If Your Right Hand Causes You to Sin, Cut it Off

If your right eye causes you to sin, tear it out and throw it away. For it is better that you lose one of your members than that your whole body be thrown into hell. And if your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and throw it away. For it is better that you lose one of your members than that your whole body go into hell.  (Matthew 5:29-30 ESV)

If you’re looking for a reason why people want to dismiss Jesus or the Bible, look no further than these couple of verses.  These verses give us insight into how Jesus views sin and we just don’t like this viewpoint.

We don’t like being told we can’t do something and Jesus is not only telling us that there are things we shouldn’t do, He’s also saying “do whatever it takes to make sure you don’t do these things.”  He is saying that the right view of sin is that it’s so bad, we should even dismember ourselves if that prevents us from sinning.

Why would Jesus deliver such a stark message?  Because of hell.  Romans 6:23 tells us, “For the wages of sin is death…”  When we sin, what we earn — what we deserve — is death and by death, the Bible means an eternity spent in hell.  Jesus knows this and is essentially saying, “do whatever it take to make sure you avoid this fate!”

When the world hears this message, it wants to stick its collective heads in the sand.  The world doesn’t want to hear the bad news, so it dismisses the message and it dismisses the messenger.

When the Church hears this message, we tend to act like “Jesus paid for all of my sins so I can do whatever I want.”  Regrettably, I’ve often acted this way myself.

The truth is, and the Bible tells us this, sin is a big deal.  Just one is enough to send us to hell.  Just one.  And Jesus loves us so much that He would have come to die in our place to cover just that one sin.

So to, how we respond to sin is a big deal.  If we die apart from Christ, even if we’ve only committed just one sin, our eternity will be spent in hell.  Therefore, we need to make certain that we understand this and that we understand our options.  Accordingly, if we do have a relationship with Jesus Christ — the only way in which the debt of our sins can be paid — then we will not want to sin even once, because we know that by sinning we are effectively nailing Jesus to the cross to pay for that sin.  Why in the world would want to cause more suffering for our Savior?

Our treatment of sin is a big deal.  If you aren’t in a relationship with Jesus Christ, you will pay for your sins in hell.  If you are, you will want the mindset of battling sin, even though Christ has paid for them all.

I haven’t done all I can to battle sin.  This day, I will choose to follow the Lord and to rejoin the fight.  God help us!  Amen and amen.

 

Better Than We Deserve

While traveling home from training this week, I cranked up a podcast episode of Tim Keller.  This particular sermon dealt with the “pride of Nebuchadnezzar.”

If you haven’t heard of this guy, he was the king of Babylon during the time of Daniel.  If you’re interested, you can catch up on the story of Nebuchadnezzar in chapters 1 – 4 of Daniel.

Ultimately, the story of this king is one of excessive pride and the eventual humiliation that brings him into a relationship with the Lord.  Nebuchadnezzar was the most powerful person in the world at that time and he ranks as one of the most powerful of all-time.  He was a very big deal.  But he was not beyond the reach of God.  When he declared his glory, God in His great mercy struck Nebuchadnezzar down so that through he might be raised again in humility.

However, while teaching through this passage, Keller made a point that I don’t remember hearing too often.  And if I did, it certainly didn’t stick like it should  have.  The point is this:

Wherever we are, we have it better than we deserve.

That’s a hard point for many of us.

Many of us will think about how bad or tough or rough things are for us and think that we certainly deserve better than we have it.

Many of us will think about those that are so obviously less fortunate than us in so many ways and think that there is no way those people have it better than we deserve.

And when our minds agree with this sort of thinking, it flavors everything else in our lives.

But the truth is that we have better than we deserve because what we deserve is hell.  I deserve it.  Sweet Wife deserves it.  We all deserve it.  Why?  Because we are sinners and death is the payment for sin:

For the wages of sin is death… (Romans 6:23a ESV)

When we understand this and remember this, then this flavors the rest of our lives.  This doesn’t mean that we walk around in funeral garb and moan.  No, instead this means that we understand our condition and that we are ready to accept God’s grace and to live daily in this grace.  The rest of Romans 6:23 says:

“…but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord. (Romans 6:23 ESV)

When our perspective is away from God we view life like this:

I deserve a wife.

I deserve a family.

I deserve a career.

I deserve a pension.

When our perspective is on a relationship with God through Jesus Christ, we understand that what I deserve for I’ve done is hell, but God has granted us salvation and eternal life through Christ.  This for sure changes my eternity, and it also changes how I live in the here and now.  Now my view should be:

God has blessed me with what I need.

God will never leave me or forsake me.

God will continue His work in me.

God will enable me to do what needs to be done.

I for sure don’t live in these truths as I should.  I really need to hear and remember these reminders.

Thank You, Lord for not giving me what I deserve and for granting me what I could not earn.  Through Christ, amen.

“Blessed is Everyone Who Fears the LORD”

 

Blessed is everyone who fears the LORD,
who walks in his ways!  (Psalm 128:1 ESV)

I read Psalm 128 this morning and I’ve been thinking about this verse from time to time today.  The idea here is that there is some sort of good that follows people who fear God.

Usually, when we think about “fear of the LORD,” there are probably a couple of things that come to mind.  Maybe we think about being scared by God related to something.  Maybe we think about how we have feared other people and we assign the same type of fear to how we think about God.  Or perhaps we think that God is trying to warn us in some way.

When we do consider the “fear of the LORD,” though, this thought should run through our mind:

God has the power and the authority to send us to hell.

When a judge in an American court room hands down a verdict he is exhibiting his authority, but I’m guessing most judges would not climb down from the bench, handcuff the guilty and lead him off to jail.  There are, of course, different reasons for that, but an obvious one is that most judges would not be strong enough to manhandle the guilty.  But God is not like that.

God has the authority to judge us.  When He judges us, His judgment is always righteous and holy.  But He also has the power to execute the judgment on us.  We are never fugitives from God’s justice and we can’t out run His pronouncements.  When it’s our time to die we will and God has the power to carry out what He has decreed.

Because of this power and authority God has, we should “fear the LORD.”  If we know these things about God, why would we not fear Him?

But there are some other benefits that come with “fearing the LORD” besides avoiding hell.  As James MacDonald often reminds us, when we choose to sin, we choose to suffer.  Though we may know Jesus Christ as our Savior, there may be times when we do not choose to honor Him and it’s in these times that we create suffering for ourselves.

And if it’s true that sin causes suffering, then it is true that obedience causes blessing.  If we choose to abstain from sex outside of marriage or sex before marriage, then we for sure avoid certain problems caused by these sins.  If we choose to avoid anger, then we avoid the consequences of this sin.  If we choose to avoid drunkenness then we avoid the problems caused by drunken carousing.

Life is hard and obedience isn’t always easy, but there is indeed a promise of blessing when we choose to honor our LORD.

 

Monday Colossians: Picking Back Up

It’s been a while since the last post in this series.  Actually, it’s been about seven weeks.  Sorry for the delay.  I guess summer got in the way.

In our last post, we examined Colossians 2:16:

Therefore let no one pass judgment on you in questions of food and drink, or with regard to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath.

The topic of “judgment” is definitely a big deal nowadays, so the key to understanding this passage is to understand the context of this particular verse.  To help you gain this perspective, I’ll point you back to the last post, “Don’t Judge Me, Bro“.  To summarize, I’ll re-post this paragraph:

Here, when Paul says “don’t let them judge you,” what He is doing is pointing the audience back to the cross of Jesus Christ.  He’s reminded them he wants them to be mature in Christ.  He’s told them that others will try to delude with plausible arguments.  But he says that instead of falling prey to the judgment of others, Christians — us, we — should simply abide with Christ and walk with Him in the way we received Him.

Paul’s goal for the audience of this letter — then and now — is for them to be mature in Jesus Christ (v. 1:28).  Being “mature” in Christ obviously means having a clear understanding of the gospel of Jesus Christ.  And when others try to make us feel guilty and pull and tug us back into “religious activities,” we need a firm and clear understanding of this gospel to aid our walk with Jesus.

In the last few verses of Colossians 2, the Apostle Paul will deliver a strong message against “self-made religion.”  This is a message I need to hear over and over again.  Lord willing, we’ll take a look at these verses in the coming weeks.


“Monday Colossians” is a weekly Bible study series from the book of Colossians.  All Bible quotations are taken from the English Standard Version (ESV) Bible translation.  You can read all of the posts in this series by clicking here.  

Our Sins are not Hidden From God

 

Earlier this week we took a look at Psalm 66:18:

If I had cherished iniquity in my heart,
the Lord would not have listened. (Psalm 66:18 ESV)

Actually, we looked at it three different times (here, here and here).  And though we took three looks, the message is pretty simple:  when we hang on to sin, our prayer life is greatly hindered. Though God hears everything, when we embrace sin, He isn’t obligated to listen or answer.

That is a pretty stark message — and it should be.

God is perfect and He wants nothing to do with sin.  That statement describes His righteousness and holiness.  He is the opposite of sin and He goes to great lengths — like sacrificing His only Son — in order to reconcile us to Himself and deal with sin.  Accordingly, we don’t need to and should not want to cozy up to sin.

Unfortunately, though, we often do.  And when we do, God knows:

O God, you know my folly;
the wrongs I have done are not hidden from you.  (Psalm 69:5 ESV)

God is omniscient.  This means He knows everything.

I’ve heard lots of Bible preaching and teaching.  I’ve even read the entire Bible once and lots of it more than once.  I know lots of stuff about the Bible.  But even so, it’s amazing how often I forget about this one particular attribute of God.  I know God is all powerful.  Amen — He can do anything!  I know God is everywhere.  Amen — He’s always with me!  I know Jesus Christ died for my sins.  Amen — I am alive with Him!  But what about God seeing everything that I do?  Crickets.

If you have children, you know it’s a lot easier for them to be obedient when you are watching.  When they are alone?  Not so much.  And we sort of understand this and train them to obey when they are alone.  “I’ll be back in 10 minutes and I want your room to be clean.”  When we return and their room isn’t clean, they usually get right to it when we watch over them!

So why do I forget God is watching me?  When I’m about to sin or in the midst of sin, why do I forget that His eyes are upon me?  I think there are perhaps several answers to these questions, but one in particular, at least for me, is this:  I get too comfortable with God.  I take His grace for granted.  I come to expect His mercy.

I’m definitely not proud of that.  As I write this, I’m actually quite ashamed.  How could I take the marvelous grace and mercy of my Savior for granted?

Lord, I am sorry that I have taken Your grace and mercy for granted.  You are a holy and righteous God and You have no fellowship with sin!  Your word tells us that the guilty will not go unpunished, yet You have wonderfully chose to save me by offering Jesus Christ in my place to pay for my sins.  Thank You, Lord, for making a way for me.  As I go forward, please grant me repentance and help me to be amazed by Your grace every second of every day.  I pray this in the name of Jesus.  Amen and amen.

When God Doesn’t Listen, part 3

Earlier this week, I posted a couple of different thoughts under the title, “When God Doesn’t Listen.”  These posts came from reading Psalm 66:18,

 

If I had cherished iniquity in my heart,
the Lord would not have listened.  (Psalm 66:18 ESV)

The main idea from this is that our attitude and approach toward sin matters.  If we cherish sin, or hold onto it tightly, there is no obligation by God to hear our prayers.

This certainly has implications for non-believers, but I think the greatest warning here goes to professed followers of Jesus Christ.  Non-believers are in a state of separation from God that will last an eternity.  Non-believers would be in a constant position of “cherish[ing] iniquity” until the Lord calls them to Himself (if He does in fact call them).  In this constant state of cherishing iniquity, God would have no obligation to hear their prayers.

Followers of Jesus Christ are in a different position with God.  Christians are instructed to confidently “draw near to the throne of grace” (Hebrews 4:16).  Likewise, we are told to cast our cares on the Lord because He cares for us (1 Peter 5:7).  And all of this is effective as well, as we are reminded in James 5:16b,

The prayer of a righteous person has great power as it is working.  (James 5:16b ESV)

So as followers of Jesus Christ, we forfeit enormous benefits when we cherish sin.  We temporarily forfeit our near position to the throne of grace, turn our backs on the great I AM who cares for us and forfeit powerful and effective prayers.

But do we even think about this?

Do we think about this as we choose to sin?

In the book Future Grace, John Piper describes our decision to sin as choosing the short-term lie of sin over the long-term promise of future grace.  When we sin, we are believing a lie that we think will give us pleasure in the near-term over the promise from Almighty God that will last forever.  I do indeed believe what Piper has written, but one of the ramifications of sin is that we forfeit in the near-term the blessing of prayers that are heard by God.  (To be clear, I’m not saying that Piper doesn’t make this case in his book as well.)

This verse has made its mark on me this summer.  If I cherish sin and hold it closely, God is under no obligation to listen to my prayers.  And as it just so happens, I have a lot of stuff to pray to God about!  If indeed I need all of the help I can get (as we are often inclined to say), then I can help myself out by not cherishing sin!

I hope this helps.

Amen and amen.

 

 

When God Doesn’t Listen, part 2

Yesterday, we took a look at Psalm 66:18,

If I had cherished iniquity in my heart,
the Lord would not have listened.  (Psalm 66:18 ESV)

The implication here is pretty easy to see.  Our attitude about sin makes a great deal of difference in our relationship with God.  If we embrace sin, then there is the expectation that God will not listen to our request.

Again, as mentioned yesterday, God hears every prayer ever uttered.  The logic for understanding this is simple.  God is everywhere and He knows everything.  Accordingly, there is not a thing said or a thing done that God doesn’t know about.  But God is not obligated to answer every prayer.  He isn’t like a genie found in a bottle that’s obligated to grant three wishes.

Also as discussed yesterday, even if we pray as “Christians,” He isn’t obligated to answer prayers uttered while we are cherishing inequity.  Perhaps our behavior can be described as “ungratefulness and arrogant” (as it was yesterday), but there is a reason these actions impair our prayer life:  we are in rebellion against God.

God doesn’t change.  He is immutable.  James 1:17 reminds us of this when it is noted that there is “no variation or shadow due to change” related to God.  He isn’t going to change His character in order to overlook our sin.  And even though He sent His Son, Jesus Christ, to pay for our sins, He still hates sin.  It is against His nature.

So when we sin, we turn our backs on Him.  We revolt.  We turn away from His face.  Accordingly, even if we are followers of Jesus Christ, our relationship with God is changed.  He doesn’t change, but the relationship does.  And when we are in this state of open rebellions against Him, He isn’t obligated to listen to or respond to our prayers.

As Christians, we should think about how our interaction with sin affects our prayer life.  Our culture is changing and many of these changes are for the worse.  As the shift is made toward approval of same-sex marriages, for example, many Christians have embraced this change in order to avoid being labeled or shunned by the culture.  But the effect on our relationship with God can be far more damaging.  As we embrace and cherish sinful behavior, our relationship with God is damaged.

Same-sex marriage isn’t the only sinful area we have embraced.  There are many others and many that affect me.  I need to check myself to see where I have embraced sin and I need to fight to get away from it.

It’s not likely that we’ll hear this argument when the culture wars are fought.  We will not hear that we shouldn’t sin because our prayer life may be hampered.  But it’s the truth.

Sunday Worship: When God Doesn’t Listen

If I had cherished iniquity in my heart,
the Lord would not have listened.  (Psalm 66:18 ESV)

Our view of sin and how we deal with sin matters.

In this verse, the psalmist is reminding us that if we choose to hold onto sin — to cherish sin — then there is a ramification: “the Lord would not have listened.”

The context for this truth is given in the two preceding verses:

Come and hear, all you who fear God,
and I will tell what he has done for my soul.
I cried to him with my mouth,
and high praise was on my tongue. (Psalm 66:16-17 ESV)

The psalmist had cried out and prayed to God and God responded.  The psalmist says, “I will tell what he has done for my soul.”  The psalmist also gives us a reminder of how he prayed.  We are told he “cried to him with my mouth” and that “high praise was on my tongue.”

When we look at this piece of Scripture in the right context we can see this message clearly:

  1. The psalmist has had prayers answered.  God has indeed done things for his soul.
  2. These prayers were made with cries out to God and with praise on his tongue for God.
  3. But if the psalmist had cherished sin, the prayers would not have been answered.  God would not have “listened.”

Again I will say, our view of sin and how we deal with sin matters.

Of course we are all sinners, every single one of us, saved and unsaved.  And, of course, since God is sovereign, omniscient and omnipresent. He knows what we pray, He knows when we pray and He knows where we are when we are praying.  And, of course, if we are unsaved and steeped in sin we can call out to God and He will hear our cry for Him.

But there is something about our attitude toward sin that affects how God listens to our prayers.

Note that in the psalmist’s prayer that he cried to God and that he brought high praise to God.  Any of us can cry out to God when we need comforting, need help or need strength.  We can cry to our heavenly Father.  But when we praise our Father, we are calling to mind who He is and we are repeating those things back to Him.  He is our Creator, Healer, Savior, Sustainer, Comforter and on and on and on.  If we truly know Him, then we can indeed call on Him as Holy and Righteous and call on Him as our Savior.  And how can we call on Him as our Savior if we are clinging tightly to the sin that caused Him to suffer and die for us?

We show the ultimate ungratefulness to God when we choose to hold onto sin after all He has done for us.  We show the ultimate arrogance when we cling to and cherish our sin while calling out to Him for help.

We will never stop sinning.  And, we may even commit some really heinous sins after we are saved and before we enter heaven.  But our attitude concerning sin matters.  In the worst case, our attitude about sin may proved we aren’t really saved.  Short of that, our attitude about sin may cause God to not actively listen to our prayers or be obligated to respond.

Lord, please change my attitude about sin.  Thank You for these reminders.  Please remind me of my sins so that I may confess thing and come to You for repentance and forgiveness.  Thank You for Jesus Christ who paid for my sins.  In His name I pray.  Amen and Amen.


“Sunday Worship” is a weekly series that can hopefully be used to help prepare our hearts to worship God Almighty.  You can read all of the posts in this series by clicking here.

“The wrongdoer will be paid back…”

Karma.  Cosmic vengeance.  People getting paid back for what they’ve done.  Do you believe in these things?  Sort of sounds good, doesn’t it?

Well, I can tell you for sure that there’s no such thing as “karma,” but we can rest assured that all of our wrongdoings will be given an accounting.  Let’s discuss this by first taking a look at the final verse in Colossians 3:

For the wrongdoer will be paid back for the wrong he has done, and there is no partiality. – Colossians 3:25 (ESV)

The lead in for this verse is the Apostle Paul reminding Christians to do their best in everything that they do, not because there is some earthly reward, but because the Lord will deliver the inheritance:

Whatever you do, work heartily, as for the Lord and not for men, knowing that from the Lord you will receive the inheritance as your reward. – Colossians 3:23-24 (ESV)

The command to “work heartily” could seem overbearing if not for the reminders of our work being to honor God and that our reward will come later.  There’s also that part of our human nature that always seems to know when “others are getting away with stuff.”  We just can’t stand it (though we aren’t as sensitive when it comes to our own sin).  Though we have the promise of the reward – “the inheritance” – in our eyes, things seem to be left undone because others are having their way.

But this reminder from Paul in verse 25 let’s us know that, end the end, an accounting will be given for all wrongdoing.  There are two simple reminders here:

* “For the wrongdoer will be paid back for the wrong he has done…” – Followers of Christ are called to live a different way.  They are called to honor Christ with their lives and this means that certain things aren’t OK to do anymore.  Others that don’t follow Christ, won’t feel such a call and their sinful practices may continue.  Here, Paul reminds us that such wrongs are given an accounting.  In fact, the wrongdoer will feel the specific retribution for the sins he has committed.

* ” …and there is no partiality.” – The promise that the wrongdoer will be paid back is also followed by the stark reminder that no partiality will be shown.

Again, I think the reminder for this verse is at least two-fold:

  • It is intended as encouragement for follower of Christ who are suffering in the present age.  It serves to provide a broader perspective that can’t help but encourage.
  • It also serves as a stark reminder that sin will not go unpunished.

Sin, which is present in the lives of us all, is accounted for in two ways:

1) Our sin is paid for by the atoning sacrifice of Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior.  Jesus Christ was born of a virgin and lived a sinless life so that He could be presented as the perfect Sacrifice.  He died on the cross to pay for our sins and then rose again on the third day to guarantee the payment for these sins.  (Had He not rose again, the sacrifice would have had to be made again.)  To receive the gift of what Jesus did for us – dying for our sins – we have to accept Him by faith.

2) If we haven’t received Jesus Christ as our Savior, we will pay for our sins eternally in hell.  This is the stark reminder Paul is giving us.  There is no partiality.  The wrongdoer – the person without Christ, will be paid back.  God is just.  That means He must resolve and reconcile all sin.  For those that follow Christ, sin is crushed by the work of Jesus Christ.  For unbelievers, their sins are paid for throughout eternity.

This is not an easy thing to speak or teach.  It is gut-wrenching, but our sin is horrible and we must take it seriously.

Greatest Hits: Jesus and Sexual Immorality

[The post below is by far the most popular that’s been posted on this blog.  I thought it was a good time for another look.]

Some time ago I was reading about a popular current topic and saw the following reply in the comments section:

“[I]t has long mentioned that Jesus not once mentioned sexual immorality, outside of that divorce is ONLY acceptable in adultery. The only thing that could be addressed as ‘sexual immorality’ in the Gospels is here…[Matthew 19:11-12]”

Of course, the topic was homosexuality and comment above was used in support of the practice.

I did not engage in a lengthy reply to the comment at the time for a couple of different reasons.  One is, I didn’t have the time to respond.  Another is, I don’t believe my comments would have been received well or in the right spirit by the people posting on that particular blog.  I posted a benign reply noting Matthew 15:19 and moved along.

So, I want to use this post as a response to the issue of Jesus and morality.

Jesus vs. the Bible

To begin, it’s worth noting that people making comments of these type generally seem to hold a certain set of beliefs related to Jesus and Scripture:

  • Jesus superseded the “Old Testament” and made it null and void;
  • Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount is the Gospel and becomes the only standard for salvation; and
  • Other parts of New Testament are considered outdated and are therefore excluded.

Not only do these presuppositions made it hard to discuss many Biblical topics, but these views are also wrong.    This views attack the canon of Scripture and the overall authority of Scripture.

In reality, the words Jesus speaks in the Bible are incredible, but all of God’s word is incredible.  We should desire to obey the things Jesus says, but we should also desire to obey all of God’s word.  This doesn’t diminish or downplay the work or authority of Jesus – not at all.  In fact, honoring all of God’s word honors Christ.

Here’s one piece of Scripture to think about related to this:

All Scripture is breathed out by God and profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness. (2 Timothy 3:16 ESV)

This post isn’t really to fight the battle for the canon of Scripture, so I’ll move on from this point.  But it is worth noting.

What I want to do is to address the issue of Jesus and sexual immorality.  I’ll try to do that by making several points below.

Jesus and Repentance

After Jesus was tempted by the devil and then baptized by John the Baptist (to mark the start of His ministry), His ministry on earth began.  The first message He gave is recorded in Matthew 4 and Mark 1:

From that time Jesus began to preach, saying, “Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.” (Matthew 4:17 ESV)

Now after John was arrested, Jesus came into Galilee, proclaiming the gospel of God, and saying, “The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand; repent and believe in the gospel.” (Mark 1:14-15 ESV)

Jesus’ first sermon called for people to repent.  He could have delivered any message He desired.  It could have been, “I’m here,” “I’m love,” or any number of things, but He chose to remind us of our status as sinners.  Was he calling out any sin in particular?  No, He was simply reminding us of our need for a Savior.

No matter where we are on the theological scale, we try to minimize sin, don’t we?  If we’ve been totally forgiven and understand God’s grace, we often minimize how horrible our sins are because we are forgiven.  And if we’re fond of a particular sin, we try to move the boundaries of sin to excuse our behavior.

Jesus and John the Baptist

John the Baptist also came preaching a message of repentance and this message even reached high into the government:

At that time Herod the tetrarch heard about the fame of Jesus, and he said to his servants, “This is John the Baptist. He has been raised from the dead; that is why these miraculous powers are at work in him.” For Herod had seized John and bound him and put him in prison for the sake of Herodias, his brother Philip’s wife, because John had been saying to him, “It is not lawful for you to have her.” (Matthew 14:1-4 ESV)

This message led to his head being chopped off and presented on a platter.

Yet, of this man Jesus said,

Truly, I say to you, among those born of women there has arisen no one greater than John the Baptist. Yet the one who is least in the kingdom of heaven is greater than he. (Matthew 11:1 ESV)

So, are we to believe that Jesus simply tolerated this John the Baptist guy’s behavior even though he called out Herod for his immoral behavior?  Or should we take away that Jesus, through His affirmation of John the Baptist was also affirming John’s message of repentance – even repentance related to moral behavior?  It’s obviously the latter.  Jesus regularly provided scathing rebukes of the self-righteous and it’s clear that John the Baptist wasn’t in that category.

Jesus and Negative Confirmation

Growing up, I was familiar with my parents’ style of parenting – the things they liked or didn’t like, the things they wanted me to do or didn’t, etc..  At times there were specific things I was told that I could not do.  But if I really wanted to do those things, I would really specific and then after I was in trouble, I would argue those specifics.  My parents had not specifically forbid certain things, but I tried to split hairs and argue the difference.

This line of reasoning is is what I call negative confirmation.  If my parents didn’t specifically say I could do something, then it was confirmation for me that I could do it.  But this line of logic is wrong.  I knew the guidelines my parents had for me and I knew their intentions.  I also knew if I started making excuses, that I was trying to violate the spirit of their rules for my own gain.

At times, we do this with God and His word.  We look for the loophole rather than trying to please God from a pure heart.

We need to remember that Jesus is God.  He is part of the Trinity – the Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit.  As such, Who He is – His essence, His character, etc. – is God.  Therefore, the things that please God are always going to please God and if they please God, then those things will please Jesus and the Holy Spirit.  The same goes for sin.

Because Jesus doesn’t specifically mention something as sin, it doesn’t mean it’s now fine to do.  In fact, though Jesus came to fulfill the Law and to further develop the Law, He also said:

For truly, I say to you, until heaven and earth pass away, not an iota, not a dot, will pass from the Law until all is accomplished. (Matthew 5:18 ESV)

If our sense is that Jesus has relaxed a standard, then our “sense” would be wrong.

Jesus and Adultery

The store of the woman caught in adultery (John 7:53-8:11) is one that resonates with us for many reasons.  In this story, we read about a woman – guilty of committing adultery – brought by the scribes and Pharisees to stand before Jesus.  But instead of receiving the death penalty (and instead of being trapped by the crowd), Jesus instructed the one without sin to cast the first stone.  Of course, all have sinned, so the crowd was stymied and sent on its way.  Finally alone with Jesus, He tells the woman that she is not condemned by Him either.

But instead of focusing on the last words of Jesus at that scene, “and from now on sin no more,” many of us use this encounter as a pass to sin.  Instead of realizing that she had sinned, but was forgiven by Christ and instructed to repent, we use this passage to pass judgment on others (the “self-righteous”) and to justify our own sin.

There’s a lot of room in this story to criticize those bringing the woman to Jesus and their motives, but regardless of their actions, Jesus isn’t providing a cover for sin.  No, He says, “from now on, sin no more.”  She received great mercy that day, but she didn’t receive permission to continue her sinful lifestyle.

In Scripture, adultery is also used as a metaphor to describe the relationship between God and the unfaithful.  Jesus described those around Him who didn’t believe, or who lacked faith, as adulterous:

An evil and adulterous generation seeks for a sign, but no sign will be given to it except the sign of Jonah.” So he left them and departed. (Matthew 16:4 ESV)

In the Old Testament, words like “adultery,” “adulterous,” and “whore” are also used to describe the unfaithful people of Israel.  For example, consider this passage from Ezekiel 16:

“But you trusted in your beauty and played the whore because of your renown and lavished your whorings on any passerby; your beauty became his. You took some of your garments and made for yourself colorful shrines, and on them played the whore. The like has never been, nor ever shall be…’How sick is your heart, declares the Lord God, because you did all these things, the deeds of a brazen prostitute, building your vaulted chamber at the head of every street, and making your lofty place in every square. Yet you were not like a prostitute, because you scorned payment.  Adulterous wife, who receives strangers instead of her husband.'” (Ezekiel 16:15-16,30-32 ESV)

These passages – from the Old and New Testaments – obviously demonstrate how God feels about adultery and sexual immorality.  These examples are given in the Old Testament context of God and His people and in the New Testament of Christ and His bride.  How then can we desire to practice something that God has spoken so strongly against?

Jesus and Scripture

In the ESV translation of the Bible, there are four verses where Jesus speaks specifically of sexual immorality:

But I say to you that everyone who divorces his wife, except on the ground of sexual immorality, makes her commit adultery, and whoever marries a divorced woman commits adultery. (Matthew 5:32 ESV)

For out of the heart come evil thoughts, murder, adultery, sexual immorality, theft, false witness, slander. (Matthew 15:19 ESV)

And I say to you: whoever divorces his wife, except for sexual immorality, and marries another, commits adultery.” (Matthew 19:9 ESV)

For from within, out of the heart of man, come evil thoughts, sexual immorality, theft, murder, adultery, coveting, wickedness, deceit,sensuality, envy, slander, pride, foolishness. (Mark 7:21-22 ESV)

These references to sexual immorality are an obvious acknowledgment by Jesus Christ that there is indeed still the sin of sexual immorality.  Jesus isn’t sweeping anything under the rug or ignoring a sin.  He’s not saying, “I love you, but go ahead and sin anyway.”  No, He’s identifying certain sins.

But also notice He’s not just pointing out sexual immorality.

Evil thoughts.  Murder.  Adultery.  Theft.  False Witness.  Slander.  Coveting.  Wickedness.  Deceit.  Sensuality.  Envy.  Pride.  Foolishness.

Ouch.

When I read those verses, my first reaction isn’t to point my finger at someone else, it’s to point the finger at me.  I do those things.  I am a sinner.  By my actions I rage against a holy God – and I claim to love Him!

So, this should have an effect on me when speaking against sin in the world.  I should first recognize that I am one of these sinners and then recognize once again God’s great mercy toward me.  Then, my heart will be prepared to address others.