have to learn how to take a basic
compass and a topographical map and figure out how to do the calculations with
the deviation between true north and magnetic north, and we had to learn how to
navigate our way through an area of land which was called land navigation, or
orienteering. And you had to learn to orient
a topographical map to the lay of that land around you and then move form point
A to point B by simply using your map and a compass. One of the first things you would have to do
is lay the map down and orient it with the compass towards true north. Once you had it oriented towards north, you
would look at the vario0us topographical features and try to figure out where you
were on the map in relation to topographical features. What you were doing was aligning the map with
reality. You had to orient it. If you had it off center, or if you had some
large piece of metal near the compass so the needle was off a few degrees, then
you were not aligned according to reality.
You were not properly oriented.
Any decisions you made would be wrong because you lacked proper
orientation. That is what happens in
life when we operate on arrogance. Our
thinking is not oriented to the reality of God's grace, which is His
fundamental principle in operating in human history. He deals with us on the
basis of grace. As church age believers,
He has given us everything related to life
and godliness. So we take the concept of
grace, which is God’s unmerited favor, and we link it with this idea of
orientation, which is aligning our thinking to ultimate reality, which is
defined by His word. And that ultimate
reality is characterized by grace, all
that comes from the kindness and benevolence of God. And we come to understand that nothing in
this life is really dependent on my skills, my abilities, my talents, and my
efforts. It is deceiving sometimes, because
there are things that make it look as if, if I work hard, if I am diligent, and
if I study hard, then I am going to advance and have success and go forward. There is an element of truth to that. And
there are many people we can point to and say they applied themselves well,
they worked hard, they studied hard, made good grades, and they were successful
in life. But there are many other people
out there who work very diligently, and for whatever reason, they don’t get the
opportunities, they don’t become a Bill Gates, or a Donald Trump, or some one like that. But they work forty, fifty, sixty hours a
week, and they are diligent, and they are smart, but God just does not give them
those opportunities. So that ultimately,
it is God’s grace and God’s plan that
brings those efforts to fruition. We have to learn that ultimately, it is not
our works, our efforts, but it is God’s grace, and God’s plan. It is not that we just sit back and wait for
it to it happen, that is mysticism and irresponsibility. But ultimately it is not dependent upon
us. We can also point to people who are
lazy, good for nothing, and irresponsible, and somehow everything they touch
turns to gold. That is just the grace of
God. So we have to recognize that it is
always God’s grace, it is not us. When
there is success, it is due to God’s grace and when there is failure it is due
to our poor volition. We have to realize
that the air we breath, the food we eat, the health we enjoy, the jobs that pay
our bills, the cars we drive , our friends, our family, our homes, our parents,
that we have, children that we have, everything comes from God. He is the one who has provided all of that. So when we look at grace orientation, it is
fundamentally the idea of orienting our thinking to God. Aligning our thinking and actions with God’s
policy of grace. All that we are and
have in this life comes from the kindness and the benevolence of God, and that
nothing is due to our own inherent abilities, talents, or efforts. That is our understanding, it is grace
orientation. That is what Paul had to
learn. That God’s grace was sufficient, and
his success as an apostle had nothing to do with his rabbinical training, his
education, his tremendous writing skills, and native logic. It had to do with God’s grace. But once he was oriented to God’s grace, then
God could use his education, training, background, his natural skills, in the ministry and in his service to God. But first he had to have that arrogance
knocked out of him. He had to be
oriented to God's grace.
The second
thing we note is that God’s grace is His policy toward His creatures, which is
based on the principle of non meritious blessing. Faith is non meritorious. Faith is a transitive verb; it always takes a
direct object, grammatically it always focuses on something. And what faith focuses on is that which has
merit. And the focus in the faith rest drill is the
promise of God, the provision of God, the power of God. That is where our strength lies. Not in our own abilities. So we have to knock that arrogance out of
us. And it relates to how we relate to
other people. It relates to how we deal
with other people, especially in people tests, where we have tendencies to want to strike back or have revenge, anger,
resentment, or whatever it may be.
Ephesians 4:31, 32, strikes at the heart of the people
relationships. 31 Let all bitterness,
wrath, anger, clamor, and evil speaking be put away from you, with all malice.32
And be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God
in Christ forgave you. That is
the essence of grace orientation. And it
is aligning our thinking with God’s grace, as exemplified at the cross. Just as God, in Christ, forgave you.
So, on the one hand we have to reject the bitterness, anger, resentment,
the vindictiveness, and on the other hand be kind, tenderhearted and forgiving,
just as Jesus Christ was toward us.
Third point: the opposite
of grace orientation is self reliance and self dependence and arrogance. The opposite of grace is dependence upon the
creature. It is creaturely orientation, and
not the Creator orientation. We have to
maintain that Creator, creature distinction.
So we think that we have basic and inherent rights to health, to
prosperity, to our talents and abilities.
At the core of arrogance, is an orientation to entitlement. We think we are entitled to salvation, to God
treating us well, because, look at what
I have to offer Him. And we have tog get
that entitlement mentality of arrogance knocked out of us and orient to
grace.
Fourth thing about grace orientation is it’s foundational to
further advance in the spiritual life.
If you do not understand grace at salvation, you cannot orient to
doctrine at the next level. If you do
not understand grace, then when it comes to love, personal love for God the
Father, and impersonal love for all mankind, you will always have trouble, because
you are not thinking in terms of unmerited kindness, and that is the core of
grace orientation. Grace orientation is
foundational to advance in the spiritual life.
Failure to grasp this will stifle your spiritual momentum.
Fifth point: Grace orientation is measured ultimately by
gratitude. It is measured by gratitude;
whereas failure to orient to grace is measured by arrogance. If you notice, there are some people who have
no grace orientation, they are never grateful for anything, they always want
more. They think they ought to have
more, think they are entitled to this and that.
Frankly, because of the curse of sin, because of the penalty of sin,
there is one thing we are all entitled to, and that is a rapid orientation to
the grave. We are not entitled to
anything else, because as fallen creatures, we deserve one and only one
thing. But God, in His grace keeps us
alive. God, in His grace, has a plan for
mankind. God, in His grace provides
salvation. And the more you think about
that, the more we orient our thinking to grace.
And your gratitude for every breath we have. For every meal we have, for every gallon of
gas we can afford to buy today. It is
all due to the grace of God.
Sixth point: Let’s look at some basic characteristics that we
find in grace orientation. We start with
orientation of grace toward salvation.
Thinking about all that means for us.
As we move out of that, one of the first things we should develop is a
genuine humility. Recognizing that it is
not about us, it is about God, and His plan, and His purposes. Humility actually develops in a couple of
different ways. First of all we have enforced
humility, which applies to believer and unbeliever alike. It is where we learn authority
orientation. We learn discipline from our
parents, from teachers, coaches, dance instructors, music instructors. As we learn that basic humility, it allows us
to learn the skills of those disciplines.
Without humility you cannot learn anything. You cannot be taught. Without authority orientation, you won’t ever
learn a thing. So we have to have that
orientation to authority and this moves from genuine humility to
teachability. It is amazing how many
believers are not teachable. They pick a
church because it is going to reinforce their own prejudices. And when the pastor says something they do
not agree with, rather than going to the word of God as the source, and say
well, maybe that is what the bible says, and it is God that is stomping on my
toes and not the pastor, they just leave and go to the next church. They just want some body to confirm, validate,
their own arrogance. They are not
teachable at all. To be truly teachable,
sometimes, is very painful. Because we
have to take an honest look at who we are, at our own life, our habits, the way
we try to deal with adversity and recognize that we may have been trying to make
everything work on our own terms. For 20 or 30 years and it is really a
miserable failure. To look into the
mirror of God’s word, and to face it with honesty and true humility, is so
threatening to some people that they will never do it. They do not have the spiritual courage to be
honest with themselves, and with the word of God. They are just not teachable. As we advance in grace orientation, we
develop a relaxed mental attitude about life.
We recognize that we are just as sinful as the person sitting across the
church from us. Their sins may be
shocking to us, but then our sins may be shocking to them. Their sins may be more overt and hang out
there a little more, whereas ours are mental attitude sins, so people just
think we have it all together, and we are just as carnal as the person down the
street who is involved in drugs and alcoholism, or whatever else that the
culture offers. But if we have a relaxed
mental attitude, we are not judgmental.
We realize that God is dealing individually with each one of us, so we
can relax and let the supreme court of heaven deal with other peoples problems
and their spiritual lives. We are not
going to gossip or malign. We are not
going to get involved in trying to solve everybody else’s problems. We are just going to relax about life. We are going to learn to let God’s power work
in our lives.
This develops into a mastery of the details of life. We begin to realize that, because God is
going to supply everything we need to accomplish His will for our life, it is
not about going out and getting all the status symbols or friends or whatever
it may are, in life. There are all kinds
of details from money to things, education, achievements, promotion, status
symbols, and sex whatever it is. These
are al the details of life. And people,
who start pursuing the details of life for happiness, get in to a frantic search
for happiness, and it always ends up in frustration. Because the details of life will never
provide stability, they will never provide happiness. They may provide a pseudo happiness for a
while, and a pseudo stability, but as soon as adversity comes and takes it
away, the person just collapses. Grace
orientation makes us recognize that God provides everything we need to
accomplish what He wants us to accomplish.
If we do not have it, then it is not necessary to accomplish God’s plan
and God’s will. So that leads to
gratitude. We develop a gratefulness for
all that God has provided for us. So
that we are focused on Him, focused on everything He gives us, in order to go
forward. So these are the
characteristics of grace orientation.
God is demonstrating that His power is what counts, not ours. The Old Testament story that really brings
this home is in the book of Judges. I’m
not going to take the time to go through every detail of this great story in
Judges 7, where God has chosen Gideon to be the judge to deliver the people
from the onslaught of the Indianite. So
Gideon pulls together an army of the Jews that is going to go against this
massive army of the Midianites, and try to gain victory, because God has called
him to do this. But God has to teach
Gideon grace orientation. He pulls
together an army of some 10, 000, and
the Lord’s response to that is, Gideon, that is too many. Well wait a minute, we are already
outnumbered about 6 to 1. The Midianites
had around 125-130, 000 and all Gideon had was about 10, 000. So
God says, no, that is way too many. He
is trying to teach us that it is not about our talents, it is about grace
orientation. So God said, ‘Whoever is
fearful and afraid, let him turn and depart at once from Mount Gilead.’” Twenty-two thousand of the people returned,
and ten thousand remained. So he
started off with 32, 000, 22, 000 left
and 10, 000 remained. That is 10, 000 against about 125, 000. Still pretty overwhelmed, Gideon said, well,
I don’t
know. But the
Lord in verse 4 said, you still have too many.
Wait a minute Lord; we are outnumbered 12 to 1. The Lord said, well, you
still have too many. We have to make it
clear that it is about My power and My strength, and not about your power and
your strength. So we’ll have a little
test. Take them down to the creek and as
they cross over the water, the ones that bend over and lap the water up into
their mouth; those are the ones who go with you. The ones that stop and bend down, and get
down on their knees, they are not ready to go to battle. The number of those who lapped, in verse 6,
putting their hand to their mouth, was 300 men.
But all of the rest of the 10, 000, 9700, stopped and took a good long
drink. God said, well you are not focused,
go home, and now I’ve got the right size.
I’ve got 300 to go against 125, 000.
God was going to demonstrate that His power was sufficient in
weakness. This is the same principle
that we see the apostle Paul had to learn, and it is the principle we have to
learn. It is that God’s power is brought
to completion in our weakness. We have
to be dependent upon Him and in His grace.
You know the story, that God gave Gideon instructions: very subtle, crafty trickery. He said to give every man a clay pot, put a
light inside the pot. When I give the
command to break the clay post, everyone is to shout and break the pot, and
then these 300 lights will appear. The
way the armies worked in that day, you would have about one light per company
of men. So rather than thinking there
were only 300 men up there, the enemy thought there were 300 companies. So the Midianites panicked, it was a nice
surprise night attack, and in their panic and fear, they started killing each other. After they slaughtered each other in a panic,
the small Jewish army of 300 moved in and wiped them out. God’s grace is sufficient. His way of doing it, may not appear to be our
way of doing it. It may not fit our
preconceived notions, our arrogance, our emphasis on our own capabilities and
abilities to solve the problem on our own.
But He is going to demonstrate that His way is the only way, and the
divine solution is the only solution.
And we have to be oriented to grace.
So this gets us through our fourth basic skill. Next time we will look at doctrinal
orientation.
With our heads bowed and our eyes closed. Father, we thank You for the opportunity to
understand Your grace and to focus on it, to learn that we must live and think
within the framework of Your grace. That
this is foundational to forward advance.
It starts at the cross. We pray,
if there is any one here this evening that is unsure of their salvation, or
uncertain of their eternal destination, that they would take this opportunity
to make it sure and certain. All you
need to do is put your trust in Christ for salvation. It is not about what you have done or haven’t
done. It is not about ritual, it is not
about bargaining with God, or buying your way into heaven. It is simply trusting in Christ’s finished
work on the cross. And the instant you
put your faith in Jesus Christ, God the Father justifies you, regenerates you,
you have eternal life, which can never be taken away from you. Now Father, we pray that You would help us to
understand, in each of our lives, how to orient our thinking to grace through the ministry of God the Holy
Spirit, as we walk by Him and are filled by Him. We pray this in Christ’s name. Amen