Showing posts with label 1 Thessalonians. Show all posts
Showing posts with label 1 Thessalonians. Show all posts

Thursday, 9 October 2014

Children of the Light (iii)

I love the start of verse 9, ‘God hath not appointed us to wrath.’ If you have faith in Jesus Christ this morning, if you’re in the day, not the night, then God has not appointed you to wrath! That should  stun us, it should amaze us, it should knock the wind out of us. We should stand on our heads for joy because we...sinners like you and me, after all we’ve said, and all we’ve done, and all we’ve thought, we will not face the wrath of God that we deserve.

We’ve wasted our Father’s substance in the far city, and we come dragging our heels home, expecting the worst, and He comes out of the house running, and gives us new clothes, and new shoes, and calls for a feast. If we have faith in Christ, a different nature, different behavior, we are appointed to obtain salvation through Jesus Christ who died for us. As Christians we need to come back to this truth early and often. There ought never to be a day when we don’t thank Jesus for dying on the cross for our sins, and walking out of the tomb three days later. We should never lose sight of the glorious Gospel. Not ever.

And one day, the end of verse 10 promises us, we’ll live together with Him. We’ll live in Heaven. No sorrow, no tears, no sickness, no regrets, no misunderstandings, no nighttime, drunkenness, no sin. Just Jesus, and Him forever.

That last verse tells us to comfort and encourage each other with the truth of Heaven. We’ve all heard the knock on Christians that what we believe is just ‘pie in the sky when you die,’ we’re too heavenly minded to be of any earthly use. Well, if your mind is not fixed on Heaven, you won’t be any use on Earth. The hope of Heaven is our comfort at the graveside, at the hospital bed. It makes the good days sweeter and the bad days bearable. The hope of Heaven gives us our new nature, and makes sense of our different behavior.


So how about you this morning? Do you recognize yourself in the description of people who live in the day? Are you awake, or have you dozed off? Are you sober, or getting drunk on worldly pleasures? Do you feel like you’re wondering around lost, or is the Word guiding your way? Maybe you need to get saved, or maybe you need to start living like you are saved once more. Whatever you need, you need Jesus, because He has it. Let’s go to Him now.

Wednesday, 8 October 2014

Children of the Light (ii)

Secondly, Paul tells us that if we live in the day, we behave differently. Christianity isn’t just doing things differently, but it’s not less than that. John MacArthur says that being a Christian involves a radical moral change. We behave differently. Look at verses 6-8 with me.

What’s Paul saying? Don’t sleep, watch. Don’t doze off at your post, like the disciples in Gethsemene, but watch. Look out for the dawn, look out for the second coming. Don’t be caught off guard, don’t sleep, watch. Don’t be lulled away by the devil’s lullaby that the world sings. Stay awake! And be sober. Is your life sober? Not just in terms of alcohol, but in terms of it’s direction?

Verse 7 tells us that it’s people who live in darkness who sleep and get drunk, but we watch, and we’re sober. The core of our life’s behavior is watchful and sober. We’re watchful over our spending, because God gives us money so that we can show that we love God more than money. We’re watchful over how we spend our time, because life is short and eternity is long. We’re watchful over our viewing habits, because the devil can use anything to inflame our lusts. We’re watchful over our kids, because God didn’t give teenagers common sense, He gave them parents.

A sober person is self controlled, balanced, calm and steady. They have the right priorities.

But we’re not alone in this fight for spiritual sobriety. We’re armed, we’ve been given protection. Look at verse 8 with me. We have a breastplate and a helmet. We have faith, love and hope. The breastplate goes over our hearts. What’s in the heart of our new behavior? Faith and love. Faith in God, and love to man. Faith that no matter what happens, God is good, and God is in control. We didn’t use to behave like that when we were in the dark, we used to behave like we were God, like we were in control, like we were all that mattered, but now, our hearts have faith in God. And our hearts have love to man. Jesus told us that people would know we love Him because we love each other.  This is daytime behavior, loving people. In the darkness we love people because of what they can do for us. We love people who we think are worth loving. But in the light, we serve all, we love all, we help all.

And we have a helmet to guard our heads, to guard our thoughts. It’s a helmet of hope. This helmet gives us hope when everyone around us is losing theirs. It means we know how the world will turn out, we know how the story ends.

Is your behavior watchful and sober? Are your hearts filled with love and faith? Your mind with hope? Do you have a new nature, a new behavior.


If you can answer those questions yes, then verses 9-11 tells us that we have a different destiny. 

Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Children of the Light (i)

I have a terrible confession to make. I’m one of those morning people. Maybe you’ve seen our kind on the way to work, at the drive though line, dropping your kids off at school It’s 730 and we’re smiling, the sun isn’t up yet, and we’re cheerful. What can i say? On behalf of all morning people, we’re sorry, and we’re trying to do better.

I love the mornings. Especially this time of the year when the sun is slowly coming up, and the colours are slowly changing. God is good to give us a world where we don’t just flick a switch and get daylight, but where changes comes slowly, and beautifully.

And we live in a world with lots of different shades don’t we? Different shades of political affiliation, hard Republican to hard Democrat and everywhere in between. We live in a world with different shades of sporting support, whether it’s red, or dark blue or purple and gold. We live in a world of varying shades of religious belief, from the atheist who claims to hate God, even though he doesn’t believe in him, to the pantheist, the polytheist, all the way to those of us here this morning, and all around the world who worship Jesus.

That example is an interesting one isn’t it? In 2014 we love to see religious belief as a spectrum, as a group of people on different paths up the same mountain. This is my truth, tell me yours. But the Bible makes clear than when it comes to Jesus there is  no grey, there is no spectrum, there is only black and white. There is only day and night. You’re either living in the daylight, or your living in the night-time. Psalm 107 describes people’s salvation as being brought out of darkness, Isaiah 9:2 tells us that when Jesus comes the people living in darkness will see a great light, In Luke 1:79 we’re told that Jesus has come to rescue those who sit in darkness. Jesus Himself said in John 8:12 ‘i am the light of the world.’

And we recognize these categories from our own experiences of life don’t we? We turn on the news and we see darkness abroad. Our brothers and sisters killed for their faith, whole countries torn apart by war. We see it on our own streets, it’s hard to watch the local news without hearing of another shooting, another break in. And most of all, we see it in our own hearts. When we’re lazy in BIble reading, when we’re slow in speaking for Jesus, when we skip church, we see this darkness in our hearts.

We’re either in the light, or we’re in darkness. On the last day, those two categories are all that will matter. Are you in the darkness, or are you in the light? Are you a sheep or a goat? That was part of the reason behind Paul writing this letter to the Thessalonians. He’d only been with them a short time, and they wanted some assurance from him that they hadn’t missed the day of the Lord, and that when it came, they were going to be ok. And we should want the same assurance ourselves shouldn’t we? We should want to know, more than anything else, that we live in the day, not in the night.
Paul gives us three ways we can know here.

First of all, in verses 4 and 5, we see that if we live in the day, we have a new nature. Read those with me. Christians aren’t people who just do things differently, Christians are different. Verse 4 tells us that we’re not in darkness. In the dark you stumble over things that would be harmless in the light, in the dark you don’t know where you’re going, you don’t know whose around you. In the dark you’re lost. Isn’t that a picture of us before our salvation. Enslaved to sin without even knowing it? Wandering around aimlessly, blindly, with no direction. We’re not in darkness anymore, so we desire to honour God, particularly when it comes to thinking about Christ’s return. If you’re in the dark, verse 4 tells us, that day will overtake you like a thief. Thieves work by surprise don’t they? They never send a note telling you they’re on their way! If we live in the dark, we’re not ready for Jesus to come back. He will surprise us, and there will be nothing we can do about it.


But, as verse 5 tells us, we are children of light. What a lovely phrase! We’re children, so we depend on the good care of our loving Father, and we’re in the light. We know where we’re going because the Bible lights our way. In our hearts there is no longer the darkness of sin, but the light of a new creation. Jesus has come and we see Him, and we love Him. He’s no longer boring or irrelevant, He’s beautiful to us, He’s life. We hang on His every word, we long to think His thoughts after Him, to follow His commands. We have been changed inside! CSL says that we believe in Jesus in the same way we believe in the noonday sun, not just because we see it, but because by it we see everything else. Is that your nature, your daytime nature, that you see everything by Christ?