Tag Archives: sanctification

Proof of Residence | Bible Gleanings – March 20-21, 2021

Proof of Residence

Ryegrass had sprouted in the driveway. The parking lot was void of vehicles. There were no tricycles or childrenโ€™s sneakers piled by the doors. The creamy white paint was chipping off the building. There were no signs of life at this apartment building. I drove there to deliver a meal that a customer ordered online. I had received an order to deliver lunch to this address, when I was, for a brief time, employed by a food delivery service.

Upon arrival, every internal alarm sounded offโ€”something wasnโ€™t right. Even from my vehicle, I could see an aged eviction notice fastened to the outside door. I proceeded up the rusty steps and knocked firmly on the doorโ€”nothing. Through the grimy window, I could see that the lights were off and the television was blank. This home was hollow and vacatedโ€”unoccupied and uninhabited. The online profile claimed that so-and-so lived at this exact residence, but the evidence contradicted the claim. There was no evidence of lifeโ€”no proof of residence.

Unfortunately, many who claim to be Christians have no evidence that the Spirit of God lives in and occupies their heart. But the word of God clearly declares that when the Holy Spirit dwells within you, there is always undeniable proof of residence. When the Spirit settles in your heart, it shows. All the signs of life are thereโ€”the lights are on, the house is clean, and maintenance work is being done. There is activity on the inside and the outside. If you truly possess the Spirit, no one can drive by the house of your life and say, โ€œThere is no proof of residence here.โ€ You might claim to be a true believerโ€”a church membership card or Facebook profile might say so. But the claim is always corroborated by evidence if it is true, and if you truly possess the Spirit of God, the truth will come out.

The Spirit demonstrates proof of His residence in your heart in a variety of ways. He speaks through you (Matt. 10:20; Mark 13:11), He bears fruit (Gal. 5:22-23), He teaches you (John 16:13), He emboldens you to witness (Acts 4:31), He leads you (Rom. 8:14), He assures you of sonship (Rom. 8:16; 2 Cor 1:22; Gal. 4:6), He gives gifts (1 Cor. 12:11), He transforms you (2 Cor. 3:18), and He helps you fight the flesh (Gal. 5:16-18).

The key, however, to the Spirit demonstrating proof of His residence in your life is by being filled with the Spiritโ€”submitting to His influence and relinquishing control of your heart to Him: โ€œAnd do not get drunk with wine, for that is debauchery, but be filled with the Spiritโ€ (Eph. 5:18). Is there proof of His residence in your life?


Bible Gleanings is a widely-read weekend devotional column, written for the Murray Ledger & Times in Calloway County, Kentucky. 

Brandon is the founder and main contributor to Brandon’s Desk, the blog with biblical resources from his ministry. He pastored the family of believers at Locust Grove Baptist Church in Murray, Kentucky for six years. He and his wife Dakota live there with their three dogs, Susie (Jack Russell), Aries (English Shepherd), and Dot (Bluetick Beagle).

The Lights and the Darks | Bible Gleanings – Feb 20-21, 2021

The Lights and the Darks

Everyone has heard the age-old proverbial caution about washing clothes: donโ€™t wash the lights with the darks. Donโ€™t throw your black socks in the wash cycle with your white dress shirt. The purpose of keeping them separate is not to prevent the darker clothing items from being ruined by the lighter onesโ€”just the opposite. Dye from the dark clothes will penetrate and stain the fabric fibers of your lighter-colored clothes.

Apparently, even God believes in separating the lights from the darks. One of the first things God did when creating the universe is separate the light from the dark:

โ€œAnd God saw that the light was good. And God separated the light from the darkness” (Gen. 1:4).

God partitioned and divorced light from the dark because, as polar opposites, they did not belong together. He wanted no association to exist between light and dark, perhaps to reflect His own sanctified nature: โ€œGod is light, and in him is no darkness at allโ€ (1 John 1:5b).

God also wants His people, who are called โ€œchildren of lightโ€ to remain separate from the darkโ€”the darkness of sin (1 Thess. 5:5). If you have believed the gospel, then God has โ€œcalled you out of darkness into his marvelous lightโ€ (1 Peter 2:9), and He wants you to be disconnected and disassociated from the blackness of sin in the world. Paul asked the obvious question, โ€œWhat fellowship has light with darkness?โ€ (2 Cor. 6:14b). There should be noneโ€”no fellowship, no mingling, and no mixing with the filthy and dark garments that are the ways of the world. When you get into the washing machine with the world, its darkness will not be stained by your lightโ€”the pitch-black dye of sin will stain you.

Unfortunately, because of the corruption of sin, we love the darkness instead of the light (John 3:19). We would rather remain in the black clothes pile of the world, the very โ€œdomain of darknessโ€ (Col. 1:13). But for those who know Christ by repentance and faith, a great separation has taken place. The Lord God separated and removed you from this dark and grimy world and clothed you in pure and unstained vestments of white (Rev. 3:4-5; 7:9). He has separated the โ€œlightsโ€ from the โ€œdarks.โ€

God delivered and disentangled you from the worldโ€™s dark clothes pile. You must resist the enticing appeal of the flesh to jump back in. As a follower of Christ, you cannot love or live in the darkness any longer. As Christ said, โ€œI have come into the world as light, so that whoever believes in me may not remain in darknessโ€ (John 12:46). And the same God who separated you will sustain you with the resisting power necessary to abstain from the darkness, so long as you continually submit to Him.


Bible Gleanings is a widely-read weekend devotional column, written for the Murray Ledger & Times in Calloway County, Kentucky. 

Brandon is the founder and main contributor to Brandon’s Desk, the blog with biblical resources from his ministry. He pastored the family of believers at Locust Grove Baptist Church in Murray, Kentucky for six years. He and his wife Dakota live there with their three dogs, Susie (Jack Russell), Aries (English Shepherd), and Dot (Bluetick Beagle).

Brandon is the founder and main contributor to Brandon’s Desk, the blog with biblical resources from his ministry. He pastored the family of believers at Locust Grove Baptist Church in Murray, Kentucky for six years. He and his wife Dakota live there with their three dogs, Susie (Jack Russell), Aries (English Shepherd), and Dot (Bluetick Beagle).

Sin’s Stench | Bible Gleanings – October 3-4, 2020

Sin’s Stench

He darted like lightning towards the house, retreating from a battle apparently lostโ€”my dog, that is. One night a few weeks ago, as my dog went out to relieve himself, he encountered a skunk that had defended itself and won. The putrid odor that enthralled him was more nauseating than anything Iโ€™ve ever smelled before. It would not surprise me to find out that the biblical writers accidentally left out the part about hell reeking of skunk spray.

Needless to say, we broke out the big guns. We used the most potent dog shampoo in our arsenal and gave him a rigorous bath. Most of natureโ€™s tear gas was on his face, so we had to flush his eyes and massage his snout with suds to eliminate the offensive odor. The skunk was still winning, however, for the foul stench remained. โ€œCover it with something that smells better,โ€ I thought. I thought wrong.

Out of options, we purchased some skunk odor eliminator and applied it as well. The repulsive tang lingered for days, so the bathing and cleaning had to carry on. The dog hated the whole cleansing process, of course. Many times he tried to jump out of the tub to escape. Sometimes it was difficult or unpleasant, but it had to be done. He had to be cleaned up for his own good (and for ours).

As sinners, we carry a stench far worse than the sulfuric fumes of a skunkโ€”namely, the odor of sin. The Lord God smells sin from heaven and it is described in Scripture as an unpleasantly-smelling smoke in His nostrils (Isaiah 65:5). However, on the day of your conversion God gave you a bath. He washed you by the cleansing blood of Christ and the spiritual washing of the Spirit (1 John 1:7; Titus 3:5).

Since you are not in your final state, the scent of sin will stick around. Therefore, Godโ€™s process of cleansing will continue until you wear a robe of white in glory. Sometimes it is unpleasant or hard to bear when God scrubs you of sinโ€™s smell, but thatโ€™s the only way it can be eliminatedโ€”you cannot wash yourself or cover the smell of sin. Sometimes He uses means of cleansing us that are undesirable: discipline, trials, rebuke, correction, and so on.

But donโ€™t jump out of the tub, friend. God always cleanses you for your good. Let God cleanse you each day and even ask Him to do so (Psalm 51:2). Yield to His continual cleansing so that you may spread a pleasing fragrance to those around you, โ€œthe fragrance of the knowledge of Him everywhereโ€ (2 Cor. 2:14). And rest assured that, no matter how many times you get sprayed by sinโ€™s stench, the Lord will wash you every time you come to Him.


Bible Gleanings is a widely-read weekend devotional column, written for the Murray Ledger & Times in Calloway County, Kentucky. 

Brandon is the founder and main contributor to Brandon’s Desk, the blog with biblical resources from his ministry. He pastored the family of believers at Locust Grove Baptist Church in Murray, Kentucky for six years. He and his wife Dakota live there with their three dogs, Susie (Jack Russell), Aries (English Shepherd), and Dot (Bluetick Beagle).

Brandon is the founder and main contributor to Brandon’s Desk, the blog with biblical resources from his ministry. He pastored the family of believers at Locust Grove Baptist Church in Murray, Kentucky for six years. He and his wife Dakota live there with their three dogs, Susie (Jack Russell), Aries (English Shepherd), and Dot (Bluetick Beagle).

Taking Out the Trash | Bible Gleanings September 5-6, 2020

Taking Out the Trash

Anything can happen in 2020โ€”even the transformation of a landfill to a recreational park. An article in the New York Times titled Huge Landfillโ€™s Long Road to Renewal, documents how Fresh Kills Landfill in Staten Island went from a garbage dump to a grassy landscape, and is set to open as a park by next spring. Fresh Kills was once an ecological eyesore due to the tons of trash that arrived there every day by barge. In the late 1970s, an estimated 28,000 tons of garbage were unloaded daily. The waste at Fresh Kills is so massive that giant trash hills formed over time and were named as though they were natural landmarks. In 2001, however, the dumping ceased and the process of renewal began.

They compacted waste, flushed out harmful chemicals, and capped the garbage mounts with plastic. After they essentially โ€œtook out the trash,โ€ they brought in soil and seeds, and let nature do its thing. Now the landfill once dominated by repugnant filth is characterized by life and beauty. Looking at Fresh Kills today, youโ€™d never know it was once a literal wasteland. It is still a work-in-progress, but it is far more useful and beautiful than ever before.

Did you know this is what God has been doing in you since you were first saved by grace? On the day of your conversion, God started the process of beautifying you by taking the garbage out of your heart and life. As an unbeliever, your life was a landfill of sin. You were characterized by the garbage and filth of sinful desires and deeds (Romans 1:18-32). In fact, your iniquities formed mounts which reached to the heavens (Ezra 9:6).

Now, God is taking out the trash and transforming you into something useful and beautiful. To be sure, this is an ongoing process that requires your obedience. That is why Paul said, โ€œPut to death therefore what is earthly in you: sexual immorality, impurity, passion, evil desire, and covetousness, which is idolatry . . . Put on then, as God’s chosen ones, holy and beloved, compassionate hearts, kindness, humility, meekness, and patienceโ€ (Colossians 3:5, 12). The old has to be removed so the new can take its place. Old earthly desires and deeds, the garbage of your former life, must be put to death so that your life can be identified by new virtues. God calls you to kill off your old inclinations and actions so that He can plant new things in your life. He wants you to be characterized by new and beautiful virtues so that old and repulsive vices are out of sight. Will you yield to the Spirit and walk with the Lord so He can continue taking out the trash?

Bible Gleanings is a weekend devotional column, written for the Murray Ledger & Times in Calloway County, Kentucky. In the event that the column is not posted online, it will be posted for reading here.

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Brandon is the founder and main contributor to Brandon’s Desk, the blog with biblical resources from his ministry. He is proud to be the pastor of the family of believers at Locust Grove Baptist Church in Murray, Kentucky. He and his wife Dakota live there with their three dogs, Susie (Jack Russell), Aries (Aussiedor), and Dot (beagle).

The Believer’s Sanctification (1 Peter 2:1-3)

Introduction: How We Act in Godโ€™s Family

I read a story recently about a boy named Roger who had a difficult time getting adjusted to his foster family. His parents had died from a drug overdose, and there was no one to care for Roger. So a kind Christian family decided they would raise him as their own.

At first, it was difficult for Roger to adjust to his new home. Several times a day, you would hear the parents saying to Roger, โ€œNo, no. Thatโ€™s not how we behave in this family,โ€ or โ€œNo, no. You donโ€™t have to scream or fight or hurt other people to get what you want,โ€ and โ€œNo, no, Roger we expect you to show respect in this family.โ€

In time, Roger began to change. Did he have to make those changes to become part of the family? No. He was already part of the family by the grace of the foster parents. But did he have to work hard because he was in the family? You bet he did. It was tough for Roger to change, and he had to work at it. But he was motivated by gratitude for the amazing love he had received.

That story captures well what itโ€™s like to live the Christian life.

We have been adopted into Godโ€™s family by His redemptive grace. And since it is a new way of life, sometimes we will fail and sin, and the Spirit will say to us, โ€œNo, no. Thatโ€™s now how we act in this family.โ€ And we make those changes in our lives through Godโ€™s graceย because we are His sons and daughtersโ€”not so that we can become a son or daughterโ€”but because we already belong to Him.ย And this process of learning how to act in Godโ€™s family is known as sanctification.ย Sanctification is โ€œthe process of Godโ€™s grace by which the believer is separated from sin and becomes dedicated to Godโ€™s righteousness.โ€ยน

Itโ€™s growing in holiness because God has declared us holy in Christ; it is a holy cleansing; it is daily overcoming the power and presence of sin in our daily lives through the power of the Spirit and the work of the Word. It is becoming adjusted to Godโ€™s family.

Andย it doesnโ€™t happen overnight, and the reason it doesnโ€™t is because you havenโ€™t always been in Godโ€™s family โ€“ in fact, you were โ€œalienatedโ€ from the family of God (Eph. 2:12), you were Godโ€™s enemy (Rom. 5:10); you were โ€œchildren of disobedienceโ€ (Eph. 2:2).

But God saved you and now you are a part of Godโ€™s family โ€“ and learning how to live as Godโ€™s child in Godโ€™s family will be tough, and it will take time. And overcoming our sinful behaviors and living obediently as His child is what the Bible calls sanctification.

Sanctification is sanctifying ourselves from ungodliness and associating ourselves with God and His word, like the blessed manย in the first Psalm:

“Blessed is the manย who walks not in the counsel of the wicked,ย nor stands in the way of sinners,ย nor sits in the seat of scoffers;ย but his delight is in the law of the Lord,ย and on his law he meditates day and night” (Psalm 1:1-2).

Sanctification is being set apart through God’s word, as Jesus prayed to the Father in John 17:17:

โ€œSanctify them in the truth; your word is truth.โ€

Sanctification is living as those who have been brought from death to life:ย 

โ€œLet not sin therefore reign in your mortal body, to make you obey its passions. Do not present your members to sin as instruments for unrighteousness, but present yourselves to God as those who have been brought from death to life, and your members to God as instruments for righteousnessโ€ (Rom. 6:12-13).

Sanctification is possible only through God, by His grace:ย 

โ€œNow may the God of peace himself sanctify you completely, and may your whole spirit and soul and body be kept blameless at the coming of our Lord Jesus Christโ€ (1 Thess. 5:23).

And here in our text for this evening, we have a passage of Scripture that spells out sanctification in more detail. It is 1 Peter 2:1-3, and in this passage we have three things that are necessary for us to live lives that are continually being sanctified. Now let me say at this point, just from hearing these passages of Scripture about sanctification, and relying on your current biblical knowledge about sanctification and holiness, you probably understand the importance of sanctification in the Christian life. Every day perhaps you strive to be more holy and walk straighter on the narrow path. It is necessary and crucial to know and understand that we needย to be living lives that are consistently being sanctified – but what if you don’t know how?ย Do you know what sanctification looks like practically? Do you understand howย to live sanctified as well as you understandย whyย you are to live sanctified?ย If someone approached you, seeking to grow in their sanctification, would you know what to say to them?ย How does one trulyย live a sanctified life? It’s not enough to know that weย needย to, but we must knowย how.

Maybe that’s you today. Maybe you understand that you really need to live sanctified – you really need to live a life that is holy unto the Lord, and you reallyย wantย to. But maybe you don’t knowย how. Well, with unwavering confidence I can truly say that this passage of Scripture is for you. Because in this passage, Peter tells us exactly what we need to live continually sanctified lives.ย This passage is the triad of Christian living; three essential components for obedience to God; the triangle, if you will, of sanctification.ย We will see that three things are necessary for our sanctification: renouncement of sin, craving the word of God, and a constant examination.

The Text: 1 Peter 2:1-3, ESV

“So put away all malice and all deceit and hypocrisy and envy and all slander. 2 Like newborn infants, long for the pure spiritual milk, that by it you may grow up into salvationโ€” 3 if indeed you have tasted that the Lord is good.

I. The Renouncement for Sanctification (v. 1)

First, we see in this passage that for our sanctification, we must renounce sin.ย At the most fundamental level, this is exactly what sanctification isโ€”the process of Godโ€™s grace by which the believer is separated from sin and becomes dedicated to Godโ€™s righteousness. Sanctification involves a daily renouncing of sin.

Soย Peter writes, โ€œSo put away all malice and all deceit and hypocrisy and envy and all slander.โ€ย He begins this passage by commanding his readers to put away sin from their livesโ€”thatโ€™s what it means to renounce.ย Renouncing is to abandon something, reject it, and put it away from you.

And as you can see here, he gives a list of five things to put away (and we will look at these in more detail later), but what is most important to notice at the beginning is the reason he gives for putting away and renouncing sin. When Peter says, โ€œSo put away,โ€ this command is not alone. By using the word “so,” or as some translations render itย โ€œso then,โ€ he is pointing back to what he has just dealt with in the previous passage.ย  Soย is a conjunction โ€“ a connecting word. This means that Peter is giving this command to put away sin,ย solelyย on the basis of something previously stated. Here’s a few examples of using this conjunction:

Pokรฉmon Go is the greatest virtual mobile game for phones,ย so then, download it for free.

Justin Bieber is the girliest, most unmanly excuse for a pop artist, so then, do not buy his albums.

In Peter’s use of the conjunction, he is essentially saying that because of something that has already taken place, his readers are to put away sin from their lives.ย So what is that something that has already taken place? The believerโ€™s salvation.ย 

Notice in the previous verses that he talks about a salvation that has already taken place in the lives of his readers:

“since you have been born again, not of perishable seed but of imperishable, through the living and abiding word of God; forย โ€œAll flesh is like grassย and all its glory like the flower of grass.ย The grass withers,ย and the flower falls,ย but the word of the Lord remains forever.โ€ย And this word is the good news that was preached to you” (1:23-25).

Peter stated there that these believers wereย bornย again,ย and that the gospel had been preached to them – all indicators of their salvation which has already occurred.ย So because they have been โ€œborn again,โ€ Peter says they should put away sin from their lives.ย In fact, the Greek actually adds more emphasis to it than do most of our English translations. The Greek reads something like, โ€œHaving laid aside all malice, and all deceit, and hypocrisy and envy and all slander.โ€ Renouncement of sin, according to Peter, is something that actually should alreadyย be taking place because of salvationโ€”but because of the tendency to fall into those sins again, Peter reminds them to put away these sins from themselves because they have been saved.

Several times throughout this letter, Peter describes the Christian life this wayโ€”that we should be living obedient and holy lives simply because of the salvation and regeneration that we have experienced and received. Often times in this letter, the only reason he says we should live a godly life is because of salvationโ€”and really, itโ€™s the only reason he needs.ย Because true salvation will always lead to sanctification and a holy life. True salvation always results in a godly life. When God saves us, inevitably we live saved lives.

In 1:3-12, Peter says that God has โ€œcaused us to be born again to a living hopeโ€ (v. 3), and then spells out many other blessings of being a believer. Following this immediately, he then commands them: โ€œTherefore, preparing your minds for action, and being sober-minded, set your hope fully on the grace that will be brought to you at the revelation of Jesus Christโ€ (v. 13).ย Because they are born again, they should set their hope on Godโ€™s grace and it should transform the way they live their lives.

In 2:4-10, he says that believers have โ€œcome to [God]โ€ (v. 4), and that they are now a โ€œchosen race, a royal priesthoodโ€ (v. 9). Even more, โ€œOnce you were not a people, but now you are Godโ€™s people; once you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercyโ€ (v. 10). Then he commands them because they are those who have received Godโ€™s mercy:ย โ€œBeloved, I urge you as sojourners and exiles to abstain from the passions of the flesh, which wage war against your soulโ€ (v. 11).ยฒ

Indeed, becoming a Christian is no four-step initiation into a social club, but a complete life change from the inside out because we have been โ€œborn of the Spiritโ€ (John 3:5).ย All of that was a brief look at why we should renounce sinโ€”because we are saved and born again. And it was crucial that we spent time looking at it, because if youโ€™re wondering why it is a problem to continue living in sin, it isย because it is an eternal issueโ€”youโ€™re not saved if youโ€™re not being sanctified.

So after giving the reason for renouncing sin, what does it actually mean to renounceย sin in the first place?ย Well, Peter says we should โ€œput awayโ€ sin. He doesnโ€™t mean the kind of putting away like we would put away leftovers in the refrigerator, or put away dishes that weโ€™re just going to use again.ย The kind of โ€œputting awayโ€ he is referring to is putting something away for good. In the Greek, the command โ€œput awayโ€ denotes something like taking off and laying aside old clothes. So Peter is picturing Christians taking these sins offย like you would with old clothes, and then casting them far away.

Thatโ€™s what you do with old clothes that are no longer wearableโ€”you take them off and put them in the garbage. Thatโ€™s what Peter says to do with these sins. To renounce them, to put them away from us, to stop wearing them, to be rid of them all together.

He has a list of five sins that we should put away from ourselves. And the important thing to notice here is that these sins are sins that affect relationships with people, namely people in the church. Peter isnโ€™t listing these here in random order, or just because he thinks these are worse than adultery or stealing. He lists these here because they are sins that will harm our fellowship with others, especially Christians.

And renouncing these sins are absolutely essential to our sanctification, because sanctification cannot be done alone. Sanctification is meant to be done in the Christian communityโ€”the church! If we have these sins present in our lives, we are hindering our own sanctification and the sanctification of others.ย So when we go through this list, if you happen to notice even slightly that these sins may be present in your life and in the way you view others, then pray as you hear them that God would create in you a clean heart (Psalm 51:10), and renew a right spirit within you.

Malice. Malice is best defined as โ€œthe intention or desire to do evil.โ€ It is like premeditated murderโ€”it is planning on committing sin. Malice is a force that can destroy Christian fellowship. This should not even be named among the congregation of believers. Malice is a grave sin because it is the intention and desire to commit sin before we even do (which by the way, is committing sin already). If we intend to gossip about someone, or a church member, or say in our hearts, โ€œMan the next time I see them, Iโ€™m gonna . . .โ€ Or if we intend to mistreat someone and disrespect them in the church, then we have a problem with malice. We must put it away and cast it far from us.

Deceit. Deceit is speaking or acting with a motive for deception. It is lying or living in a manner that is deceptive. We cannot live our lives together lying to one another, and we cannot live lives that are deceptive and untruthful. We are to be those who present Godโ€™s truth to each other and to the unsaved, both by our words and actionsโ€”we are to be lovers of truth, not deceitful. We must renounce and put away deceit far from us.

Hypocrisy. We cannot live double lives. In Greek theater, a hypocrite was one who played different parts in a drama. And it is no mistake that Peter names hypocrisy right after deceit, for they go hand in hand. Deceit and hypocrisy are two branches of the same sinful weed that should never be growing in the life of one who abides in the True Vine (John 15:1-4). We must be honest about our faults and shortcomings, and our behavior in the church and our behavior at home or in the workplace should be consistently the same. We must put away hypocrisy from ourselves.

Envy. Envy is synonymous with jealousy. It is a desire to have a quality, possession, or other desirable attribute which belongs to someone else. It is when we desire what belongs to someone else. It might be a position in the church, nicer clothes, someoneโ€™s boyfriend/girlfriend, a nicer home, or a shinier vehicleโ€”but we must put away envy from ourselves.

Slander. And finally, we have slander. It is defined as โ€œmaking a false statement about someone.โ€ It is lying about another person, gossiping about them, or any type of speaking that is false or unhelpful. Paul says in Ephesians that we should speak only that which โ€œis good for building upโ€ (4:29), and slander is the opposite of this. In fact, it is more satanic than any sin in this list, for the word devil in the NT actually means slanderer orย โ€œone who slanders.โ€ So committing this sin is contributing to Satan’s notorious schemes. We should put this sin away from ourselves.

These are all sins that should not be found in our lives, but like old clothes, we should put them away from ourselves. Renouncing sin is something we did at our conversion, and it is something we must continually do throughout our Christian life. The moment you were saved was only the beginning of a lifelong process of sanctification unto God, to be set apart from sin daily for Godโ€™s glory.

How can we renounce these sins? Repent when you see it present in your life, and pray for a clean heart. Ask for trusted brothers and sisters in Christ to keep you in checkโ€”be accountable to them, a mutually watch your lives and confront each other with grace and correction when these sins are present.ย For our sanctification, we must renounce sin.

II. The Nourishment for Sanctification (v. 2)

Second, we see in this passage that for our sanctification, we must long for the word of God:ย โ€œLike newborn infants, long for the pure spiritual milk, that by it you may grow up into salvation” (v. 2).ย 

After exhorting his readers to renounce sin, he says that they should be longing for the word of God, the โ€œpure spiritual milk.โ€ย Peter had described in v. 1 what they should not do (commit those sins), and now he turns to the positive and describes what they should be doing.ย That in itself teaches us that sanctification is twofold in this sense: it is overcoming sin, and doing good things. It is not enough to avoid committing sin and resist temptation, we must also be doing good things.

They should be craving and longing for the word of God.ย Peter uses a familiar image here of a newborn baby longing for its motherโ€™s milk, to illustrate how the believer should long for the word of God in order to partake of it, and grow by it.ย He tells them, โ€œLike newborn infants, long for the pure spiritual milk.โ€ย He tells his readers that they should do something just like newborn infants do. And by the way, this is the only passage of Scripture in the whole Bible where we are commanded to be like infants. All other places in Scripture exhort us against being an infant and tell us to grow up (Eph. 4:15).

So Peterโ€™s readers, like newborn infants, should long for the pure spiritual milk of the word.ย The phrase โ€œlong for,โ€ carries a deal of weight to it in the Greek. It is epipotheo, which speaks of an intense desire or longing for something. It is the intensified version of the Greek word potheo which speaks of simply longing. It means to long greatly for something.

What is the object of their longing? The pure spiritual milk. And of course, he is referring to the word of God and nothing else. It was the preaching of the word of God that brought about their salvation (1:25b), and now it is the word of God they are to consistently long for.

It is pure, meaning it is stainless, clean, and free of contamination. This confirms the truth that Scripture is perfect and without error because it has been inspired by God (2 Tim. 3:16-17).ย It is spiritual, meaning it is more than just milk because it deals with our inner being.ย But it is like milk, because we can take it in and be nourished by it. We can long for it, and we can digest it.ย So to sum up what Peter is saying in this part of the verse, in the same way that newborn infants long for their motherโ€™s milk to satisfy their hunger and be nourished, so we should long for the word of God in order to be nourished for our sanctification.

We are to be like newborns, craving and starving for the word of God so that we can gain strength and sustenance for our sanctification.

This intense desire for the word of God has been characteristic of Godโ€™s people since the time of Job. I love how Job describes his intense longing for the word of God in Job 23:12:

โ€œI have not departed from the commandment of his lips; I have treasured the words of his mouth more than my portion of foodโ€ (ESV).

Let me just stop right here and ask: When have we ever longed so much for the word of God that we would rather read His word than eat a meal when we are hungry? Have we ever had a desire like that? When you first wake up in the morning, do you wake up hungry for the word, or are you scrolling through Instagram, checking Facebook, and looking at Snapchat?ย Let me give you a word of advice, if you want to grow spiritually and hunger for the word of God, you need to be opening your phone and getting into His Book, and chatting with Him daily!

And in Psalm 119, the psalmist speaks often of his desire for the word of God:

โ€œHow sweet are your words to my taste, sweeter than honey to my mouth!โ€ (119:103).

โ€œTherefore I love your commandments above gold, above find gold” (119:127).

Peter says that this is the kind of intense longing for the word of God that we should have. And we should crave it because we need it. Thatโ€™s why a newborn infant doesโ€”because they need the nourishment from it.ย Thatโ€™s the idea here: the word of God gives Christians sustenance, nourishment, and growthโ€”just like milk gives sustenance, nourishment, and growth to a newborn baby.

But what is the purpose of longing for the word of God? Why is it such a big deal to long for and crave the word of God? According to Peter, โ€œ[so] that by it you may grow up into salvation.โ€ย Peter says that we should long for the word of God so that we will grow up into salvation. Once again, thatโ€™s what sanctification isโ€”growing up into salvation.

And why will longing for the word of God result in growing in our salvation? Because once we long for the word of God, we will partake and be nourished by the word of God.ย Iโ€™m sure you donโ€™t believe that you hunger for no reason. Youโ€™re not hungry just because you want to be. I mean sure, Subway is pretty good, but you still donโ€™t hunger for it randomly. You hunger so that you will eat. Your physical hunger is an indicator to your consciousness that you need nourishment. So what do you do when you’re hungry? You go get something to eat.

Same principle here: we must crave and intensely desire the word of God so that we will read it, study it, take it in and digest its precepts for our lives. We are toย have a hunger and craving for Godโ€™s word, because we need it.ย Deuteronomy 8:3 illustrates this perfectly:

โ€œAnd he humbled you and let you hunger and fed you with manna, which you did not know, nor did your fathers know, that he might make you know that man does not live by bread alone, but man lives by every word that comes from the mouth of the LORD.โ€

And so the expected result of craving for the word of God is โ€œgrowing up into salvation,โ€ as Peter says here. Of course, we are already saved, but salvation is also ongoingโ€”thatโ€™s where sanctification comes into play. We are being saved daily from the power and presence of sin in our lives. And we need to crave and hunger for the word of God like a newborn infant, so that we ill partake of it in order to be nourished and strengthened to live the Christian life!

So how can you crave the word of God? First, understand your utter dependence upon the word of God for sustenance and growth.ย Understand that you need the word of God for your Christian life and growth. You donโ€™t have anything else in the entire world that can take its place and cause you to grow spiritually. So measure your spiritual strength and growth by your time spent in the word of God. If it doesnโ€™t bother you to go without the Bible for a few days, then something is definitely wrong. You must understand that the transformation effected by Godโ€™s word cannot be replaced by anything else. Secondly, understand that craving is directly correlated to tasting. Iโ€™ll never forget the first time I tried the arroz con pollo at Los Amigos Mexican Restaurant close to where I live. It’s a beautiful dish of rice topped with chicken and cheese. Well, let me tell ya,ย Iโ€™ve been hungering for it ever since I tried it. But I never had a hunger for it until I tried it. And as you taste the word, as you feast on the Scripture, as you have your breakfast of Godโ€™s word every morning, you will notice a deep desire for more of the word of God like youโ€™ve never had before. The more you read the word, the more you want to read the word. The more you study it, the more you want to study it. As you find out just how delicious every verse of Scripture really is, you will keep coming back to it like your favorite meal. If you donโ€™t have a hunger for the word, then perhaps itโ€™s because you havenโ€™t tasted it.ย For our sanctification, we must long for the word of God.

III. The Examination for Sanctification (v. 3)

โ€œif indeed you have tasted that the Lord is goodโ€ (v. 3).

Third and finally, we see in this passage that for our sanctification, we must examine our lives.ย Once Peter has exhorted the believers to renounce sin, and crave the word of God, he finally calls them to examine themselves. Notice the if (some translations since) in this verse. Most of the time in the Bible, it is the smallest words that make all the difference.ย Peter is saying that if we have tasted that the Lord is good, we should be renouncing sin and craving the word of God.ย โ€œRenounce sin and crave the word if you have tasted that the Lord is good.โ€

This verse functions as an examination for sanctification. In other words, if we are daily being sanctified, we should be seeing evidence of these two things in our lives.ย Of course, if you know your Old Testament even remotely, you will recognize that the phrase โ€œtasted that the Lord is good,โ€ has its origins in Psalm 34.ย There, the psalmist gives a loud, open, outstretched and broad invitation to anyone within his hearing to experience the Lord God:

โ€œOh, taste and see that the LORD is good! Blessed is the man who takes refuge in him!โ€ (v. 8).

That verse in the psalm is an invitation to those who have not experienced the Lord, saying essentially, โ€œJust see for yourself how good the Lord is!โ€ย But notice that the way Peter uses the phrase is past tense:ย โ€œif indeed you have tasted that the Lord is good.โ€ย In the Psalm, it is โ€œtaste and see.โ€ In Peter it is, โ€œyou have tasted.โ€ย So if Psalm 34 is the invitation to experience the Lord, then Peter assumes that we and his readers have already responded to that invitation.

So if we have been saved, if we have responded to this invitation in the Psalms, we should be able to see clear evidence of renouncing sin and craving the word in our daily lives.ย If we have responded to Godโ€™s invitation to experience Him, our lives should demonstrate a positive response to that invitation.

A young man once asked me a stunning question. We were having lunch and talking about Scripture and he asked me, Is it a sin to doubt your salvation? He struggled with the assurance of his salvation at the time, and he asked me in this restaurant if it was a sin to doubt your salvation and to have no assurance of salvation. As I pondered this, I answered in this way: “Well, it really depends on what brought about the doubt in the first place.” I went on to explain that the Scripture does command us to seek assurance for our salvation, and to rest in that assurance (there are a plethora of Scriptures that speak to assurance). So in that sense, it would be sinful if you fail to seek out those Scriptures that talk about assurance and then gain assurance by reading and believing them.ย But if your doubt arises from an inconsistency in your Christian lifeโ€”then that is a good doubt to have! If you see no evidence of renouncing sin and craving the word in your daily life, then you have great reason to doubt your salvation!

One Scripture came to mind as I was talking with him. It was in 2 Peter 1, where Peter lists off a range of godly qualities that should be present in our lives. He names things such as โ€œself-control, godliness, brotherly affection, love,โ€ and many others. And listen to thisโ€”Peter says that the reason we should see these godly qualities in our lives is โ€œto make your calling and election sure: for if ye do these things, ye shall never fallโ€ (v. 10, KJV).ย And I told him, โ€œThe life youโ€™re living should be enough evidence to confirm your salvation. If you see no transformation, you never had salvation.โ€

But sometimes we backslide donโ€™t we? Of course we do. And God will give us grace to move forward on His path as we seek His strength and power to do just that.ย But if you donโ€™t see sanctification and transformation in your life, if you see no evidence that you have โ€œtasted and seen that the Lord is good,โ€ then there are basically two options on the table if youโ€™re not living a sanctified life:

Option #1: You are spiritually sick and unhealthy. You are malnourished in your soul if you see no regular transformation. What do you feel like doing when youโ€™re sick? Nothing. Do you act like yourself when youโ€™re sick? No. Do people want to be around you when youโ€™re sick? No.ย Now, apply all of those questions to your spiritual health. Are you doing anything in the Christian life? If not, you may be unhealthy. Are people positively influenced by you? If not, you may be unhealthy. If youโ€™re not craving the word and renouncing sin daily in your life, I urge you to go the Physician who knows your heartโ€”and get as much of His prescription (the Bible) as you possibly can.

Option #2: You are unsaved. Not only does the unsaved person have no desire for the word of God, he has no desire for Godย (Rom. 3:11). Obedience cannot proceed from a heart that has not been changed. Perhaps you donโ€™t see evidence of these things in your life eitherโ€”and I ask you, Can you honestly think of a time in your life when you realized you were a sinner, and surrendered your life to Jesus Christ for salvation

Conclusion

Peter has explained in this passage that these are the necessary requirements for living a life that is continually sanctified. We must renounce sin (v. 1), we must be nourished by Scripture (v. 2), and we must continually examine ourselves for evidence of these things (v. 3). Sanctification is part of the Christian life from beginning to end, and we know what is required in order for sanctification to take placeโ€”and just like Roger, there will be times when God says, โ€œNo, no. Thatโ€™s not how we behave in this family.โ€ But it will be said to us because we already belong to Himโ€”and because we are continually being set apart for His purposes and His glory each and every day.

Is God saying that to you tonight? Is God saying to you, โ€œYou know you donโ€™t need to be in that relationship,โ€ or โ€œYou know you need to get that pornography out of your life,โ€ or โ€œYou know you need to apologize to him,โ€ or โ€œYou know you need to start getting into the Bible more.โ€ If God is saying things like that to you, He wants you to respond to Him. Confess that sin to Him, and ask Him for His sustaining grace to help you. The good news is that you can change and you can live faithfully because God has already given you everything you need for it.

But perhaps God is saying something different to you โ€“ maybe when you look down through the history of your life, you have never renounced the sin in your life; maybe youโ€™ve never craved or desired the word of God; maybe you donโ€™t have a relationship with the Lord. If youโ€™ve never been saved and you know you need to be โ€“ let me tell you something: God is telling you right now that you need to be saved and have a relationship with Him. You need to understand that God is holy and requires holiness of you. You ย need to understand that you have sinned against Him, you have not lived a holy life, and God considers your sins to be as crimes. And like any crime, He will punish them if there is no payment for them. The good news is that He sent Jesus Christ into the world to live a perfect life, and die on the cross to pay for your sins. All you must do is realize you are a sinner, turn away from sin, and trust in Jesus Christ to be your Savior – believe that what He did on the cross is enough for your salvation.

So I read to you again this text: โ€œSo put away all malice and all deceit and hypocrisy and envy and all slander. Like newborn infants, long for the pure spiritual milk of the word, that by it you may grow up into salvationโ€”if indeed you have tasted that the Lord is good.โ€


  1. Thomas Nelsonย Publishers.ย Nelson’s Illustrated Bible Dictionary,ย (Nashville, TN: Thomas Nelson, Inc., 1986),ย 948.
  2. Peter states here that a costly war is taking place in the Christian’s life. You can read more about that in one of ourย pastย Bible studies here.
This message was preached on January 17th, 2016 in Sevierville, TN during Winter Retreat 2016ย hosted by First Baptist Church, Barlow.ย ย This message was also preached on May 22, 2016 at Ohio Valley Baptist Church in Barlow, Kentucky. Recently, this message was also preached on August 14th, 2016 at Locust Grove Baptist Church in Cadiz, KY.

Those Jesus Never Knew (Matt. 7:21-23)

The following message was delivered at Ohio Valley Baptist Church on the 12th day of October 2014:ย 

John Giles, Convict

Alcatraz Island in the San Francisco Bay was home to the former federal prison of Alcatraz. This prison was in operation from the mid-1930s until the mid-1960s as our nationโ€™s leading federal prison. It housed only the most dangerous criminals like Al Capone, George R. โ€œMachine Gunโ€ Kelly, and many others.ย Alcatraz was considered an inescapable prisonโ€”though 6 inmates attempting escape were never located. Prison records recorded them as drowned in the bay. Others dispute that claim saying they made it to freedom.

The US Army used to send laundry to Alcatraz to be washed. John Giles was an inmate who worked at the loading dock where the laundry was delivered. He was sneakyโ€”piece by piece, he was able to steal over time a complete army uniform.ย Then on July 31, 1945, he merely dressed in the uniform and walked aboard an army boat, pretending to be an army officer. However, the boat was not headed for San Francisco as Giles expected, as he stepped off the boat on Angel Island, where Fort McDowell was, which was a major processing location for troops during WWII. He was arrested immediately.

He may have fooled the officers on the boat for awhile, but he couldnโ€™t pull of the impersonation forever. He may have worn the uniform of an army officer, but on the inside he was still John Gilesโ€”criminal, convict.

One of the most sobering truths in all of Scripture is that not everyone who professes to be a Christian is truly a Christian. That there are some people wearing Christian uniforms on the outside, but are in reality unregenerate, unsaved sinners on the inside. They may fool people for a time, but they will not fool the Lord who knows His own.ย This theme runs throughout all of Scripture, but in Matthewโ€™s gospel (which we are looking at today), there are some very powerful descriptions:

John the Baptist to the face of the Pharisees and Sadducees:

โ€œHis winnowing fork is in his hand, and he will clear his threshing floor and gather his wheat into the barn, but the chaff he will burn with unquenchable fireโ€ย (Matt. 3:12).

A winnowing fork was a tool used to separate wheat from chaff, by throwing it into the air so the heavier grain/wheat can fall back on the ground . . . And the chaff which would only be on the surface, would be separated from the wheat and the farmers would gather the wheat into their barns, but burn the chaff because it was useless. One day Jesus Christ is going to clear out His threshing floor. He is going to gather into His arms the saved, the elect of God, but there are going to be those who were only on the surface but appeared to be part of the wheatโ€”and they are the unbelievers and according to 2 Thess. 1:9, . ..โ€œThey will suffer the punishment of eternal destruction, away from the presence of the Lord and from the glory of his might.โ€

Jesus in the parable of the weeds:

โ€œHe answered, โ€œThe one who sows the good seed is the Son of Man. The field is the world, and the good seed is the sons of the kingdom. The weeds are the sons of the evil one, and the enemy who sowed them is the devil. The harvest is the end of the age, and the reapers are angels. Just as the weeds are gathered and burned with fire, so will it be at the end of the age. The Son of Man will send his angels, and they will gather out of his kingdom all causes of sin and all law-breakers, and throw them into the fiery furnace. In that place there will be weeping and gnashing of teethโ€ (Matt. 13:37-42).

What do you do with weeds in a garden? You take them out because they donโ€™t belongโ€”they contribute nothing, they are of no value to the rest of the garden, they may grow together, but the fruits and vegetables are the real thing. Back in 13:30, Jesus said that both grow together.ย There are those who profess faith in Christ, appear to be Christians but because they never had a personal relationship with Jesus Christ and were truly justified by faithโ€”they will not go to heaven, but to hell forever, and they will be surprised to find that out. These are those described by Matthew as those Jesus never knew,ย and we are going to look at this text together this morning.

The Text: Matthew 7:21-23, ESV

21 โ€œNot everyone who says to me, โ€˜Lord, Lord,โ€™ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven. 22 On that day many will say to me, โ€˜Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your name?โ€™ 23 And then will I declare to them, โ€˜I never knew you; depart from me, you workers of lawlessness.โ€™

I. They Professed Him (v. 21)

The first thing to notice is Jesusโ€™ introduction to this passage where He talks about the profession of these people: โ€œNot everyone who says to me, โ€˜Lord, Lord,โ€™ will enter the kingdom of heaven.โ€ย Jesus points out aย limitation on those who say to Him, โ€œLord, Lord.โ€ In Jesusโ€™ time, โ€œLord, Lordโ€ would have been a title of immense respect (like โ€œrevered teacherโ€).ย There may be those who say โ€œLord, Lord,โ€ who proclaim His name, who highly respect Him, that will enter the kingdom of heavenโ€”but according to Jesus, โ€œNot everyone who says to [Him], โ€˜Lord, Lord,โ€™ will enter the kingdom of heaven.โ€ He tells His audience that there is a restriction from heaven, to some who use that title.

But Jesusโ€™ point is not in the use or misuse of His name/title. Indeed, we are to respect His name and boldly proclaim it; the foremost problem is not the use of the title, โ€˜Lord, Lord,โ€™ but the fact that the people Jesus is describing leave it at just thatโ€”it is only a profession of His name. The problem is claiming His name (as they do three times), but not living His way. They simply say in contrast to those who do the will of God (v. 21b).ย According to Jesus, these who simply profess faith โ€œwill not enter into the kingdom of heaven.โ€ This means they are not going to be born again through profession of faith, and they will be denied entrance into Godโ€™s heaven because they never truly believedโ€”it was only a profession; it wasnโ€™t transformation.ย It becomes clear as you study this passage, that these people were never truly saved; These are not Christians who lost their salvationโ€”thatโ€™s an impossibility.

The important thing to notice is the contrast Jesus makes between those who โ€œsayโ€ and those who โ€œdoโ€ here in v. 21. โ€œNot everyone who says to me โ€˜Lord, Lordโ€™ will enter into the kingdom of heaven, but the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven.โ€ In contrast to the one who professes faith, Jesus says that the only person that will enter โ€œthe kingdom of heavenโ€ is โ€œthe one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven.โ€

If doing the will “of [the] Father” is what was lacking in those who professed faith, and it is required of those who go to heaven, then what does Jesus mean by doing God’s will? I believe Jesus’ meaning here is two-fold, but inseparable:

A. It is Godโ€™s Will for You to be Saved.

Jesus is talking about salvation in this passage. Salvation is needed to go to heaven, after we die. And while not everyone will receive salvation because of rejection of God, it isย stillย God’s desire for all to be saved:

โ€œAs I live, declares the Lord GOD, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live; turn back, turn back from your evil ways, for why will you die, O house of Israel?โ€ (Ezek. 33:11)

โ€œThe Lord is not slow to fulfill his promise as some count slowness, but is patient toward you, not wishing that any should perish, but that all should reach repentanceโ€ (2 Peter 3:9).

B. It is Godโ€™s Will for You to Do Godโ€™s Will.

But inseparable from salvation, if we are truly saved, our changed lives will be the sure result. Following salvation should be the desire to do God’s will and carry out His commands. Paul writes,

โ€œ . . . work out your own salvation with fear and tremblingโ€ (Phil. 2:12), but in that same text says โ€œit is God who works in you . . .โ€

A changed life, and living by God’s will is the outworking that we have truly been saved.

โ€œFor this is the will of God, your sanctificationโ€ (1 Thess. 4:3)

Sanctification involves growing in the faith, being delivered daily from the presence of sin. It is God’s will for us to continue in the faith (Col. 1:23), and our lives had better show evidence of our repentance and faith, orย we never had repentance and faith.

Doing Godโ€™s will involves living by His principles, obeying His commandments, serving Him faithfully.ย Something doesnโ€™t make sense when our actions deny our beliefs.

Thomas Linacre was physician to King Henry VIIย and Henry VIIIย of England. Late in his life, Thomas studied to be a priest and was given a copy of the four Gospels to read for the first time. Thomas lived through the darkest of the churchโ€™s dark hours under the rule of Pope Alexander 6th, who shamed Christianity with his murder, corruption, incest, and bribery. Reading the Gospels for himself, Thomas was amazed and troubled: โ€œEither these are not the Gospels,โ€ he said, โ€œor we are not Christians.โ€

Our lives must demonstrate true belief in Christโ€”or we do not have true belief.

Does your life reflect what you say you believe? Your behavior is a reflection of what you truly believe. If it doesnโ€™t thereโ€™s a problemโ€”either youโ€™re not saved, or youโ€™re not being obedient to Christ. If youโ€™re not saved, you can beโ€”by repenting of your sins and turning to Jesus; placing total faith in His finished work on your behalf.ย If youโ€™re not being obedient to Christ and doing Godโ€™s willโ€”God can give you the strength to. You just need to surrender completely to Him. Whatever is stopping you from living out the faith you say you believeโ€”it will be worth it when you get it out of the way so you can fully surrender to God.

II. They Defend Themselves (v. 22)

Not only did they profess Christ, but the second thing to notice here is how they defend themselves: โ€œOn that day many will say to me, โ€˜Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your name?โ€™โ€ (7:22).

A. โ€œThe Day of the LORD.โ€

Jesus says, โ€œOn that day.โ€ What day? He is talking about the Day of the Lord, when all will stand before God in final judgment, where He will separate the wheat from the chaffโ€”and will gather into Him His church, and the unsaved will depart into everlasting fire . . . where He will separate the weeds from the good seeds, where He will separate the believers from the non-believers.

The Old Testament referenced it:

โ€œAlas for the day! For the day of the LORD is near, and as destruction from the Almighty it comesโ€ (Joel 1:13).

โ€œThey shall be mine, says the LORD of hosts, in the day when I make up my treasured possession, and I will spare them as a man spares his son who serves him. Then once more you shall see the distinction between the righteous and the wicked, between one who serves God and one who does not serve himโ€ (Malachi 3:17-18).

Also, Jesus and the New Testament writers warn of it:

โ€œI tell you, on the day of judgment people will give account for every careless word they speak, for by your words you will be justified, and by your words you will be condemnedโ€ (Matt. 12:36-37).

โ€œAnd just as it is appointed for man to die once, and after that comes judgmentโ€ (Heb. 9:27).

“Then I saw a great white throne and him who was seated on it. From his presence earth and sky fled away, and no place was found for them. And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and books were opened. Then another book was opened, which is the book of life. And the dead were judged by what was written in the books, according to what they had done. And the sea gave up the dead who were in it, Death and Hades gave up the dead who were in them, and they were judged, each one of them, according to what they had done. Then Death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. This is the second death, the lake of fire. And if anyone’s name was not found written in the book of life, he was thrown into the lake of fire” (Rev. 20:11-15).

So Jesus is creating the setting for what Heโ€™s talking about here. โ€œOn that dayโ€ of judgment where He will reign as judge (Acts 17:31), He says, โ€œ . . many will say to me, โ€˜Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many mighty works in your name?โ€

Jesus doesnโ€™t say that this is a select โ€œfewโ€ who will say to this to Him, but โ€œmany.โ€ How do they defend themselves? โ€œLord, Lord, did we not . . .โ€ You can hear the tone of surprise in their voicesโ€”โ€œDid you see what we did Lord? Did you forget? Did we not . . .โ€ They are still saying the same thing as while they were on the earth (โ€˜Lord, Lordโ€™)โ€”that means nothing has changed. They have not been born again, they are still sinners in need of a Savior.

The very fact that they defend themselves is an indicator that they are not saved. Because with Jesus, Heโ€™s all the defense you need. He took your case to the cross and settled it. On the Day of Judgment, all youโ€™ll be able to say is โ€œBy grace I was brought to faith!โ€ So then, this demonstrates that they were depending on something of their own merit, which they say: โ€œdid we not prophesy in your name, and cast out demons in your name, and do many might works in your name?โ€ They list off three things to defend themselves. Thereโ€™s no doubt that they did these things, even Satan and his followers can perform miracles. Even Judas cast out devils in Mark 3:14-15, and he appeared to be a disciple, but it was shown that he was not.ย They even claim authority behind their deeds: โ€œin your nameโ€ is mentioned three times.

But Jesus isnโ€™t denying that they did indeed do these thingsโ€”the paramount problem was that these sinners are trusting fully in their own meritโ€”they are defending themselves by pointing to their works. And notice the high standard of their worksโ€”I canโ€™t remember the last time I prophesied can you? I canโ€™t remember any time I ever cast out a demon, can you? Those things are things that most people donโ€™t even do or try to do in their lifetimes.ย But I think thatโ€™s Jesusโ€™ point here: It doesnโ€™t matter how great your works are, how high they areโ€”they will not even get you near the presence of God. What if you plant a church on a foreign mission field? Nope. What if you lead thousands to Christ? Nope. What if you give up all you have and serve the poor? Nope.

B. Why Works Wonโ€™t Work

Why wasn’tย their works enough (they did “mighty works”)? Why arenโ€™t works enough?

1. Itโ€™s not the way God saves. (Jesus reveals later the chief problem was โ€œI never knew you.โ€)ย Itโ€™s not the way God saves, so donโ€™t try to get in that way! The only work you need is the work of Jesus Christ on the cross:ย โ€œJesus answered them, โ€œThis is the work of God, that you believe in him who he has sentโ€ (John 6:29). Jesus also tells His hearers in the Sermon on the Mount, that they must have a righteousness that is greater than outside-righteousness: โ€œFor I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heavenโ€ (Matt. 5:20). We needย Hisย righteousness, and true heart transformation.ย If youโ€™re going to be savedโ€”it must be Godโ€™s way, the only way.

2. Good works cannot justify. We have sinned against God (Rom. 3:23), this demands holy punishment and wrath (Rom. 1:18; 6:23). Good deeds cannot satisfy the wrath and demands of a holy God. Only a perfect substitute can propitiate God’s wrath, and justify us in God’s sight. This substitute was Christ. His perfect work in becoming sin for us, and giving us His righteousness in exchange is enoughย (2 Cor. 5:21). Paul writes,ย โ€œNot that we are sufficient in ourselves to claim anything as coming from us, but our sufficiency is from Godโ€ (2 Cor. 3:5). Again,ย โ€œI do not nullify the grace of God, for if righteousness were through the law, then Christ died for no purposeโ€ (Gal. 2:21). And again, โ€œFor by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boastโ€ (Eph. 2:8-9).

3. The spiritual state of man.ย The current threat that is causing fear among peoples of the world is the spread of the fatal virus, Ebola.ย The latest report on the death tollย of Ebola is 4,033.ยนย ย But there is a worse spiritualย Ebola that has claimed more lives than any other disease in the world. That disease is sin. The Bible says that weย are โ€œdead in sinsโ€ (Eph. 2:1). If you remain spiritually dead throughout this life, even if good works are done, but nothing changes about your spiritual deadnessโ€”then you will go through the second death and be thrown into the lake of fire. Weย must be born again (John 3:3; Titus 3:5). God must do a supernatural work in youโ€”replacing your heart with a new one, giving you a desire for Him, and breathing into you spiritual life.

I’ve heard many well-meaning evangelists and preachers use this illustration before: “Salvation happens like this: You are struggling at the top of an ocean, wanting to be rescued, and then God throws you a lifesaver and you grab onto it.” But that is a fatal misrepresentation! You have already sunk to the bottom of the ocean, and drowned to deathโ€”and God must reach down, pull you out of the water, perform spiritual CPR on you and breathe new life into you. You were deadย in sins. You cannot be saved by works because youโ€™re still in a state of spiritual deadness.

Onย January 1985, there was a large, unmarked and unclaimed suitcase discovered at the customs office at the Los Angeles International Airport. When U. S. Customs agents opened the suitcase, they found the curled-up body of an unidentified young woman. She had been dead for a few days, and as the investigation continued, it was learned that she was the wife of a young Iranian man living in the US. She was unable to obtain a visa to enter the US and join her husband so she took matters into her own hands and tried to smuggle herself into the country. The officials were surprised that an attempt like this could ever succeed. She tried to get in, but it was not only foolish, but fatal.

And if, by good works, we try to get in to heaven our own way, it will prove not only foolish but fatalโ€”with unquenchable fire waiting at the doorstep of our eternity. As a Christian, rest in the cross, your case is settled. Depend on Christโ€”that gives you true freedom (Gal. 5:1); because you fail too often to depend on your own “goodness” (which is no goodness at all; Rom. 7:18; 14:23). If you are a non-believer, you need to make things right with Godโ€”works will never get you to Him. Depend completely on Christ.

III. Jesus’ Dreadful Declaration (v. 23)

These false believers professed Christ, on the Day of Judgment they defend themselves, and then in response to their confession, Jesus confesses something to them: โ€œAnd then will I declare to them, โ€˜I never knew you; depart from me, you workers of lawlessnessโ€ (v. 23).

Jesus reveals to them what the fundamental problem was: โ€œI never knew you.โ€ย Wait a minute. Doesnโ€™t God know everything? Of course He does. Heโ€™s omniscient. The key to understanding what Jesus is saying here comes from the Greek word for โ€œknow.โ€ Itโ€™s ginosko, and itโ€™s used here to describe an intimate knowledgeโ€”a relationship knowledgeโ€”similar to the intimacy between a husband and wife. . . And Jesus is saying thatโ€™s what theirย problem wasโ€”there was never a personal relationship. They never knew Jesus as their Savior, so He never knew them as His childโ€”God knows who are His:ย โ€œBut Godโ€™s firm foundation stands, bearing this seal: โ€œThe Lord knows those who are his,โ€ and, โ€œLet everyone who names the name of the Lord depart from iniquity.โ€โ€ (2 Tim. 2:19).

They were committed to the power Jesus represented and the status they thought they had, but they had never allowed the will of God and a personal relationship with Jesus Christ to control their actions.

Jesus also says to them, โ€œdepart from me.โ€ย These are the words no one wants to hear from Christโ€”but by this time, at the day of judgmentโ€”itโ€™s too late. This is the final destination of those who are not truly savedโ€”eternal departure from the presence of God.ย The tragic part about it is not that they are surprised about this judgment, the tragic part is not that they cannot see their Christian friends in heaven, the tragic part is not even that they cannot go to heavenโ€”the tragic part is that they will be separated from God forever.

Jesus tells them their fundamental problem, they never knew Him in a personal relationship. He tells them to get away from Him. Third, He calls them “workers of lawlessness.โ€ They thought they were workers of righteousness by their deeds, but in reality they were workers of lawlessness because their deeds apart from spiritual transformation are of no value, and God takes no delight in them if inner faith is missing.ย Outward acts of righteousness without inner faith is an abomination to the Lord. In Isaiah this is depicted vividly:ย โ€œBring no more vain offerings; incense is an abomination to me . . .โ€ (Isaiah 1:13).

These who simply profess faith are those described by Jesus in Matthew 15:8, โ€œThis people honors me with their lips, but their heart is far from me.โ€ย They are those who enter through the wide and broad gate that leads to destruction (Matt. 7:13-14); They are those who bear bad fruit (Matt. 7:15-20); They are those who built their house on the sand because they didnโ€™t heed the words of Jesus (Matt. 7:24-27).ย They are those described by Paul, โ€œThey profess to know God, but they deny him by their works. They are detestable, disobedient, unfit for any good workโ€ (Titus 1:16). They are those whoย needย Christ to save them through a personal relationship. Is that you today?ย Do you know Jesus? Thereโ€™s a difference between knowing about Him and knowing Him. He wants to have a personal relationship with you, He wants to forgive your sinโ€”just repent and trust the Savior.

Conclusion: Charlesย Waterman

Weโ€™ve seen today that there are those who simply profess faith, but will be surprised to find that their works were not enough for salvationโ€”they will on the Day of Judgment finally be separated from Godโ€™s eternal presence.ย The good news is that God saves those who come to Him in repentance and faithโ€”there is hope! God knows your past, He knows what you’ve done, and He is willing to forgive if you’re willing to come to Him. Is God drawing you to come to Him?

From a home with one brother and one sister, Charles Watermanโ€™s urge was to see the country. This took him to hitchhiking on the railroad to California. He was influenced by the worldly crowd and gave himself to become an alcoholic. Even as such, he worked his way up to become an engineer on the steam locomotive. He married Anna, who had a Christian background and did what she could to keep the testimony before him.ย Anna was discouraged at the path her husband followed because it was causing him to miss work on some of his hangovers. So she asked a lady in her town in California to meet with her and help her pray for Charles to be saved. His wild life went on for three or more years and one night he became frightened while under the influence and when he finally arrived at home, he told Anna he wanted to be saved. She immediately called her friend who came over to their home and they led him to the Lord. He begged the Lord for forgiveness and to clean up his life, which the Lord did.

The happiness that followed caused Anna to write the song Yes, I Know!ย with these words:

“Come, ye sinners, lost and hopeless,

Jesusโ€™ blood can make you free;

For He saved the worst among you,

When He saved a wretch like me.

And I know, yes, I know

Jesusโ€™ blood can make the vilest sinner clean.”ย ยฒ

Do you know Christ today? Are you depending on your own goodness and works? Are you fully trusting in His grace this hour? Come to Christ, and He will not turn you away.


 

1. NBC News,ย Ebola Death Toll Rises to 4,033.ย 
2. Hymntime,ย Yes, I Know!ย