RAMBO RELIGION
Dr. W. A. Criswell
Titus 3:1-7
10-22-86 7:30 p.m.
Now let’s turn to Titus; Titus; toward the end of your New
Testament; the Book of Titus, Paul's letter to his son in the ministry named
Titus. We're going to stand in a moment and read the first seven verses of
chapter 3, the last chapter—Titus, chapter 3. And you share your Bible with
one who might not have it, and we want to read it out loud together—Titus,
chapter 3. The text is going to be the fifth verse, and the title of the
message is Rambo Religion. You got it? Titus, chapter 3, verses 1
through 7. Now, let's stand together in the presence of the Lord and read it
aloud. Titus 3:1 through 7 together:
Put them in mind
to be subject to principalities and powers, to obey magistrates, to be ready to
every good work,
To speak evil of
no man, to be no brawlers, but gentle, shewing all meekness unto all men.
For we ourselves
also were sometimes foolish, disobedient, deceived, serving divers lusts and
pleasures, living in malice and envy, hateful, and hating one another.
But after that the
kindness and love of God our Saviour toward man appeared,
Not by works of righteousness
which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us, by the washing of
regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Spirit;
Which He shed on
us abundantly through Jesus Christ our Saviour,
That being
justified by His grace, we should be made heirs according to the hope of
eternal life.
[Titus 3:1-7]
Now, let's read, verse 5 again, "Not by works of
righteousness which we have done, but according to His mercy He saved us, by
the washing of regeneration, and renewing of the Holy Spirit."
Now, let's be seated and begin: Rambo Religion.
John Arthur Rambo was an actual somebody, an actual soldier. He was killed in
Vietnam, and his name appears on the Vietnam Memorial in Washington, D.C.
Heroic feats are attributed to him on the movie screen. I don't go to the
movies, but I've seen pictures of him in magazines. I presume it's a picture
of Sylvester Stallone or somebody like that. Anyway, he is a he-man. He's
macho. And in the minds of millions, young and old, he is enshrined as the model,
modern day warrior. He is a cultural symbol of standing against the wrongs
that so grievously afflict our world. He is a symbol of direct personal action
often needed to right those things that are wrong. He epitomizes the zenith in
facing down the enemy, gaining victory over evil through direct powerful,
personal action.
Now, applied to religion, applied to spiritual things, Rambo
religion represents the curing of the sin problem by reverting to self-effort
and achieving human standards of righteousness. Now, I'll give you a good
example of the universality of Rambo religion. We have Jay Strack coming this
weekend to hold a revival meeting. He is a marvelous convert, a teenager who
was hooked on drugs, who went to jail, who lived a dissolute life. He was
marvelously saved, delivered, and he is a strength in the faith of our Lord.
We did everything in our power to get that brilliant, able, eloquent young man
in the public schools of the city of Dallas to speak to these teenagers about
the curse of drugs and alcohol and promiscuity. We were not able to get him
into one school, not one.
That is Rambo religion. We're going to do it without God,
without the church, without religion. We're going to do it ourselves. And I
can tell you this, and I'm not a prophet any more than you are. There is
coming a dissolution of the fabric of America that when we see the crime rate
going up day by day, it is a slow climb compared to what it's going to be some
of these days in the future. Rambo religion does not cure the human heart and
self-achievement does not deliver us from the rampages of compromise and sin.
Now, a nation can glory and justly so in those who have
fought for her existence and even died in her defense. Our Memorial Days are
sacred and to be observed with worthy tributes to human devotion and
achievements. But in Scripture, in the true Christian faith, in salvation by
and through the atoning sacrifice of Jesus, we have no cause, personally, to
glory in ourselves or to trust in our own achievements. Rambo can be a popular
and justly acclaimed hero nationally, but in Rambo religion there is no place
before the throne of God for our personal boasting and our personal
achievements.
Now, I have two tremendously pertinent and Scriptural avowals:
First, Rambo religion cannot save the lost. Self-effort, self-righteousness,
personal goodness and merit do not open for us an entrance into heaven. Now,
this is what God says about us and our moral goodness and our personal efforts
toward splendid introductions of our merit before God in heaven. How are we in
God's sight? In Isaiah 64 and 6, quote, "But we are all as an unclean
thing." I'd like to translate that out of the Hebrew, but I can't do it.
It's not nice in polite society. "But we are all as an unclean
thing—referring to something—and all our righteousnesses are as filthy rags;
and we all do fade as a leaf; and our iniquities, like the wind, have taken us
away."
In Romans 3 and 10: "There is none righteous, no, not
one." Verse 12: "They are all gone out of the way, they are together
become unprofitable; there is none that doeth good, no, not one." Verse
23: "For all have sinned, and come short of the glory of God." In
Galatians 3:22: "The Scripture hath concluded all under sin." Titus
3:5, our text, "Not by works of righteousness which we have done, but
according to His mercy He saved us."
The man who stands before God and says, "Look at me. I
am worthy. I lived a good life. I paid my debts. I took part in the civic
betterment of my town. I helped others. I am worthy to stand in Your
presence, to enter Your beautiful city and walk Your golden streets. I
observed the ceremonies and the rituals of acceptable religion. Look at me. I
am worthy." And God looks. And what does God see? God sees the thin,
transparent veneer of our own personal righteousness. And what God sees in us
is we are clothed in filthy garments.
Do you remember that sign, that symbol, that picture in
Zechariah, chapter 3, where Joshua, the high priest stands before God clothed
in filthy garments? That's the way we are in our own righteousness as we stand
before God compared to holiness and compared to perfection and compared to
sinlessness. Compared to God, we all are as those filthy rags. We all are
sinners. Our only hope to stand in the righteousness of Christ and imputed
righteousness, and God sees us through Jesus Christ. We have no other hope
when we stand in our own goodness, when we stand in our own righteousness. We
stand condemned.
Our only hope is to stand in the imputed righteousness of
Christ. His blood must wash our sins away. We are like the Passover people,
the family. They were beyond the blood. They were under the blood. If they
were not under the blood, the angel of death entered traumatically into the
home. They were saved by the blood. We are saved by the blood of the
crucified one. We are washed clean in His sacrifice, and it is in His
resurrection that we are justified. We are declared righteous by His
resurrected life in the presence of God.
Romans 4:25, "Jesus our Lord was delivered for our
offences, and was raised, for our justification." That is we are washed,
saved, forgiven by the blood of Christ, the sacrifice of Christ, and we are
kept saved by the intercessory ministry of our Lord before God in heaven saved
by the blood of the crucified one, kept saved by the intercessory life of our
Lord in heaven. It is an imputed righteousness. Our hope of salvation is to
be found in Christ and in Him alone.
I want to read that from the Apostle Paul in the third
chapter of the Book of Philippians. Philippians, chapter 3:
For we... are
they, who worship God in the spirit, and rejoice in Christ Jesus, and have no
confidence in the flesh.
Though I might
have confidence in the flesh. If any man could...
Circumcised the
eighth day, of the stock of Israel, of the tribe of Benjamin, an Hebrew of the
Hebrews; as touching the Law, a Pharisee;
Concerning zeal,
persecuting the church; touching the righteousness which is in the Law,
blameless.—I kept the Law like that rich young ruler.—
But what things
were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ.
And I doubtless
count all things loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ my Lord,
for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them as dung, that I
may be found in Him.
[Philippians 3:3-8]
And that is the key to the Christian life that we be found
in Him, not having mine own righteousness which is of the Law but that which is
through the faith of Christ, the righteousness which is of God, an imputed
righteousness. The righteousness of God bestowed upon us freely by His grace. You
have a marvelous, wonderful song that delivers that message of our
righteousness in Christ in the beautiful hymn, "The Rock of Ages,"
The rock of ages,
cleft for me,
Let me hide myself
in Thee;
Let the water and
the blood,
From Thy wounded
side which flowed,
Be of sin the
double cure,
Save from wrath
and make me pure.
Could my zeal no
languor know,
Could my tears
forever flow,
These for sin
could not atone;
Thou must save,
and Thou alone,
In my hand no
price I bring,
Simply to thy
cross I cling.
[Augustus Toplady, “Rock of Ages”]
That's the way we're saved. Not by the commendation of
ourselves to God in our own righteousness, but pleading the mercy and grace and
forgiveness and imputed righteousness of Jesus our Lord. There's no other way.
Now, the second avowal: Rambo religion can't save us. We
cannot commend ourselves to God by our superior achievements or pristine
merits. The second avowal: Rambo religion cannot make the believer mighty in
the Lord. Given great, great power before God and with men, self-effort,
self-commendation, the works of the flesh, human strength and wisdom cannot
make us mighty before God.
Do you remember the story of the apostles in the seventeenth
chapter of the Book of Matthew, the three—Peter, James and John—that the Lord
loved so much were with the Lord on the Mount of Transfiguration, and the rest
of the disciples were down there in the valley. And they were trying to cast
out a demon out of a poor, afflicted boy, and they were failing ingloriously.
And the Lord comes, and He does what they could not begin to do. They were
doing it in their own strength and in their own power, and they failed
miserably.
Do you remember the story of the vagabond Jews in Acts 19?
They were trying to cast out demons in the name of Christ and in the name of
Paul, and they were failing miserably. And the demon said, "Christ we
know, and Paul we know, but who are you?"
Do you remember the story of Israel at Kadesh Barnea when
they came up to the Promised Land and refused to enter in by faith trusting
God? Why, the tragedy of a sentence—that they would all die in the
wilderness—was pronounced upon them from God through Moses. And they repenting
said, "Well, we'll go in."
And Moses said, "You can't go in without God."
“Well, we're going in anyway.”
And they tried to enter into the land in their own strength,
and they were defeated. And many of them were killed.
We don't find in us that strength that can only come from
God. Our victory and our strength must always be found in Christ. I cannot—I
cannot—I cannot illustrate that more vividly than in my own life: This—the
sweetest, littlest child brought to me, "Pastor, this is my daughter.
This is my little boy, and I want you to win him to Christ. I want you to save
him." I never feel so helpless in all God's world as I do before the
smallest child. How can I save a soul? How can I forgive sin? How can I in
any ways be other than an instrument of God to lead the youngster to the Lord?
We are wholly dependent upon Christ. We cannot do it. It's a work of the
Spirit of God.
Paul, after having been saved for more than thirty years,
and after having served the Lord faithfully through them all says in that
passage that I've just read, "All of these things that I counted gain to
me, I count but dung that I am may be found in Christ." Our strength lies
not in ourselves but in Him. Our goal is to be found in our Lord. Our
strength is not ours, but His. What does Paul say in Philippians 4:13?
"I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me." Not through
my own strength, but through His. "I can do all things through
Christ!"
We are called upon by faith to participate joyfully in the
victory Christ has already won for us and bestowed upon us by His grace.
Colossians 2:6 and 7, "As therefore ye hath received Christ Jesus our
Lord, so walk ye in Him, rooted and built up in Him, and stablished in the
faith, abounding therein with thanksgiving." Rambo religion seeks to
compel us to work for ourselves in order to get saved and to stay saved. But
true spiritual religion rejoices in Christ Who has won for us true salvation
and has the promise of everlasting life freely bestowed upon all of us who
believe in Jesus. As Ephesians 1:3 avows we are blessed with all spiritual
blessings in heavenly places in Christ. There in Christ we are made
permanently complete. Colossians 2 and 10, "And ye are complete in Him,
who is the head of all principality and power."
Nothing more needs to be added to this position of
righteousness and blessedness in Christ. No Rambo religion of our striving and
making is necessary. We are rather to rejoice in our spiritual blessings in
Christ our Savior. Our life is to be one of praise and glory and thanksgiving
and hallelujah to Him. What we do, therefore, we do out of thanksgiving to
Him. What we do, therefore, is to be pleasing in His sight. And what we do,
therefore, is to share this wonderful good news of what Jesus has done for us.
That's our life.
Never as in Rambo religion are we to think that we achieve
our salvation by our own good works, never to commend ourselves to God by our
personal excellence, never to live the Christian life in our own strength, but
in all things to be found in Him. That's the religion of Christ. That's the
faith of the Lord Jesus. And when we are tempted to think that we are
commending ourselves to God by all these wonderful things that we could do in
His name, we do not commend ourselves to God by anything that we do of our own
merit, or achievement, or excellence, or goodness. We cast ourselves upon the
mercies of God. We receive His blessing with infinite thanksgiving. And all
that we are and every promise, everything that we could ever hope to be lies in
His goodness and in His grace.
Now, may I close? When you read the Revelation, when you
read the last book in the Bible, when those saints of God stand before the throne,
and they are singing songs and praising the Lord God Almighty, tell me, do they
sing, "All praise and thanksgiving to me, look what I did, the good battle
that I fought and the great deeds that I did and the things that I accomplished?”
Do they sing that? Or do they sing, "All praise and glory and
thanksgiving to the Lamb Who washed us from our sins and made us saints to the
glory of God. To Him be glory forever and ever. Amen?” That's what we sing.
And that's what we sing in heaven.
Now Denny we’re going to stand and sing us a song. While we
sing this song to give your heart to the Lord publicly and openly tonight, “I
do accept Him as my Savior and here I stand. I am coming tonight.” Or, “I am
putting my life and my letter and my love and prayers and attendance in this dear
church.” Or, “I am answering a call of God in my heart.” As the Spirit of the
Lord will move come and stand by me. I’ll be right. “Pastor, this is a great
night for me and here I am. I am on the way.” May God bless you as you come
while we stand, and while we sing.