The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy.

I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.

John 10:10 ESV

Wednesday, August 25, 2021

Living In The Power Of The Cross - Matthew 16:24-25; 11:28-30; Galatians 2:20; Romans 6:3-7

                                                                                  


(I gave this message at Pines Baptist Church in Pembroke Pines Florida on Sunday August 22, 2021. You may view the PowerPoint Slides of this message on Microsoft One Drive Here.)

 

The cross is probably the most prominent symbol of Christianity and for good reason. You find it on church buildings, signs, literature, jewelry, clothes and so forth. A survey by the Pew Research Center taken in 2020 found that 65% of adults in the United States identified themselves a Christian. The sad thing is that much of what the cross represents in Scripture is absent in the experience of many professing Christians. 

 

Many years ago, a pastor of mine told us that one of his former students, now serving as an associate pastor in a church of another denomination, called him to lament that after a service the Senior Pastor told him that the Scripture, he had read at the beginning of the service that spoke of the blood of Christ, was inappropriate because it might offend some of the people who were visiting. You see even some Christian leaders don’t grasp the centrality of the cross to the Christian message. 

 

The reality is that if there is no cross there is no salvation. If there is no cross, there is no Christianity. The cross is both central to the Gospel message and our response to the Gospel message as we shall see. Theologically, or doctrinally, the cross lies at the core of the Gospel message, the message of Good News and salvation. We are justified, that is declared righteous in God’s sight, only through the substitutionary death of Jesus Christ on the cross where He shed His blood and paid the penalty for our sin so that we could be forgiven and given the gift of eternal life. 

 

But the cross is also used as a metaphor or a word picture, figure of speech, to describe a person’s response to Jesus Christ and the Gospel. The cross is used as a word picture to describe both our experience in coming to Christ and then following Christ. 

 

I want to notice first of all something that is so very important and fundamental to our understanding of what the cross means to us as we live in the power of the cross. This should be so self-evident that I risk insulting you by stating what is perhaps already obvious to you. But if we miss this point, we will miss all that follows.

 

We need to understand that the cross is first and foremost an instrument of death. The Romans, or whoever else invented the cross, had no other purpose in mind. The cross was designed as an instrument of execution or death. It was designed to kill the person who was nailed to it. In this regard there was no compromise. No one ever climbed down from a cross. For anyone who was hung on a cross life came to an agonizing end. It was a ruthless instrument of death. No one ever won an argument with a cross. It was totally effective as an instrument of death. Death on a cross was irrevocable. Remember this as we continue.

 

In God’s plan to save sinners He had to punish sin with the death of the sinner or a substitute. Jesus became our substitute by dying on the cross. God judged our sin in Jesus’ death on the cross. You’re familiar with Romans 3:23, “…for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.” (NIV) and verse 25, “God presented him”, that is Jesus Christ, “as a sacrifice of atonement, through faith in his blood…”. A sacrifice of atonement can also be translated “propitiation”. So, the Apostle Paul writes, “He was delivered over to death for our sins and was raised for our justification.” (Romans 4:15 NIV) And continuing in chapter five verse one, 

 

“Therefore, since we have been justified through faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ.” In other words, God had to punish sin with death, and in His great love for each of us He punished our sin when His Son Jesus Christ voluntarily and obediently died on the cross for the sins of the world. 

 

That is at the center of Biblical Christianity. Jesus’ death on the cross paid the penalty for our sin, and God accepted His substitutionary death on the cross when He raised Him from the dead. And by faith in Jesus’ death on our behalf we receive forgiveness of sin, deliverance from the penalty and power of sin and the gift of eternal life. 

 

But the truth of the cross as an instrument of death is also essential in our response to the Good News God offers us. In other words, the cross as an instrument of death is descriptive throughout the New Testament of how we are to respond to the Gospel. It is used a metaphor a word picture, that describes how we respond to the Good News that Jesus offers us. 

 

Notice secondly that the cross is an instrument of surrender. The cross, as an instrument of death, pictures the capitulation, the surrender of our will and heart to God. Jesus used the cross as a metaphor or figure of speech in this sense. Matthew 16:24-25 (NIV), 

 

“…’If anyone would come after me, he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me. For whoever wants to save his life will lose it, but whoever loses his life for me will find it.’”

 

This is what I call one of Jesus’ “iron clad metaphors”. He leaves no wiggle room. It’s an “all or nothing” proposition. You have all probably seen a person shackled after being arrested or after being convicted in a court of law. Their hands are rendered useless by handcuffs. Sometimes the handcuffs are attached to a chain around the waist so that they cannot even scratch their nose. And their feet are put in ankle cuffs or shackles so that they can barely walk no less run or attempt to escape.

 

That is what some of Jesus’ words are like. Matthew 16:24 is an example. To follow me, Jesus says you must, figuratively speaking die to yourself. That is how he defines “taking up your cross”. It means to deny yourself. In other words, you give up once and for all your right to rule your own life. It’s a radical commitment. Jesus is ruthless in His demand, isn’t He? As Dietrich Bonhoeffer says, “When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die.” 

 

Jesus goes on in verse 25 to explain further what He means by “taking up your cross”. He speaks about giving up your life, “whoever loses his life for me”. There it is the significance of the cross in the life of the believer. To follow Christ, we give up our right to our own life. To follow Christ, we give up our right to live for ourselves! Do you see why I began by making sure we understand the nature of the cross? This is the surrender Jesus is talking about. When you choose to follow Jesus, you can only come on His terms and His terms are defined by death on a cross or losing your life. 

 

Let us not be confused here. We are not saying that someone coming to Christ must become something before God will save him. Christ is not asking you to “clean yourself up” before He will save you. We are not talking about salvation by works here. Rather Jesus is saying, “You come as you are, acknowledge your sin and bondage, and I will clean you up. I’ll give you a new life.” But you must surrender your life to Me before I can do that. There must be a capitulation, a yielding to me, that is as drastic and complete as pictured by death on a cross. There must be an end to what you were before I can make you what I want you to be. You don’t save any part of your life for yourself, verse 25. You lose it all giving it to me. 

 

A.W. Tozer, writes in Root of Righteous

 

“We must do something about the cross, and one of two things only we can do – flee it or die upon it. And if we should be so foolhardy as to flee we shall by that act put away the faith of our fathers and make Christianity something other than what it is. Then we shall have left only the empty language of salvation; the power will depart with our departure from the true cross.”  (page 63) 

 

This is the danger of the Church in any age. Making the cost of following Christ too cheap. Downplaying the cost of following Christ. Making a profession of faith while holding on to your own life. Ignoring Jesus’ words “he must deny himself and take up his cross and follow me”. This can prevent one’s heart from being regenerated by a work of the Holy Spirit. Perhaps a person being more religiously informed but living no different than a non-believer. 

 

There is another metaphor used by Jesus that speaks of surrender and the benefits of surrender. Matthew 11:28-30 (NIV),

 

“Come to me, all you are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” 

 

The image of two oxen yoked together were very familiar to those in Jesus day. Two oxen were used to pull a plough or a heavy load. Using this metaphor Jesus is giving us further insights into the believer’s relationship to Him. You will notice it begins with an invitation, “Come to me”. We have a choice to make. The invitation to be “yoked” to Jesus requires a voluntary response on our part.  We choose to be yoked. We are not forced or coerced into being yoked with Him. It is a voluntary response on our part to His invitation.  

 

But this voluntary yoking is a surrender on our part to Jesus Christ. That is implicit in the metaphor of a yoke which was a wooden cross piece that was fastened around the necks of the two animals holding them together as they pulled the load. To be “yoked” implies a surrender in this case to the Son of God, to the One who created us, to the One who loved us and died to save us from our sin. In other words someone far greater than us. The metaphor also implies an intimate relationship with Christ. We are being “yoked” to Him, connected to Jesus. We are surrendering to God receiving all the benefits that come with that decision.

 

Then you will note we are yoked to Jesus who is characterized as being “gentle and humble in heart.” Is there anyone who would not like to be in a relationship with someone described by those words? 

 

Then notice the benefits of being “yoked” to Jesus, “and you will find rest for your souls.” Someone has written, “To be yoked to Christ is the turning of our heart towards His heart. It is aligning our mind with the mind of Christ. He does not call us to bear the problems of life, carry the weight of the day, and take on the distresses of the heart or the trials we face – alone. He comes alongside to help and heal, to encourage and provide the sufficient grace we need for all life and godliness. Let us harness our heart 

to our loving Saviour, take up our cross, die to self and live for Him.” (“What Does Matthew 11:30 Mean? dailyverse.kowing-jesus.com)

 

The blessings that are ours in Christ come by way of surrender, “take up you cross and follow me”, - “take my yoke upon you and learn from me”. 

 

Thirdly, the cross is an instrument of transformation. Galatians 2:20. (NIV). Paul’s personal testimony,

 

“I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.” Paul said something similar in writing the Romans, (6:3-4) “Or don’t’ you know that all of us who were baptized into Christ Jesus were baptized into his death? We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death in order that, just as Christ was raised from the dead through the glory of the Father, we too may live a new life.” (NIV)

 

Death is an instrument of transformation. “I have been crucified with Christ – Christ lives in me”. We were “baptized into his death…in order that… we too may live a new life”. These both speak of transformation. When we come to Christ in repentant faith and are born again, we die with Him.  And our old life comes to an end. Just as death on a cross brings life to an abrupt end as we have noted, death is pictured in our spiritual experience at conversion. The old life we lived for ourselves comes to a decisive end. That is why when we baptize someone we ask, “Is it your earnest desire to follow Christ in death to self and to walk with Him in newness of life?” 

 

Paul goes on to describe the results of that death with Christ, Romans 6:5-7, 

 

“If we have been united with him in his death, we will certainly also be united with him in his resurrection. For we know that our old self was crucified with him so that the body of sin might be rendered powerless, that we should no longer be slaves to sin—because anyone who has died has been freed from sin.”   (NIV)

 

He writes, “our old self was crucified with him”. This phrase describes something that “happened to us” (John Stott). We did not crucify the old self. It is not something we have done. Rather our old self “was crucified with him”. The word translated “old self” is literally the “old man”. The term refers to the unregenerate man, who we were in Adam. New English Bible ,“man as we once were”. Who we were before we were saved. The “old self” was crucified with Christ, was put to death on the cross, says Paul resulting in a spiritual transformation. A. B. Simpson writes,

 

“When He was offered up on Calvary, it was not only for our sins, but for out sinfulness. In Him we were recognized by God as hanging on that cross with Him and dying when He died, so that His death represents our death, and when we recognize it, appropriate it and identify ourselves with it, it becomes the same as if we had been crucified, and our old life had gone out with His.” 

 

Dr. A. W. Tozer, 

“So the cross not only brings Christ’s life to an end, it ends also the first life, the old life, of every one of His true followers. It destroys the old pattern, the Adam pattern, in the believers life, and it brings it to an end. Then the God who raised Christ from the dead raises the believer and a new life begins.”    (A.W. Tozer, The Root of Righteousness, page 62) 

 

The cross is an instrument of transformation. You see, our sanctification is rooted in this metaphor of the cross. My guess is that most, if not all of us who are born again Christians, have areas of our lives where we struggle. Maybe even some of us struggle with a besetting sin. Our victory not only lies in the work of Christ on the cross and His resurrection from the dead, but in our willingness to take our weakness and sin to the cross. By that I mean deal with it as the cross deals with any of its victims, PUT IT TO DEATH! 

 

That involves a conscious, deliberate, decisive decision to turn it over to God; to break with it; to kill it figuratively speaking. When we act in such a way by faith, all the power available through the death and resurrection of Jesus that Paul declared in Romans 6 transforms us. I like the New Living Translation of Romans 6:5-7, 

 

“Since we have been united with him in his death, we will also be raised to life as he was. We know that our old sinful selves were crucified with Christ so that sin might lose its power in our lives. We are no longer slaves to sin. For when we died with Christ, we were set free from the power of sin.” 

 

Friends that is a bold and unambiguous description of transformation. And it comes by way of the cross. In light of this truth, Paul could give these instructions to the Colossian believers, Colossians 3:5-6, “Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature [or sinful nature] sexual immorality, impurity, lust, evil desires and greed, which is idolatry. Because of these, the wrath of God is coming.” (NIV) And to the Galatians, he wrote of God’s provision through the power of the Holy Spirit in the life of the believer giving us victory over the sins of our sinful nature. Galatians 5:16, 22-24 (NIV), 

 

“So I say, live by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the sinful nature…the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness gentleness and self-control. Against such things there is no law. Those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the sinful nature with its passions and desires. Since we live by the Spirit, let us keep in step with the Spirit.”

 

Do you see why Paul could write, Gal. 6:14 (NIV) “May I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.”?

 

A.W.Tozer, who died nearly 60 years ago wrote,

 

“In every Christian’s heart there is a cross and a throne, and the Christian is on the throne til he puts himself on the cross; if he refused the cross he remains on the throne. Perhaps this is at the bottom of the backsliding and worldliness among gospel believers today.”  (The Root of Righteousness, pg. 66) 

 

Perhaps you are here today and have never made a decisive, deliberate, conscious decision to follow Jesus Christ or at least not in the way you understand it today in light of God’s Word. Think back with me to Jesus’ words in Matthew 11. His invitation to come to Him and be yoked to Him. He is asking for you to give Him control of your life, nothing less. If you are yoked to Him, He rules your life. You are giving Him that right. 

 

If you respond to his invitation, I want you to notice His promises. There are two of them. First, He said that yoked to Him, “you will find rest for your souls.” Literally it reads, “I will rest you.” Jesus is our “rest”. That implies an intimacy with Jesus Christ that nothing else can rival. 

 

It reminds me of His words, John 10:10. Speaking of the devil he said, “The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy…”. Friend that describes the only thing the devil and the world ultimately have to offer us. In contrast, Jesus continued, “I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.” or “have it more abundantly”. (NIV) The New Living Translation reads, “My purpose is to give them a rich and satisfying life.” There could not be two alternatives more opposite than those two choices. Accepting Jesus Christ’s offer comes at a cost…death to self comes first, then the gift of eternal life He  alone offers. 

 

Secondly, He will treat you gently. His motive is love and compassion. You will never regret your decision to follow Him on His terms. That is why He can say to each of us, “…my yoke is easy and my burden is light.” The New Living Translation, “…my yoke is easy to bear, and the burden I give you is light.” 

 

If you are a believer today, is there any area where you are in a struggle with sin? Paul provided the early church with quite a comprehensive list of sins to get rid of in Galatians 5, Ephesians 4 & 5 and Colossians 3. If you are in a battle remember that the death and resurrection of Jesus not only paid the penalty for our sin but delivered us from the power of sin in our lives. Whatever the area of need you or I are facing the solution comes by way of the cross. If we will bring the conflict with sin to the feet of Jesus and surrender, give up and let go, Jesus will meet us at the point of our need. As we have seen He has made every provision for victory over sin that any believer faces if we die to self and yield ourselves to God. 

 

Watchman Nee tells of a man who came down with a leg cramp while swimming in the river at a resort. The expert swimmer called to intervene remained calm, collected and unwilling to rescue the struggling swimmer until he was sinking in the water. Later someone said to the rescuer, “I have never seen any Christian who loved his life quite as much as you do.” The man who came to the rescue of the drowning man replied, “If I had gone earlier, the drowning man would have clutched me so tightly that both of us would have gone under. A drowning man cannot be saved until he is utterly exhausted and no longer makes the slightest effort to save himself.” 

 

“When we give up the case, then God will take it up. God is waiting until we are at the end of our resources and can do nothing more. If we try to do anything in the flesh we are virtually repudiating the Cross of Christ. God has declared us to be fit only for death When we truly believe that, then we  give up our fleshly efforts to please Him.”  (Normal Christian Life) 

 

You see Jesus Christ wants to live His life through us, but He can’t until we’re dead.  As Dietrich Bonhoeffer said, “When Christ calls a man, he bids him come and die.” Jesus has come to rescue us. The cross has provided us with every resource necessary to know Him and walk with Him in obedience. Rescue comes through surrender. 

 

Never forget the imagery of the father of the prodigal son, day after day waiting for the return of his wayward son. Longing to wrap His arms around the son he loved and restore him to fellowship and provide for his every need. But of course, the son had to return in order to feel the warm embrace and the forgiveness of his father. 

 

It’s our move this morning. He is waiting with open and compassionate arms whether it be for salvation or victory over the struggle with sin in our lives. Why prolong the struggle? Come to the cross this morning. 

 

 

© James P McGarvey All Rights Reserved

 

 

   

  

Monday, May 3, 2021

The Grace of Giving - Part Two - 2 Corinthians 8:16-9:15 - Outline

(This is an outline of a message last given at Hollywood Hill Alliance Church on October 17, 2009. You can read the manuscript of "The Grace of Giving" (Part One) - 2 Corinthians 8:1-15  HERE )


2 Corinthians 8:16 - 9:15

 

“The theological basis for stewardship is the doctrine of grace.” Keith Bailey

 

1. In collecting funds - a need for propriety   2 Cor. 8:16-24

    a. the standard – integrity   2 Cor. 8:20-21

    

    b. the method – accountability   2 Cor. 8:17-19; 22-24  

 

2. Grace giving involves the “law of the harvest” or principle of sowing   2 Cor. 9:6

    - sowing always determines the harvest

    - sow generously – reap generously.  Prov. 3:9-10; 11:24-25; Luke 6:38

 

3. Grace giving is deliberate   2 Cor. 9:2,5,7

    vs. 2  “ready to give 

    vs. 5  “had promised”

    vs. 7  “what he has decided in his heart”

 

4. Grace giving is voluntary   2 Cor. 9:5,7

    vs. 5  “not as one grudgingly given”

    vs. 7  “not reluctantly or under compulsion”

 

5. Grace giving is cheerful   2 Cor. 9:7

    

6. Grace giving is by faith   2 Cor. 9:8-11

    a. God is the source of our giving   2 Cor. 9:8-9

        God is the source of our resources.

      

“As regularly as the resource of the cheerful giver are taxed by his generous giving, they are replenished by divine grace. This gives him a complete sufficiency.”  (Murray J. Harris)

      

    b. God multiplies our giving   2 Cor. 9:10-11

         “Grace is what God can do, not what we can do.”  (Dr. A. B. Simpson)

 

          Law of the harvest: sowing generously pays rich dividends

          God supplies the seed (for sowing)

          God multiplies seed (for sowing)

          God enlarges (increases) the harvest

      

“God will supply, God will increase, God will enlarge. God will make us rich so that we can be generous on every occasion. Rather than giving once and being out of resources, the person whose heart represents the biblical pattern of giving in generosity and cheerfulness will discover that he has more and more to give and the more he gives the more he has, and the more he has the more he wants to give.” 

(Kenneth Gangel)


7. The results of grace giving. 2 Cor. 9:12-15

    a. Needs are met.  2 Cor. 9:12

 

    b. God is glorified   2 Cor. 9:11,12b,13

        vs. 11b, 12b – thanksgiving to God

        vs. 13 – praise to God

  

    c. Our faith is confirmed   2Cor.  9:13

        James 2:14-17

        

        Sea of Galilee – it receives water and gives out water

        Dead Sea  – it keeps everything it takes in

        

“To give is to live. To restrain, to hold, to guard, to hoard, is to die. The same rive of life in the power  of the Spirit of God comes into your heart and into mine, and I would leave the parable with you. Freely you have received; The Lord help us to freely give.”  (Dr. Alan Redpath)


© James P McGarvey, All Rights reserved  

Sunday, April 4, 2021

The Valley of Slaughter - Jeremiah 19:6 - America's Abortion Crisis


I gave this message at Hollywood Hills Alliance Church on January 17, 2010. View the the PowerPoint presentation of this message "The Valley of Slaughter - Jeremiah 19:6 - America's Abortion Crisis" on Microsoft OneDrive click HERE.  Download FREE Microsoft OneDrive HERE

…the ultimate sin that brought judgment upon nations was the sin of child sacrifice.”                      Christian Newswire September, 2008

Child sacrifice to the idol Molech- …they have filled this place with the blood of innocent children. They have built pagan shrines to Baal, and there they burn their sons as sacrifices to  Baal. I have never commanded such a horrible deed; it  never even crossed my mind to command such a thing!"  Jeremiah 19:4-5

Jeremiah 19:6-8 (NLT)

So beware, for the time is coming, says the Lord, when this place will no longer be called Topheth or the valley of the son of Hinnom, but the  Valley of Slaughter. For I will upset the battle plans of Judah and Jerusalem and let invading armies slaughter them. The enemy will leave the dead bodies as food for the vultures and wild animals. I will wipe Jerusalem from the face of the earth, making it a monument to their stupidity.All who pass by will be appalled and will gasp at the destruction they see there.

God Judged Israel for Child Sacrifice - Psalms 106:34-42

They did not destroy the peoples as the Lord had commanded them, but they mingled with the nations and adopted their customs. They worshiped their idols, which became a snare to them. They sacrificed their sons and their daughters to demons They shed innocent blood, the blood of their sons and daughters, whom they sacrificed to the idols of Canaan, and the land was desecrated by their blood. They defiled themselves by what they did; by their deeds they prostituted themselves. Therefore the Lord was angry with his people and abhorred his inheritance. He handed them over to the nations, and their foes ruled over them. Their enemies oppressed them and subjected them to their power.  


America is Warned!

Since you have refused to obey laws and regulations and have behaved even worse than your neighbors, I myself the Sovereign Lord, am now your enemy. I will punish you publicly while all the nations watch… 

You will be a warning to all the nations around you. They will see what happens when the Lord turns against a nation in furious rebuke. I, the Lord have spoken!  Ezekiel 5:7-8; 15 (NLT)

View all 54 PowerPoint slides of this message on Microsoft OneDrive  HERE.



 

Thursday, January 7, 2021

A Call to Fast


(I gave the latest version of this message at The Lighthouse Chapel on Sunday January 3, 2021. You can view the Facebook livestream of that service Here. The message begins at the 37 minute mark.
You may view the PowerPoint slides of this message on Microsoft OneDrive Here)

In his book, The Happen Stance How To Make Things Happen in Your Christian Life  Pastor K. Neill Foster includes a chapter on fasting. Here is the opening paragraph of that chapter.

 

"Fasting the delightful discipline. Is this a contradiction in terms? No! The practice of fasting is geared for results. Far from some somber truth dressed in drabness, fasting is a vibrant, radiant, yes, delightful Christian discipline."

 

Now, that might sound counter intuitive to some of us. Fasting is delightful? If we are honest some of us would respond to the thought of fasting with words like sacrifice, self-denial, hunger, self-discipline or hardship, rather than delight. 

 

One cannot go far in either the Old or New Testament before finding references to fasting. The incidents of fasting recorded in the Bible provide a wealth of information from which to understand what Biblical fasting is all about. 

 

This morning it is not my intention to present a comprehensive teaching on fasting but touch on some of the truths relating to God's call to fast. 

 

Note first of all, the mandate to fast. This answers the question "should we fast?" Let's turn to Jesus first for the answer. On at least two occasions, Jesus spoke about fasting. First, Jesus assumed his disciples would fast. In the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus said,

 

“And when you fast, do not look gloomy like the hypocrites, for they disfigure their faces that their fasting may be seen by others. Truly, I say to you, they have received their reward. But when you fast, anoint your head and wash your face, that your fasting may not be seen by others but by your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you." (Matthew 6:16-18 ESV) 

 

Twice, in this passage Jesus says "when you fast" not "if" you fast. It wasn't a matter of "if." It was a matter of "when." Jesus clearly taught that the day would come when his disciples would fast. 

 

Secondly, we are to fast in His absence. On another occasion He was asked why his disciples did not fast. Mark chapter two, verses 18-20,

 

"Now John's disciples and the Pharisees were fasting. And people came and said to him, 'Why do John's disciples and the disciples of the Pharisees fast, but your disciples do not fast?' And Jesus said to them, 'Can the wedding guests fast while the bridegroom is with them? As long as they have the bridegroom with them, they cannot fast. The days will come when the bridegroom is taken awayfrom them, and then they will fast in that day." 

 

Jesus expected that his disciples would fast after he departed from them.

 

Secondly, some thoughts on how to fast. Notice that, motive is key. Back to Matthew 6. Jesus exposed the hypocrisy of those who fasted to be seen by others; those who fasted to gain the attention of those around them. Remember he said, when you fast, don't look "gloomy." Don't "disfigure' your face, to be noticed by others. Rather anoint you head and wash you face. In other words, act and look normal. Don't draw attention to yourself because you're fasting. 

 

He went on to say, you should be fasting to be seen by your Father who is in secret. After all, He is the one who will reward you. You don't fast to embellish your reputation or to feed your spiritual pride and ego. On the contrary fasting is an act of humility. David said, "I put on sackcloth and humbled myself with fasting." (Psalm 35:13) 

 

Arthur Wallis, in his book His Chosen Fast, writes, "...fasting is a divine corrective to the pride of the human heart. It is a discipline of the body with a tendency to humble the soul." And one of the key spiritual principles repeated throughout Scripture, finds application here.  As Peter stated it, "God opposes the proud but gives grace to the humble." (1 Peter 5:5) Fasting is an opportunity to humble ourselves before God. When we come to Him in a spirit of humility, contrition, and repentance we position ourselves to receive an out-pouring of His grace. 

 

That's what fasting is all about. Getting in touch with God. Think of it this way. Through fasting we give God our undivided attention so He can do what He would otherwise not have the opportunity to do. Fasting is giving God a chance to do a work in our lives that only He can do, if we allow Him to do it. Andrew Murray said, 

 

"Fasting helps to express, to deepen, and to confirm the resolution that we are ready to sacrifice anything, to sacrifice ourselves to attain what we seek for the kingdom of God." (With Christ in the School of Prayer)

 

You see, fasting helps us focus on God. Fasting is a practical way of narrowing our focus. Here's what I mean by that. When we fast, we set aside a legitimate and very powerful biological and physiological desire, our appetite for food, so that we can focus on the spiritual. We set aside something that is tangible and physical to gain something that is intangible and spiritual. 

 

As you know, we live in material world. We relate to that world by what we see and hear- touch, taste and smell. We rely on these five senses to function in the physical world that we live in. But God lies beyond those five senses, beyond the material, beyond the empirical in the realm of the unseen. Ordinarily, we do not relate to him with these five senses. He is Spirit and can only be known by spirit. 

 

The apostle John put it this way, “God is spirit, and those who worship him must worship in spiritand truth,” (John 4:24) hence the great value of fasting. Our appetite for food is one of the strongest of human desires that competes for our attention. 

 

Fasting helps us move from a fixation on the material and physical world that dominates our senses and life, and focus on the spiritual, which is unseen. Fasting gives our spiritual life the advantage as it were, as it competes with the physical. As Jentezen Franklin says, "Simply stated, biblical fasting is refraining from food for a spiritual purpose." 

 

Remember Dr. Foster's premise? Fasting is a delightful discipline. Are you beginning to see why? 

 

Fourthly, when we fast we should be led of the SpiritWe look at Jesus' example. Let me put Jesus 40 day fast in its context. I believe there were three things of great significance that took place before Jesus began his public ministry. First, He was baptized by John the Baptist in the Jordan River where the Holy Spirit descended on Him and God's voice from heaven declared, "You are my Son, whom I love, with you I am well pleased." (Luke 3:21) Submitting to John's baptism was an act of consecration on the part of Jesus. As Arthur Wallis points out, "His baptism in the Jordan was His dedication unto death in anticipation of the cross." (His Chosen FastBut his baptism was also where the Holy Spirit of God "descended" upon Jesus Christ "in bodily form," "like a dove" writes Luke. (Luke 3:22) This certainly speaks of the empowerment, of the Holy Spirit, and the call and anointing for ministry.  

 

Secondly, Jesus begins a 40 day fastLuke writes, 

 

"And Jesus, full of the Holy Spirit, returned from the Jordan [where he was baptized] and was led by the Spirit in the wilderness for forty days, being tempted by the devil. And he ate nothing during those days. And when they were ended, he was hungry.' (Luke 4:1,2) Notice that the text says Jesus was "led of the Spirit" to the wilderness for the 40 day fast. Mark's account is even more straightforward. After His baptism, Mark writes, "The Spirit immediately drove him out into the wilderness. And he was in the wilderness forty days, being tempted by Satan." (Mark 1:12) Clearly Jesus began the 40 day fast in response to the leading of the Holy Spirit. Our motive for fasting has always been of great importance as we noticed when looking at Matthew 6.

 

The prophet Isaiah wrote one of the most valuable passages in the Bible on fasting. In chapter 58, the prophet, among other things, deals with motive for fasting. He first indicts his readers  for their wrong motives. The people asked why God was ignoring their fast. "Why have we fasted, and you see it not?
Why have we humbled ourselves, and you take no knowledge of it?" (Isaiah 58:3) To which God replies, "Behold, in the day of your fast you seek your own pleasure and oppress all your workers. Behold, you fast only to quarrel and to fight and to hit with a wicked fist. Fasting like yours this day will not make your voice to be heard on high. 

 

Arthur Wallis, commenting on this passage writes, "God reminds his people that the acceptable fast is the one which He has chosen. Fasting, like prayer, must be God-initiated and God ordained if it is to be effective. Prevailing prayer begins with God; He places upon us a burden by the Spirit, and we respond to that burden. Prayer that originates with God always returns to God. So it is with fasting." (God's Chosen Fast)

 

You see, being Spirit led in our fasting helps guard against the temptation to try and gain merit from God by an act of self-denial. It prevents us from turning fasting into a "good work," a way of bribing God, if you will. John Wesley sounded the warning this way, 

 

"Let us beware of fancying we merit anything of God by our fasting. We cannot be too often warned of this; inasmuch as a desire to 'establish our own righteousness,' to procure salvation of debt and not of grace, is so deeply rooted in all our hearts." 

 

I trust you will not underestimate the significance of the sequence of events that took place in Jesus' life at this point. First, He submits to the baptism of John the Baptist in an act of consecration. Second, He is empowered by the Holy Spirit at his baptism. Third, the Holy Spirit- then led Him into the wilderness to begin a 40-day fast where he is tempted by Satan. It was only then that Jesus returned to Nazareth "in the power of the Spirit." to begin his public ministry. 

 

Notice it was during the 40-day fast that Jesus engaged Satan in spiritual warfare. May I suggest to you that this alone is reason to fast. Ephesians 6:12, "For our struggle is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the powers of this dark world and against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms."

 

Down through Biblical history Satan has opposed the redemptive purposes of God that ultimately led to the sacrificial death of Jesus Christ for the sins of the world. Time would not allow us to trace that thread down through the Biblical record. Suffice it to say, having risen out of those waters of baptism and consecration where Jesus received the affirmation of the Father and the empowerment of the Holy Spirit, the only one who stood in the way of Jesus Christ carrying out the mission assigned to Him by the Father was Satan himself. Satan knew it. Jesus knew it. The Father knew it. And the Holy Spirit knew it. Hence Jesus was thrust into the wilderness to engage His enemy, not only His enemy, but our enemy; the enemy of every human being that has ever lived or will ever live on this earth. 

 

So, Jesus was in the wilderness forty days without food. And Luke says He was hungry. It was in that vulnerable state that he was tempted by the devil, the first temptation being to turn a stone into bread. That was predictable. Satan always tempts us at our point of weakness where we are most vulnerable. Please note, he was tempting Jesus with more than having lunch. As G. Campbell Morgan writes, "The suggestion behind the temptation is that all that humanity needs is the physical, and the material supply of that..."

 

By the way, nothing has changed. That is the big lie today. It's called secular humanism, and it's offspring moral relativism. This is the dominant philosophy - religion if you will - of our western culture today. Morgan continues, "Said the Devil: Man is only an animal, highly developed possibly; but bread is the one thing necessary." 

 

You see, that is the inevitable conclusion of naturalism, man's attempt to live apart from God, to live as if there is no God. That is social Darwinism. Matter is all there is. Life is all about the survival of the fittest, in a world without God, without the purpose, meaning and fulfillment, that come from knowing God through faith in Jesus Christ. If you are here this morning and have never trusted in Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins could that be where you are spiritually?  

 

You're probably familiar with Jesus' response to the temptation to turn a stone into bread as well as the other two that followed. He stood his ground using the Word of God to overcome each of Satan's temptations. "It is written: Man does not live on bread alone," was Jesus' reply to the Devil. 

 

Again, G C Morgan, "Said Jesus: Man is not an animal. He does not live as animals live. His life cannot be sustained on that level." If we are ever tempted not to fast or for that matter not to seek the Lord, not to obey the Lord, not to worship the Lord, not to give our lives to the Lord, may I suggest that this could be at the root of the temptation. Living in a material world we are continually being tempted to buy into the big lie of Satan that what we can see and hear, touch, taste and smell is all there is to live for and all we need to find fulfillment and satisfaction as human beings. 

 

Jesus exposed that lie by refuting the first of the devil's temptations. He went on to resist two more temptations, and the devil left Him. Luke says, Jesus returned to Galilee "in the power of the Holy Spirit" (Luke 4:1) where, thirdly, He began his public ministry. Dr. Foster, writing of Jesus' 40 day fast says, "It is significant that He did this [the 40 day fast] before His ministry began and before the miraculous began to occur." Then he makes this observation, "The absence of the miraculous among many of today's Christians could be traceable to the lack of this forgotten discipline." As Arthur Wallis has written, "In New Testament times fasting was a channel of power." (God's Chosen Fast

 

In looking at how to fast, we’ve seen the importance of motive in fasting. Secondly, we’ve seen that fasting is an act of humility and thirdly that fasting helps us focus on God. 

 

Lastly, note that fasting is your telegram to God. Jeremiah 29:12,13, "Then you will call upon me and come and pray to me, and I will hear you. You will seek me and find me, when you seek me with all your heart." 

 

Fasting is a means of declaring to God both the sincerity and urgency of your heart. By its very nature fasting expresses a deep sense of need on the part of the one fasting. As we noted, Pastor Foster wrote, "The practice of fasting is geared for results."

 

I don't know how many of you are old enough to remember the era when telegrams were used. I remember as a boy growing up in Japan in the 1950's and 60's that my parents used them. Remember, back then there was no internet, no Facetime, no Zoom, no skyping, no emails, cell phones or texting. It took several weeks to get an airmail letter to or from the States. There were telephones of course, but we rarely received or made phone calls to the States because it was cost prohibitive, about $25 a minute. So, telegrams were used to send a message of importance that were time sensitive. 

 

When the man came to the door and delivered the telegram, it wasn't set aside to be read at a later time. No, if a telegram came you knew it was important, perhaps even urgent. You opened it and read it immediately. I remember seeing some of those telegrams. Since you paid for a telegram by the number of words used, there was no concern for proper syntax, just the minimum number of words necessary to get the message across. When we fast, we are sending a telegram to God. Again, Arthur Wallis, "Fasting is calculated to bring a note of urgency and importunity into our praying, and to give force to our pleading in the court of heaven." (God's Chosen Fast)

 

As Ezra testified, having called a fast before he led the remnant on that dangerous journey from Babylon back to Jerusalem, "...we fasted and petitioned our God about this, and he answered our prayers." (Ezra 8:23) 

 

In January of 2016, I brought a message from 2 Chronicles 20 from the life of Jehoshaphat King of Judah. He and his people were facing this massive army headed their way from the south. Upon hearing the news of the approaching army, the King was "alarmed" and "afraid." Perhaps you remember that King Jehoshaphat's first response was to “proclaim a fast for all Judah.” He called his nation to prayer and fasting. You see, fasting communicates urgency of desire. Apparently, King Jehoshaphat was desperate in light of this threat to his nation so he and his people sought the Lord in prayer and fasting. Arthur Wallis, " When a man is willing to set aside the legitimate appetites of the body to concentrate on the work of praying, he is demonstrating that he means business, that he is seeking with all his heart, and will not let God go unless he answers." (God’s Chosen Fast)

 

How desperate are you for God this morning? Desperate to know His presence in a deeper, and more intimate way? Just this past week, the Lord impressed me with this thought. “Fasting is a pathway to intimacy with God.”

 

Perhaps, you're spiritually dry. The world and all it has to offer has left you empty and unfulfilled. Or perhaps you are in urgent need of victory over a besetting sin. You're in a struggle with the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes or the pride of life. Perhaps this morning, you need direction, guidance from the Lord for a decision you must make. Though it happened years ago when I was just a boy, I can still picture in my mind the image of my mother and father kneeling at the living room sofa seeking the Lord as they fasted and prayed over the noon hour.  I have shard this with you before; when I fast, this is what motivates me: "I need God more than I need food." 

 

Dr. Bill Bright, founder of Campus Crusade For Christ and a man of prayer and great insight- into fasting has written, "Fasting is the most powerful spiritual discipline of all the Christian disciplines. Through fasting and prayer, the Holy Spirit can transform your life."

 

King Jehoshaphat's father, King Asa, faced a similar crisis as his son as recorded in 2 Chronicles 14. As a vast army of Cushites threatened his nation King Asa called upon the Lord, "...Lord, there is no one like you to help the powerless against the mighty. Help us, Lord our God, for we rely on you, and in your name we have come against this vast army. Lord, you are our God; do not let mere mortals prevail against you.” (2 Chronicles 14:11) After the Lord "struck down the Cushites," the prophet Azariah brought this word of encouragement from the Lord to King Asa, “The Lord is with you when you are with him. If you seek him, he will be found by you” (2 Chronicles 15:2) May I suggest to you that is the theological basis for fasting. 

 

Pastor K. Neil Foster, “Fasting is the quickest way to get yourself into the position where God can give you what He wanted to give you all along." 

 

As we enter the new year I believe there is no greater need than for the intervention of God in our lives, personally and in our families, in our nation and the world. I believe that will only come through repentance and seeking the Lord in prayer and fasting.

 

Yesterday morning as I was thinking of this message I believe the Lord brought some additional thoughts to mind. Fasting is not only a pathway to intimacy with God, it is a means by which we have access to His presence. It is a means by which we have access to His provision. It is a means by which we have access to His power. It is a means by which we have access to His gracious and merciful intervention.

This year, let’s take advantage of His call to fast.

 

_____________________________________


Message Outline

 

A Call to Fast

Matthew 6:16-18; Mark 2:18-20

 

1. The mandate to fast.

    a. Jesus assumed we would fast.

        Matthew 6:16-18

 

    b. Fast in his absence.

         Mark 2:18-20

 

2. How to fast.

    a. Motive is key.

        Matthew 6:16-18

 

    b. Fasting is an act of humility.

         Psalm 35:13

         1 Peter 5:5

 

    c. Fasting helps us focus on God.

        John 4:24

 

    d. Be led of the Spirit.

        Jesus’ example:

        

        Baptism - consecration & empowerment - Luke 3:21-22

 

40-Day fast - the defeat of Satan - Luke 4:1,2

 

        Begins three years of ministry - "in the power of the Spirit"

 

 

     f. Fasting is your telegram to God.

        Jeremiah 29:12,13;

        Ezra 8:23

 

“The Lord is with you when you are with him. If you seek him, he will be found by you.” 

 2 Chronicles 15:2b. (NIV)

 

 

© James P McGarvey All Rights Reserved