Monday, February 8, 2010

Putting Sin to Death J. Ligon Duncan III

Putting Sin to DeathJ. Ligon Duncan III


Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature: sexual immorality, impurity, lust, evil desires and greed, which is idolatry. Because of these, the wrath of God is coming. You used to walk in these ways, in the life you once lived. But now you must rid yourselves of all such things as these: anger, rage, malice, slander, and filthy language from your lips. Do not lie to each other, since you have taken off your old self with its practices and have put on the new self, which is being renewed in knowledge in the image of its Creator. Here there is no Greek or Jew, circumcised or uncircumcised, barbarian, Scythian, slave or free, but Christ is all, and is in all. —Colossians 3:5–11 NIV
 
"Suppose a man to be a true believer, and yet finds in himself a powerful indwelling sin, leading him captive to the law of it, consuming his heart with trouble, perplexing his thoughts, weakening his soul as to duties of communion with God, disquieting him as to peace, and perhaps defiling his conscience and exposing him to hardening through the deceitfulness of sin—what shall he do? What shall he take and insist on for the mortification of this sin, lust, distemper, or corruption?"
Thus wrote the Puritan, John Owen, in the middle of the seventeenth century. His audience consisted of fifteen-year-old boys who were away from home at Oxford University (where Owen was vice-chancellor). The book in which these words were written (now volume 6 of his collected writings) has justly remained a classic treatment of sin. I vividly recall reading it for the first time over twenty-five years ago. I have not found anything else that quite faces down the evil of indwelling sin with as much vigor as Owen does. Too many books and sermons (of the latter I include my own, of course) only touch the surface of the problem, failing to become too specific for a host of reasons. But conquering sinful habits (and habits are what they become) is a mark of spiritual maturity. There can be no growth without it. Dillydally here and the result will be something so fragile, so insipid, that ruin is bound to be the eventual result.
It is important to desire spiritual maturity. If we have no desire to grow, we will not grow! If the heart is wrong, everything else that proceeds from it will be wrong, as Jesus told the Pharisees again and again. In addition, it is important to think properly and accurately about what it means to become a Christian and be a Christian. Consider what Paul tells the Colossians in chapter 3. There he insists that there are two things about ourselves that we need to know and reckon with, if we are Christians: We died with Christ, and we have been raised with Christ. As a consequence, we are to seek the things that are above, where Christ sits at God's right hand. We are to live with our heads above the clouds, beholding something of the glory and majesty of Jesus. We are to know who we are and what is true of us. This is the positive aspect of sanctification's path that Paul would have us utilize.
But there is also a negative side. There is a power to negative thinking, Norman Vincent Peale notwithstanding! Paul wants us to appreciate that unless we know what not to do, there is no use in telling us what we should do! There is as much power in negative thinking as there is in positive thinking. The key word here is mortification. It's an old word, long known and loved by readers of the King James Version of the Bible, and it needs to be reintroduced into our vocabulary. It means "putting sin to death." Every Christian must be engaged in the duty (yes, it is a duty) of putting sin to death. "Kill a sin or a part of a sin every day" was Owen's advice. "Kill sin, or it will kill you," he added, indicating something of the seriousness of the issue. What is it that Paul tells us here in Colossians 3 that we need to do?

The Reality of What We Are

First, he exposes the reality of what we are. There is a general point that needs to be made if we are going to be serious about dealing with indwelling sin. We must say, "I need to face up to the reality of ongoing sin." We have been delivered from sin's reign, but we have not as yet been freed from the presence of sin. A constant struggle ensues within us as the flesh lusts (wages war) with the soul. There is a spiritual war that is going on in the innermost part of our being. We need, therefore, to look sin (personal and particular sin) in the eye.
We rush on in reading these verses, don't we? We note the "up close and personal" way in which Paul lists two sets of five sins, and we find ourselves asking what they mean. But we need to stop and reflect for a moment on the appropriateness of all this talk about sin. J. C. Ryle's justly famous volume,Holiness, begins with a statement to this effect: "He who would make great strides in holiness must first consider the greatness of sin." Ryle, writing at the end of the nineteenth century, was merely reflecting what Anselm of Canterbury had written in the Middle Ages. In a dialogue between himself and a character named Boso, Anselm was attempting to answer the question, Why did God become man (Cur Deus homo)? At one point in this work, Anselm utters the famous line, "You have not yet considered the gravity of sin." Because he was reluctant to recognize our need for salvation, Boso was unable to see why the Lord Jesus Christ had to become incarnate in order to save his people. Our problem is sin. It has been so since the Garden of Eden, and it remains so to this day.
What Anselm, Owen, and Ryle are saying is that our hearts need to be exposed by God's Holy Spirit to reveal the extent of sin's ravages upon us. This is something like what happens when an MRI machine scans the inner organs and tissues of our body. It can show us not only what is healthy, but what is cancerous and unwanted. It can see what the eye alone cannot see.
If you get bitten by a snake, one of the best things you can do is to bring it with you to the doctor (you need to kill it first!), so that the poison can be recognized and the relevant antidote prescribed. It is the same with sin. Unless we can identify the sins, we will not know what the remedy should be. It is not enough to be vague and general about our sins. Sins have names, and we will do well to learn what they are. It will be a point of progress whenever we can identify what those sins are that prevail in our lives. And before we can do that, we will need to acknowledge that there is the need to do it. Sin has a hold on us in ways that we sometimes refuse to acknowledge. We may be in denial about it. We must begin by facing the fact of our sin—our specific sins.
Robert Murray McCheyne, the nineteenth-century Scottish Presbyterian minister whose life was extinguished before he reached thirty, wrote in his posthumously published Diary: "I have begun to realize that the seeds of every known sin still linger in my heart." This is a point of advance. When we know this, our eyes have been opened—just like when a doctor diagnoses our disease, and we come to understand what it is. Imagine a doctor saying to you, "Yes, there's something going on inside you, but we will not worry about that! Let's look on the bright side, shall we? Isn't it a beautiful day!" What would you think of that? Even if that satisfied your need for denial in the short term, I doubt that you would ever visit that doctor again. Most of us, when things get serious, want to know the truth, even if it hurts. And hurt it will, make no mistake about that.

What Needs to Be Dealt With

Second, Paul identifies for us in detail what needs to be dealt with. There is a translation issue in our text that needs to be looked at briefly. The New American Standard Version renders verse 5 this way: "Consider the members of your earthly body as dead to …" That sounds like something Paul says in Romans 6. There is a time to "reckon ourselves to be dead to sin." In Christ, the great change has already taken place. But it is doubtful if that is Paul's message here. Hence the New International Version renders it this way: "Put to death, therefore, whatever belongs to your earthly nature." This is better, but it, too, disguises rather than clarifies what Paul intends here. Let me go back to the King James Version for a minute: "Mortify therefore your members which are upon the earth." Probably the NIV translates it the way it does lest we think that Paul is suggesting some sort of self-mutilation. The Colossians were about to make that very mistake. But we do need to appreciate that the way sin operates in our lives is via the members of our body!
Your members! Christians need a physical holiness. New Testament holiness transforms what we do with our bodies. It has eyes and hands and feet.
The first list of five sins moves from external acts to internal motivations. It is staggering to think that the first thing Paul mentions is sexual immorality. The word he uses covers all forms of prostitution, every illegitimate sexual deviance—heterosexual, homosexual, or even bestial. He links with it the attitude of the heart: impurity. Paul wants us to consider that what the mind lingers on in secret, the body will do externally. Then comes lust, that is, passions that come and master us, uncontrolled and uncontrollable. Desire is the next word, by which he means something that is out of control. And he ends the list by suggesting that all sexual deviance is a form of greed, which is a form of idolatry. These sins are selfish at their heart. They show, as Calvin wrote in the 1559 edition of his Institutes of the Christian Religion: "Man's mind is a perpetual factory of idols." You have lost your mind when you think that life is about satisfying your own personal desires, and yours alone! You have made yourself like God when you think that way. You are bowing down to the god of self.
Paul's day was remarkably like our own. It was a day when sexual immorality abounded. Homosexuality was as prevalent then as it is now. Paul's words here seem particularly pertinent for us today. Holiness, true holiness, demands total sexual purity. Sin has distorted what God intended to be a beautiful thing.
Perhaps this touches us very personally. Nobody else knows about it. Maybe, that's just as well. Affairs, business trips, magazines, Internet pornography—the list of possible areas that affect us is endless.
Put these sins to death! If you don't, they will destroy you. "Because of these, the wrath of God is coming," Paul warns. Frightening, isn't it? Do you notice that Paul has several motives for ethical living, and not just positive ones! In verses 1–4, the motive is positive. It is because of who we are, of what we have become in Christ. We have died and have been raised with Christ. Our lives are hidden with Christ in God. But here, the motive is altogether negative. The wrath of God is coming on those who do not repent. Turn or burn, is what Paul is suggesting, blunt and harsh as that may sound.
Sin also has a potential to destroy others. In verse 8, in another list of five sins, Paul moves from internal emotions to external actions, doing the opposite (or mirror image) of what he did in verses 5–7. The five sins mentioned are: anger, rage, malice, slander, and filthy language from your lips. He begins with anger: that spirit of being opposed in a hostile way to things that God desires for our lives. There is a righteous anger that is perfectly proper and in accord with the highest reaches of holiness. But that is not what Paul has in mind here.
To help us understand what he means, he adds rage. We hear of road rage, or the rage that can arise in a family—a seething cauldron of rage. One commentator suggests that the word can be translated as "exasperation." We sometimes regard exasperation as a virtue! We say, "I don't suffer fools gladly."
Then comes malice, a refusal to forgive, and allied to cynicism. Then comes slander: defaming someone's character, or character assassination. It would be wonderful to say that the church is free from this kind of thing, but it is not. Paul is calling on Christians to be different from the world—not to wag their tongues. If you cannot think of something good to say about others, then say nothing at all!
Jonathan Edwards had a daughter with an ungovernable temper. A young man asked Edwards if he could marry her. "No!" he replied. Upon asking for the reason, Edwards went on: "Because she is not worthy of you!" He explained, "The grace of God can live with some people with whom no one else can live!"
Sex and speech are the features of life that are most out of control. You will never grow until you bring the surgeon's knife of God's Word to these points in your life. Maybe you are where Augustine was, praying: "Give me chastity, but not yet!" But God is saying to you: "I want it now!"
There is one more thing that Paul seems eager to say. Sin cannot always be dealt with privately. In verse 9, he urges the Colossians not to lie. He is not simply calling for truthfulness, but rather for honesty and accountability. "Don't pretend," he seems to be saying. If I am going to be able to function in this fellowship, then I had better stop pretending that I am better than I am. We need to be able to say to each other: "I need your help, counsel, wisdom. I am struggling to Zion, rather than marching to it."
The way of pretense is a way that leads to failure in fellowship and Christian living.

How Are We to Do This?

Third, Paul gives practical indications as to how we go about this. There are two verbs that he employs in the passage that need to be engraved on our hearts: "put to death" (vs. 5) and "rid yourselves" (vs. 8). They bring to mind the words of Jesus in the Sermon on the Mount that urge us to pluck out our right eyes and sever our right hands.
"Let not that Christian think that he makes any progress in true holiness who is not prepared to walk over the bellies of his lusts," wrote Owen in his uncompromising way.
It may sound to you like legalism. That is a convenient word which some Christians employ to shirk the task of painful self-examination and change. They use this when some application sounds as though it will hurt. But it is not legalism to want to be as holy as Jesus. It is the only sensible thing to desire. Anything less is compromise and unworthy.
Without getting too technical, the tense of the verb (aorist imperative) has in mind the whole action. Paul is concerned not simply with the resolve to mortify sin, but with the desire to be rid of it altogether. It is as if he were saying, "Lay your hands on this sin's throat, and don't release the pressure until it stops breathing."
What will that mean? It will begin with an honest owning up to the gravity of our condition. It will mean facing sin down and pursuing its destruction at whatever cost to ourselves. It will mean going before the Lord and saying, "Lord, I have this besetting sin. And I am so sorry. I fly off the handle, or I trash people, or I gossip all the time. I rejoice when others fall because it makes me feel better about myself." It will mean changing habits and lifestyle, determined that our members be used for that which is holy and not for self-gratification at the expense of God's Word and God's ways.
Will you pursue this task? Without it, you will always be less than what God wants you to be.

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Paul Washer Bible Study Series Studies (144 Videos)

Paul Washer Street Witnessing in Lima

Pasphilanthropianism


Tony Miano (The Lawman Chronicles) describes the fast-growing false religion, Pasphilanthropianism--the worship of a false god that is "All-Loving" and "All-Forgiving."



“A great sickness has developed in contemporary evangelical Christianity that is built around self. The emphasis on self image, self esteem, and self worth is nothing more than humanistic worldliness. Selfism has twisted evangelicalism from a God-centered to a man-centered perspective. Salvation is now seen from the viewpoint of what can it do for us? That is a horrifying error.” — John MacArthur
Click on the banner Come to Christ on His terms

There is no genuine biblical salvation without genuine biblical repentance. In as much, as there is no authentic presentation of the gospel when there is no call to repent.

Thine, O LORD, is the greatness, and the power, and the glory, and the victory, and the majesty: for all that is in the heaven and in the earth is Thine; Thine is the kingdom, O LORD, and Thou art exalted as Head above all"
(1 Chron. 29:11).

Gal.6:14 But may it never be that I would boast, except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.


I’m always amazed by the people who, despite God’s clear and emphatic commands through the Apostle Paul, say things like, “Ah, we need to forget about the differences in our doctrines, and we just need to love one another.” as though those two are consistent goals. Surely they haven’t come to realize that the only way we can love right is to live right, and the only way we can live right is to believe right.
- Mark Kielar




20"I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself up for me.
Galations 2:20

I BELIEVE in God the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth: And in Jesus Christ his only Son, our Lord; who was conceived by the Holy Ghost, born of the virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead, and buried; he descended into hell; the third day he rose again from the dead; he ascended into heaven, and sitteth on the right hand of God the Father Almighty; from thence he shall come to judge the quick and the dead.
I believe in the Holy Ghost; the holy catholic church; the communion of saints; the forgiveness of sins; the resurrection of the body; and the life everlasting.
Amen

Mark 1:15 ..."The time is fulfilled, and the kingdom of God is at hand: REPENT ye, AND BELIEVE the gospel."
- Jesus Christ

“Be killing sin or it will be killing you.”
-John Owen

Christ will be master of the heart, and sin must be mortified. If your life is unholy, then your heart is unchanged, and you are an unsaved person. The Saviour will sanctify His people, renew them, give them a hatred of sin, and a love of holiness. The grace that does not make a man better than others is a worthless counterfeit. Christ saves His people, not IN their sins, but FROM their sins. Without holiness, no man shall see the Lord.
—Charles Spurgeon



"“When God calls a sinner, He does not repent of it. God does not, as many friends do, love one day and hate another; or as princes, who make their subjects favorites and afterwards throw them into prison. This is the blessedness of a saint; his condition admits of no altercation. God’s call is founded upon His decree, and His decree is immutable. Acts of grace cannot be reversed. God blots out His people’s sins, but not their names.” -Thomas Watson

Never apologize for your Lord. The words of the Lord hurt and offend until there is nothing left to hurt or offend. Jesus Christ has no tenderness whatever toward anything that is ultimately going to ruin a man in the service of God. Our Lord’s answers are based not on caprice, but on a knowledge of what is in man. If the Spirit of God brings to your mind a word of the Lord that hurts you, you may be sure that there is something He wants to hurt to death.
- Oswald Chambers, (My Utmost for His Highest, September 27)

"Discernment is not simply a matter of telling the difference between what is right and wrong; rather it is the difference between right and almost right."
-Charles Spurgeon

"God does not find us worthy, but makes us worthy. If we never come to Christ to be healed till we are worthy, we must never come(Watson, Gleanings , 21)."
Thomas Watson

"Sirs, as far as you can, you do kill God, for you put him out of your thoughts, you make nothing of him, and what is that but the crucifixion of God? You despise him so much that his presence has no effect upon you."
Charles Haddon Spurgeon

In his helpful book, Evangelism and the Sovereignty of God writes, "The repentance that Christ requires of His people consists in a settled refusal to set any limit to the claims which He may make on their lives."

- J.I. Packer

Repentance is not just a mental activity.

"There is enough sin in my best prayer to send th whole world to hell."
- John Bunyan

"If you want to understand Christianity, do not shut your Bible—open it, read it! Read the books of Moses, the prophets, the Psalms; they all point to Him. Study your Bible. It is ignorance that blinds men and women of this generation and keeps them outside of Christ. So do not have a hurried service at nine o’clock so you can go out and play golf and bathe in the sea—listen for your life! Here is the only message of hope for you."
D. Martyn Lloyd-Jones

MacArthur on Charismatic Rivivalism
“It is an offense to our rational, truth revealing God; it is an offense to the true work of His Son; it is an offense to the true work of the Holy Spirit to use the names of God, or of Christ, or of the Holy Spirit in any mindless emotional orgy marked by irrational, sensual, and fleshly behavior produced by altered states of consciousness, peer pressure, heightened expectation or suggestibility. That is socio-psycho manipulation and mesmerizm and it is a prostitution of the glorious revelation of God taught clearly and powerfully to an eager, attentive, and controlled mind. What feeds sensual desires, pragmatically or ecstatically, cannot honor God. You have to preach the truth to the mind.”
-John MacArthur

(From the 1998 Grace to You message from 2 Timothy 3:1-4:4 “God’s Word in Today’s Church: Five Reasons I Teach the Bible”)

"I refer to the loss of the concept of majesty from the popular religious mind. The Church has surrendered her once lofty concept of God and has substituted for it one so low, so ignoble, as to be utterly unworthy of thinking, worshipping men..."
-A. W. Tozer

"What you do in your house is worth as much as if you did it up in heaven for our Lord God. We should accustom ourselves to think of our position and work as sacred and well-pleasing to God, not on account of the position and work, but on account of the word and faith from which the obedience and the work flow."
-Martin Luther

"Why should I disbelieve my God? How dare I doubt him who cannot lie? How can I mistrust the faithful promiser who has added to his promise his oath, and over and above his promise and his oath has given his own blood as a seal?"
-Charles Haddon Spurgeon


“If your heart takes more pleasure in reading novels, or watching TV, or going to the movies, or talking to friends, rather than just sitting alone with God and embracing Him, sharing His cares and His burdens, weeping and rejoicing with Him, then how are you going to handle forever and ever in His presence...? You'd be bored to tears in heaven, if you're not ecstatic about God now!”
-Keith Green

"People will never set their faces decidedly towards heaven and live like pilgrims, until they really feel that they are in danger of hell." -J. C. Ryle

"Jesus is the Truth. We believe in Him, —not merely in His words. He Himself is Doctor and Doctrine, Revealer and Revelation, the Illuminator and the Light of Men. He is exalted in every word of truth, because He is its sum and substance. He sits above the gospel, like a prince on His own throne. Doctrine is most precious when we see it distilling from His lips and embodied in His person. Sermons [and songs] are valuable in proportion as they speak of Him and point to Him. A Christ-less gospel is no gospel and a Christ-less discourse is the cause of merriment to devils."
-C.H. Spurgeon

"The holier a man becomes, the more he mourns over the unholiness which remains in him." -Charles Haddon Spurgeon

"the battle for our Sundays is usually won or lost on the foregoing Saturday night, when time should be set aside for self-examination, confession and prayer for the coming day."
-J.I.Packer


"No pursuit of mortal men is to be compared with that of soul winning."
-Charles Haddon Spurgeon

"Let there be no misunderstanding at this point. The Arminian limits the atonement as certainly as does the Calvinist. The Calvinist limits the extent of it in that he says it does not apply to all persons (although as has already been shown, he believes that it is efficacious for the salvation of the large proportion of the human race); while the Arminian limits the power of it, for he says that in itself it does not actually save anybody. The Calvinist limits it quantitatively, but not qualitatively; the Arminian limits it qualitatively, but not quantitatively. For the Calvinist it is like a narrow bridge which goes all the way across the stream; for the Arminian it is like a great wide bridge which goes only half-way across...."
- Loraine Boettner

A.W. Pink said what?
"The god which the vast majority of professing Christians love is looked upon very much like an indulgent old man, who himself has no relish for folly, but leniently winks at the indiscretions of youth. But the Word says, “Thou hatest all workers of iniquity (Psalm 5:5). And again, “God is angry with the wicked every day” (Psalm 7:11). But men refuse to believe in this God, and gnash their teeth when His hatred of sin is faithfully pressed upon their attention."

The Doctrine of Election is not the Invention of Any Man.
"God's sovereign election is the truth most loathed and reviled by the majority of those claiming to be believers. Let it be plainly announced that salvation originated not in the will of man but in the will of God that were it not so none would or could be saved. For as the result of the Fall man has lost all desire and will unto that which is good and that even the elect themselves have to be made willing and loud will be the cries of indignation against such teaching." Then he says, "Merit-mongers will not allow the supremacy of the divine will and the impotency of the human will. Consequently they who are the most bitter in denouncing election by the sovereign pleasure of God are the warmest in crying up the free will of fallen man,"


A.W. Pink Defines The Doctrine Of Justification
Justification has to do solely with the legal side of salvation. It is a judicial term, a word of the law courts. It is the sentence of a judge upon a person who has been brought before him for judgment. It is that gracious act of God as Judge, in the high court of Heaven, by which He pronounces an elect and believing sinner to be freed from the penalty of the law, and fully restored unto the Divine favour. It is the declaration of God that the party arraigned is fully conformed to the law; justice exonerates him because justice has been satisfied. Thus, justification is that change of status whereby one, who being guilty before God, and therefore under the condemning sentence of His Law, and deserving of nought but an eternal banishment from His presence, is received into His favour and given a right unto all the blessings which Christ has, by His perfect satisfaction, purchased for His people.

Pierced for our Transgressions

Pierced for our Transgressions
Rediscovering the glory of Penal Substitution

Spurgeon Archive


"What we mean by salvation is this, deliverance from the love of sin, rescue from the habit of sin, setting free from the desire to sin."
-Charles Haddon Spurgeon

Prayer by C. H. Spurgeon December 30, 1877:

Prayer by C. H. Spurgeon December 30, 1877:
"Lord, there are so many today who are running away from the truth. Oh, that You would be pleased to speak by Your Spirit that Your word may be known. Lord, hold us fast to the truth of Your word, bind us to it. May we not be ashamed of the truth of Your word but proclaim it boldly without compromise. May we not wish to be thought cultured, nor aim to keep in step with the times. May we be side by side with You, O bleeding Savior; and be content to be rejected, be willing to take up unpopular truth, and to hold fast despised teachings of sacred Scripture to the end. Oh make us faithful unto death."

Amillennialism and Premillennialism

Amillennialism and Premillennialism
The millennium is the period of time that Jesus reigns as King. There is debate as to the nature of the millennium. Is it a literal 1000 years or is it a figurative length of time? Below is a chart that simply lays out the two dominant positions: premillennialism and amillennialism.
Premillennialism is the teaching concerning the end times (eschatology). It says that there is a future millennium (1000 years as mentioned in Revelation 20) where Christ will rule and reign over the earth. At the beginning of the millennium Satan and his angels will be bound and peace will exist on the entire earth. At the end of the 1000 years Satan will be released in order to raise an army against Jesus. Jesus will destroy them and then the final judgment will take place with the new heavens and the new earth being made.
Amillennialism is the teaching that there is no literal 1000 year reign of Christ as referenced in Revelation 20. It sees the 1000 year period spoken of in Revelation 20 as figurative. Instead, it teaches that we are in the millennium now, and that at the return of Christ (1 Thess. 4:16 - 5:2) there will be the final judgment and the heavens and the earth will then be destroyed and remade (2 Pet. 3:10).
Info from CARM.org

Why Every Self-Respecting Calvinist Should Be A Premillennialist

Amillennialism Described & Defended

Sermon Player - Lake Road Chapel

Apprising Ministries

The White Horse Inn: Know What You Believe & Why

Alpha and Omega Ministries, The Christian Apologe

Pulpit Magazine

Christian Apologetics RZIM

Watcher's Lamp

Let Us Repent and Believe

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