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I really believe that personally the ministry that I carry
on here in this church in the pulpit is not just to teach you
what the Bible says, not just to preach the gospel to you, to
preach the Word of God to you, but to stimulate you to personal
study of the Scripture. And if I have failed to do that in great
measure, I have failed to do what I ought to have done. If you
have just enjoyed the sermon, if you had just walked away and
said, "Well, I'll reconnect with the Word of God next week when I
listen again," then you have not responded in personal diligence
and somehow I have failed to accomplish what ought to have been
accomplished in your life.
The goal of preaching certainly is to make the Word of God
clear and to proclaim the truth and teach the truth to you. But
it also at the same time should stimulate you to want to take up
the sword for yourself, take advantage of the tremendous
opportunity you do have to come to grips with the great truth of
Scripture.
A verse to begin that supports that thought is 2 Timothy
2:15, "Be diligent to present yourself approved to God as a
workman who does not need to be ashamed, handling accurately the
Word of truth." There is a statement made to a young pastor by
the name of Timothy. He is told that he must be responsible to
with diligence present himself approved to God. How can he do
that? By being a workman who doesn't need to be ashamed. How
can he accomplish that? By handling accurately the Word of
truth. It is essential that he as a minister of God's Word
handle it carefully, proclaim it accurately.
But it's not just the minister who is responsible to study
the Word of God, not just the minister to discern its truths. In
the book of Acts there is a great testimony given with regard to
a group of people, they're called the Bereans, that because they
lived in a town called Berea. And when the Apostle Paul went
there, he preached the truth to them. It says in verse 11 of
Acts 17, "These were more noble minded than those in Thessalonica
for they received the Word with great eagerness, examining the
Scriptures daily to see whether these things were so."
Here were a group of people who are called noble because
they did essentially what Joshua 1:8 says, they meditated day and
night on the Word of God in order that they might discern its
truth and against that truth measure the preacher. They are
noble because they diligently searched the scriptures and they
did it daily with great eagerness in order that they might
discern who was speaking the truth.
Studying the Word of God is something that demands
diligence. It is a craft that calls for craftsmanship. But it
begins with basic knowledge. Like anything else, any apprentice
at a new job or a new trade, starts with the knowledge of the
basics and certainly as students of the Bible that's where we
have to start. We start with knowing the content of Scripture.
And that calls for a faithful and careful and consistent reading
of God's Word. I would suggest to you that if you're going to be
a student of the Bible, as we said this morning, it will all
begin with a high view of Scripture. We tried to help you with
that this morning. And then it will move to the second aspect of
being effective in Bible study and that is basic knowledge of the
text. You have to know what it says, to begin with. That
becomes a matter of reading the Scripture.
I confess to you that I'm not a particularly good reader of
Scripture and that's because I have such a highly developed sense
of curiosity, I guess. I find it very difficult to read
Scripture very long before my curiosity gets the best of me and I
have to stop and find out what it means. But in your early years
of beginning to study the Word of God, you have to resist some of
that curiosity or else you'll get so bogged down you'll never get
through the basic content. It is important to read the Scripture
so that you come to grips with what it says. Then you can begin
to search out what it means by what it says. But everything
begins with a knowledge of Scripture.
Go back with me to Proverbs chapter 1...Proverbs chapter 1.
In verse 20 we read this, "Wisdom shouts in the street. She
lifts her voice in the square. At the head of the noisy streets
she cries out. At the entrance of the gates in the city she
utters her sayings." Now the idea here is that divine wisdom is
available. It is not hidden, it is not stashed in a cave
somewhere, it's not buried in the ground, it's not hidden behind
some mysterious codes. It doesn't take somebody who knows the
secret to unlock it. It is rather public domain, if you will.
It is in the street. It is in the square. It cries out in the
noisiness of life at the entrance of the gates of the city which
is the busiest place in town...there wisdom is made available.
And what the writer of Proverbs is saying is it is available.
"So, how long, O naive ones, will you love simplicity?" In other
words, are you going to spurn the availability of divine wisdom?
"And, scoffers, how long will you delight in your scoffing? And
how long will you fools hate knowledge?" And then there is
reproof. "Turn at my reproof. Behold, I will pour out My Spirit
on you and I'll make My words known to you."
There is no real reason to be ignorant about the truth of
Scripture because it is available, it is not hidden. It is not
for those who know some secret code. It is not for those who can
unlock some cryptic mysteries. It is readily available for
everybody in the street. And God even promises that He'll assist
in the process, pouring out His Spirit so that His words can be
known. Then comes, of course, the judgment, "Because I called
and you refused, I stretched out My hand and no one paid
attention. You neglected all My counsel, didn't want My reproof.
I'll laugh at your calamity, mock when your dread comes, when
your dread comes like a storm."
I was watching a little bit on the Discovery Channel of a
program that sometimes is a curious program to me on mysteries.
And they have a particularly segment called, "Thy Mysteries of
the Bible." And they were talking about the mystery of the book
of Revelation last night. And whatever mystery is in the book of
the Revelation, they confounded into a hopeless confusion and
they did it by interviewing all kinds of quote/unquote scholars
from liberal universities who were trying to explain the
significance of Revelation and were utterly unable to do it. And
one watching that would conclude that these mysteries are so
profound and so confusing and so esoteric and so fantastic and so
symbolic that no person, not even the most erudite person at the
highest level of religious training in a university could ever
sort them out. Nothing could be further from the truth. In
fact, they all ignored the basic introduction to the book of
Revelation which says straight forward these words, "Blessed is
he who reads and those who hear the words of the prophecy,"
indicating that anybody who wants to can read it and hear it,
meaning with understanding. It is available, this knowledge of
God through His Word. It is not secretive, it is not hidden. And
those who refuse to come to its straight-forward truths and be
taught by the Spirit will be judged by the God who has made
Himself so clear that according to Romans 1, "All men are
without...what?...excuse."
In Hosea chapter 4 we read this, "Listen to the Word of the
Lord, O sons of Israel, for the Lord has a case against the
inhabitants of the land because there is no faithfulness or
kindness, or knowledge of God. They're swearing, deception,
murder, stealing and adultery." Sound familiar? "They employed
violence so that bloodshed follows bloodshed. Therefore the land
mourns and everyone who lives in it languishes, along with the
beasts of the field and the birds of the sky and also the fish of
the sea disappear. Yet let no one find fault and let none offer
reproof for your people are like those who contend with the
priests. So you will stumble today and the prophet also will
stumble with you by night, and I will destroy your mother, My
people are destroyed for lack of knowledge." You mean it isn't
there? Next statement, "Because you have rejected knowledge."
You have forgotten or ignored the law of your God so I will
reject you and I'll forget your children. Again, God judges
those who turn their back on an available revelation that He has
made plain and made clear.
The knowledge of the Word of God is where everything begins.
That knowledge is available to the one who desires it and who
comes to the truth of Scripture.
Now we are not called only to know it, but obviously we are
called to know it and put it into practice through obedience.
Listen to what it says in James 1:21, "Receive the Word implanted
which is able to save your souls but prove yourselves doers of
the Word and not merely hearers." So the idea is that we are to
put the Word of God into practice in our lives. That will, as we
saw in Joshua 1:8, make our way prosperous and lead us to good
success, in order to put it into practice we have to understand
it. In order to understand it we have to know its content...we
go back to the fact then that we must read the Scripture so that
we can absorb what it says and then begin to work on what it
means by what it says.
The Bible contains over 250 passages in the Old Testament
and about 55 passages in the New Testament that require us to be
obedient to everything that is commanded in Scripture. In fact
you remember when Jesus gave the great commission in Matthew 28
verses 19 and 20 He said that you're to go into all the world,
you're to make disciples and teach them to obey all things
whatsoever I have commanded you. This is clearly the injunction
of Scripture over and over. In fact, in Deuteronomy 5:29 we read
this, "O that there were such an heart in them that they would
fear Me and keep all My commandments always that it might be well
with them and with their children forever." Or in Luke 11:28,
"Blessed, or happy, are they that hear the Word of God and keep
it, or obey it." John 14:15, "If you love Me, keep My
commandments." First John 5:3, "For this is the love of God that
we keep His commandments." In John 8 Jesus said, "He who is of
God hears God's Word." We...we remember that from this morning's
message, verse 47. The Apostle Paul said, "I joyfully concur
with the law of God in the inner man." You remember the psalmist
said his delight was in the law of the Lord and in His law he
meditated day and night. And remember Psalm 19 where David said,
"The Word of God is more desirable than gold and sweeter than
honey." The psalmist in Psalm 40 verse 8 said, "I delight to do
Thy will, O God, Thy law is in my heart."
So, we have then this desire to do the will of God, plant it
in us as believers. It is predicated on knowing the will of God
which calls for us to understand what it says and then to be able
to interpret what it says and apply what it means by what it
says. The Lord revealed to His prophet Isaiah, as we continue to
sort of build this foundation, the Lord revealed to His prophet
Isaiah the magnificent nature of His being and the importance of
His judgment. And God clearly stated that each person must
listen to everything that God says. And I repeated...I repeat
tonight what I read you this morning from Isaiah 55 in its full
representation in verses 9 to 11 because it's so important. "For
as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher
than your ways, My thoughts than your thoughts. As the rain
comes down and snow from heaven and returns not thither but
waters the earth and makes it bring forth and bud that it may
give seed to the sower and bread to the eater...there's that
hydrological cycle I mentioned to you...so shall My Word be that
goes forth out of My mouth. It shall not return unto Me void but
it shall accomplish that which I please and it shall prosper in
the thing where unto I sent it." Here again God reveals to the
prophet that His Word when received and applied produces the ends
which God intends.
In the hymn book of the Psalms, Psalm 138:2 the psalmist
says, "I will worship toward Thy holy temple, or Thy holy place,
and praise Thy name for Thy loving kindness and for Thy truth for
Thou hast magnified Thy Word equal to Thy name."
There's no greater testimony to the importance of Scripture
than Psalm 119. And you ought to familiarize yourself with Psalm
119. One of the wonderful things about the study Bible is that
it's going to break down Psalm 119 into all its components, it's
a long Psalm of 176 verses and every verse is about the Scripture
except the very last one which is a response. But 175 verses
about the Scripture all broken down so that you can come to grips
with what the Scripture really claims for itself. But in nearly
every one of those 176 verses there is an emphasis on the
necessity of knowing the Word and obeying it.
Turn with me to Psalm 119, and obviously we can't read all
176 verses, but I want to pinpoint some of the verses that need
to be highlighted which emphasize this call to the Word of God.
Psalm 119 verse 16, "I shall delight in Thy statutes, I shall not
forget Thy Word." And here is the psalmist expressing his love
for the Word and his delight in obeying it. Verse 24, "Thy
testimonies also are my delight, they are my counselors." Verse
35, "Make me walk in the path of Thy commandments for I delight
in it." Verse 47, "And I shall delight in Thy commandments which
I love." Verse 48, "And I shall lift up my hands to Thy
commandments," that is I'll do them, put them into practice,
"which I love and I will meditate on Thy statutes." And over to
verse 72, "The law of Thy mouth is better to me than thousands of
gold and silver pieces." Down to verse 92, "If Thy law had not
been my delight, then I would have perished in my affliction."
And then verse 97 down to 104, "O how I love Thy law. It is
my meditation all the day. Thy commandments make we wiser than
my enemies for they are ever mine. I have more insight than all
my teachers for Thy testimonies are all my meditation. I
understand more than the aged because I have observed Thy
precepts. I have restrained my feet from every evil way that I
may keep Thy Word. I have not turned aside from Thine ordinances
for Thou Thyself has taught me. How sweet are Thy words to my
taste, yes sweeter than honey to my mouth. From Thy precepts I
get understanding, therefore I hate every false way."
Delighting in the Word and because you delight in it you
learn it and when you learn it you apply it, it effects every
area of life. It makes you wiser than your enemies, your
teachers, the aged of every society. It helps you turn aside from
sin and discerns for you so that you can avoid every false way.
Verse 105, "Thy Word is a lamp to my feet, a light to my path."
Verse 111, "I have inherited Thy testimonies forever, for they
are the joy of my heart." Verse 113, "I hate those who are
double minded but I love Thy law." Verse 127, "Therefore I love
Thy commandments above gold, yes above fine gold."
Skipping down to verse 159, "Consider how I love Thy
precepts. Revive me, O Lord, according to Thy loving kindness."
And then just several to close out, verse 161, "Princes
persecute me without cause, but my heart stands in awe of Thy
words," 167, "My soul keeps Thy testimonies and I love them
exceedingly." Verse 174, "I long for Thy salvation, O Lord, and
Thy law is my delight."
Here you have the attitude that has to be brought to bear
upon the Scripture. That's what we were talking about this
morning. When you understand what you have in your hand and when
you treasure this more than gold and when you consider it sweeter
than honey, when you delight in it, you will then begin to read
its truth. And that's where all effective Bible study begins.
Blessed are those, says the psalmist, who keep the testimony of
God and seek Him with their whole heart. And how shall a young
man cleanse his ways? By taking heed thereto according to Thy
Word. David said, "With my whole heart I sought Thee. O let me
not wander from Thy commandments." And so it goes. We begin
with a commitment to know the Word of God.
I can suggest to you a simple plan that you might follow.
In the study Bible I have a Bible reading plan that will get you
through the Bible in a year, and many of you do that already.
But let me suggest to you something that I've used through the
years that's been of real help to me. It's a way to begin to
absorb scriptural data at the maximum kind of level that will
help you come to grips with what the Bible actually says, which
is where you have to start. There's no shortcut to this but
there is a way that you can get after it.
Read through the Old Testament at whatever pace you feel
comfortable with. Just read through it. Take a chunk of
chapters on a daily basis and just read them and when you're done
go back and read them again, and just read through the Old
Testament in its sort of chronological order.
But when it comes to the New Testament which really gives us
the unfolding of the mysteries hidden from those in the past
which unfolds the full meaning of the Old Testament, the New
Covenant document, you need to read it more repetitiously. And
what I have suggested and what worked in my own life early on as
I began to come to grips with the need to know the Scripture was
to read repetitiously. And here's a little formula that I
followed and found very beneficial. I first discovered it in an
old book on how to study the Bible by James M. Grey who was a
past president of The Moody Bible Institute many, many years ago.
Kind of refining off of that process, here's what worked for me.
Take a book of the Bible and read it repetitiously for 30
days. And here's how I did it. I took the book of 1 John, 1 John
has five chapters and I read 1 John every day for 30 days, just
simply read it in the same version 30 times in a row. In fact I
became so enthralled by it that I actually broke the pattern on
the first book and read it ninety days in a row. But at the end
of 30 days I knew what was in 1 John just because of the
repetitious reading. In fact, I began to visualize my Bible and
if anybody asked me to this day what it says in 1 John 1 or 2 or
3 or 4 or 5 I'm pretty familiar with that because of repetition.
That's how your mind retains things. In fact if somebody says,
"Where in the Bible does it say,`If we confess our sins He is
faithful and just,'" that's easy, 1 John chapter 1 left hand
page, right hand column halfway down. You know, you begin to
visualize your Bible because of the familiarity of the text as
you go over it and over it and over it.
Now at the same time I wrote a one-sentence summary of each
chapter and just over the period of 30 days memorized what that
chapter was about so that I was locking into my mind an
understanding of the chapters and familiarity with the text
itself. Well at the end of 90 days I had a fair understanding of
what was in 1 John. I didn't yet fully understand all of it. I
hadn't gone into the depth of studying it all, but I was familiar
with it. And it elevated an awful lot of questions in my mind.
Then wanting to stay within the framework of John, I went to
the gospel of John. Now the gospel of John has 21 chapters and
that's too much to swallow in one month, so I divided it into
three sections of seven. Using seven is about the maximum number
of chapters you want to work with. I read through the first seven
chapters of John's gospel for 30 days, a second chapter, a second
seven for 30, and a third for seven for 30, so in 90 days I had
gone through the gospel of John and in the process wrote out a
simple little summary of each chapter, each of the 21 chapters.
Well, at the end of those 90 days of reading seven, seven and
seven, I understood what was in John. And to this day I can
still visualize that and that's been many, many years ago,
probably nearly 30 years ago and I remember that the wedding at
Cana was in John 2 and that the woman at the well in Samaria is
in John 4, and that Jesus encountering His brothers and their
lack of faith in John 7, and the feeding of the 5,000 in John 6,
and John 10 is the shepherd chapter, and John 15 is the vine
chapter, and the highly priestly prayer is in 17 and so it goes
and so it goes. Jesus in the garden is in 18. Just pure
familiarity.
I also began to realize that some of the things I didn't
understand in the epistle of John were explained in the gospel of
John. And that the best interpreter of Scripture is Scripture
itself. And I learned that very early and that's why when I
teach you the Word of God, I explain the Scripture with the
Scripture, don't I? Because that's the way I learned the
Scripture.
And then after that I went back to Philippians and took
Philippians which is a brief book of four chapters, read it 30
days in a row and was familiar with what was there. Then I went
back to the gospel of Matthew and took 28 chapters, broke them
into four sections of seven...seven for 30, seven for 30, seven
for 30 and in four months I had a grasp on the book of Matthew.
Now at that pace at about seven chapters at a time going from a
shorter book to a longer one, in two and a half years you will
have done the New Testament. Now you're going to read the Bible
for the next two and a half years, I hope. How about reading it
so that you produce familiarity? And that calls for repetition.
That calls for repetition. And in that process in two and a
half years you will have learned that there are parts of the
Bible that connect very obviously and you will cease to be a
total concordance cripple. You know what I mean. You can't
remember where anything is, and so you go chasing through that
inadequate concordance in the back of your Bible that never has
the verse you're looking for because you will have absorbed that.
Now you can't do that with the whole of the Old Testament.
Much of that narrative flow you just read as narrative and its
intent and its full rich meaning gets explained so wonderfully in
the New Testament. But you need to be familiar with the New.
Get yourself on that kind of a reading plan and you will be
amazed and astounded to find out what a Bible scholar you'll
become in that two and a half years as you begin to connect the
Scripture with itself. And again this reaffirms the idea that we
have been conveying to you all day today, and that is that
there's a single author. While there were many who wrote on
behalf of God under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, God
Himself is the author and with one author always speaking
infallible and inerrant truth, there is complete continuity. And
that is what theologians called analogia scriptura. That is
to say the Scripture is analogous to itself. That is there is no
contradiction. There are apparent difficulties which our finite
minds cannot grasp, like the trinity and like the paralleling of
human volition and divine election. There are those kinds of
issues that we cannot resolve because the limitations of the
human mind. But there are no contradictions because of the
singular author being God Himself.
I found that that exercise of reading the Bible in that
fashion in just a period of two and a half years or so gave me a
tremendous familiarity with the content of Scripture. And that
became the foundation upon which to build an understanding of
that content. And many of the questions that i had early on in
my Christian experience were answered not by reading commentaries
or studying theology books, but just by absorbing the very text
of Scripture itself.
I'll tell you something else. I continue to read Scripture
all the time and as I continue to read it all the time I continue
to be amazed at what is disclosed in it. There is a basic
understanding of Scripture that the Bible defines as the milk of
the Word, 1 Corinthians chapter 3. There are not certain milk
doctrines and certain meat doctrines. In other words, certain
lighter things and heavier things. Milk and meat does not
describe different truths, it describes the depth of truth.
There is a milk level of understanding and then there is a meat
level of understanding. And you go from the milk down to the real
steak as you plunge into Scripture and begin to see the profound
depth that is there. But you start with an understanding of the
Scripture itself. And then from there you begin to ask yourself,
"Okay, I know what it says, what does it mean by what it says?
Let's go from the milk to the meat." And we need to get into
that and we will when we talk about the process of discovering
the meaning of Scripture. We're going to do that. We're going
to do that next Lord's day and I'm going to show you in
particular how I go about determining the meaning of Scripture.
But before we get there, there's something I have to talk
about tonight and it's a very important thing. This morning I
talked about the major prerequisite to effective Bible study and
that is your view of Scripture, right? Tonight I added to that
another prerequisite to Bible study and that is that you know
what it says. You have to hold it high and learn what it says.
There are no shortcuts. There are no shortcuts. And listen,
folks, spiritual maturity is related to the application of truth,
is it not? Spiritual blessing isn't something you get zapped
with while you're just wandering through a revival tent. It
doesn't happen that way. It's not something that's going to
happen to you because a sermon was a real zinger and captivated
you. You may have a momentary working of God in your heart, but
spiritual maturity and spiritual growth is the long-haul process
of the application of divine truth in your life. It calls for
meditating on it day and night. It calls for observing to do
everything that is in it. And then you begin to make your way
prosperous and have good success. It doesn't happen in short
spurts. It doesn't happen with ecstatic event. True spiritual
development, true spiritual growth is just like human growth, it
is a process fed by nourishment. And that nourishment is the
Word of God. Jesus said, "Sanctify them by Thy truth, Thy Word
is truth." Sanctification doesn't happen in a stadium, at a big
rally. Sanctification doesn't happen at a camp somewhere where
somebody gave a message that grabbed your heart. Sanctification
is a long-haul process by which someone is matured into Christ's
likeness through the intake and the living out of the
understanding of divine truth. So we must learn then what the
Scripture says and then we can begin to make a deeper effort to
understand what it means by what it says. And that puts it into
the fabric of our life and allows us to begin to live it out.
But before we get into that, how we do that specifically,
let me talk about something else.
We've laid down this foundation preliminarily, we must have
a high view of Scripture, we must knows its content. Now beyond
that I want to give you some understanding of the requirements
for determining the meaning of Scripture...some requirements for
determining the meaning of Scripture.
May I suggest to you that even unbelievers may have a
certain interest in the Bible? I am always amazed why liberal
theologians who deny its inspiration want to become professors of
religion or professors of theology, but they do. They have some
kind of interest in Scripture. It is also possible for an
unregenerate, unconverted, unsanctified person to read and
understand some of the basic content of the Bible, right? They
can read that Jesus died on a cross. They can read that He rose
again. They can read that He promised to return. They can return
that He did miracles. They can read that an axe head floated.
They can read that the Lord parted the Red Sea and the children
of Israel crossed under the leadership of Moses and Pharaoh's
army was drowned. They can read that.
But in order to understand it, in order to comprehend its
meaning with full spiritual implications, there are some
requirements...there are some requirements. First requirement,
one must be a Christian...one must be a Christian. Don't ever
trust the interpretive skills of a non-Christian. I don't care
whether they are a liberal theologian, or whether they are a
cult, whether you're talking to somebody at the University of
Chicago in the theology department who doesn't believe that God
authored the Bible, but it's merely a high-level of human
inspiration, or whether you're talking to an elder from the
Mormon church, you cannot trust their interpretation of
Scripture. They can read it like you can read it. They can know
what it says and sadly many times they know what it says better
than Christians do who aren't nearly as faithful to read what it
says. It is always sad when some Jehovah's Witness comes to your
door and knows where things are in the Bible when you don't. But
you cannot trust their interpretation.
I'll show you why. Turn to 1 Corinthians chapter 2...1
Corinthians chapter 2. Verse 6, this is a very, very important
portion of Scripture, verse 6, "Yet we do speak wisdom among
those who are mature." He means there those who are in Christ
who are believers. "Wisdom, however, not of this age, nor of the
rulers or leaders of this age who are passing away." We have a
wisdom, we have a knowledge and an understanding of the depth of
Scripture that they do not. It is the wisdom that is called in
verse 7 God's wisdom spoken in a mystery, that means something
hidden. The hidden wisdom which God predestined before the ages
to our glory, the wisdom which none of the rulers of this age has
understood, for had they understood it they would not
have...what?...crucified the Lord of glory. He's talking about
religious people.
I'll tell you something else. If the rulers of this age and
the educators of this age and the philosophers and the
psychologists and the wise men of this age understood true
wisdom, they would not reject the Lord of glory who was
crucified. They do not have wisdom. You remember Jeremiah 8:9,
the verse I read you this morning, "You have rejected My Word so
what kind of wisdom do you have?" And the point is even stronger
in verse 9 as he reaches back into the Old Testament and quotes
out of Isaiah 64 and 65, "Just as it is written, things which eye
has not seen and ear has not heard." Do you know why they don't
know the meaning of God's wisdom? Why they can't get beyond what
the Bible says to what it means? You know why? Because it is
not available purely to empirical study. Eye can't see it and ear
can't hear it. It is not purely a physical thing. It cannot be
apprehended by empirical study. It can't be understood
objectively by any kind of application of human logic or reason
or intellect. Furthermore, verse 9 says, it has not entered the
heart of man. Man can't understand the wisdom of God externally
through objective research, and he can't understand it internally
through subjective wisdom. He can't know it on the outside, and
he can't know it on the inside. He can't know it. The only ones
who can know it, according to the end of verse 9, are those
who...what?...who love God...who love God.
Verse 10 explains why. "For to us God revealed them through
the Spirit." Let me tell you something, folks. There's only one
way to understand the meaning of Scripture and that is to be
taught by the Spirit of God. I don't expect a liberal theologian
to come up with a right answer. I don't expect a cultist to come
up with the right answer. I expect them to come up with the
wrong answer because they do not have the external objective
criteria to discern the mysteries of the truth of revelation,
they do not have the internal subjective criteria to discern the
truth of God's wisdom, therefore it is not available to them but
to us God revealed them through the Spirit. Isn't that amazing?
To us. "For the Spirit searches all things, even the depths of
God." To understand the wisdom of God, redemptive wisdom which
unfolds in the Scripture, to understand all of the greatness of
God's revelation is not possible for mankind unaided by the Holy
Spirit.
And he gives an illustration of that in verse 11. "For who
among men knows the thoughts of a man except the spirit of the
man which is in it." It's just a little analogy. There's only
one component in the human being that understands the thoughts of
a man and that's the spirit that's in man. In other words, it's
your internal self that understands your mind. Your hand doesn't
understand your mind. Your foot doesn't understand your mind.
Your nose doesn't understand your mind. Your ear doesn't, your
eye doesn't. It's that internal part of you that understands
your thought process. "Even so the thoughts of God no one knows
except the Spirit of God." No part of the physical creation can
know the mind of God, only the Spirit of God. That's his little
analogy.
"Now we have received not the spirit of the world, but the
Spirit who is from God that we might know the things freely given
to us by God." Isn't this amazing? And we're not many noble and
not many mighty, but we know what the world doesn't know. In
fact, we know the things freely given to us by God which things
also we speak, not in words taught by human wisdom, but in those
taught by the Spirit who combines spiritual thoughts with
spiritual words.
I'm not surprised that people in the world think we're a
little odd, a little weird, a little spacey, we speak a language
they don't understand. They don't understand it at all. And
they look at us and wonder with our limited intellectual
abilities how in the world we understand it. How is it that we
know things they don't know? How is it that we can comprehend
things they can't comprehend?
I was talking to a Jewish man the other day and had the
opportunity to give him my book, "The Power of Integrity." He said,
"Well this is very helpful to me because," he said, "I'm having a
big problem in my life, I'm trying to study ethics, I'm trying to
sort out ethics." Brilliant man, CEO of a major conglomerate,
entertainment conglomerate in Hollywood, a man of very immense
influence and a very, very bright and very gracious man. But a
man who was concerned to understand ethics. I said, "Here they
are, here's a book on integrity and somebody you'll enjoy reading
about, a man named Daniel, an uncompromising Jewish man of
biblical times."
And, you know, here we are with so little in terms of the
world and yet we know what they just can't understand. Why?
Verse 14, and this is probably the key, "A natural man," that is
a man unconverted, without the aid of the Holy Spirit, "does not
accept the things of the Spirit of God. It isn't that he just
doesn't accept them. They are what to him? Foolishness. He
can't understand them. He cannot comprehend them because they
are spiritually appraised. That's why you have to remember,
folks, when you go out to present the gospel to an unconverted
person, unless the Holy Spirit awakens the heart, it's useless,
it's hopeless because they can't understand it. You're not in a
battle, you're not in an intellectual battle trying to have a
heavier weight of argument so you can swing the pendulum over in
their mind. This is not some human enterprise you're engaged in.
They're hopeless. They're dead in trespasses and sin and they
have no faculty to comprehend spiritual reality. In fact, their
assessment of it is that it's foolishness because things like
this are spiritually appraised. But he who is spiritual as
opposed to being natural, which is unconverted, spiritual as
being converted, born again, those who are spiritual who have
that new mind, the mind of Christ who have a new nature appraise
all things, and yet he himself is appraised by no man. Boy,
that's marvelous, isn't it? They can't even make an accurate
judgment on us. The world can't accurately judge us. We can
accurately judge them because we know God's wisdom, they have no
way to appraise us. They can't figure us out anymore than they
can figure out what we believe, for who can ever know the mind of
the Lord, but we have the mind of Christ. Isn't that tremendous?
Beloved, you have no hope of ever understanding the Bible
unless you have been born again, unless you have a new faculty
aided by the Spirit of God. It isn't just the Spirit of God,
it's the Spirit of God working through your mind. It's the
Spirit of God giving you the mind of Christ so that you can think
in a way that you could never think apart from Him. Scripture
writers sent forth the truth in divine words. Unaided, natural,
unconverted people can read those words and they can basically
read what they say, but they cannot understand what they mean.
The truth then is available only to those who are illumined by
the Holy Spirit.
Martin Luther once wrote, "Man is like a pillar of salt,
he's like Lot's wife, he's like a log, he's like a stone, he's
like a lifeless statue which uses neither eyes nor mouth, neither
sense nor heart until he is regenerated and converted by the Holy
Spirit."
The best that an unconverted man can do is chew the bark of
Scripture, but he'll never get to the wood. And that's why it is
so foolish to expose yourself to someone teaching the Word of God
who doesn't have the Holy Spirit. What folly that is. Of course
they'll come up with the wrong interpretation.
There's a second necessary component. In fact there are a
few more that I'll have to continue next week. But I'm going to
give you a second one and we've already sort of begun to speak
about this, let's just call it desire...desire. Turn to 1 Peter
chapter 2, if you are going to study the Word of God you have to
desire it. There's an old story about Socrates, whether it's
true or not, who knows? But Socrates was the reigning
philosopher and sage of his time and he was the envy of every
young would-be student who wanted to be a pupil of Socrates. The
story goes that some young man came down to Socrates who used to
teach by the sea in a grove and this young man came and in a
private moment said to the brilliant Socrates, "Sir, I would like
you to be my teacher. Will you teach me?" Socrates is reported
to have replied to him, "Follow me." And he turned and walked
down the sand toward the seashore, continued walking into the
water, continued walking, continued walking until they were both
about mouth deep in the sea, as it was sort of surging up and
down across their lips. He turned around and looked to the young
man who by now was wondering what in the world kind of lesson
this was. Put both hands upon his head and shoved him under and
held him there. Wanting to exercise great respect for his
teacher, the young man tried his best quietly to remain below the
surface and hold his breath.
It became rather impossible after a few moments, however,
and he began to fight and press and then he began to flail. And
Socrates being a strong man held him there and held him there and
held him there. And according to the story somewhere between a
minute and two minutes which is a long time and finally let the
flailing man go. And he burst out of the water and spewed out
salt water all over the place and yelled at Socrates, "What in
the world are you doing?" or something to that effect. To which
he is said to have replied, "When you want to know as badly as
you want to breathe, I'll be your teacher." Made the point.
There's something to be said for that. Real diligent Bible
study is done by people who want to know desperately. There is a
certain level of desperation. And Peter deals with that. Look
at 1 Peter...1 Peter 2 verse 1, "Therefore putting aside all
malice and all guile and hypocrisy and envy and all slander, like
newborn babes long for the pure milk of the Word that by it you
may grow in respect to salvation if you've tasted the kindness of
the Lord." Now the heart of this passage is one statement.
"Like newborn babes long for the pure milk of the Word." Here
he's not talking about milk and meat doctrine as he was in 1
Corinthians 3, he's giving a simple analogy and here it is. You
need to have the same kind of desire for the Word that a baby has
for milk. That's a great analogy, isn't it? When you bring a
baby into your home, a newborn baby, that's really all they care
about and they notify you and they notify you relentlessly when
it's time for that milk. You care what color the curtains are in
their nice little room that you fixed up, you care what color
their little booties are and that stuff you put on them and you
care about putting a curl in their hair and a little ribbon or
whatever, you care about buying them a little set of pajamas if
it's a boy, you care about all that stuff. All they care about
is milk, give them the milk, deal with the consequences and give
them some more. Life is very, very simple. That is the
simplicity which Peter has in his mind as he draws the analogy in
writing to these believers scattered throughout Pontus, Galatia,
Cappadocia, Asia, Bithynia who are the elect of God. In the
midst of difficult times and even persecution he calls upon them
to have a hunger, to have an appetite, to have a singular focus
that desires the Scripture like a newborn baby desires milk.
What should feed that desire? Several things. First of
all, if they remember the Word was the source of their life. See
the first word in verse 1, "therefore," that takes you back.
Back to what? Back to verse 23, "You were born again not of the
seed which is perishable but imperishable, that is to the living
and abiding Word of God." You were born again by the Word of
God. The point being the Word of God made the most profound
impact on your life ever, the most profound impact on your life
possible. And if the Word of God is that powerful to have that
kind of impact on your life, then you ought to long for it.
Remember the Word is your life source. If it so dramatically
changed your life at the beginning, remember what it will do if
you continue to desire it.
Secondly, eliminate your sin. Remember the Word was the
source of your conversion. Secondly, eliminate your sin, verse
1, "Putting aside all evil." Malice is kakia in the Greek, it
simply means general evil. Put aside all evil. And he gives
some illustrations, some examples like deceit. The word "guile"
is dolos in the Greek, it's the word used for fish hook which is
very deceptive if you're a fish, obviously. Put aside hypocrisy,
put aside envy, put aside katalalia, lalalalia, it's an
onomatopoetic word, it sounds like what it means, slandering,
speaking about somebody behind their back. Put aside those kinds
of things. Get rid of the evil in your life and then desire the
Word.
What drives this desire? A remembrance of the power of the
Word of God as demonstrated in your salvation and an elimination
of your sin. As long as there is sin in your life it's going to
clog up that desire, it's going to convolute that desire, it's
going to mess with the purity of that focus, it's going to draw
you away from the Word of God. As somebody wrote in their Bible
long ago, "Either this book will keep you from sin, or sin will
keep you from this book."
Thirdly, admit your need. Verse 2, "Like newborn babes long
for the pure milk that by it you may grow in respect to
salvation." Admit your need...be open and honest enough to cry
out for it. I'm always saddened when I meet people who are in a
place in the world where they can't seem to find a church, they
can't seem to find a place where they can be fed the Word of God
and they have such a crying heart longing for this. You people
are so greatly blessed to have the supply if the longing is
there. Acknowledge that need. Cry out as that baby does for
milk.
Pursue growth is another thing. Remember the power of the
Word in your salvation, put aside sin, admit your need for the
Word, pursue growth that you may growth in respect to salvation.
And the last little point to make is survey your blessings.
Verse 3, "If you've tasted the kindness of the Lord." If you
already know how good it is to know His Word and obey it. If
you've already been blessed in obedience in the past, survey that
and seek to obey in the future.
How do you know when somebody has this desire? How do you
know when somebody really has a longing for the Word? First of
all, they honor it...they honor it. They hold it high. They're
like Job who said, "I've treasured the words of His mouth more
than my necessary food." They're like Jeremiah who said, "Thy
words were found and I did eat them and they were the joy and
rejoicing of my heart." They're like the psalmist who said,
"They're more valuable to me than gold and much fine gold,
they're sweeter than honey from the honeycomb." When I find
someone who honors the Word I am seeing desire.
And then a love for the Word, deep affection for its truth.
That shows up in wanting to talk about the Word, wanting to
teach the Word, wanting to hear the Word taught, wanting to read
books that unfold its truth. Like we read in Psalm 119 over and
over, oh how I love Thy law, I delight in Thy law, it is my joy,
it is my rejoicing. People who have this desire honor the Word.
They respect it. They exalt it. They obey it. They love it.
They have a deep affection for its truths. They'd rather talk
about that than anything. They'd rather pursue an understanding
of sound doctrine than anything else.
They also fight for it. They're...they belong in Jude 3,
they earnestly contend for the once-for-all-delivered faith.
They'll go to war. They'll go to battle for its veracity.
They'll go to battle against those who attack its truth. It's
that precious to them.
When you honor the Word and when you love the Word, you will
fight for it. Sometimes people will say, "Well you need to be
more peacemaking, you need to be more conciliatory, you may need
to be more loving. And perhaps if that's a personality trait,
they're right. But when it comes to the Word of God, if you love
it and honor it, you can't help but fight for it.
And then I would add, the people who desire the Word
proclaim it, too...proclaim it. Don't tell me you have this
longing for the Word, don't tell me it's sweeter to you than
honey and more precious than gold if you don't proclaim it.
Because whatever it is you love most you talk about. Is that not
true? Whatever it is you love most you talk about. I see all
these bumper stickers, "My kid was the honor student at Such-and-
such a place." There must be a lot of kids who get to be that
because it's on a lot of bumpers. Parents wanting to proclaim
from the back bumper their love for this kid. I understand that.
You see a lot more of those than you do a little bumper sticker
saying, "My Savior is the Lord Jesus Christ." I understand the
humanness of that. I understand when a young man falls in love
and all he can talk about his girlfriend. I understand when a
little kid in a Little League baseball game hits a homerun,
that's the most important thing in his life, and probably in his
father's life too for a while. I understand those aspects of
life. But sometimes they do betray a really confused order of
priorities, don't they?
The people who long for the Word like a baby longs for milk
can't help but proclaim it, they can't be restrain, it just comes
out. And then lastly they personalize it...they personalize it.
They're not conformed to this world but they're being
transformed by the Word. The Word dwells in them richly,
Colossians 3. It takes up the fabric of their life, begins to
shape them, shows up in how they live. You watch their life and
you don't see some teeth-gritting, stern, veined-neck trying to
gut their way through this obedience, there's a calmness, there's
a sweetness, there's a naturalness. And you can catch them at
any moment in their life and there's a consistency because the
Word has taken over and shaped their personal character.
How do you know when you have a desire, a real desire?
You'll honor the Word, you'll love it. It will be the source of
war for you on occasion. It will be the topic of conversation
most familiar on your lips as you proclaim it. And it will show
up in your life even involuntarily. I always say, "When someone
is spiritually mature they're involuntary responses are godly."
They don't even have to think about it, it's so much a part of
the fabric of their life.
Well, that's enough for tonight and there are three more
prerequisites to add to those and we'll do that next time. Let's
pray.
As you can tell, before we pray, it's hard for me to stop
talking about this subject because it is such a passion of my own
heart. And I can only hope, and you have to pray for me, that
I'll be able to get everything I want to say into these next two
Sundays.
Father, thank You for tonight. Thank You for these dear
precious people who have come, come because they do hunger for
Your Word, because they want to understand it, they want to know
its truth, they want to live it. They want to make their way
prosperous, have good success, they want the joy of obedience.
They want to bring glory to Your name.
Thank You for those who by virtue of their salvation,
conversion and new birth have the Spirit of God as their teacher.
O God, may they have a strong desire like a newborn babe does
for milk, a strong desire to know Your Word. So essential if
they're to be diligent and study it as workman who need not be
ashamed.
We thank You, Lord, for this great treasure. We thank You
that we can understand it. You have made it clear. We want that
understanding that we may live it and know the fullness of
blessing and bring You honor in Your Son's name. Amen.
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