|
THE
SINS OF THE SAINTS
Dr. W.
A. Criswell
1 John
3:9
6-24-73
10:50 a.m.
On the radio and on
television, you are sharing the services of the First Baptist Church in
Dallas. Could I also add a word of welcome to the enormous number of
visitors we have this morning? We pray that the preaching of the
gospel of Christ shall be a blessing to your heart, and that the dear Lord
will be with us in power and in strength as we leave this blessed
place.
The title of the sermon
is The Sins of the Saints, and it is a review of the first epistle
of the apostle John. What he says springs out of a life of long
duration. The other disciples had been dead for many, many years, and
John alone survives. John is also the pastor of the church at
Ephesus, and has been for possibly thirty years. He is an aged man;
he is between ninety and a hundred years old.
What he says is doubly,
trebly, quadruply significant and meaningful for us, first, because of who
he is. In that inner circle, Peter, James, and John, John seemingly
was nearest to the heart of our Lord. He was the disciple Jesus
loved, the beloved disciple. And if anyone could reflect the heart
and mind of Christ Jesus truly, it would be the chosen beloved disciple
John.
But another thing about
him, the fact that he was a pastor for so many, many years makes what he
says meaningful because he speaks out of an incomparably rich
experience. As you read the epistle, the heartbeat of a pastor who
has been a shepherd for the flock of our Christ for so long is apparent, is
manifest in every syllable and word of the letter.
What apparently he
writes out of is what the people have brought to him and have asked him
through the years of his pastoral leadership. For example, some would
come and say, "John, that unpardonable sin, it frightens us. Is
there a sin that a man can commit and there's no forgiveness in this world
or in the world to come? John, is there such a thing as an
unforgivable sin?"
And John replies,
"There is a sin that a man can sin unto death, and I do not ask that
you pray for it." What kind of a sin is that? The fact of
it that it could be frightens us. Is there a sin that damns a man out
of heaven, out of the presence of God, into hell and perdition and forever,
he can never be forgiven? Is there a sin so awesome as that?
John says there is. “There is a sin unto death. I do not say
that you pray for it." What could that be?
Could it be murder? Take another man's life? Shed another man's
blood? No, for Moses was a murderer. Could it be
adultery? There is no sin that disintegrates human personality like
adultery. No, for David was an adulterer as well as a murderer to
hide it away.
What is that sin that is unto
death that is never forgiven? Is it the denial of the Lord? In
seeking to save one's own life, to protect one's own interest, to disavow
any knowledge of the Lord? No, Simon Peter did that with oaths, and
cursings, and foul and bitter words. He denied that he even knew the
Lord. Well, could it be the persecution, wreaking havoc with the
people of God, destroying the witness of the church of Christ? Could
it be that? No, Saul of Tarsus was guilty of that.
Well, what is the sin
unto death that is never forgiven? As I search through the
Scriptures, as the Lord speaks of it and as John writes about it, there is
just one sin that I know that damns a man forever, and that sin is the
ultimate and final rejection of Christ. He cannot be a Savior to the
man who willfully refuses to be saved. And when a man refuses the
witness of God the Father and God the Holy Spirit to the saving grace of
God the Son, there is no other hope. It is a sin unto death and is
never forgiven.
Then I can see some of
the members of the church come to the aged pastor and say, "Pastor
John, we pray and our prayers rise no higher than our heads. The
heavens are brass and God doesn't listen. He can't hear
me."
And the apostle writes,
why, no. No! “This is the confidence that we have in Him, that,
if we ask any thing according to His will, He heareth us. And if we
know that He hear us, whatsoever we ask, we know that we have the petitions
that we desired of Him.”
The trouble, John says,
about our praying is that we seek to impose and to force our will upon the
will of God. It will not work. There'll be no answer.
There's no victory. John says when we pray first, we must pray in the
spirit, in the heart, in the will, in the choice of God. When we
leave the choice to Him, praying in God's will, then we can ask anything
and be importunate in it and God will give us the petitions that we desire
of Him.
So many things that we
ask for are personally motivated. It is something we choose. We
have asked for it. There's to be none of us in praying. There's
to be nothing of self in it. Yet it all is to be of God.
And when a man can get
himself where he hides himself out, crucifies himself, he's dead.
Dead man doesn't have desires. A dead man is without feeling in
himself. So the man must die to himself if he would live to
God. Then when he prays, anything that he asks, God will do it for
him, asking in the will of Christ in His spirit and in His name. Then
when the answer is not immediate, it becomes just the testing of God, a
trial to see whether we really meant what we prayed for. A bland,
indifferent prayer could never move heaven, and most of our prayers are
like that. We say little things before we go to bed at night, little
indifferent things.
I heard of a fellow who
when he went to bed at night said a little prayer. Finally, the
mechanical effort was just so trite that he got down and said, "Ditto,
Lord," and the next night "Ditto" and the next night
"Ditto" again. Prayer that moves God is prayer of a man
who's identified himself with the cause and purpose of Christ. Then
he can be importunate.
George Mueller, the
great leader of that orphanage in England prayed ten years for a man, and
then he was won. And then twenty years for another man, and he turned
and was saved. And in his old age, George Mueller said, "I've
been praying for that man for forty years, forty years." That is
prayer that will touch the heart of God and find an answer from
heaven.
Then the people of the
flock come to the sainted apostle and say, "John, how do we know we're
saved? How can you know you're born again? How do I know I'll
go to heaven when I die? How do I know that I know that I'll see the
face of Jesus someday? How can I know that I'm born again?"
And in this epistle, John writes seven tests by which we can know that
we've been saved, born again. It's a strange thing in the epistle he
uses that word "born" seven times. And these are the seven
tests as to whether or not we're saved; we've been born again:
·
The
first one is 1 John 2:29: “If we know that He is righteous, ye know that
every one who doeth righteousness is born of Him.” The first
characteristic of a man who is born again is that he loves to do
right. He loves to do right in his business. Isn't that an
indictment of so much of American business, American labor, American
economic and political activity? If a man is born again, he loves to
do right. His word is his bond. He's an honest man. He's
that way at home. He's that way in his relationships with all
others. He loves to do right. That's one sign and the first one
John writes about a man who is born again. He's a Christian.
·
The
next two are in the same verse: “Whosoever is born of God doth not commit
sin; for His seed remaineth in him: and he cannot sin, because he is born
of God,” And we're coming back to that.
·
The
fourth one. How do you know you're born again? “Beloved, let us
love one another, for love is of God; and every one that loveth is born of
God and knoweth God. He that loveth not knoweth not God; for God is
love.” One of the signs that a man is born again is that he loves
God's people. There's a tenderness in him; there's a compassion in
him that is felt when you talk to him, you see it in his face and in the
tone of his voice. The man is a Christian. He is born
again. Not that we love a man’s sins, but that we love the man
himself; for Jesus' sake, we love him.
·
The
fifth one: How does a man know that he's born again? “Whosoever
believeth that Jesus is the Christ is born of God: and every one that
loveth Him that begat loveth Him also that is begotten of Him.” In
the Book of Corinthians the Apostle Paul said, “No man can call Jesus Lord
Christ but by the Holy Spirit.” And in the tenth chapter of Romans,
the apostle wrote, “If thou shalt confess with thy mouth Jesus is Lord, and
believe in thine heart that God has raised Him from the dead, thou shalt be
saved.” A man who is born again is a man who believes that Jesus is
the Christ of God.
·
Sixth:
How do you know you're born again? 1 John 5:4: “For whatsoever is
born of God overcometh the world, and this is the victory that overcometh
the world, even our faith.” The man who is born of God wars against
the world. He feels the conflict in it and the confrontation.
It's a part of his daily life. The man who is born of God, who is a
Christian, never lays down his arms against trial and temptation. He
never surrenders to the deadly foe. The man who is a born again
Christian is a man who belongs to Christ, therefore he's not belonging to
the world. I would submit it, isn't it axiomatic, that if he belongs
to us, then he doesn't belong to them? If he's an addition to Christ,
then he's a subtraction from them. And the man who is born of God
confronts the world and separates himself from it.
·
And
seventh: How do you know you're born again? “We know that
whatsoever is born of God sinneth not; but he that is begotten of God
keepeth himself, and that wicked one toucheth him not.”
Now, we're going to
discuss that. What is this thing that John so emphasizes? “Whosoever
is born of God doth not commit sin; for His seed remaineth in him and he
cannot sin.” A man of God, born of God, and he cannot sin because he
is born of God. What does that mean? There are whole systems of
false theology that are built upon the translation here in this King James
Version. And it is a tragedy, for the fault lies in the
translation. This is a mistranslation of the grossest sort and the
grossest kind, and it has led to untold error and heresy. For a man
to be born of God, he cannot commit sin; so the translation says.
Experience denies that. That's why I had you read in the
seventh chapter of the Book of Romans. The apostle Paul said, “I war
in my soul. It's a confrontation every day of my life. For what
I want to do, I don't do. And what I don't want, I do that I
do. O wretched man that I am!”
What is this? If
a man is born of God, he cannot sin? And of course it led to the
false theological system of sinless perfection: that we are not really
Christians until somehow we arrive at that state of Christian maturity
where we live above sin. And yet the Scriptures say, “There is no man
that liveth that sinneth not." And the Scriptures will say, “All
have sinned.” All of us! All of us!
Well, what does it mean
here? It is a very simple thing that John wrote, a very simple
thing. What he wrote was this: in the verbs of the Greek
language, and in the verbs of the Hebrew language—to us all verbal form has
to be expressed in tense. You can't talk in the English language
without tense. And there's not a boy that's been to school and
learned grammar but that knows the tenses of the English verbal form, and
he studies the tenses of the verbs. And you can't speak in English
without pigeonholing everything that you say or are saying. See the
change in tense? You can't say it in English without pigeonholing it
in tense, in time, but Hebrew's not that way. Greek is not that
way.
In the Hebrew and the Greek,
the men spoke in kinds of action. And the verbs never referred to
tense or time as such, but always describe kinds of action. A thing
was looked upon as out there, or back there, or going on right now.
And what is translated as present indicative in our language, in the
Greek language is the verb for continuous linear action, for going
on. And that is the verb that the apostle John uses here: hamartanein,
the infinitive. He cannot continue on in sin because he's born of
God. And the same thing in the verb above: “Whosoever is born
of God doth not commit sin,” doth not practice sin, “for God's seed is in
him," the Holy Spirit of God is in him, and the Word of the Lord is in
him. Jesus said: "You are clean through the Word which I have
spoken unto you." And there is a cleansing in the Word:
"Thy Word have I hid in mine heart, that I might not sin against
Thee."
In a child of God, in a
born-again Christian, there is the Spirit of God, and there is the Word of
the Lord, and these things make it impossible for a born-again Christian to
practice sin, to continue on, active, present linear action. It makes
it impossible for a man to live in sin, to continue in sin. He cannot
do it. He cannot! If you like the practice of sin, you like
it. You enjoy it. You have married yourself to it, so part of
your way of life, it is a sure and certain sign that you are not
saved.
For the child of God
who is born again cannot practice, cannot continue in sin. He cannot
do it. This prodigal boy, was he a sinner? He was. The
Scriptures say that he wasted his substance with harlots, whores,
prostitutes. Scriptures say that he wasted his life in riotous
living, drunkenness, and wantonness. But look, look, look which one
of them is miserable and unhappy? That is the born-again Christian,
and the prodigal son said, "I'm so miserable in this hog pen.
I'm so miserable in this dirt and iniquity and filth and sin I could
die."
The prodigal boy said,
"In my Father's house, in God's house, there are menial servants who
are happy, and I'm so miserable I could die." You see, he's a
child of the Father. He's born of the Father, and he's miserable, and
he's unhappy. And he cries to God and he says, "I'm going
back. I'm going back!"
Sweet people, I could
not tell you the legions who have come down that aisle, have taken my hands.
There's hardly anything that feels like the feeling of hot tears falling on
my hand. Take my hand and say: "Pastor, I have drifted
away. I have fallen afar off. I have forsaken God. I have
fallen into sin." It happened this morning at the 8:15 service.
It happens all the time. That is a sure sign that you're born
again. "I am miserable in this. I'm unhappy in this.
I'm not right with God in this, and I'm coming back."
You can't continue in
it. You can't practice it because you're a child of God. And
you can't help that. No matter how you try to be happy and glad in
it, you can't because you've been born again.
In the prayer that—wasn't
it Richard?—in the prayer, he was thanking God for the latest decision of
the Supreme Court concerning pornographic literature and salacious
movies. Where do those things come from? I was talking to an
expert about it yesterday and he said that reflects the sentiment of the
modern American mind. He said, "The great mass of American
people love that, and the more salacious it is on television or in the
movie house, the better they like it."
But if you are a
born-again Christian, you can't like it. There'll be something on the
inside of you, that in the dirt and the filth of the world you're unhappy,
and you can't help it. You've been born again, and you can't continue
in sin. That's what the apostle said after he had been pastor of the
church for maybe sixty years, and is now in his old age talking to his
sheep.
We must hasten, and
bear with me. He follows that with seven tests of the genuine
Christian. And in each instance, he introduces it: "If we
say …", "If we say …" or "He that saith …" seven
times. Evidently, John lived with his people, and loved his
people, and listened to them. So these are seven tests of the
genuineness of the Christian faith:
· “If we say
that we have fellowship with Him, and walk in darkness, we lie, and do not
the truth.” The man who is a Christian likes to walk in the
light.
· “If
we say we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth not in us.”
The man that says, "I'm a good man. I'm as good as anybody
else." The Pharisee who prayed saying, "Lord, I thank Thee
that I'm not like other men, not even like that publican down
there." The child of God is a man who would be the first to
admit that he's a sinner, and that he needs saving, and that he needs Jesus
and the strong arm of God. How could Jesus ever be a Savior to a man
who doesn't need saving? Christianity begins when a man feels that
he's lost and can't save himself. When a man says, "I don't need
a Savior. I haven't sinned," then he deceives himself. All
right.
·
“If we say that we have not sin, we make God a liar and His truth is not in
us.”
· Four:
"He that saith, I know Him, and keepeth not His commandments, is a
liar and the truth is not in him."
· Number
five: "He that saith he abideth in Him ought himself also so to
walk, even as He walked." Sheldon,
you know, who wrote that marvelous book, In His Steps or What
Would Jesus Do? A Christian man says, "Does this
please God what I'm doing? Is this right in God's sight? I want
to walk in the way of the Lord."
· Number
six: "He that saith he is in the light, and hateth his brother,
is in darkness even until now. He that loveth his brother abideth in
the light, and there is none occasion of stumbling in him."
That's like this wonderful passage over here in 3:14, "We know that we
have passed from death unto life, because we love the brethren. He
that loveth not his brother abideth in death."
· Then number
seven: "If a man say, I love God, and hateth his brother, he is a
liar, for he that loveth not his brother whom he hath seen, how can he love
God whom he hath not seen? And this commandment have we from Him,
that he who loves God loves his brother also."
That's one of the tests of the
genuineness of the faith, that you love your brother, you love God's
people. As most of you know, I was an undershepherd out in the
country and in little village churches for ten years. And in one of
those communities there came to be a bitter feud between this man and this
man, both of them in the church over the boundary line between their two
farms.
And so bitter did that
altercation continue through the years, through the years, that those men
would do everything they could to spite the other man and they taught their
children to hate each other. They'd eat at the same table and never
speak. Upon a day, upon a day, the spirit of revival came in the
church. God came down. And one of those men walked across the
church to the other man and held out his hand and said: "My brother,
my brother, I have hated you for these years. I've taught my children
to hate you, and I haven't spoken to you for years and years. But, my
brother, I ask your forgiveness. I ask your forgiveness, and I extend
to you my hand."
And that farmer looked
into the face of his neighbor and said: "I ask you to forgive
me."
He said: "Friend,
you put that boundary anywhere you want to place it, and it will be fine
with me. If it's on this side of the creek, if it's on that side of
the creek, if it's in the middle of the creek, you place the boundary; it
will be all right with me."
And there in the
presence of God's people, they embraced each other. It was
electrifying. It was like revival in itself. That is a sign of
a genuine child of God. To hate, to despise, to do disservice, to
hurt is of the evil one. But to love and to cherish and to encourage
and to bless is a sign of the child of God. I want to help, not
hurt. I want to bless and not be a stumbling block. I've got it
in my heart because I'm saved. I'm a Christian. That's what it
is to follow Jesus. Isn't it remarkable how out of the years of experience
of this aged apostle he speaks to us today like our undershepherd?
We stand in a moment to
sing our hymn of appeal. And while we sing the song, a family you, a
couple you, or just one somebody you, giving your heart to the Lord, come;
putting your life in the fellowship of this dear church, come. If you’re
on the topmost balcony in the topmost seat there is time and to
spare. Down a stairway, into the aisle, from anywhere; you, make the
decision now and come, while we stand and while we sing.
|