Tag Archives: Spirit

What would Jesus Want You to Do (part 1)?

What would Jesus Want You to Do (part 1)?
August 05, 2000 Sermon by DRW Passage Ephesians

 

Question Yes No                                                                                Maybe(only 2)
1.  hang out with people who treat others badly
2.  hug a stranger who has AIDS
3.  cheat on a test to get a passing grade
4.  help a relative die who has a terminal illness
5.  stay at a party where people are drinking
6.  copy answers from a friend’s homework
7.  keep the money when the cashier gives you too much change
8.  smoke a cigarette
9.  lie to your parents
10.      speed to make it to school on time
11.      maintain sexual purity
12.      spread rumors about someone who hurt you
13.      lie for a friend to an authority figure
14.      be the first to talk to the new person in school
15.      date someone who doesn’t believe in God
16.      sneak out after curfew

Directions for chart:

Read off each statement, have the people place a check mark in the appropriate box. Let them know they can only have two maybe’s. Have them “take a stand” on an issue. Yes, they would do that or no, they would not. Only allow two maybes per person. The goal is for them to make a decision.

The trick about this is not telling them what you plan to do after you go through the entire list. After you read off the last item, you repeat the list with a different question. It’s no longer “what would you do,” but instead it is “what would Jesus want you to do?” At this point they will place a X to signify their answer. If it is the same, they can make their check into an X.

What did you notice about the marks you made? Were they the same in both cases or do you realize that you have to change a few things in your life to match the title of the sermon? This is why we ask this important question:

I.  What would Jesus Want You to Do?

A. A significant and answerable question because it is a

1.  Call to imitation (Ephesians 5.1)

The apostle Paul made this very commitment. He resolved to live his life for Jesus, no matter the cost or consequences. In Ephesians 5.1 he wrote, “Be ye therefore followers of God, as dear children.” The word for “followers” is μιμηταὶ. The word means to imitate and describes a mimic, an actor. True Christians are imitators of Christ. In Acts 11.26, it says the followers of Christ were “first called Christians at Antioch” because their lives, actions, values, and attitudes reminded unbelievers of Jesus Christ! He was their purpose for living. Paul thought he knew God until he met Jesus Christ. Jesus came to this earth to reveal God and redeem man. Paul met Jesus on the road to Damascus, confessed Him as Lord and Savior, and became a mimic, an imitator, a follower of Jesus!

The apostle Paul voices his commitment in Philippians 3.7-14. Paul says, “But what things were gain to me, those I counted loss for Christ. Yea doubtless, and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count them but dung, that I may win Christ, And 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 by faith: That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings, being made conformable unto His death; If by any means I might attain unto the resurrection of the dead. Not as though I had already attained, either were already perfect: but I follow after, if that I may lay hold of that for which also I was laid hold of by Christ Jesus. Brethren, I do not say that I have laid hold of it yet: but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.”

Here we can see that Paul had a passion for Jesus Christ. He wanted to be identified with Him, please Him, and live for Him. However, Paul also knew to do so was not easy. He had his own struggles in following Jesus. He surely would tell us that doing what Jesus would do, requires preparation. Here are four steps from Paul’s life, to consider as we make our own commitment to imitate Christ.

a.  Step One: LEARN the Scriptures for they speak of Christ, they include the words and deeds of Jesus Christ. In Philippians 3.10, Paul expressed the desire to know the Savior. He said, “That I may know Him.” How can we aspire to do what Jesus would do in every situation no matter what the cost or consequences, if we do not know Jesus?

They say that when you have been married for twenty five years, you begin to know what a spouse will say, think, respond, and feel about most everything! How does this happen? We get to know a person by spending time with that person, entering into the life of that person!

It’s the same with Jesus Christ. We must become disciples of Jesus, if we are going to do what He would do in each and every situation. A disciple is a student, a pupil. To know Jesus we must search the Scriptures, study the life of Jesus, the words of Jesus, the desire of Jesus, what made Him happy, what made Him sad, what made Him mad. It is more than putting on a shirt or bracelet. It is putting on a life!

1)  Came to meet people’s needs

a)  Luke 4.18-19; Isaiah 61

b) Bind the broken hearted

2)  Came to be a man for the valley

a)  Luke 9.37

b) Transfigurationneed to bo back down; Meet needs of people

3)  Came to be a servant

a)  Mark 10.45

b) John 13 (esp 12f)

c)  Stand along side of

b. Step Two: LISTEN to the Spirit of Christ within. Jesus speaks to His followers, not just through the written Word, but through His indwelling Spirit. The voice of the Holy Spirit, is also called the Spirit of Christ, because He always confirms the will of God and of Christ (John 14, 16).

Just as we tune in on a certain frequency to hear our favorite radio station, we must tune in on the voice of God, the Spirit of Christ within. Those who truly seek the Lord, His will, His way, will find Him!

1)  Prepared well for His valley engagements

a)  Luke 2.40ff-Listening/learning among the teachers

b) A process to prepare Him well for the valley (Hind’s Feet on High Places)

c)  Hebrews 10.24-25-We are a people of the assembly where we learn to be prepared

c.  Step Three: LEAN upon the supernatural, spiritual resurrection power of Christ. Paul wanted not only to know more of the person, Jesus Christ, but he wanted to know more of the power of the resurrected Christ. In Philippians 3.10 he says, “That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection.”

We do not possess the necessary power to face the opposition and live for Jesus. The power must come from the Holy Spirit of God within our hearts! Notice these verses. In 2 Corinthians 4.7 Paul says, “But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us.” Then in Romans 8.11-14 Paul says, “But if the Spirit of Him that raised up Jesus from the dead dwell in you, He that raised up Christ from the dead shall also quicken your mortal bodies by His Spirit that dwelleth in you. Therefore, brethren, we are debtors, not to the flesh, to live after the flesh. For if ye live after the flesh, ye shall die: but if ye through the Spirit do mortify the deeds of the body, ye shall live. For as many as are led by the Spirit of God, they are the sons of God.” We must remain connected to the power source of God’s Spirit!

1)  Placed Himself totally under His Father’s authority

a)  Hebrews 10.7-God-man in the valley for His Father

b) John 7.17

(1)     We have come as ambassadors of God, with His message, under His authority, proclaiming His love, grace, and word.

(2)     With authority, not as an authoritarian.

c)  Humble

d) Accountable

(1)     Not My will but Yours be done.

e) Direction

(1)     As He sought He healed

(2)     His intent to do His will (we are intended and created to do His will)

f)  Commitment

2)  Committed Himself completely to obeying God’s Word and following the leading of the Holy Spirit.

a)  God said it, I believe it, and that settles it (Billy Graham)

b) Luke 4.1ff

(1)     In the desert He was led and greatly tempted but overcame

(2)     “It is written”

c)  Ecclesiastes 12.9-11

(1)     Dependence on Him

(2)     Pray for guidance.

(3)     Take the Word of God and match it to the situation.

(4)     Powerful allies-the Word of God and the Spirit of God

d) 1 Kings 3

(1)     “Perspiring over the biblical text to find the verse that will meet the need of the hurting, the bruised, the broken.

d. Step Four: LOVE the Savior, Jesus Christ more than anything. Paul was willing to suffer to know Christ and follow Him. In Philippians 3.10 he concludes, “That I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection, and the fellowship of His sufferings, being made conformable unto His death.” Jesus said to be His disciples, His followers, we must “deny ourselves.” Sin is selfish, it is preoccupied with pleasing self, loving self over God and others. Self is our greatest obstacle to overcome, if we are to be like Christ.

Conclusion of WWJYD-part 1

Someone once wrote with sarcasm: “I would like to buy $3 worth of God, please. Not enough to explode my soul or disturb my sleep, but just enough to equal a cup of warm milk or a snooze in the sunshine. I don’t want enough of Him to make me love a black man or pick beets with a migrant. I want ecstasy, not transformation. I want the warmth of the womb not a new birth. I want about a pound of the eternal in a paper sack. I’d like to buy $3 worth of God, please.” How much of God do we want? How closely do we want to follow in Christ’s steps?

Do we want enough of God that we stop using our money, resources and time selfishly, and start using them to help others and build the kingdom of God?

Do we want enough of God that we develop a ravenous hunger for the Word and let all other priorities fall behind it?

Do we want enough of God that we become passionate about prayer instead of speaking to God in thoughtless, trite phrases when we want something?

Do we want enough of God that we give ourselves as humble servants to others?

Do we want enough of God that we learn to forgive those who hurt us, forgo bitterness, give up resentment, and if possible, make peace with our enemies?

Do we want enough of God that we develop His compassion and love for the most unlovely, that we lay aside our pharisaical, condescending attitudes and love all men with the passionate love of Christ?

How much do we want to follow “in His steps?” How serious are we about doing what Jesus would do? How much of God do we want? Three dollars?… Discipleship is far more than a What Would Jesus Do wristband. Jesus said in Luke 14.33 “So likewise, whosoever he be of you that forsaketh not all that he hath, he cannot be my disciple.”

 

Here are some questions to consider when answering WWJWYD?

1.  Would Jesus be saved? He IS salvation. Acts 4.12 “Neither is there salvation in any other: for there is none other name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be saved.

2.  Would Jesus be baptized? Jesus was baptized by John the Baptist to “fulfill all righteousness.”

3.  Would Jesus Join our Church? It was Jesus who said, “I will build my church.” Jesus established His church. He’s the head of the church.

4.  Would Jesus go out of His way for you or for someone else? He went to the cross for you and me.

5.  Would Jesus come to Sunday school or Wednesday night Bible Study? His habit was to worship .

6.  Would Jesus bring his friends to church? Jesus was the “friend of sinners.”

 

I realize what is going on in your minds right about now. You are thinking that there is a huge gap between doing what you are currently doing and doing what Jesus would want you to do. And do you know what that gap is? It’s called life. You leave here. It’s your job. It’s your parents. It’s piano practice. It’s school. It’s your boss with a last minute assignment. It’s your teacher with a Summer assignment. It’s paying the bills. It’s having to fix the computer after it has broke for the third time. It’s an argument with your sister. It’s life. And we meander through this life. And we get back to church the next Sunday and there’s the preacher telling us again that we need to be obedient and committed. And he just doesn’t understand all the things we have to do. I’m lucky if I get back here to get a little more of that presence of Christ.

So what are we to do with this gap? With this thing called life that sits in between the presence of Christ and our obedience to him? Well, what if we took the question what would Jesus want me to do? What if we took that question and instead of trying to fit it into our life or tag it onto the end of our life what if we put it at the beginning of our life right after the presence of Christ. What if after we left here that became the question that preceded everything we did? What if obedience came right after presence? And then life came after that?

Well, that’s not practical, you might say. And I would say yes. That would inform everything I do, you might say. And I would say yes. That would mean having to rearrange my whole life, you might say. And I would say yes. That would mean a whole new set of priorities, you might say. And I would say yeah, you’’re probably right.

Well I don’t know that I can do that. And that’s the real point, isn’t it? When the preacher calls for obedience we’re just not sure we can do it. And do you know what? We can’t. We don’t have it within us to be obedient. But here’s the good news. The Holy Spirit does. The Holy Spirit does have it within Him to be obedient. The Holy Spirit has it within Him to cause us to be obedient. And maybe the way by which we would avail ourselves to the Spirit is to simply commit ourselves to the daily and the hourly asking of the question. What would Jesus want us to do? What would Jesus do? And ask the Spirit to take over from there. It might just change things for you and me. they might wonder what we’re up to. They might just start calling us that obedient and committed church.

Is there something that is keeping you from doing what Jesus would want you to do? Can I pray for you? Write it out on the registration card. Would you like to talk with me about ways you can incorporate this into your life, to evaluate your life, so you can be freed from the worries of this life and be free to do what Jesus would want you to do? Please let me know on the registration card.

Let’s pray:

Father, here Your children gather to seek You, to know You better and to do Your will in this world. Some have come today seeking You, others have come out of habit, I pray that You have touched each person’s heart to desire to do Your will.

You know, people, the first step in doing what Jesus would do is to be saved. If you desire this, please raise your hand now and then write on your registration card that you have made that decision.

Speak to our Father today and ask Him to help you as you travel through life to be committed to Him. Ask Him for boldness to overcome the fear of failure, the fear of peers, the fear of letting go. He will. Father, help us to lead the obedient committed life You have created for us and have always intended for us to live.

Amen.


©2012 Teach for God Ministries. Used by Permission.

Permissions: You are permitted and encouraged to reproduce and distribute this material in any format provided that you do not alter the wording in any way and do not charge a fee beyond the cost of reproduction. For web posting, a link to this document on our website is preferred. Any exceptions to the above must be approved by Teach for God Ministries.

Please include the following statement on any distributed copy: By David R Williamson. ©2012 Teach for God Ministries. Website: www.teach4god.com

Psalm 51-I’m Not a Baboon, I’m a Child of God!

Dancing with Broken Bones-A Series on Psalm 51-I’m Not a Baboon, I’m a Child of God!
February 20, 1994 Sermon by DRW Passage Psalm 51.10-12

Introduction

Some of us feel like we have been trapped on a slot car set, like the one Pete got for his roommate—on the surface it appears as though we are going somewhere in life but underneath we know that scenery looks strangely familiar. Our lives can become like that—falling over the same sin, the same thing, we begin to see the rut our lives are beginning to cut, we watch as that rut becomes our lifestyle—its then we feel the paralysis, the erosion of life and joy,

At this point in our life is where we must make a choice: to continue in the rut, never to change or to allow God to change us and build upon that devastated past a new foundation in Jesus.

1.  We need to realize that we are desperate without God working within our lives.

1.  He has pardoned us from our sin, made us clean; but David know that wasn’t enough.

1.  We need a new heart.

2.  David know nothing less would do

2.  Today we have the technology to transplant hearts that will keep us alive for a few more years

1.  its usually the heart from a baboon

2.  but, I’m not a baboon, neither was David.

3.  David knew that what he needed was a new pure heart that could allow him

1.  not to re-enter his old passionate ways of sin

2.  but into the new passion of his God

2.  David got down to business.

1.  He became like Christ.

1.  In Luke we read that Jesus was on His final journey to Jerusalem and His death not with a hollow spirit but one with passion and determination:

2.  He set His eyes to Jerusalem.

2.  He was like Paul.

1.  There is a biography of Paul called “The Man of Steel”, for he was determined to pursue God’s righteousness alone (Philippians 3)

2.  and refused to be satisfied with the status quo.

We need these: Are you desperate for purity, do you thirst after it? Are you ready to get busy pursuing it?

Today, we will look at the seven consequences of sin and God’s way for us to overcome the sin in our life (we must realize that the consequences are still ours except by God’s grace He removes them).

2.  The Seven Consequences of Sin (7-12)

1.  Defilement (7)

1.  contamination

1.  levitical law requires those contaminated be withdrawn from the city

2.  as the leper, they couldn’t associate with clean people

3.  Jesus offers this in Matthew 8.1ff

2.  possible exclusion from worship (11)

2.  Deafness (8)

1.  one writer puts it this way:

He had become deaf to the voice of God, deaf to all sounds of joy. Once he had been able to take his harp and make the halls of his palace ring with joy and gladness. No more! (Phillips, 91)

2.  illustration of me and my guitar (I play when I am in fellowship with God)

3.  He had no way to regain that song except in restoration of fellowship with God that is found in

1.  repentance

2.  and forgiveness

3.  Disgrace (9)

1.  There is always shame and disgrace associated with sin

*   the criminal brought to the courthouse will cover his face

2.  David’s sense of disgrace went far deeper than that. He was not just ashamed of what man might thing; he was ashamed that he had been seen by God (Phillips, 92).

1.  1 John 3.1-3

2.  Like Jonah, he wanted to run and hide; but like Jonah, he knew he couldn’t

4.  Damage (10)

1.  barah

1.  Genesis 1.1

2.  to create absolutely, supernaturally, to make something out of nothing. David wanted a new heart. He did not just want to have the old one changed. If he was to be kept from sinning in the future, a radical work needed to be done in his soul. As Jesus would later put it to Nicodemus, he needed to be born again, to be recreated. The word bara implies all that. The word describes the creative activity of God which brings something out of nothing. It was not just restoration David wanted, he wanted regeneration. He wanted a new, clean heart (Phillips, 92).

2.  David knew that a pardon was good but not complete. He needed the radical change that God would bring through Jesus Christ or else his future would be a mere repetition of the past.

5.  Doom (11)

1.  David had seen Saul become the tormented victim of an evil spirit. David was afraid that this might happen to him.

2.  The Holy Spirit

1.  The OT shows us that the Holy Spirit set upon people and left after the work was completed or sin had interfered.

2.  The NT shows us that the Holy Spirit has been given to indwell permanently God’s people (John 14.16-17)

3.  Being cast away from His presence

1.  a true consequence of sin is not being allowed into God’s throne room because of the unrepentant, unconfessed sin

2.  today this is visually seen in Matthew 18 and the loss of fellowship with God’s Body

6.  Depression (12a)

1.  Much of the depression in the lives of Christians today is caused by sin. It may be flagrant sin, hidden away somewhere in the past, gnawing away at the conscience. It may be something spitefully said, some fit of temper indulged, or some lie told. Sin causes depression (Phillips, 93).

2.  Much freedom is gained through confession to God of these sins.

1.  John Gibson’s song that says: “He’s the only free psychiatrist, that is known throughout the land.”

2.  Cast your cares upon Him, for He cares for you (1 Peter 5)

3.  Today, we can’t lose our salvation but we certainly can lose the joy of our salvation and this is a cause for depression and rejection among Christians

*   willful, unconfessed sin

7.  Defeat (12b)

1.  the sin-repent-sin cycle had to be broken

1.  remember the slot car life we tend to feed

2.  the only way out is Jesus

2.  This requires perseverance and willingness to allow God to work in and through us.

Do you see the desperate strait the consequences of sin bring our way? This would be our lot if God didn’t do something about it. He did, He gave those who believe in Him a new heart.

3.  A New Heart (10-12)

These three verses are verses of intense emotion. Verses that tell us a little bit about the new heart we received when we accepted the love of God in Christ Jesus. It is not the heart of a baboon but of a loving God.

This new heart David asks for is promised to God’s people in Ezekiel 11.19 and 36.26.

I like what Spurgeon had to say about verse 10:

What! has sin so destroyed us that the Creator must be called in again? What ruin then doth evil work among mankind! Create in me. I, in my outward fabric, still exist; but I am empty, desert, void. Come, then, and let Thy power be seen in a new creation within my old fallen self. Thou didst make a man in the world at first; Lord, make a new man in me.

In the seventh verse he asked to be clean; now he seeks a heart suitable to that cleanliness; but he does not say, “Make my old heart clean”; he is too experienced in the hopelessness of the old nature. He would have the old man buried as a dead thing, and a new creation brought in to fill its place (240).

Jesus death, burial, and resurrection, what we commonly summarize in the word “blood”, granted us the promise of Ezekiel and the desire of David’s heart. He doesn’t give us a transformation but a totally new creation (2 Corinthians 5.17).

Why? Ezekiel 11.20 and 36.27 tell us to enable us to follow Him, to get us out of the rut and into God. Romans 1.16 tells us the Gospel, our salvation, is His power for our lives. Philippians 2.12-13 tells us it is God who works in us to do His work through us. It was done to give us a single mind to follow Jesus (Matthew 6.33).

This new heart He has given us is characterized by three manifestations:

1.  A Steadfast Spirit (10)

1.  this is to persevere through life

1.  Romans 5.3-4

2.  James 1.2-4

3.  perseverance is one reason Paul was Paul, Martin Luther was Martin Luther, and Billy Graham is Billy Graham

2.  not a burning out but a shining forth

1.  Dunker Days of Glory, Seasons of Night

2.  Philippians 3.14-16

3.  One writer comments on this:

Blessed is the person who wants growth so badly that he refuses to shrink from the process that produces it. David wanted grace that could not only weather fierce storms but also bring stability into a life tossed with guilt, regrets, and fear of discovery. Sin fractures our ability to last, to resist the beetles that chew on our lives through unending petty aggravations and mundane routine. Then, when the pressures intensify, the beams of our soul no longer stand the strain. We collapse. That’s why David coveted a steadfast spirit more than gold (Swartz, 1990).

4.  The result of this is the eagle who is able to soar above the gales that blow because he used them to bring him above them.

2.  The Indwelling Holy Spirit (11)

1.  A scary truth is we know more about the Holy Spirit today than David ever did, but we seldom hear this intense cry from our mouths.

Perhaps we know more truth about the Spirit’s working, but David might have known more about the reality of His power. In quiet moments, he felt the loss and grieved over the alienation and blindness covering him like a shroud. Sadly, we often do not. Many times we are so confident of the indwelling presence of the Spirit, which cannot be taken from true Christians, that we forget that the Holy Spirit can be held back by our failure to yield to His guidance (Swartz, 1990).

2.  We are to yield to the Spirit of God by being obedient in what the Word of God has commanded us and therein giving glory to God if we don’t we grieve the Holy Spirit.

The evidence is that He is regretfully compelled to withdraw His gracious influence and working, and His grief is reflected in the gloom and heaviness of the estranged heart (Sanders, 1970).

3.  The life of the new heart manifests the gifts and the workings of the Holy Spirit to the glory of Christ Jesus.

3.  A Willing Spirit (12)

1.  Too often today we would rather surrender to God on our own terms rather than His

1.  the WW II movie where the tattered army tells its victors that they will surrender on their terms

1.  “We have come to negotiate the terms of surrender.”

2.  “You will surrender unconditionally, and here are the terms . . .”

2.  One writer states:

That’s so much like us isn’t it? Modern man demands the right to dicker, barter, or negotiate with God, who demands unconditional surrender. David sought a willing, renewed spirit. Knowing that a guilty man has nothing to negotiate with, David longed for the kind of perpetual inner kneeling that would receive mercy gratefully and render obedience ungrudgingly (Swartz, 85).

2.  The evidence of a willing spirit? obedience to God seen through obedience at:

1.  home (Ephesians 6)

2.  school (2 Timothy 2.15)

3.  everywhere we need to show unconditional obedience to the One who seeks the best for our souls.

If this is our life, steadfast, yielded and obedient we will become a beautiful tapestry for God where He will receive glory for our new heart; if not we will act like we have a baboon’s heart within us and not give glory to God but look foolish in His sight.

We have been given a new heart. This new heart is changing us daily from one glory to God to the next (2 Corinthians 3.18; 4.16-18).

Is this you, even in the consequences of your sin, do you hold steadfast, allowing God’s Spirit to work in you, and willingly giving your all to follow Him? He will take these people to new heights in victory, as the eagle soars, and to new heights in blessings for these are them that seek after Him.

During these next few moments, take the time to reflect on the condition of your heart. Do you lack these things, ask God to restore them to you. If there is sin that blocks you, confess it and repent of it. After you have spent a moment in prayer for yourself turn to your neighbours and pray for them.

Father,

We thank You for the new creation that we are in Your Son Jesus Christ. We ask now that we will have His character renewed in us. We pray that we will give you the glory for the work You do in our lives. We pray Father that we may see Your Spirit at work within us changing us daily. Be glorified now in Your Bride, Your Body. Amen.

Please Stand:

Now to Him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and to make you stand in the presence of His glory blameless with great joy, to the only God our Saviour, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion and authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen.


©2012 Teach for God Ministries. Used by Permission.

Permissions: You are permitted and encouraged to reproduce and distribute this material in any format provided that you do not alter the wording in any way and do not charge a fee beyond the cost of reproduction. For web posting, a link to this document on our website is preferred. Any exceptions to the above must be approved by Teach for God Ministries.

Please include the following statement on any distributed copy: By David R Williamson. ©2012 Teach for God Ministries. Website: www.teach4god.com