Love & Lust
Notes
Transcript
LOVE
AND
LUST
Copyright 1985,1993,2001,2007
Crossroads Full Gospel
International Ministries
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Published by, and the sole property of, Jimmy Swaggart Ministries, Baton Rouge, LA, and
extracts from the Swaggart Bible Commentary series are identified as S.B.C. Copyright ©
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1964 by Zondervan Corporation. New Testament Copyright © 1954, 1958, 1987 by The
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Extracts from the New International Version are identified as N.I.V. Copyright 1973,1978,1984
by The International Bible Society. Used by permission of Zondervan Publishing House.
Also used: The New Testament: An Expanded Translation (Wuest) translated by Kenneth S.
Wuest. Copyright © 1961 by Wm. B. Eerdmans Publishing Co., Grand Rapids, Michigan.
Bracketed comments following some scriptures assist the reader in understanding the intended
meaning of these verses
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CONTENTS
LOVE AND LUST....................................................................1
LUST.....................................................................................1
OUR LIFE IN TIMES PAST................................................3
OUR LIFE AS CHRISTIANS..............................................5
Which Master Are You Serving ?..........................................9
GUARDING THE THOUGHT LIFE.................................11
THE OFFERING OF OURSELVES FOR GOD’S
SERVICE............................................................................16
“LAW” OR “GRACE”........................................................23
LOVE..................................................................................30
AGAPE LOVE....................................................................32
OPERATING IN AGAPE LOVE........................................38
LOVE AND LUST
The subjects “love” and “lust” are, in a spiritual sense, total
opposites - for true love gives for the benefit of others whereas lust
always seeks to fulfill its own desires. In this study we will examine
the various ways in which lust expresses itself. We will also learn
what true love is and how we can walk in the love in which Jesus
walked during His earthly ministry. Firstly, however, we will look at
the definitions of lust.
LUST
Background Reading: 1 John 2:15-17
In the New Testament, the word “lust,” as a translation of the
Greek noun “epithumia,” means a strong desire of any kind.
Sometimes this word is used to denote a good desire, e.g. Luke
22:15, 1 Thessalonians 2:17. Mostly, however, it is used in
connection with desire which is evil, e.g. Galatians 5:16. The Greek
verb “epithumeo” has the same twofold application. It is used, for
example, in relation to the desires of the Holy Spirit (Galatians 5:17),
as well as those who lust after sinful things (1 Corinthians 10:6).
Today, in the English language, the word “lust” is used almost
exclusively in the negative sense. Its meaning has been reduced, for
the most part, to that of mere sexual hunger. However the word
“lust” really indicates a strong desire of any kind. Generally it does
have a negative connotation, especially as used in common speech,
but it can also be used in a positive sense.
So the word “lust” can mean:
- a greedy, obsessive desire
- an excessive desire
- in particular, a sexual drive
- a strong wish for what promises enjoyment or pleasure.
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The subjects “love” and “lust” are, in a
spiritual sense, total opposites - for true
love gives for the benefit of others
whereas lust always seeks to fulfill its
own desires.
Lust is not necessarily base and immoral. It may be refined in
character, but if it is inconsistent with the will of God, then it is evil.
For example, if a person had not eaten for a long period of time, they
would have a strong desire or lust for food, which of course, in this
instance, would not be evil. But if one lusts after something purely
for selfish gain, beyond the boundaries of the will of God, this is then
an evil desire which will bring one into bondage.
Lust in the general sense is the natural tendency of the flesh to
desire those things which are evil in nature. The Bible speaks of this
lust in various ways, e.g. the lust of the mind or the flesh, evil lust,
passionate lust, foolish and hurtful lusts, ungodly lusts, youthful
lusts, worldly lusts, lusts of men, the lust of the eyes, etc. All of these
examples are referring to lusts of the sin nature.
In its most basic form, lust in the negative sense is selfishness,
for its hallmark is that it is concerned only for the desires of the one
in whom it is operating. Before we were regenerated and grounded in
the Word of God, we would all have operated in this kind of
selfishness (lust) in one form or another to a large extent. We know
this because selfishness involves doing what we want regardless of
what the Lord commands, whether we are aware of it or not. Even as
Christians, if we are not grounded in the Word of God, we will
continue, for the most part, to be controlled by selfishness (a form of
lust). This means therefore that in these areas of selfishness, we are
controlled and ruled by the sin nature. Paul tells us, however, that
this ought not be the case - for Christ delivered us from sin’s grip at
the Cross, and this includes the domination and control of the sin
nature (Romans 6:6).
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“. . .Lust in the general sense is the
natural tendency of the flesh to desire
those things which are evil in nature - in
its most basic form, lust in the negative
sense is selfishness. . .”
OUR LIFE IN TIMES PAST
Background Reading: 1 Corinthians 6:9-11
Ephesians Ch.2 tells us that, as unsaved people, we walked
according to the desires of our sinful flesh (the sin nature):
EPHESIANS 2:1 And you has He quickened (made
alive), who were dead in trespasses and sins;
EPHESIANS 2:2 Wherein in time past you walked
according to the course of this world, according to the
prince of the power of the air (Satan), the spirit who
now works in the children of disobedience (unbelievers):
EPHESIANS 2:3 Among whom (the children of
disobedience) also we all had our conversation (lived
our life) in times past in the lusts of our flesh (according
to our sinful nature with its evil desires), fulfilling the
desires of the flesh and of the mind (darkened and
unrenewed); and were by nature the children of wrath,
even as others.
Before regeneration, the evil and corrupt affections of our
hearts showed themselves in our perverted thinking as well as in our
general conduct. In this state our minds were darkened by the lusts of
the flesh (sinful nature), and this situation gave rise to acts of
unrighteousness. Of course this happened to varying degrees with
different individuals, but nevertheless, the fact is that we were all, by
nature, “children of wrath.” Again, the word “lust,” when applied in
this context, is not referring to sexual desire alone, but also to a
general lust for sin, greed, selfish ambition, strong negative
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emotions, sensual desires, drunkenness, etc., as Galatians 5:19-21
indicates:
GALATIANS 5:19 Now the works of the flesh are
manifest (clearly seen), which are these; Adultery,
fornication, uncleanness (impurity), lasciviousness
(sensuality, debauchery),
GALATIANS 5:20
Idolatry, witchcraft (sorcery),
hatred, variance (discord), emulations (jealousy), wrath
(fits of rage), strife (selfish ambition), seditions
(dissensions), heresies,
GALATIANS 5:21 Envyings, murders, drunkenness,
revellings, and such like: of the which I tell you before,
as I have also told you in time past, that they which do
(practise) such things shall not inherit the Kingdom of
God.
Willpower only goes so far in giving us the strength to say “no”
to some of the lusts of our flesh. It was not enough in times past, as
the Old Testament Saints found out. The Law of Moses was given to
show how far man diverged from the mark of righteousness, i.e.
being right with God. It is the same today. Willpower is woefully
inadequate to handle our spiritual condition of sin and the power
exerted through the sin nature.
“. . .Before regeneration, the evil and
corrupt affections of our hearts showed
themselves in our perverted thinking as
well as in our general conduct. . .”
The answer to man’s shortfall is found only at the Cross of
Calvary. Only in Christ can we die and yet live. Only through Him
can we dwell with the power to conquer the dictates of the sin nature,
and only through Him can we overcome the lusts of sin.
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OUR LIFE AS CHRISTIANS
Background Reading: Ephesians 5:1-20
Through the baptism of regeneration, our spirit was cleansed
of the unrighteousness we inherited from our forefather Adam,
unrighteousness which caused us to be born in a state of sin, having
also a nature of sin. While our spirit has been washed clean of
pollution, the sin nature still resides within us and needs to be
constantly denied any expression if we are to walk in victory. This
can only be done through the power of the Cross.
At salvation the sin nature is removed from the spirit. And while
it is decommissioned and dethroned in a legal sense in the area of our
mind and senses, this may not be the case at an experiential level. In
order to keep the sin nature dethroned experientially, we must renew
our minds with the light of God’s Word, and then act, with God’s
help (His grace), on this renewal. Indeed, unless we gain knowledge
and heart revelation of our wrong thinking and attitudes, how can we
be corrected? Ephesians 4:22-24 instructs us as follows:
EPHESIANS 4:22 Strip yourselves of your former
nature - put off and discard your old unrenewed self which characterized your previous manner of life and
becomes corrupt through lusts and desires that spring
from delusion; (Amp.)
EPHESIANS 4:23 And be constantly renewed in the
spirit of your mind - having a fresh mental and spiritual
attitude; (Amp.)
EPHESIANS 4:24 And that you put on the new man,
which after God (in His image) is created in
righteousness and true holiness (created to be like Him)
To “put on the new man” means that we must yield to the Holy
Spirit, in the knowledge of God’s will, through the power given at
the Cross. We need to believe and trust that the Spirit will energize
our human nature with the energies of His Divine Nature that we, in
Christ, are partakers of (2 Peter 1:4). With this energizing will come
the desire and power to live righteously. We have all we need, as
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Christians, to do this. It is matter of first using our will to choose to
go in the right direction by yielding. Then as we focus our faith,
God’s power becomes available to us to enable us to do the right we
have chosen.
“. . .While our spirit has been washed
clean of pollution, the sin nature still
resides within us and needs to be
constantly denied any expression if we
are to walk in victory. . .”
There are many Christians who are operating in lust
(selfishness) in certain areas of their lives because they have not
bothered to study God’s Word, or they have not believed and trusted,
or they have believed but have not gone on in faith to trust. All three
scenarios mean that these Christians have not applied the Word’s
principles and truths to their lives in these areas. This will mean that
they will be continuing to operate in carnality in those areas to which
this neglect of God’s Word applies. For instance:
1 CORINTHIANS 3:1 And I, brethren, could not speak
unto you as unto spiritual, but as unto carnal (fleshly,
dominated by the carnal nature), even as unto babes in
(your new life in) Christ.
1 CORINTHIANS 3:3
For you are yet carnal
(spiritually immature): for whereas there is among you
envying, and strife, and divisions, are you not carnal,
and walk as (unregenerated) men (i.e. men of the
world)?
Through the Apostle Paul’s writings, which are primarily
directed towards Christians, continual mention is made of the
problem of Believers listening to and obeying the voice of their
flesh. This is to operate in selfishness, or to heed the desires of the
sinful nature rather than the voice of the Spirit - the direction given
by God’s Word and the leading of the Holy Spirit. Paul instructed in
Colossians Ch.3 that we are to:
6
COLOSSIANS 3:5 Mortify (put to death) therefore your
members which are upon the earth (the sin nature as
expressed through your body); fornication, uncleanness,
inordinate affection (lust), evil concupiscence (unholy
desires), and covetousness (greed), which is idolatry:
(N.I.V.)
COLOSSIANS 3:6 For which things’ sake (such works
of the flesh) the wrath of God comes on the children of
disobedience: (N.I.V.)
COLOSSIANS 3:7 In the which you also walked some
time, when you lived in them (prior to conversion).
(N.I.V.)
COLOSSIANS 3:8 But now you also put off all these;
anger, wrath, malice, blasphemy, filthy communication
out of your mouth. (N.I.V.)
COLOSSIANS 3:9 Lie not one to another, seeing that
you have put off the old man with his deeds;
COLOSSIANS 3:10 And have put on the new man,
which is renewed in knowledge (through the renewing of
the mind) after (in) the image of Him Who created him
(it)
Notice in verse 10 that in order to live in the image of the One
Who created us, we need to put on the new man through the
application of truth (according to God’s prescribed order). We also
need to put to death the evil desires of our earthly nature. We do this
by first recognizing that these evil desires still exist, and then
refusing, via the grace of the Divine Nature, to yield to them. As we
refuse, by God’s empowerment, to allow their expression, the lusts of
the sinful nature will not gain ascendancy over us. To do this,
however, we need to be desiring to operate in the love of God and
actively seeking His empowerment to live a Godly life.
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“. . .To “put on the new man” means that
we must yield to the Holy Spirit, in the
knowledge of God’s will, believing and
trusting that the Spirit will energize our
human nature with the energies of His
Divine Nature, giving us the desire and
power to live righteously. . .”
The real battle-ground will always be in the mind. Therefore
we need to be constantly bringing our thinking into line with God’s
thinking, as revealed in His Word, if we are to live righteous and
holy lives in Christ. As we know, the sin nature will remain with us
during our natural human existence, but is meant to remain
dethroned and so non-active. Unless we find and rely on God’s
graces, however, we will allow the sin nature to be enthroned in
many areas of our lives, with the result that we will act like
unregenerate people in these areas. Whether we decide to yield to
the sin nature, moment by moment, or to deny its expression is
largely a product of whether or not we have renewed our minds and
our thinking - by God’s grace. This includes understanding the
doctrine of the Cross and us in Christ, being dead to sin and
partakers of God’s Divine Nature. Proper renewal comes through the
digestion of truth which means we become one with it, and so one
with God in that area. Simply put, this means we will have faith in
this area of digested truth.
Because the real battle-ground will always be in the mind, we
need to be constantly seeking to set our affections and desires on
eternal things, not temporal things - the things of this world:
COLOSSIANS 3:1 If you then are risen with Christ,
seek those things which are above (spiritual things
which come only from the Lord), where Christ sits on the
right hand of God.
COLOSSIANS 3:2 Set your affection on things above
(eternal things), not on things on the earth (temporal
things).
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Only the grace of God can bring us to this heart condition and
this strength.
“. . .The real battle-ground will always be
in the mind. Therefore we need to be
constantly bringing our thinking into
line with God’s thinking, as revealed in
His Word. . .”
WHICH MASTER ARE YOU SERVING ?
Background Reading: Romans 6:12-22
Many Christians have been deceived into living for themselves
and fulfilling their own desires. They do not realize they are not
doing what God wants them to do, and they are ignorant of the fact
that you cannot serve God outside His will. The real problem is as
Romans 6:16 tells us:
ROMANS 6:16 Do you not know, that to whom you
yield yourselves servants to obey, his servants you are to
whom you obey; whether of sin (the devil’s way) unto
(which leads to) death, or of obedience (God’s way) unto
(which leads to) righteousness?
Another version reads:
ROMANS 6:16 Do you not know that to whom you put
yourselves at the disposal of as slaves resulting in
obedience, slaves you are to whom you render habitual
obedience, whether slaves of the sinful nature resulting
in death, or obedient slaves [of Christ] resulting in
righteousness? (Wuest)
The key to this scripture is contained in the phrase “to whom
you yield yourselves servants to obey.” This statement clearly
indicates that we have a God-given ability to serve a master of our
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own choosing. Therefore we willingly submit ourselves to either the
Lordship of Christ or the lordship of the devil, in every area of our
lives. If Christians make a habit of yielding to sin, this will produce
various kinds of bondage, and in the extreme, the forfeiting of one’s
salvation. Remember the will is only the trigger to point us in the
direction of that which we have desired or already said “yes” to in
our hearts. From choosing to yield to the Holy Spirit or the sin
nature then comes the power to do that which we have desired whether to sin or to act righteously.
“. . .Many Christians have been deceived
into living for themselves and fulfilling
their own desires . . . and they are
ignorant of the fact that you cannot serve
God outside His will. . .”
When a Christian chooses to live for self (operate in
selfishness) in any area of their lives, they place themselves under
the dominion of darkness in that area. So in fact they become a
servant of sin in that area. Indeed there are only two masters we can
choose to obey, God or Satan, and Christians who are trying to stand
on “middle ground” are, in fact, serving the latter (in those areas of
their lives they are refusing to yield to God). Concerning the deeper
issues of life, self-determination and self-control will block the light
of God from shining, and darkness will be the result. There is no
“middle ground” in which self rules. If we are not yielding our lives
to God, we will be serving darkness, which is to serve Satan.
MATTHEW 6:24 No man can serve two masters: for
either he will hate the one, and love the other; or else he
will hold to the one, and despise the other. You cannot
serve God and mammon (that is, deceitful riches, money,
possessions or whatever is trusted in). (Amp.)
2 PETER 2:19 . . . for a man is a slave to whatever has
mastered him. (N.I.V.)
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Scripture clearly reveals that it is impossible to serve two
masters. We cannot have divided loyalties where the Lord is
concerned, for ultimately this will result in the loss of all spirituality
and sometimes even salvation itself. So we need to continue to
measure ourselves against the Word of God to see, in every area,
whom we are serving.
GUARDING THE THOUGHT LIFE
Background Reading: Isaiah 55:6-9
Some Christians believe that because they do not seem to be
doing anything wrong in a physical sense, they are not sinning and so
are not serving sin in any area. The scriptures show us, however, that
the real battle-ground is in the mind. Thinking is, in reality, an action,
and the way we think will determine whether we experience victory
or defeat in our Christian walk (Matthew 12:37). We know the
principle contained in Luke 6:45 of the good man speaking forth
good things into existence from the good treasure which has been
deposited in his heart. Likewise the evil man will speak forth evil
things into existence from the evil treasure which has been deposited
in his heart. So we see that it is out of the abundance of the heart that
the mouth speaks. It is the same with our thought-life. From that
which we continually think about and meditate upon, we will bring
forth fruit accordingly. Intent will develop and with this will come
the power to do what we desire.
“. . .Thinking is, in reality, an action, and
the way we think will determine whether
we experience victory or defeat in our
Christian walk. . .”
If people allow wrong thoughts to become lodged in their
minds so that they entertain them and meditate upon them, they will
adopt these wrong thoughts and develop wrong attitudes. This will
bring them into bondage. We can see an example of this in Matthew
5:28 where Jesus is speaking:
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MATTHEW 5:28 “But I say unto you, That whosoever
looks on a woman to lust after her (meditates upon
thoughts of sexual immorality) has committed adultery
with her already in his heart.”
A man who continually looks upon women with thoughts of
intense sexual desire will come into bondage and find it very hard to
resist these thoughts. A spirit of lust will come to control the person
concerned, and they will need to be delivered from the power of
Satan in that area.
That which is imagined by the mind, is, to the mind, true. In that
area, therefore, a spirit of adultery and a spirit of lust will then attack
the Believer to try to bring into reality in the physical realm that
which is already reality in the mind. This attack has success when
there is an infusion or permeation of evil desire. Such is the power
of sin. So working in conjunction with the sin nature, such spirits
give added intensity of desire - to the point where the person
concerned becomes a slave to this desire, through their own making.
Scripture tells us of this kind of bondage:
MATTHEW 15:19 For out of the heart proceed evil
thoughts, murders, adulteries, fornications, thefts, false
witness, blasphemies:
MATTHEW 15:20 These are the things which defile a
man (make him unclean) . . .
“. . .If people allow wrong thoughts to
become lodged in their minds so that they
entertain them and meditate upon them,
they will adopt these wrong thoughts and
develop wrong attitudes. . .”
You can thus see that sinful thoughts which are meditated upon
and accepted will give demonic forces permission to promote the evil
desire - and this will allow bondage of varying degrees to enter into
the life of the person concerned.
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Therefore do not be fooled. Just because you may not be saying
or doing anything which is contrary to God’s Word does not mean
you are not giving ground to the devil in some way. This statement is
not intended to condemn people, but to make us aware of any doors
the enemy may try to use to gain access to our lives. You may have a
problem with fear, or you may find yourself easily caught up in
resentment or anger, etc. Other people have difficulty controlling
their temper. As Christians, when we indulge in the wrong thought
patterns involved in any of these examples, we are giving the enemy
legal ground to enter our lives and create problems. So remember, to
accept wrong thoughts and to meditate upon them is to give
admittance to their source (our adversary). Therefore we need to be
aware of our thinking and guard our thought-life so that we make
every thought obedient to Christ and do not give legal ground to the
devil to afflict us in some way. And if we have particular weaknesses
in any of these areas, we should ask the Lord to help us gain the
victory through the empowerment of His grace.
2 CORINTHIANS 10:4 (For the weapons of our
(spiritual) warfare are not carnal (natural, man-made),
but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong
holds;)
2 CORINTHIANS 10:5 Casting down imaginations
(philosophies), and every high (proud) thing that exalts
itself against the knowledge of God, and bringing into
captivity (by God’s grace) every thought to the obedience
of Christ;
Another version reads:
2 CORINTHIANS 10:4 For the weapons of our
warfare are not physical [weapons of flesh and blood],
but they are mighty before God for the overthrow and
destruction of strongholds, (Amp.)
2 CORINTHIANS 10:5 [Inasmuch as we] refute
arguments and theories and reasonings and every proud
and lofty thing that sets itself up against the [true]
knowledge of God; and we lead every thought and
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purpose away captive into the obedience of Christ, the
Messiah, the Anointed One (Amp.)
“Strongholds” as found in the Word are areas of thinking which
oppose God’s Word and onto which we hold tightly. Anything that
sets itself up against the Word is based on pride. And strongholds of
pride can be hard to dislodge because by its very nature, pride will
never acknowledge it is wrong. Therefore we need to come humbly
before God, and ask Him to reveal areas in our thinking that are
wrong, areas which hinder our walk and our growth as Christians.
“. . .Strongholds as found in the Word
are areas of thinking which oppose God’s
Word and onto which we hold tightly. . .”
We need to set aside every proud stronghold which sets itself
up against the Word of God. This includes strongholds of worldly
thinking and intellectual reasoning which have come from human
minds, not the mind of God. For example, many Christians and even
ministers of God today think that their lives and ministries will be
enriched if they study psychology and use it as a supplement to the
Gospel. This is like trying to mix oil with water, God’s thinking with
man’s thinking, and it will not work. At no time did God ever intend
His people to use humanistic teaching to deal with what are
essentially spiritual problems, rooted in sin. It is God’s way of
thinking and God’s teaching, based on His prescribed order, which
will deliver the captives - not philosophies which are derived from
the mind of man with the help of Satan, philosophies which excuse
his sin.
ISAIAH 55:8 “For My thoughts are not your thoughts,
neither are your ways My ways,” says the Lord.
ISAIAH 55:9 “For as the heavens are higher than the
earth, so are My ways higher than your ways, and My
thoughts than your thoughts.”
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ISAIAH 59:8 The way of peace they know not (the
world does not know peace); and there is no judgement
in their goings (no wisdom in their decisions): they have
made them crooked paths (elaborate plans arising from
faulty foundations): whosoever goes therein shall not
know peace. (“Peace” is not a philosophy, creed, dogma,
theory, or doctrine. It is a Person, and that Person is
Christ: E.S.B.)
ISAIAH 59:9 Therefore is judgement far from us,
neither does justice overtake us: we wait for light, but
behold obscurity; for brightness, but we walk in
darkness (because of our wrong thinking and wrong
focus).
We also need to be very careful that we do not begin to think
according to human standards in areas of morality. Just consider how
we are constantly being bombarded by the influence of media which
would tell us, for instance, that euthanasia is an act of mercy, that
homosexuality is a valid alternative lifestyle, and that sexual
immorality is both desirable and liberating. The Word of God is to be
our guide, not the deception of secular humanism (man’s philosophy
of man, devoid of the knowledge of God’s existence or influence) or
changing cultural dictates which again give justification for man’s
sin. The Word tells us, “I am the Lord, I change not” (Malachi 3:6).
And neither do His principles and righteous standards.
“. . .The Word of God is to be our guide,
not the deception of secular humanism
or changing cultural dictates which
again give justification for man’s sin. . .”
The people who are experiencing emotional problems in this
world, primarily have a sin problem. And the answer to every sin
problem is found at the Cross. Remember Jesus’ words at Calvary,
“It is finished.” What was finished? The need for sacrifices was
finished. The ceremonies and feasts had become obsolete. The Old
Covenant was finished in the sense that it had been fulfilled. But the
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state of sin, the guilt of sin and the power of sin were also finished in
the sense of having been defeated. Jesus conquered sin at the Cross,
and made this defeat effective for us when He rose from the dead.
Now all those who put their trust in Christ’s finished work at the
Cross, and the resurrection power we have in Him, will find the
pathway to truth and deliverance as they seek it sincerely.
So do not become entrapped and ensnared by false teaching
and worldly thinking. Determine that you will know the Word of
God as your guiding light, and keep your mind free from any
philosophy or system of thought which opposes its principles and
commandments. In this way you can both avoid and demolish enemy
strongholds, and “imaginations and every high thing that exalts itself
against the knowledge of God.”
We thus need to examine every thought, making each thought
subject to God’s Word and rejecting those thoughts that are worldly
or fleshy. We need to have our minds renewed so that we are
thinking according to God’s standards, rejecting that which is wrong
and embracing that which is holy, right and true. We need also to
meditate on things that are Godly and wholesome, things that will
edify us, as Philippians 4:8 instructs.
PHILIPPIANS 4:8
Finally, brethren, whatsoever
things are true, whatsoever things are honest,
whatsoever things are just, whatsoever things are pure,
whatsoever things are lovely, whatsoever things are of
good report; if there be any virtue (excellence), and if
there be any (thing worthy of) praise, think (let your
mind dwell) on these things.
THE OFFERING OF OURSELVES FOR GOD’S SERVICE
Background Reading: 2 Timothy Chapter 2
Although we may sometimes fall into sin’s grip in an area, we
are not to remain there. Acknowledgement of wrong then true
repentance will bring God’s forgiveness and remove all sin’s legal
ground.
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1 JOHN 1:9 If we (Christians) confess our sins, He is
faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us
from all unrighteousness.
If we believe also for the cleansing of all unrighteousness, then
the aftermath of sin will also be removed. Therefore when we ask
for forgiveness and believe that it has been granted, we should also
always believe for this spiritual cleansing.
Romans 6:12 tells us:
ROMANS 6:12 Let not sin (the sin nature) therefore
reign (rule) in your mortal body, that you should obey it
in the lusts thereof.
We can see from this scripture that it is possible for Christians to
allow sin, in an area, to dominate them - and we know that this is
true. The verse also indicates that it is our choice as to whether we
allow our sin nature to gain the upper hand so that we obey our
fleshly lusts - or whether we do not. Indeed we, as Christians,
through our resurrection with Christ, have been given access to the
Divine Nature. Through the graces and energies of the Divine
Nature, we can order our behaviour, therefore denying the sin nature
any expression in our lives - as faith is exercised. Correct focus is
needed, however, in regard to our faith. Therefore we need to be
taught and refreshed, year after year, concerning the things that
pertain to our new life in Christ. This the Spirit will do as we seek
truth with all we have. As part of this commitment we need to meet
daily with the Lover of our souls so that He may reveal His will for
our lives. Through seeking truth and the Author of it, we can obtain
the victory we need - through His empowering graces.
“. . .Through the graces and energies of
the Divine Nature, we can order our
behaviour, therefore denying the sin
nature any expression in our lives - as
faith is exercised. . .”
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Sin springs from the desire to gratify the lusts of the sinful
nature, and one sin can give an entry point that leads us on to more
sin. Therefore Christians cannot afford to entertain sin of any kind, or
to think that small areas of sin don’t matter. Sin itself is full of deceit.
It promises pleasure or gain but returns nothing but emptiness and
defeat. And if sin becomes a habit, it can cause a hardening of the
heart to take place whereby Christians can become insensitive to the
convicting power of the Holy Spirit. On the other hand, if we
continually yield to the Spirit, thereby living righteously, our hearts
will be softened towards God. The writer of Hebrews gives warning
in this regard:
HEBREWS 3:12 Take heed, brethren (the writer is
warning Christians today based on Israel’s track record
in the wilderness), lest there be in any of you an evil
heart of unbelief (the Israelites’ problem), in departing
from the living God (not receiving the message
preached).
HEBREWS 3:13 But exhort (urge and encourage) one
another daily, while it is called Today; lest any of you be
hardened (into settled rebellion) through the
deceitfulness of sin.
If our heart can be “hardened through the deceitfulness of sin,”
then it can also be softened by us living in God’s Word. Because of
the destructive and deceitful nature of sin, Paul instructs us to yield
every part of ourselves as an instrument of righteousness in God’s
service.
ROMANS 6:13 Neither yield your members (the parts
of your body) as instruments of unrighteousness unto
sin (the sin nature): but yield yourselves unto God, as
those who are alive from the dead (raised in newness of
life), and your members as instruments of righteousness
unto God.
ROMANS 12:1 I beseech you therefore, brethren, by
the mercies of God, that you present (dedicate) your
bodies (as) a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God
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(by taking up your cross of self-denial and continuing in
God’s Word), which is your reasonable (spiritual)
service.
In response to God’s great mercy, it is our duty and our
reasonable service to present and dedicate our body, which means
our whole being, to Him (Luke 9:23). The reason for this is found in
First Corinthians 6:19-20 where we are told that our body is the
temple of the Holy Spirit, and that both our body and our spirit
belong to God.
The instruction to present ourselves in Romans 12:1 is speaking
about the voluntary act of yielding every aspect of our life to the
Lord. It not only implies the avoidance of sin but also the yielding of
one’s body as an instrument to be used in God’s service, not as we
see fit but as He sees fit. This means that every part of us should be
used to serve God, not Satan or self.
“. . .Sin springs from the desire to gratify
the lusts of the sinful nature, and one sin
can give an entry point that leads us on
to more sin. . .”
The offering of ourselves also includes our mind (our thoughtlife), for as stated, we must dedicate and consecrate our whole being
to the Lord if we are to live a holy life by His grace.
ROMANS 12:2 And be not conformed to this world: but
be ye transformed (changed) by the renewing of your
mind (the way you think, i.e. we begin to think
spiritually), that you may prove (and know for yourself)
what is that good, and acceptable, and perfect, will of
God.
To not be conformed to this world in our thinking we must
commit ourselves to the study and application of the Word of God by
which our mind will be renewed. We thus offer our minds for His
service by seeking truth and yielding ourselves to the Holy Spirit.
This is not a “let go and let God” affair but a process where we co19
operate with the Spirit, striving in His power to achieve a desired
result - that of pleasing the Father.
We either yield our bodily members to be servants of sin or
servants of righteousness. There is no middle or neutral ground. Even
Paul found this difficult at times, experiencing in himself the inner
conflict between his fleshly desires and those of his regenerated
spirit (Romans 7:15-25).
In this chapter, Paul speaks about his early Christian experiences.
He had assumed that once he had accepted Christ into his heart and
was baptized in the Holy Spirit, he would have had enough strength
to keep the Law of God (God’s righteous standards). In time he
realized that the Lord didn’t intend for him or anyone else to keep
His commandments by their own strength, i.e. by willpower and
determination. Rather, the Law of God, as pertaining to New
Testament Christians, is to be kept by us relying on the grace of God
at work in and through us.
At this point in time, as described in Romans Ch.7, Paul was
mistaken and even deceived through ignorance and false hope,
having been trained for his whole lifetime in a religious system
which taught that through works we please God. But God revealed
to him the prescribed order by which we must live in order to walk
according to God’s righteous standards (constituting law for us in
this New Testament Age of Grace). In Romans Chs. 6, 7 and 8 these
truths were openly laid out to the New Testament Church - so that we
may have victory not only at a positional level but also at an
experiential level. The conclusion in this is that man cannot, by
himself, live up to God’s holy and righteous standards. To do so he
needs God’s help - even after salvation. Summing it up, to please the
Father we are to live by grace, not by law. If we try to live by law
(so as to obey God’s laws in our own strength, which is to try and
please God by works), the sin nature will be enthroned, producing
self-effort and so self-righteousness.
“. . .Rather, the Law of God, as
pertaining to New Testament Christians,
is to be kept by us relying on the grace of
God at work in and through us. . .”
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Paul speaks of his inner conflict and obvious frustration before
he gained insight into these truths. Indeed the desire to sin can be
very strong, especially when we are faced with situations where we
are unjustly treated, persecuted or provoked. We may also have
persistent weaknesses in areas which prompt us to sin in response to
particular circumstances. We should never, however, attempt to deal
with a sin problem through self-effort alone, or by formulas and
methods.
Self-dependence or self-effort alone cannot meet the need of
the day in our Christian walk. If we are relying on ourselves alone,
then what we are doing is no better than the Pharisees of Jesus’ day.
They were trying to please God through works, resulting in the sad
state of pride, self-righteousness and error. Failure, defeat and sin
will follow this format for living.
Sometimes we can use our will to override sin in the short term.
To achieve a long term solution to any sin problem, however, we
need to deal with it through submitting ourselves to the Word of God
and believing for God’s empowerment to assist us in our time of
need. Natural thinking will never gain us victory over the flesh - only
doing things God’s way. If we find we still lack the ability to
overcome, we will then need to seek help from a mature Christian.
It is really not so much a matter of defeating sin, but a matter of
character. If we allow God to build our character by the graces and
energies of His Divine Nature at work in us, then sin will be on the
outside of us instead of the inside. If we walk in the light, the lusts
of the flesh will not have sway and any darkness will flee (1 John
1:7).
Paul encourages us to recognize our position in Christ and to
make a concerted and consistent effort against the flesh - in the
strength the Lord provides. If we choose to love truth and hate sin,
we will yield our whole being as an instrument of righteousness,
being then empowered by the Spirit to act accordingly. As a
consequence, the enemy will have no legal ground to enter or remain
in our life and sin will have no dominion over us. This is certainly to
be our goal - to love truth and hate sin, and to be faithful to God and
His Word.
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“. . .It is really not so much a matter of
defeating sin, but a matter of character.
If we allow God to build our character by
the graces and energies of His Divine
Nature at work in us, then sin will be on
the outside of us instead of the inside. . .”
The following scriptures are taken from Wuest’s translation of
the Greek New Testament. They proclaim the way of victory for the
Christian, so that righteous fruit is brought forth:
ROMANS 6:13 Moreover, stop putting your members at
the disposal of the sinful nature as weapons of
unrighteousness, but by a once-for-all act and at once,
put yourselves at the disposal of God as those who are
actively alive out from among the dead, and put your
members as weapons of righteousness at the disposal of
God,
ROMANS 6:14 for [then] the sinful nature will not
exercise lordship over you, for you are not under law
but under grace.
ROMANS 6:17 But God be thanked, that [whereas] you
were slaves of the evil nature, you obeyed out from the
heart as a source a type of teaching into which you were
handed over.
ROMANS 6:18 And having been set free once for all
from the sinful nature, you were constituted slaves to
righteousness.
ROMANS 6:19 I am using an illustration drawn from
human affairs because of the frailties of your humanity.
For just as you placed your members as slaves at the
disposal of uncleanness and lawlessness resulting in
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lawlessness, thus now place your members as slaves at
the disposal of righteousness resulting in holiness.
ROMANS 6:20 For, when you were slaves of the sinful
nature, you were those who were free with respect to
righteousness.
ROMANS 6:21 Therefore, what fruit were you having
then, upon the basis of which things now you are
ashamed? For the consummation of these things is
death.
ROMANS 6:22 But now, having been set free from the
sinful nature and having been made bondslaves of God,
you are having your fruit resulting in holiness, and the
consummation, life eternal.
As we have said, to please the Father, and to produce the
righteous fruit described in Romans 6:22, we need to be living by
grace not law. This is to live according to the prescribed order of
victory as set out in the Word of God. To explore this issue, which
very often becomes a stumbling block for Christians, we will look at
the dichotomy that exists between “law” and “grace.”
“LAW” OR “GRACE”
God’s Law as such is good, but if it is obeyed without grace, it
becomes a false means by which one tries to obtain righteousness or
live according to a righteous standard. This then brings in the
question for the Christian of law or grace. Which is the Christian
seeking to live under and by?
If a Christian wants to please God (this being their true heart
intent) and doesn’t properly understand the truths of the message of
the Cross (the Atonement), they will ultimately and inevitably seek
to function under “law.”
If a Christian does not understand the Cross, then their
foundation for doing anything for God will be based on a false
premise. Indeed only through an understanding of the Cross, which
is found in Romans Ch. 6, can a Christian begin to live in “grace”
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experientially. If we obey by grace and continually rely on God, the
very desire to do wrong diminishes.
“ . . .If a Christian does not understand
the Cross, then their foundation for
doing anything for God will be based on
a false premise. . .”
The faith needed for the Christian to draw on the graces afforded
to us through the Cross, can only come to us if we understand and
rely on the way faith is developed in us. Therefore:
1. We must know that faith is God-given and that only through
the Divine Nature energizing our human nature can we really believe
and trust.
2. We must know that faith comes by hearing God’s Word and
digesting it. The grace of the Divine Nature gives us the Divine
energy to believe and trust in this Word - which constitutes faith.
We speak here in regard to God’s Word, repentance, the Blood,
God’s forgiveness, and the “newness of life” by which we walk. The
prescribed order by which we are to live our lives comes through the
Cross. Anything outside of this will result in “law” which will
frustrate the grace of God in this New Testament Age of Grace
(Galatians 2:21). To frustrate the grace of God is to stop Him from
empowering us with His grace because of our intent to self-rule and
be self-reliant.
The intent of many Christians is to please God, but sadly, as
we have said, they attempt to do this under “law” and not grace.
Anything done under law is done by and through the power of self.
Not to understand the Cross, with the Holy Spirit’s help of course,
means that the Christian cannot draw on God’s graces so as to do His
will. This can only result in the Christian living his life by self-effort
and therefore self-rule, no matter how noble his intentions. This is to
frustrate the grace of God - to keep Him and the blessing of His
grace at bay.
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The proper object of one’s faith must be the Cross. Every other
object, no matter how seemingly good, if it does not encompass the
Cross will frustrate (stop) God’s grace, which is to prevent this grace
being received in one’s life. There is no other road or way. Good
works, intellectual study, prayer alone, water baptism, fasting,
sacrificing of time and goods, all if used alone as objects to attract
God’s attention and favour will cause one to come under law and so
fail in one’s most noble ambition.
“. . .Not to understand the Cross can only
result in the Christian living his life by
self-effort and therefore self-rule, no
matter how noble his intentions. . .”
The Christian whose intention is to please God, will, without
grace, always operate under the laws of religion. This must lead the
Christian, of course, to an experientially dead life, at best, in Him.
Yes, saved if in Christ, but dead to the experiential side of grace and
so the outworking of “newness of life” (Romans 6:3-4).
Indeed concerning our spiritual affairs, we either function
under “law” or “grace.” If we are functioning under “law” then, in
those areas, we will come under condemnation (judgement) (Romans
4:15).
The result of this condemnation will be that in these areas of law
in our self-empowered world of religion, we will frustrate the grace
of God - that is, we will block Him from doing what He wants to do
as our loving Heavenly Father (Galatians 2:21).
You see where there is “law,” there is no room for anything
else, for the Christian is “full up” in that area of their life. We, with
God’s help, must be emptied of self and allow God to fill us with His
graces, including the power that comes through His Divine Nature
and His Word. However if we have religion, or have turned our faith
into formulas, thereby making it a religion, then a position of “law”
results. This is because religion always works in “law,” otherwise
known as self-effort.
One writer comments concerning this subject: “Whereas the
effect of law is condemnation, the action of grace is “justification.”
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The doctrine of justification by works generates religious pride that of Justification by Faith produces contrition and humility. In
the matter of Justification, Faith and works are opposite and
irreconcilable - as opposed as Grace and Debt. Since God declares
ungodly men righteous, works cannot in any sense furnish a ground
for Justification, and hence the first step toward Salvation on the
part of a sinner is to humble himself and accept the Divine
pronouncement that he is “ungodly.” . . . . .
Regrettably, the vast majority of mankind accepts the human
doctrine of salvation by merit; a very small minority believes the
Divine Doctrine of Salvation by Grace. As the Lord Jesus Himself
said, few tread that narrow way. It is abhorrent to human pride.” 1
(underlines added)
This same principle applies in regard to works. Because the
Cross is not involved, those works done in the power of self alone
will never please God or bring victory into our lives. Therefore
man’s works, no matter how good or well intentioned these may be,
cannot be deemed “good” or “acceptable” in a spiritual sense.
When man looks for God’s favour in the doing of good works
alone, even though it is “good” to do them, it does not gain approval
from God. This is because man is seeking credit for his self-effort,
and is not giving credit to anyone else for he has done it himself.
This in fact is self-reliance and comes under the “law of works,” for
while these works are “good” they are not “Godly,” and so are of no
eternal value.
“. . .With God’s help, we must be emptied
of self and allow God to fill us with His
graces, including the power that comes
through His Divine Nature
and His Word. . .“
To the natural mind such works may appear altruistic, certainly
good, for example to help one’s fellow man in need. However,
God’s Word tells us that we are first to love our fellow man
(Matthew 22:37-40), not just meet his natural need. This love, if we
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are to follow God’s prescribed order, must be a Godly love, “agape
love,” and we can only love like this if we:
1. Are in Christ
2. Understand the Cross
3. Come to faith in the Cross (the Atonement) and what it has
afforded
4. Receive the empowerment of the Divine Nature to love as
God loves.
All the “doing” in the world to try and help our fellowman will
not replace our responsibility to love him. God has said in His Word
that we must love both Him and our fellowman. Only when we do
this can we please God. Of course God would not ask us to do
something we cannot do. We are able to love in the way God wants
us to love only in Christ as we yield to the Holy Spirit and allow Him
to fill us and energize us with His graces.
Returning to the distinction between law and grace, another
example can be seen in the Saint who has sin in their life. After
realizing they are doing wrong, they manage to stop sinning, after
much struggle, by willpower.
However while to cease doing this wrong is good, it does not
deal with the spiritual side of the sin. In order for any sin in a Saint’s
life to be dealt with in accordance with God’s Word, the Blood must
first be applied (through repentance) so that grace can then be
received.
If this is not done, the Saint will live under “law” and its
penalty. Just stopping the sin is not the end of law. The arm of the
flesh (willpower) cannot deal with a spiritual problem, for only
God’s grace can deal with it completely. Only the Blood of the Cross
can afford us this grace that deals with sin completely and brings us
under “grace,” even the forgiveness of sins.
The process begins when we allow ourselves to be humbled
under the mighty hand of God (James 4:10; 1 Peter 5:6). Then
through His Anointing, we encounter the power of truth that not only
brings conviction to the heart but also the knowledge of this
forgiveness. As we respond to God’s conviction power, we will
repent and put our sin under the Blood of the Cross to be forever
obliterated (1 John 1:9; Ephesians 1:7; Psalm 103:12).
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“. . .Through His Anointing, we
encounter the power of truth that not
only brings conviction to the heart but
also the knowledge of this
forgiveness. . .”
God’s grace orders our life or comes into our life through Godgiven faith. Only in Christ, as we absorb the graces of the Divine
Nature with a proper focus in regard to God’s truth, wisdom and will,
can we live in this higher order to which Christ has given the Saint
access through the Cross.
To understand what the Cross has done for us and what it has
afforded us, we must, with the help of the Holy Spirit:
1. Seek God’s Word and will in regard to the Cross
2. Find God’s Word and will in regard to the Cross
3. Embrace God’s Word and will in regard to the Cross, e.g.
Romans 6:11.
However we must know that in order to partake fully of the
graces of the Divine Nature:
1. The Saint’s intentions must be God-created
2. The Saint’s motive must be God-given (pure)
3. The Saint’s steps must be God-directed.
In other words, everything that is good or holy or righteous
within we who are in Christ has already been placed there by the
Lord Himself. Our responsibility is to yield - His is to supply us
with grace and empowerment. Then the glory goes to Him and Him
alone. Amen.
Ways of operating in “law” therefore involve:
(a) Using willpower alone to do right. This is to do things, to
try to please God, in our own strength.
(b) Formularizing God’s do’s and don’ts - in other words His
principles or His Word - so that our faith is turned into a
religion in these areas. This is to use religious works to try to
please God.
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The Saint, to please God and reach his potential, must not only
identify with Christ, but in all that he does he must identify in Christ.
Positional salvation is not the goal but it is the gateway to
conditional (experiential) salvation. The first is salvation from hell;
the second is salvation from self. Only by experientially being in
Christ can we know the joy and power of God’s strength which
enables us to say “yes” to His way, will and Word. All this amounts
to us living our life not by obedience to “law” but by God’s “grace”
afforded to us through the Cross. And to live under grace will cause
us not to break God’s laws.
“. . .Positional salvation is not the goal
but it is the gateway to conditional
(experiential) salvation. The first is
salvation from hell; the second is
salvation from self. . .”
On a practical level, to live under grace is to acknowledge God
in all our ways (Proverbs 3:5-6), so that we can order our lives by
His direction and through His empowerment. In this we must serve
God first, not man, for outside His empowering grace we cannot
obtain merit. This is, in fact, to live by law, seeking to please God by
our own efforts. In fact we sin when we don’t submit to God first,
for then self-rule gains ascendancy. And remember that we cannot
serve two masters, the Lord and ourselves.
The Lord desires that we seek Him continually, desiring His
direction and His will to be done in our lives. We also seek Him to
ask for His enablement at a holy level so that we will not frustrate the
grace of God (Galatians 2:21). As we have said, this means that we
stop God from doing what He wants to do in our lives by preventing
Him from bestowing His grace upon us.
As we acknowledge the Lord in all our ways and seek to put
Him first in everything we do, we develop our relationship with Him
and learn greater levels of trust. This is to function under grace not
law, not seeking to please Him through works but according to His
direction and empowerment. As a result we can then give God the
glory for whatever fruit is manifested in and through our lives. This
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is the way of the Cross, this is the harvest and the outcome of the
Spirit-led life (Romans 8:1). Amen and amen!
It should be our desire and goal to produce such fruit that our
Lord may be glorified in all that we do. Then others may see Christ
and His love through us, so that we become living witnesses to the
truth of the Gospel of Jesus Christ. We need therefore to rid
ourselves of lust, if it is in our lives, and to live a life of love. We
have two options - to live in lust (selfishness through a self-ruled
life) or to live in love (selflessness through a Spirit-ruled life). The
only way we can do the latter is by allowing God to empower us
through the Divine Nature to walk after His Spirit. This is the way
we walk in His love. Let us examine this subject more closely.
“. . .On a practical level, to live under
grace is to acknowledge God in all our
ways (Proverbs 3:5-6), so that we can
order our lives by His direction
and through His empowerment. . .”
LOVE
Background Reading: 1 Corinthians 13:4-8
Love is one of the focal points of the Bible, the reason being
that God is Love and that he who dwells in God, dwells in Love.
Therefore love is not an attribute of God which can be tacked on or
taken away - it expresses His very nature and identity.
1 JOHN 4:7 Beloved, let us love one another: for love
is of God (speaks of agape love, of which the world
knows nothing, and, in fact, cannot have to any degree);
and every one who loves is born of God, and knows
God. (This is the God kind of love, and cannot be faked.
In fact, something will always happen to show what type
of love the person possesses, whether it’s the God kind or
that of the world.) (E.S.B.)
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There are, however, many different human views of what love is,
and because of this, the true meaning of God’s kind of love is usually
clouded in misconception.
In the dictionary, love is defined as an emotion, a sentiment or a
feeling of pleasurable attraction toward or delight in something (a
principle, a person or a thing) which induces a desire for its presence,
possession or well-being, or the promotion of its object. This gives
us a general impression of what love is, but we need to look at its
meaning much more closely if we are to obtain a true Biblical
understanding of this powerful yet overused word.
1 Corinthians 13:13 tells us:
1 CORINTHIANS 13:13 But now abides faith, hope,
love (agape love), these three (which will remain
forever); but the greatest of these is love (agape).
There are various types of love, but within the confines of our
language, only one term is employed. Therefore, in the English
language, we find that the individual distinction between different
types of love is missing. For instance, the word “love” in English can
refer to anything in the Greek language from “agape” (God-type
love), to “philadelphia” (brotherly love), to “philandros” (love of a
wife for her husband), to “philarguria” (love of money), etc., etc.
Thus the Greek language uses many words to distinguish
between the many different forms of love. We, however, will be
concerned here mainly with the God-type love known as “agape.”
The Greek word “agape” describes a giving, active love which
expresses itself on behalf of others. It is the highest form of love, for
it has no vested interests in receiving a return from the loved one.
Agape love is thus characterized and epitomized by selflessness.
Agape is the term used in describing God’s love for man (John 3:16),
man’s love for God (2 Thessalonians 3:5; 1 John 2:5) and man’s love
for his fellow man (John 15:12; Galatians 5:14).
“. . .The Greek word “agape” describes a
giving, active love which expresses itself
on behalf of others. . .”
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Agape love is not a love which emanates from unregenerated
man because without the empowerment of the Holy Spirit, man’s
love is basically rooted in self. This means that unsaved man’s good
works and deeds will be performed with a selfish motive of some
kind - for man’s love expects a return of some kind, even if this is
only to feel good or rewarded because of the expression of that love.
God’s love has a totally different foundation - for His love is
unconditional and does not expect a return for His sake. Even
Christians who lack yieldedness to the Holy Spirit cannot love with
this kind of love. It comes about by the nature of God being
expressed through man (via the Divine Nature). Agape love also
encompasses God’s justice and love of righteousness. It will
eventually usher in perfect order and perfect peace, when all evil is
eradicated (Revelation 21:1-4). This is the love of our God, and
because everything He does is motivated by this love, we need to
respect all God’s ways as just and perfect. Indeed in every situation,
and in all His dealings, God is loving and God is just.
DEUTERONOMY 32:4 He is the Rock, His work is
perfect: for all His ways are judgment (just): a God of
truth and without iniquity, just and right is He.
“. . .Agape is the highest form of love, for
it has no vested interests in receiving a
return from the loved one. Agape love is
thus characterized and epitomized by
selflessness. . .”
AGAPE LOVE
Background Reading: 1 John 4:7-21
In the Old Testament, man’s highest expression of love was
commanded by Moses, and in the New Testament, it was quoted by
Jesus: to love the Lord with all one’s heart, soul and body.
This is still the highest level or expression of love to which we
can ever attain.
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DEUTERONOMY 6:5 And you shall love the Lord
your God with all your heart (spirit), and with all your
soul (mind), and with all your might (strength or body).
MARK 12:29 And Jesus answered him . . .
MARK 12:30 “And you shall love (with Holy Spirit
generated love) the Lord your God with all your heart,
and with all your soul, and with all your mind, and with
all your strength: this is the first commandment (this is
the type of “love” which the world doesn’t have, and in
fact, cannot have, which only a Believer can have, and
which can only be given by the Lord: E.S.B.)
MARK 12:31 And the second is like, namely this, You
shall love (with Holy Spirit generated love) your
neighbour as yourself. There is none other
commandment greater than these (if we truly love God,
we will love our neighbour also).”
MARK 12:32 And the scribe said unto him, “Well,
Master, You have said the truth: for there is one God;
and there is none other but He:
MARK 12:33 And to love (with Holy Spirit generated
love) Him with all the heart, and with all the
understanding, and with all the soul, and with all the
strength, and to love (with Holy Spirit generated love)
his neighbour as himself, is more (important) than all
whole burnt offerings and sacrifices.”
Agape love is full of goodness and is selfless in nature. We can
see this type of love in action in John 3:16 where it tells us that God
gave to the world His only begotten Son, the very best He could
give.
JOHN 3:16 For God so loved the world (with the God
kind of love), that He gave His (one and) only begotten
Son (to die for the sin of the world), that whosoever
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believes in Him (Jesus) should not perish, but have (with
God) everlasting life.
God could give nothing of any greater value than His Son - to
be the ransom payment for the souls of men. And Jesus displayed His
love for the Father through His obedience to the Father’s word (will)
- for Jesus said, “I came down from heaven not to do My own will
but the will of Him Who sent Me” (John 6:38). Likewise we show
our love for the Father by obeying Him - His Word and His will
(John 14:21).
“. . .Jesus displayed His love for the
Father through His obedience to the
Father’s word (will) – likewise we show
our love for the Father by obeying Him His Word and His will. . .”
The love of God for mankind was displayed in its fullness when
Jesus suffered and laid down His life for us. Jesus, the Lamb of God,
was God’s love manifest in the flesh.
ROMANS 5:8 But God commends His love toward us
(His death for the unrighteous is proof of that love), in
that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us. (He
died for those who hated Him, He died for those who hate
Him.)
ROMANS 5:9 Much more then (how much more will
He do for us now we are reconciled to Him), being now
justified by His blood, we shall be saved from (the)
wrath (of God) through Him.
ROMANS 5:10 For if while we were enemies we were
reconciled to God through the death of His Son, it is
much more [certain], now that we are reconciled, that
we shall be saved [daily delivered from sin’s dominion]
through His [resurrection] life. (Amp.)
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The extent of God’s love was shown by the fact that Christ died
for people in whom there was nothing to evoke that love. In reality,
when He died for us, we were enemies of the Cross of Christ. Yet He
willingly laid down His life.
Jesus revealed that the highest expression of love we can ever
desire to operate in is to do likewise - to lay down our lives for
others, even strangers.
JOHN 15:12 This is My commandment, That you love
one another, as I have loved you.
JOHN 15:13 Greater love has no man than this, that a
man lay down his life for his friends.
1 JOHN 3:16 Hereby perceive we the Love of God
(speaks of knowledge gained by experience), because He
laid down His life for us (the highest proof of love is the
Sacrifice of that which is most precious): and we ought to
lay down our lives for the Brethren. (This proclaims
Christ as our example, and what the meaning of true love
actually is.) (E.S.B.)
“. . .Jesus revealed that the highest
expression of love we can ever desire to
operate in is to do likewise - to lay down
our lives for others, even strangers. . .”
Many people have misinterpreted this statement of Jesus
concerning the laying down of one’s life. It simply means that we
should deny our fleshly wants and desires, and serve God with our
whole being in whatever capacity He has called us to. (And when we
say “fleshly” wants and desires, this does not necessarily mean our
sinful desires - it can simply mean the desires we have for our own
life which are not shared by God.) To serve Him in this way involves
taking up the cross of self-denial and bringing our wants and desires
into line with God’s will for our life. Jesus described the attitude we
should have towards God and His will in the following verses:
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LUKE 14:26 If anyone comes to Me, and does not hate
his [own] father and mother [that is, in the sense of
indifference to or relative disregard for them in
comparison with his attitude toward God] and [likewise]
his wife and children and brothers and sisters, [yes] and
even his own life also, he cannot be My disciple. (Amp.)
LUKE 14:27 Whoever does not persevere and carry his
own cross, and come after (follow) Me, cannot be My
disciple. (Amp.)
“The Greek term for “hate” (misei - Luke 14:26) does not mean
hate the way we normally utilize the word. Instead, it relates to
preference. . . . . God must have priority in our lives. Actually, only
when He is first can we truly love our parents, spouses, children,
siblings, and self in a biblical way.” 2
“The phrase, “And hate not his father, and mother, and wife, and
children, and brethren, and sisters, yea,” speaks to the dearest
affections of the human heart. It speaks of a proper relationship with
Christ.
The word “hate” here simply means “an idiom of preference.” It
means to love less.
The nearest affections are the strongest; but no affection
however strong must be permitted to compete with, or displace
Christ (Williams).
To be sure, if one truly follows this command by the Lord,
making Christ all in all, the love for one’s nearest relatives, will be
even greater and stronger than previous, but in its proper place.” 3
The message of Luke 14:26-27 is still our guideline today, for
this is to love God with all our heart, soul, mind and strength. As we
have said, man can only love this way with God’s help, through His
empowerment. To love as the scriptures declare is to love God first,
and this is the basic condition of discipleship. This is to “seek first
the Kingdom of God, and His righteousness” (Matthew 6:33), as the
Word instructs.
In the Godly man, agape love is both spontaneous and
commanded (John 13:34-35, 15:9). We are to love as Christ loved us,
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and allow God to express Himself through us. Indeed scripture tells
us that we are to be imitators of our Heavenly Father.
EPHESIANS 5:1 Be ye therefore followers (imitators)
of God, as dear (dearly loved) children
EPHESIANS 5:2 And walk in love, as Christ also has
loved us, and has given Himself for us an offering and a
sacrifice to God for a sweetsmelling savour.
Through Jesus, God’s love has been made available to the Saint
through the energizing grace of the Divine Nature, and we are
commanded to pass this love on to a lost and hurting world. It should
be every Christian’s goal to be a living expression of the Lord’s
nature so that in all we do, He is indeed glorified. In this way, as the
Word of God tells us, by our love for one another the world will
know that we are His and that God is alive and active in the earth
today. And we need to remember it is only through God’s Divine
Nature enmeshing with our human nature and energizing it that we
can love as God wants us to love - in the sense of “agape.”
Otherwise our greatest expressions of love will be grounded in self,
and this constitutes human love, not agape love.
1 JOHN 3:18 My little children, let us not love in word,
neither in tongue (just in speech); but in deed and in
truth (in action).
JOHN 13:34 A new commandment I give unto you
(more is required than the old commandment to love your
neighbour as yourself), That you love one another; as I
have loved you, that you also love one another (in the
way of agape).
JOHN 13:35 By this shall all men know that you are
My Disciples (not only proclaims this “Love” as the
foundation of the New Covenant, but as well, proclaims it
as the basis for recognition that one is truly in the New
Covenant), if you have love one to another (this type of
Love is the “God-Kind of Love,” and is impossible for
anyone to have without accepting Christ as one’s
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Saviour; as well, “Love” and the “Cross” are
indivisible). (E.S.B.)
“. . .To love as the scriptures declare is to
love God first, and this is the basic
condition of discipleship. . .”
OPERATING IN AGAPE LOVE
Background Reading: 2 Corinthians 5:14-21
Many people think that living in love is merely being “nice” to
people and not offending them by saying things (presenting them
with truths) which they may not want to hear. Such people justify
themselves and their position by saying that everyone has the right to
do as they choose, and that challenging or confronting people or
making them feel uncomfortable is not profitable or “nice.” While
this may be true to some degree, this view has been distorted and
exaggerated to the point where good (that which God calls love) is
being called evil, and evil is being called good (Isaiah 5:20-21). For
example, some Christians are reluctant to share the Gospel with
people, in wisdom, when the opportunity arises because they do not
want to make them feel uncomfortable or lose their favour. In doing
so, such Christians feel they are operating in love. The truth is,
however, that they are either misguided, or simply operating in
selfishness (lust) and the compromise brought about by the fear of
man. What they are doing is denying people the opportunity to hear
the truth concerning what is destined for them if they do not make
Jesus the Lord of their lives. And it is not an expression of love
towards the unsaved if we do not care enough about them to try to
save them from eternal torment.
This may seem very blunt, but nevertheless it is the truth. We
find in Christian circles that concepts such as love have been greatly
polluted with worldly ideas, as well as a fleshly, lazy, complacent
desire to do nothing - to the extent where people are deceived in
regard to what true love is all about.
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“. . .Some Christians are reluctant to
share the Gospel with people, in wisdom,
when the opportunity arises because they
do not want to make them feel
uncomfortable or lose their favour. . .”
We can see examples of true love in action throughout Jesus’
earthly ministry. True love overturned the tables of those who were
buying and selling in the Temple, and drove them out (Matthew
21:12-13). True love told the Pharisees of their hypocrisy and likened
them to a brood of snakes and white-washed tombstones (Matthew
23:13-33). Love proclaimed the Gospel to the lost regardless of the
opposition. We need to remember, however, that all through Jesus’
earthly ministry, He was led by the Spirit to do the things He did.
This does not mean that we are to rebuke people as He did, unless we
are directed by the Spirit to do so - and this is very rare, being
usually done by Five Fold ministers when they are led and anointed
by the Holy Spirit to do so. It does mean that when an opportunity
arises to share the Gospel with someone, we should take full
advantage of it and help bring that person to the truth. For as we have
learned, if we truly love other people, we will do all we can so that
their physical and spiritual needs can be met in Christ. This entails
firstly, of course, the salvation of their spirit, and then the application
of God’s principles to other areas of their lives.
To walk in agape love, we must walk in the light of the truth,
yielding to the Spirit. But if we do not seek to love as God has
directed, we will be allowing the devil to blind us spiritually and we
will be choosing to walk in darkness instead of light. This will cause
us to stumble about in the darkness, even though we are saved.
1 JOHN 2:8 Again, a new commandment I write unto
you (the commandment to love), which thing is true in
Him and in you (who live in Him and so should live like
Him): because the darkness is past, and the true Light
(Christ) now shines (and will shine forever).
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1 JOHN 2:9 He who says he is in the Light, and hates
his brother (a fellow Believer), is in darkness (does not
truly know God) even until now.
1 JOHN 2:10 He who loves his brother abides in the
Light, and there is none occasion of stumbling in him
(nothing in him that would cause him to stumble). (To
walk in the light is to be governed by love, which removes
the stumbling blocks: E.S.B.)
1 JOHN 2:11 But he who hates his brother (a fellow
Believer) is in darkness, and walks in darkness, and
knows not where he goes (has lost his way), because that
darkness has blinded his eyes (in that area).
True holy light gives the energy to love at an agape level, e.g. to
love your enemies so that you may even give your life for them, even
the worst kind - Jesus did. If we seek this and find it, then darkness
is kept at bay. If we don’t bother to seek it, then darkness will be the
order of the day. Darkness in certain areas will prevent us loving
with a pure heart and pure motives. That darkness will separate us
from God’s truth and frustrate His grace from being made available
to us (Galatians 2:21).
How much we need the energy that comes from the Father of
Lights, energy to love and serve God. Only in Him is this wonderful
energy (grace) available and only through Christ can we enter into
this blessing and way of life.
“. . .True holy light gives the energy to
love at an agape level, e.g. to love your
enemies so that you may even give your
life for them, even the worst kind Jesus did. . .”
Outside this prescribed order, men and women (this can
include Christians) stumble in dark corridors, rebelling against their
Creator and sinning against their fellow man, having no concern for
his eternal future. Again only in Christ, and according to His
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prescribed order, can we escape this darkness into which we were
born.
This problem of darkness in the Christian life is addressed in the
scriptures:
MATTHEW 6:19 Lay not up for yourselves treasures
upon earth (everything on the Earth is temporal), where
moth and rust does corrupt, and where thieves break
through and steal (if the eye be set upon treasures on
Earth, the life and character of the Believer will be
shrouded in moral darkness): (E.S.B.)
MATTHEW 6:20 But lay up for yourselves treasures in
heaven (spiritual not temporal, worldly treasure), where
neither moth nor rust does corrupt, and where thieves
do not break through nor steal:
MATTHEW 6:21 For where your treasure is, there will
your heart be also (a man’s aim determines his
character; if that aim be not simple and Heavenward but
earthward and double, all the faculties and principles of
his nature will become a mass of darkness; it is
impossible to give a divided allegiance). (E.S.B.)
MATTHEW 6:22 The light of the body is the eye (a
figure of speech; He is, in effect, saying that the light of
the soul is the spirit): if therefore your eye be single (the
spirit of man should have but one purpose, and that is to
Glorify God), your whole body shall be full of light (if
the spirit of man is single in its devotion to God [meaning
not divided] then all the soul will be full of light). (E.S.B.)
MATTHEW 6:23 But if your eye be evil, your whole
body shall be full of darkness (if the spirit be evil, the
entirety of the soul will be full of darkness). If therefore
the light that is in you be darkness (the light is not acted
upon, but rather perverted), how great is that darkness
(the latter state is worse than if there had been no light at
all)! (E.S.B.)
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As we live as God has instructed, which we can only do with
singleness of heart and consecration, we will be living in the law of
love - empowered by God to do His will, for our sake as well as
others. If we don’t live in this way, there will be darkness in various
or even many areas of our life.
1 JOHN 4:12 No man has seen God at any time. (But)
If we love one another, God dwells in us, and His love is
perfected (brought to maturity) in us.
In order to understand the love of God more fully, we must
come to the point of realizing that before regeneration, we, in
ourselves, were of no value to the Kingdom of God, being immoral,
bent sinners (Romans 3:10-12). But God’s love saw the potential
value in us through Christ. So while we were still sinners and
enemies of God (Romans 5:8-10), He demonstrated His great love
towards us through Jesus (1 John 3:1). As we allow the Spirit of
Truth to renew our mind with the Word of God, we can gain
understanding of these mighty spiritual truths. Then we need to allow
the Divine Nature, of which we have been made partakers, to be
expressed through us. This takes place as we activate our will in
agreement with the Word of God and not our fleshly nature. In this
we are choosing to do right, and from this will begin to flow the
empowerment to do that which we have chosen. The will acts as the
trigger by which either the Divine Nature or the sin nature is
enthroned, and therefore engaged in that area of choice. Through
God’s power, as we do not yield to the sin nature, we will be
crucifying the flesh and acting upon the desire of our regenerated
spirit which has been educated according to the Word of God. As we
do all this, people will begin to see the fruits of discipleship being
displayed in our life.
“. . .The will acts as the trigger by which
either the Divine Nature or the sin
nature is enthroned, and therefore
engaged in that area of choice. . .”
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As we have said, we need God’s empowerment to love as He
loves. To gain God’s empowerment we need to:
1. Allow God to teach us, through the hearing of faith: Romans
10:17.
2. Yield to the Holy Spirit Who will then energize our human
nature with the energies and graces of His Divine Nature.
3. Then act in faith upon the Lord’s teaching and the direction
it gives.
Then, when the Lord sends you out, operating in His love and
anointed with His power, you will see the captives set free because
you have obeyed the voice of the Lord (Luke 11:33-35).
So are you operating in love or lust? Are you loving the ways
of God and the will of God above your own desires and interests, or
are you seeking self-fulfillment through fleshly or ungodly pathways
of your own making? This may only be in specific areas, and you
may even be trying to serve God on your own terms and in your own
way. However in either case, if you are doing this, it is still lust
(selfishness) and not agape love that you are walking in.
“. . .Are you loving the ways of God and
the will of God above your own desires
and interests, or are you seeking selffulfillment through fleshly or ungodly
pathways of your own making? . . .”
Another thing of which we need to be mindful in this area of
love or lust is: are we obeying God in the very basic areas - going to
church and performing essential Christian duties, but avoiding a full
surrender of ourselves to Him? Are we really not wanting to abandon
self-interests, self-direction and self-rule so that we can grow to
maturity in Christ and love God with all our heart, mind, and
strength? There is love and there is lust - and there are different
levels at which we may operate in both. Our goal, however, should
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always be to walk in the unselfish love of God through His
empowerment. To do this we need to be disciples, fully committed
and surrendered to Him, spirit, soul and body. And the Holy Spirit
Who dwells within will give us, when this commitment is apparent,
both the desire and the power to do God’s will (Philippians 2:12-13).
We may fail from time to time in our Christian walk. But as long as
we are honest with ourselves and God, we can acknowledge any
failure, repent and continue on in faith with His empowerment. The
main consideration in all of this is that we are truly goaling, on a day
to day basis, to walk in God’s will for our lives. In and with the
Lord, the journey is just as important as the goal.
May you have the victory in Christ. Amen!
For further information or teaching material to help you grow in
the Christian faith, please visit:
CROSSROADS INTERNATIONAL
FULL GOSPEL MINISTRIES
crossroadsministries.org.au
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NOTES
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NOTES
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1
2
3
S.B.C. Daniel, pg.332.
Dr Bernard Rossier, Studies in the Books of Matthew,
Mark and Luke, Vol.1, pg.71.
S.B.C. Vol.9, Luke, pg. 391.