Daniel
Pasaribu
Monday Sermon for LJUSC as of April 9, 2012
“LIVE AND WALK IN THE SPIRIT”- PART I - Galatians 5:
16 & 25
Dear Precious Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
Galatians 5:16:” Walk in the Spirit, and you should not
fulfilled the lust of the flesh”. Galatians 5:25 : “ If you live in the Spirit,
let us also walk in the Spirit”. Do you walk with God? As a Christian, do you
walk daily “in the Spirit?” How would you characterize your Christian walk? Is
it a spiritual one? Or is it a walk that is carnal? Do your appetites control
you? Does your “wants” and “desires” control you?
Christians waver between spirituality and carnality for
most of their life, with a small handful achieving a walk that is consistently
spiritual. But those who don’t achieve a consistent spiritual walk do fulfill,
on a consistent basis, the unspoken, inherent truth of the verse in Galatians
5:16. That verse says that if one walks in the Spirit, one will not fulfill the
lust of the flesh. The inherent, unspoken truth in that is that if one does not
walk in the Spirit, one will fulfill the lust of the flesh.
Christians walk carnally, pleasing their flesh, some
moderately, some laviously, some unbridled, and some with a measure of
restraint, while many struggle openly and obviously with their flesh, dominated
at times, weak, helpless and overpowered by its demands and needs. They go
about seeking to please God in their life with supreme efforts at doing good
and fail.
As Christians we often hear messages about living for
God, about being obedient to God, about doing the “right thing,” about
following rules and standards of conduct. Such messages are good reminders for
us. We need to hear about our duty. The Bible admonishes us about things we are
to DO. The book of James clearly tells us that we are to DO, not just profess.
Thus, we strive to conduct ourselves upright in a Christ-like manner. We
associate with other like-minded Christians which help us maintain a lifestyle
that is consistent with our beliefs, with our profession of faith. We avoid
social scenes that will place temptations before us or which will harm the
image we now have of a “good person,” or a “godly person.” We do not want to be
considered, any more, a “wicked person,” or an “immoral person.” In short, we
do, as the Scriptures say: “Put away the old man and put on the new man.”
But inside, there is a raging, snarling lion.
Sin dominates some Christians such that they awaken with
a lust to satisfy the flesh that does not diminish throughout the day. Some
want liquor on awakening. Some want a cigarette. Some want a sleeping pill.
Some want drugs. Some want sex. And others are so depressed they simply want to
go back to sleep. Christians stumble through their days struggling against the
flesh, losing, winning, losing, falling, getting up, falling again, despairing
and weeping, wanting deliverance, not understanding the battle, and never
realizing the battle is already won.
Most Christians view the struggle against sin as a
contest of will power. They feel they must exert their will power against the
flesh. And so they must. Most Christians feel that if they fail, it is because
they “gave in” or “gave up,” or were too weak to resist temptation. And that is
true. But, the underlying rationale behind their thinking is truly not true .
Their reasoning is shallow, not complete. You see, it is a paradox of sorts. It
is the will of the Christian that decides to sin or not. But, hear this
statement: The will power of the Christian is no match for his or her flesh.
You will lose most of the time.
The Bible says: “He that saith he abideth in him ought
himself also so to walk, even as he walked.” - 1 John 2:6. But the Christian
says: “I can’t walk as Christ walked. After all, He was God. And yes, I know I
should not do this sin. However, the urge is so powerful, my appetite for it is
so enormous, that after awhile, I cannot ignore the flesh. It’s cry is too
fierce, too loud, too demanding. It occupies my every waking thought. It drives
me. I am too weak to resist and so I give in.”
That is the cry of far, far too many Christians, today.
It doesn’t have to be that way. There is a simple, yet tremendously effective
weapon that can be used against the flesh.
God says His grace is sufficient. God says He has chosen
the weak things of the world (you do qualify, don’t you?). God says He is able
to do the impossible. God says we can do ALL things through Christ. God says He
does best when we are weak.(Phillipians4:13)
Again, we will give intellectual assent to all of that.
But we somehow can’t walk through our front door with full and complete
expectation of those things. We say we believe God is “all sufficient,” but we
don’t expect God to give us the will power, the character, the power, the
desire or whatever it is we need to be strong and to win the victory over the
flesh. We say we believe that God gives us grace to help, but we don’t expect
God to give us the power to overcome our sin. We make our sin greater than
God’s grace. We make our weakness greater than God. We make our wickedness too
great for God to handle.
Dear Precious Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
No Christian on the face of this earth is capable of
living holy before the Lord God unless he or she walks by faith. You must
believe that God is able to enable you to live for Him. You must believe that
if He gave an order for you to obey, He will absolutely have committed Himself
to provide you with the power, the purpose, the desire and whatever else you
need to obey that command. Thus, if God said to be holy, to live holy and to be
fruitful, then all that remains for the Christian is to believe it.
If the book of James teaches anything, it teaches us
that unless and until we reach out and grab the task God has set before us, or
unless we reach out and perform the task commanded, our faith is dead. “Even so
faith, if it hath not works, is dead, being alone. 18. Yea, a man may say, Thou
hast faith, and I have works: show me thy faith without thy works, and I will
show thee my faith by my works. 19. Thou believest that there is one God; thou
doest well: the devils also believe, and tremble. 20. But wilt thou know, O
vain man, that faith without works is dead?” - James 2:17-20. If all we have is
knowledge, we are not wise. We are not faithful. And we are not obedient. And
if those things be true, then we are not walking in the Spirit.
And if that be true, the we are walking in the flesh.
And if we are walking in the flesh, we are fulfilling the lusts of the
flesh.(Galatians 5:16)
And everywhere, Christians strive with the flesh,
winning, losing, rising, falling, weeping, hoping, waiting, all seeking to live
the “victorious” Christian life, only to see it dangle just beyond their grasp.
Just when it seems close, they reach for it and suddenly it is once more far
away, jerked away by the ropes of sin. And too quickly, we yelp that “the devil
made me do it” in order to have an excuse. And while it is true that Satan and
his demons horde lurk amongst us and stalk us, it is not true that all our
fleshly failings belong to them. The Bible says: “Ye are of God, little
children, and have overcome them: because greater is he that is in you, than he
that is in the world.” (1 John 4:4)
And everywhere, such Christians have acknowledged the
truth of all the Scriptures quoted herein, and have acknowledged the veracity
of what has been said here, but have failed to reach out and by faith, live the
life that Christ has already given: His Life. His Strength. His Power. Not
ours.
As it is written: “Not by power or might, but by my
Spirit saith the Lord.” And again, it is not with our vision, our
determination, our ability to see and know the road ahead that we walk. It is a
walk of faith. “(For we walk by faith, not by sight:)” - (2 Cor 5:7).
And even the faith we have is of God. “I am crucified
with Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the
life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who
loved me, and gave himself for me.” - Gal 2:20. Paul said “yet not I, but
Christ.” He understood from whence his life now came. And he understood that it
was God’s faith given to Paul that enabled Paul to live the spiritual life.
Charles Stanley once said that our God would not give us
His Spirit and then abandon us, hoping we’d somehow learn to walk, learn to
live and learn to obey, without giving us everything we could possibly need to
live, to walk, to obey and to glorify Him. It is not logical that God would
fail to equip His soldiers. It is not logical that God would leave us to our
own puny, frail will power in order to achieve victory in our Christian walk.
But that’s what we do, many of us. Too long and too often, Christians have
walked, depending on themselves, expecting that they should somehow have this
great power of will and character, never expectantly and unconditionally
realizing that it was a “done deal,” that Christ conquered the flesh on the
cross and that they are dead with Christ, yet risen also with Him in newness of
life.
Actually, there is not an honest Christian alive who
will deny that he or she is inadequate for the expectations of Christ. None of
us can do it. The facts are that although we have striven mightily against sin,
again and again we have failed. That’s a fact and you know it. You have failed
and failed and failed and failed. Your flesh has overpowered you in many areas
of your life, again and again. Your temper, your appetite, your tongue...your
flesh, has betrayed you. That’s a fact that’s undeniable.
“Being confident of this very thing, that he which hath
begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ:” -
(Phil 1:6)
Recognize your weakness and then rejoice. Paul did. “And
he said unto me, My grace is sufficient for thee: for my strength is made
perfect in weakness. Most gladly therefore will I rather glory in my
infirmities, that the power of Christ may rest upon me.” - 2 Cor 12:9. The big
difference between the carnal Christian and the spiritual Christian is that the
one has a life of striving and failing, the other, a life of striving and
achieving. The difference is that one, in simple faith, depends on God to
empower him or her for the task, while the other depends on a surge of will
power, or chance, or some kind of vague, undefined “Hope I’m up to it” kind of
“faith” that is no faith.
If you will, in simple faith, give yourself to God and
then expect Him to help you and believe that He has given you all you need to
walk victoriously, then it will be even as your faith has decreed. “I beseech
you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a
living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.”
- Rom 12:1. Notice that your body is considered by God to be “holy” and, best
of all, “ACCEPTABLE UNTO GOD.” Thus, isn’t it reasonable that you present
yourself to God? After all, you belong to Him. You were bought with a price.
“For ye are bought with a price: therefore glorify God in your body, and in
your spirit, which are God’s.” - 1 Cor 6:20.
So what about it? Are you tired of losing? Weary of the
flesh always winning? There is a way to win. Regularly. Consistently.
It takes faith in what God has already promised. It
takes understanding and wisdom. It takes an expectant faith that waits patiently
for God to perform, never wavering, not doubting, and never making one’s sins
and weakness greater than God’s grace.
Remember this: “Moreover the law entered, that the
offence might abound. But where sin abounded, grace did much more abound:” -
Rom 5:20
God’s grace abounds towards you, that is, God has sent
His grace, in abundance, IN YOUR DIRECTION, and is able to subdue your worst
sin.
How Do We Live and Walk In the Spirit?
The phrase "live and walk by the Spirit"
occurs not only in verse 25 but also in verse 16, "But I say, walk by the
Spirit and do not gratify the desires of the flesh." So here we see what
the opposite of walking by the Spirit is, namely, giving in to the desires of
the flesh. Remember, "flesh" is the old, ordinary human nature that
does not relish the things of God and prefers to get satisfaction from
independence, power, prestige, and worldly pleasures. When we "walk by the
Spirit," we are not controlled by those drives. This is what verse 17
means: the flesh produces one kind of desires, and the Spirit produces another
kind, and they are opposed to each other. Walking by the Spirit is what we do
when the desires produced by the Spirit are stronger than the desires produced
by the flesh. This means that "walking by the Spirit" is not
something we do in order to get the Spirit's help, but rather, just as the
phrase implies, it is something we do by the enablement of the Spirit.
Ultimately, all the good inclinations or preferences or
desires that we have are given by the Holy Spirit. Apart from the Spirit we are
mere flesh. And Paul said in Romans 7:18, "I know that in me, that is, in
my flesh, dwells no good thing." Apart from the gracious influences of the
Holy Spirit, none of our inclinations or desires is holy or good, "for the
mind of the flesh is hostile to God's law and does not submit to it because it
cannot" (Romans 8:7). The new birth is the coming into our life of the
Holy Spirit to create a whole new array of desires and loves and yearnings and
longings. And when these desires are stronger than the opposing desires of the
flesh, then we are "walking by the Spirit." For we always act
according to our strongest desires.
Therefore, "living and walking by the Spirit"
is something the Holy Spirit enables us to do by producing in us strong desires
that accord with God's will. This is what God said he would do in Ezekiel
36:26, 27:
“A new heart I will give you and a new spirit I will put
within you . . . I will put my Spirit within you and cause you to walk in my
statutes”.
Thus when we "live and walk in the Spirit," we
experience the fulfillment of this prophecy. The Holy Spirit produces in us
desires for God's way that are stronger than our fleshly desires, and thus He
causes us to walk in God's statutes.
Led by the Spirit and Not Under Law
This, then, explains the two parts of the next verse in
Galatians 5, verse 18, "But if you are led by the Spirit, you are not
under the law." It is easy to understand, in view of what we have seen,
how Paul could shift from the phrase "walking by the Spirit" in verse
16, to "being led by the Spirit" in verse 18. The phrase, "being
led by the Spirit," simply makes more explicit the initiative of the
Spirit in the life of a Christian. We don't lead him; He leads us. We are being
led by Him through the stronger desires He awakens within us. "Walking by
the Spirit" and "being led by the Spirit" refer to the same
thing. "Being led by the Spirit" stresses the Spirit's initiative and
enablement. "Walking by the Spirit" stresses our resulting behavior.
The Spirit leads us by creating desires to obey God, and we walk by fulfilling
those desires in action.
This explains, then, why we are not "under the
law," as verse 18 says. "If you are led by the Spirit (i.e., led by
him to obey the law), then you are not under law." You are not "under
law" in two senses. First, you are not under the law's condemnation
because you are fulfilling the just requirement of the law. That's what Paul
meant in Romans 8:4 where he said that Christ died "in order that the just
requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us who walk according to the
Spirit." When you walk by the Spirit, you fulfill the basic requirement of
the law and so you are not under its condemnation. The second sense in which we
are not under law when we "walk by the Spirit" or are "led by
the Spirit" is that then we don't feel the pinch or burden of the law
demanding of us what we have no desire to do. When the Spirit is leading us by
producing godly desires, then the commands of God are not a burden but a joy.
So in that sense too, walking by the Spirit frees us from being under the law.
"Where the Spirit of the Lord is, there is freedom". (2 Corinthians
3:17)
“LIVE AND WALK IN THE SPIRIT”- PART II - Galatians 5: 16
& 25
Works of the Flesh and Fruit of the Spirit
Now, if we look in Galatians 5: 19–24 which follow, we
will find one more expression about the Spirit which confirms and expands what
we have seen so far about "walking by the Spirit." In these verses
Paul contrasts the "works of the flesh" (19–21) with the "fruit
of the Spirit" (22–23). The opposite of doing the "works of the
flesh" is "bearing the fruit of the Spirit." This is exactly the
same contrast we saw in verse 16: "Walk by the Spirit and do not gratify
the desires of the flesh." The "works of the flesh" are what you
do when you "gratify the desires of the flesh." The "fruit of
the Spirit" is what appears in your life when you "walk by the
Spirit." Therefore what we have in these verses are three images of the
Spirit's work in our life: "walking by the Spirit" in verse 16,
"being led by the Spirit" in verse 18, and bearing "the fruit of
the Spirit" in verse 22.
Why does Paul refer to the "fruit of the
Spirit" instead of the "works of the Spirit" to match
"works of the flesh"? In view of what we have seen so far, I think
the reason is that Paul wants to avoid giving any impression that what the
Spirit produces is our work. It is not our work; it is His fruit. What we do
when we walk by the Spirit is simply fulfill the desires produced by the
Spirit. And what better way is there to describe the ease of following our
strongest desires than to say it is like having the Spirit's fruit pop out in
our attitudes and actions? Therefore, just like the phrase "led by the
Spirit," so also the phrase "fruit of the Spirit" stresses the
Spirit's initiative and enablement to fulfill God's law.
Love Your Neighbor
The last thing we want to notice in these verses about
"walking by the Spirit" is that it refers basically to one kind of
behavior: loving behavior. The first thing mentioned in the fruit of the Spirit
is love in verse 22. This is emphasized even more in verses 13 and 14:
You were called to freedom, brethren, only do not use
your freedom as an occasion for the flesh, but through love be servants of one
another. For the whole law is fulfilled in one word: "You shall love your
neighbor as yourself."
Just as the works of the flesh and the fruit of the
Spirit are contrasted in verses 19–23, so here giving in to the flesh and
serving each other through love are contrasted in verses 13 and 14. This shows
that love is the all-encompassing lifestyle of one who bears the fruit of the
Spirit, is led by the Spirit, and walks by the Spirit. This is confirmed by the
reference to the law in verse 14 and verse 18. In verse 18, "If you are
led by the Spirit, you are not under the law." In verse 14, "If you
love your neighbor, you fulfill the whole law." Therefore, loving your
neighbor and being led by the Spirit (or walking by the Spirit) are almost
synonymous.
Almost. But there is a crucial difference which should
make us very grateful that Paul taught what he did about the Holy Spirit. If
all we were ever told was, "Love your neighbor," we probably would
have set about trying to do it by ourselves and would have turned love into a
work of the flesh. We know this happens because of 1 Corinthians 13:3 where
Paul says:
“If I give away all that I have and if I deliver my body
to be burned but have not love, I gain nothing”.
This is utterly important for your life. Yet it is
understood by so few. It is possible to undertake the most sacrificial acts
imaginable for other people and still not please God. Give away all your goods
and your own life, too, and come to nothing in God's eyes. It is possible to be
eulogized by the world as the greatest philanthropist or the most devoted
martyr and still not please God. Why? Because what pleases God is walking by
the Spirit and being led by the Spirit and bearing the fruit of the Spirit!
The great problem in contemporary Christian living is
not learning the right things to do but how to do the right things. The problem
is not to discover what love looks like but how to love by the Spirit. For Paul
it is absolutely crucial that, if we came to life by the free and sovereign
work of the Spirit, we learn to walk by the free and sovereign work of the
Spirit. In view of the sovereignty of the Spirit who leads us where He wills by
the stronger desires He creates within us, what should we do? What, very
practically, is involved in obeying the command, "Walk by the
Spirit"?
Dear Precious Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
There Are Seven Steps Toward Living and Walking by the
Spirit According to Galatians 5: 16 & 25.
Let me conclude by mentioning seven things that I think
we must do so that it can be truly said that we are living and walking in the
Spirit.
1. Acknowledgement and confirmation
First, we must acknowledge from our hearts that we are
helpless to do good apart from the enablement of the Holy Spirit. As Paul says
in Romans 7:18, "I know that in me, that is, in my flesh, dwells no good
thing." What did Jesus mean when he said in John 15:5, "Without me
you can do nothing"? Of course we can do something without Jesus: we can
sin! But that's all we can do. So, the first step of walking by the Spirit is:
admit this fact and let it have its devastating effect on our pride. We cannot
do anything pleasing to God without the constant enablement of the Spirit. The
Fruit of the Spirit which are working in your daily life will be the Character
of the Holy Spirit who dwells in you and the confirmation or sign to proof that
you are truly living and walking in the Spirit. They are love, joy, peace,
longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness ,gentleness and
self-control.(Galatians 5:22-23)
2. Prayer
Second, since it is promised in Ezekiel 36:27 that God
will put His Spirit within us and cause us to walk in his statutes, pray that
He does it to you by His almighty power. Many of you know the glorious,
liberating experience of having an irresistible desire for sin overcome by a
new and stronger desire for God and His way. And as you look back, to whom do
you attribute that new desire? Where did it come from? It came from the
merciful Holy Spirit. Therefore, let us pray like Paul did in 1 Thessalonians
3:12 for that chief fruit of the Spirit: "Now may the Lord make you
increase and abound in love to one another and to all men." And let's pray
like the writer to the Hebrews did in Hebrews 13:21,
“And now may the God of peace . . . equip you with
everything good that you may do his will, working in you that which is pleasing
in his sight through Jesus Christ”.
If it is God alone who works in us what is pleasing in
His sight, then above all, we must pray. "Create in me a clean heart, O
God, and put a new and right spirit within me" (Psalm 51:10).
3. Trust in the Lord
The third step involved in walking by the Spirit is
faith. We must believe that since we have come under the gracious sway of God's
Spirit, "sin will no longer have dominion over us" (Romans 6:14).
This confidence is what Paul meant by "reckoning ourselves dead to sin and
alive to God" (Romans 6:11). We simply count on it that the Spirit who
made us alive when we were dead in sin wills our holiness and has the power to
achieve what he wills. One of the things we believers can pray for with
undoubting faith that God will do it is our sanctification, which is the same
as being led by the Spirit.
The reason we can is that we know that God will cause
His children to be led by the Spirit. And the way we know this is because of
Romans 8:14, where Paul says you can't even be a child of God unless you are
led by the Spirit. "For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, these are
the sons of God." If you are a child of God, you have a solid and
unshakable promise that God will give you victory over those powerful desires
of the flesh. One word of caution: do not prejudge the timing of the Holy
Spirit's work. Why He liberates one person overnight but brings another to
freedom through months of struggle is a mystery concealed for now from our
eyes.
4. Action By Faith of God
The fourth step in living and walking by the Spirit
after you have acknowledged your helplessness without him, prayed for His
enablement, and trusted in His deliverance is to act the way you know is right.
Notice: this is not step number one. If this were step number one, all our
actions would be works of the flesh, not fruit of the Spirit. Only after we
have appealed for the Spirit's enablement and thrown ourselves confidently on
His promise and power to work in us, do we now work with all our might. Only
when we act with that spiritual preparation, will we be able to say with Paul in
1 Corinthians 15:10,
"By the grace of God I am what I am, and His grace
toward me was not in vain. On the contrary, I worked harder than any of them,
though it was not I, but the grace of God which is with me".
Or in Galatians 2:20, "I have been crucified with
Christ, it is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me" (see also
Romans 15:18, 19). A person who has acknowledged his helplessness, prayed for
God's enablement to do right, and yielded himself confidently to the
sovereignty of the Holy Spirit has this astonishing incentive to do
righteousness, namely, the confidence that, whatever righteous act He does, it
is God almighty who is at work in him giving him the will and the power to do
it. It is a sign of hasty prejudice when a person says, "Well, if the
Spirit is sovereign and I can't do any good without His enablement, then I may
as well just sit here and do nothing."
There are two things wrong with that statement: it is
self-contradictory, and it is unbiblical. It is a contradiction to say, "I'll
just sit here and do nothing." If you choose to sit in your chair while
the house burns down, you have chosen to do something, just as much as the
person who chooses to get up and save himself and others. Why should you think
the one choice any more inconsistent with the sovereignty of God than the
other? And such a statement is also unbiblical because Philippians 2:12 and 13
says,
“Beloved, work out your own salvation with fear and
trembling (get out of the chair, the house is on fire!) because (not "in
spite of" but "because") God is at work in you both to will and
to work for His good pleasure”.
It is a great incentive, not discouragement, that all
our effort to do what is right is the work of almighty God within us. At least
for myself, I am greatly encouraged when the going gets rough that any effort I
make to do right is a sign of God's grace at work in me. "Let him who
serves serve in the strength which God supplies, that in everything God may get
the glory" (1 Peter 4:11).
5. Praise and worship in spirit and truth
After you have the understanding about to live by faith
then the next step is to worship the Father in spirit and truth. Remember just
as we are a work in progress, other people are too.
Jesus explains this in Matthew 7:1-5 which says “judge
not, that you be not judged.
For with what judgment you judge, you shall be judged
and with what measure you
mete, it shall be measured to you again. And why behold
you the mote that is in
your brother’s eye, but consider not the beam that is in
your own eye? Or how will
you say to your brother, let me pull out the mote out of
your eye, and behold, a
beam is in your own eye. You hypocrite, first cast out
the beam out of your own
eye, and then shall you see clearly to cast out the mote
out of your brother’s eye”.
Instead if you think they are doing something wrong,
pray for them, to come to the
knowledge of the truth. If you are keeping your focus on
Jesus, you wouldn’t see
what others are doing. Many people worship differently,
some are quiet and still,
some shout, some run, all these are ways to praise and
worship.
True worship should be from your heart, keeping your
focus on God. Worship is
reverent devotion and allegiance pledged to God. True
worship is occurred
under the inspiration of God’s Spirit. As the fruit of
the Spirit flows through you,
love, joy and peace will draw you into God. It requires
a relationship with Him, as
you worship talk to your heavenly Father straight from
your heart. Moses talked
with God face to face, and we too can meditate and see
God in our spirit.
Hebrews 12:28-29 says “wherefore we receiving a kingdom
which cannot be
moved, let us have grace whereby we may serve God
acceptably with reverence
and godly fear. For our God is a consuming fire”. God is
the only one that can
judge, because He knows the heart.
6. Intimacy With God
The crucial point is to hear the Voice of God when we
have an Intimacy with God after you are able to worship Him in spirit and
truth. God, who is Himself defined by an internal relationship among the
members of the Trinity, loves and creates. That’s what He does. What does He
create? What can He create, but more of what He Himself is? He creates beings,
personalities, who will be in relationship with Him. They will also be in
relationship with each other. He will love them, and they will love.
All the rest is the superstructure, the framework, into
which this real stuff fits, and lives, and grows, and prospers. Intimate
relationship is the true reality through living and walking in the Spirit.
So, the simple answer to the Why? of Intimacy with God
is, that as beings made in the image of God, intimacy is what we were made for.
God, as a Trinity of Father, Son and Holy Spirit, is always intimate. We were
made for intimacy with them, as well as others made in their image.
Many teachers, prophets, preachers and pastors will tell
you that there is a meaning to life. Some teachers will even explain that the
key is found in Intimacy with God. But who tells you in practical ways how that
can be achieved? Few indeed.
If we learn how to be closer and closer with the lord
Jesus than there are keys of knowledge and practical exercises to help anyone
tune into the voice of God.
Similarly, so too can anyone begin to move into closer
Intimacy with Jesus, experience the indwelling presence of the Holy Spirit, and
know the infinite love of father God. One of the best method to have an
intimacy with God is to sit at the feet of the Lord Jesus is to ask Him all the
truth or everything we need to know and He will then reveal to us what we
should do according to His instruction in Jeremiah 33:3 :” Call upon Me. And I
will answer you and I will reveal to you the great things you have never
known”.
The more we get closer to God the more we will receive
the Wisdom and Revelation about His Kingdom and to make us be ready and get
prepared for the coming of the Lord Jesus to rule and reign in the Millenium
Kingdom of Christ for 1000 years and to reign in the New City of Jerusalem
forever and ever with the Father and the Lord Jesus together with all the
faithful Saints of God as promised in Revelation 1:5-6; Revelation 5:9-10 and
Revelation 22:5.
7. Thanksgiving
The final step in living and walking in the Spirit is to
thank God for any virtue attained or any good deed performed. If without the
Spirit we can do no right, then we must not only ask His enablement for it but
also thank Him whenever we do it. Just one example from 2 Corinthians 8:16.
Paul says, "Thanks be to God who puts the same earnest care for you into
the heart of Titus." Titus loved the Corinthians. Where did that come
from? God put it in his heart. It was a fruit of the Spirit. So what does Paul
do? He thanks God. And Titus should, too. Thanks be to God who puts love in our
hearts!
Dear Precious Brothers and Sisters in Christ,
The conclusion of the sermon today that "If we live
by the Spirit, then let us also walk by the Spirit." Let us acknowledge
from our heart that we are unable to please God without the Spirit's constant
enablement. Let us pray for that enablement. Let us trust confidently in the
Spirit's power and promise to give that enablement. Then let us do what we know
is right by faith . Let us also seek the will, desires and perfect plan of God
by worshipping Him in spirit and truth. Let us also hear the Voice of God as
the results of our deep intimate relationship with the Lord Jesus through the
guidance of the Holy Spirit. And at last having done it, we may give
thanksgiving to our Father in Heaven and also let us turn and say with all the
saints, "Not I, but the Spirit of Christ within me." To God be all
the glory and honor for ever and ever!
Amen.
Daniel Pasaribu
End of Sermon
Tidak ada komentar:
Posting Komentar