Showing posts with label falling away. Show all posts
Showing posts with label falling away. Show all posts

Sunday, July 7, 2024

Still have doubts? Take his yoke!

 Read Hebrews 6

What’s going on here? Have we abandoned once saved, always saved?  That’s for the next service. Stick around to find out where you will be spending eternity. I have an advanced copy of the list.

We talk now about moving forward.  We talk about building upon a foundation. We talk about not being lazy in our discipleship.

Most scriptures have messages for the lost: Repent and Believe. They also have messages for the disciple:  Put your talents to work at once. Grow in God’s grace. Wake up! Pay attention!

Take his yoke Learn from him. Put his words into practice.

We are not just pouring the foundation. We are building the house. We only need to build the foundation one time. Now it’s time for uprights and crossbeams and the eternal search for a good two-by-four.

Now is the time for discipleship. OK, but what about this falling away business? I will jump ahead a few chapters. Listen to God’s word.

If we deliberately keep on sinning after we have received the knowledge of the truth, no sacrifice for sins is left, but only a fearful expectation of judgment and of raging fire that will consume the enemies of God. Anyone who rejected the law of Moses died without mercy on the testimony of two or three witnesses. How much more severely do you think someone deserves to be punished who has trampled the Son of God underfoot, who has treated as an unholy thing the blood of the covenant that sanctified them, and who has insulted the Spirit of grace? For we know him who said, “It is mine to avenge; I will repay,” and again, “The Lord will judge his people.” It is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living God.

Remember those earlier days after you had received the light, when you endured in a great conflict full of suffering. Sometimes you were publicly exposed to insult and persecution; at other times you stood side by side with those who were so treated. You suffered along with those in prison and joyfully accepted the confiscation of your property, because you knew that you yourselves had better and lasting possessions. So do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded.

You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what he has promised. For,

“In just a little while,

    he who is coming will come

    and will not delay.”

 And,

“But my righteous one will live by faith.

    And I take no pleasure

    in the one who shrinks back.”

But we do not belong to those who shrink back and are destroyed, but to those who have faith and are saved.

We are not those who shrink back. Yes, we sin, but sin is not our objective.

We are not those who shrink back. Yes, we miss the mark on a recurring basis, but only the enemy tells us that our salvation is forfeit.

Jesus says confess and get back in your race.

If you have tasted God’s goodness in salvation, how can you desire anything else? The sinful person that you once were wants his old job back, but Jesus will not let you go.

He has saved you and you have not been lost to the enemy. So, what now?

How I rejoice when I get to use this word in a message.  What now?

DISCIPLESHIP

We take his yoke.

We learn from him.

We put his words into practice.

We who have received the good news and embraced the gift of salvation take the message of life and hope to our neighbors and to the world.

These words are to come. They are in the chapter just before an extensive discussion on faith. Here they are.

But we do not belong to those who shrink back and are destroyed, but to those who have faith and are saved.

We have faith and we are saved.  So why then do these words test me and my faith and make me wonder about my salvation?

If they do, we have not taken his yoke, learned from him, or put his words into practice.

For when we take his yoke, learn from him, and put his words into practice, doubt is eviscerated.

We no longer doubt. We are not the wave tossed about on the sea.  We are the faithful.

Want to get rid of doubt? Put his words into practice.

 

Falling Away?

 Read Hebrews 6

 

Imagine waking up each day to incredible pain. You treated the pain yesterday but you have to deal with it again today.

Some of you don’t have to imagine that. It’s a daily deal.

Imagine having beaten cancer only to find out it’s back. That stinks. Here we go again.

Imagine having been brutally attacked by thugs. You have broken bones. Your body nearly bled out. Your vision was blurry for a long time, but you finally got better.

Now here come those thugs again and this time they have knives and tire irons.  Once was enough.

Some of you are thinking, M1911, .45 caliber will take care of them, but you remember that you loaned out your trusty weapon yesterday and don’t have a backup on you.

You don’t want to go through another beatdown, but you do.

A month later, it’s the same thing all over again. Not all your breaks and bruises have fully healed.

You might be wondering if I have taken a job writing for Netflix or Prime or one of those that produce some binge-worthy series, but that’s not the case.  It’s just analogy.

For what?

For crucifying Jesus again and again and again. Who would do that?

Pray it’s not you.  The counsel for those who would reject the salvation of the Lord having tasted God’s Kingdom is not something of which we want to have any part.

Just as the rebellious will not enter God’s rest, neither will one who falls away from God’s salvation be allowed back in. Ouch! That’s some mean stuff right there.

What happened to once saved, always saved?

This part is a might prickly. Some refer to it as the Devil’s favorite scripture. Can a believer fall away?  Sin, yes, we get that. We still sin but are we still sinners or a new creation?

If we are going to try out best to understand this scripture, you have to set aside your doctrine and view it through the lens of Jesus.  Remember in the first chapter, I challenged you to read this entire book looking through the lens of Jesus?

Messiah.

Savior.

Lord.

King.

Priest.

Intercessor.

Promise Keeper.

Way Maker.

Miracle Worker.

God who is in his very essence Love.

We have instructions about confessing when we sin, so God knows that we will sin even in our redeemed state. There is an eye has not seen and ear has not heard state where sin won’t be a factor, but for now, it is.

But can we lose our salvation?

It appears that the author might have used some hyperbole to get the attention of the Hebrew readers who would not fall away to paganism or atheism but to the rote rituals of Judaism.

We should consider this verse literally and as hyperbole as we seek to understand what is a stern message in any case. Here’s the thing about when Jesus used hyperbole.  The truth even in hyperbolic form is still the truth.

What?

If your eye offends you, then pluck it out. The same for your hand. Cut it off. Now, here’s the bottom-line truth part. It is better to get into heaven missing one eye than to miss the boat altogether.

It is better to come into the kingdom of heaven with the nickname Stumpy than not to get in at all.  It’s hyperbole, but it’s truth nonetheless.

The message over these past few chapters has been about moving forward. Christ surpassed Moses and the Law given through him. We must move forward in Christ.

The foundation has been set in repentance and baptism and the laying on of hands. It is time to move from the salvation that we received to the fullness of that salvation.

We must build upon the foundation instead of  laying the foundation again and again. That’s like crucifying Christ time and time and time again.

Look forward. Move forward. Quit looking back. Here are some words that are coming soon. Keep your eyes fixed on Jesus.

You have repented of your sins.

You have received Jesus as Lord.

You believe that God raised him from the dead.

You believe that his death took away your sin.

The righteousness of the Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world has been imputed to you.

You believe that in the resurrection of the Lord is the promise of your resurrection.

You have this fantastic foundation. Stop rebuilding it and start building upon it.

If you have tasted the goodness of the Lord, how could you go back to the law for your salvation?

The apostasy addressed here is not going over to Baal or some other false god, but returning to a life of recurring sacrifices required by the law.

 How do you build upon this foundation that we know in Christ Jesus?

In the practice of your faith.

By living a life governed by love.

By not growing lazy in your salvation.

This part will sound very familiar. How do we build upon the foundation that we have in Christ Jesus?

By taking his yoke and learning from him.

By putting his words into practice.

By trusting the promises of God.  A promise can have no greater assurance than to be from God.

There comes a point where every infant needs more than milk. They need meat.

The writer here is challenging his readers telling them that they have been on formula for long enough. It’s time to chew on something solid. It’s time to take your faith and build upon your salvation. It’s time to move forward.

Image an infant that never matures enough to eat solid food.

Imagine an infant that never learns to walk.

Imagine an infant that never learns to talk.

Imagine having to take care of this person even though God designed them to grow and learn and build and produce good fruit.

Imagine  being that person.

What’s the point of Jesus dying on the cross to atone for your sins if you keep desiring the sinful life? What’s the point?

I have offered this provocation before in different contexts, but here it is in the realm of Hebrews.

Why do we want to go to heaven if we keep wanting to do things our way instead of God’s way?  Why do we want to live forever if we are not interested in what God has in store for us?

What’s the point?

Is it once saved, always saved? I am confident that it is.

Is discipleship a challenge? Absolutely!  It is a challenge and then some, and it comes with stern, sometimes impossible warnings.

So when we sin, transgress, or somehow just miss the mark, we are not called to repent and seek salvation again. We are called to confess with the Spirit of God pointing us in that direction.

We are called to confess because the word of God judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart. That’s not just on our way to salvation. That’s throughout our salvation.

We may sin and confess so much that we wonder if we are saved, but as long as God’s Spirit is working in us, an we confess our sin, we should never doubt our salvation and we should respond with great passion in our discipleship.

We get back in our race with more gusto than before we missed the mark. We are still growing in God’s grace. We are being sanctified, and that is a process.

And having tasted God’s goodness, we might be tempted to throw in the towel but we are not able to fall away from the God who loves us so much.

I am sure that this account is not politically correct in our modern world, but once upon a time on an operation called Bold Guard in Europe, I led a company of Marines for an exercise that lasted a couple of weeks.

It was time to backload on the ships and we were staged waiting for our turn. A young, black Marine dropped his rifle. He was close enough that I had to say something.

He smarted off.  If you didn’t know, you don’t get to be disrespectful to officers.

My gunnery sergeant started for this young Marine and I could tell that this was not going to be pretty.

I grabbed the gunny and held him back. I said, “We will sort this out aboard the ship.”

That would give the young Marine a little time to think about what he had done, and it would keep my gunnery sergeant out of the brig for thrashing a young Marine.

So, the day came and this young black Marine was standing in front of me in the small company office space we had on the ship.

You might wonder why I keep mentioning that the Marine was black.  That’s simple. I turned him white, at least for a minute.

When the Marine had dropped his rifle and smarted off to me, he—like the rest of us—was tired. I didn’t want to take his money or his rank or his liberty.

C’mon, we just finished an exercise in Denmark and Germany. It was time to pull into port and turn the Marines loose on Europeans somewhere. I think Rotterdam was scheduled as our next port.

I just wanted to make a point with this young man. Master your weapon and your attitude if you want to make it in the Corps.

So, after talking about what the gunnery wanted to do to him, I said, “Maybe, I should just do that myself.”

I can forcefully project my voice when needed. I did.

I did not realize until just then, just how scared the young Marine was. He went flush. His color was gone. He was pale and about to pass out.

He didn’t. I say that I turned him white, but he was colorless.

I didn’t take rank or pay or liberty, but I had him carry his rifle with him everywhere he went for the next two days until we got to port.

He was a Marine. He messed up but he was still a Marine and needed to stay that way.

I just wanted to let him know that he didn’t want to forsake the calling that had been entrusted to him as a Marine. I might have pushed the limits of what was acceptable, but sometimes you push those limits when you don’t want to see someone you care about go down the tubes.

We get a similar warning in this part of Hebrews. But we are not lost. We have not fallen away. We have not forsaken the calling that we have as Christians.

God’s Spirit is irresistible to us. We can fall short but we can’t fall away.

We are a new creation. The old creature wants his job back, but we have been made new. There is no going back.

We can miss the mark again and again, but we don’t go back to Square One. We confess and get back into our race of faith.

God’s goodness is too powerful. His grace has reached beyond our sins and God is not kicking us to the curb.

God disciplines those whom he loves, but once he has claimed us, we will not be lost to him.

Amen.