In this episode Brother Jonathan talks about pleading for truth, what the scriptures say about truth, the importance of pleading for truth, his testimony of correction on this matter, the Holy Spirit as the spirit of truth, why are people unwilling to be corrected, are we to continue seeking for truth after we've been converted, the question "doesn't the bible have multiple interpretations", answering a matter before you examine it is condemned in scripture, and grieving the Spirit of God.
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Pleading for
Truth
Remnant Bible
Fellowship
Episode 21
I.
Introduction
II.
What’s
done with the truth:
a. Serve God in truth (Josh. 24:14) with all
your heart (1 Sam. 12:24) and with all your soul (1 Ki. 2:4)
b. Walk before God in truth (1 Ki. 3:6)
c. Speak the truth in your heart (Psa. 15:2)
d. Be lead in God’s truth (Psa. 25:5)
e. Declare truth (Psa. 30:9)
f.
Be
preserved by truth (Psa. 40:11)
g. Desire truth in your inward parts (Psa.
51:6)
h. God’s truth is your shield and buckler
(Psa. 91:4)
i.
You
will be judged by God’s truth (Psa. 96:13)
j.
Choose
the way of truth (Psa. 119:30)
k. Call upon God in truth (Psa. 145:18)
l.
(by
mercy) and truth iniquity is purged (Pro. 16:6)
m. We are to plead for truth (Isa. 59:4)
n. It is to be sought (Jer. 5:1)
o. We ought to be valiant for the truth
(Jer. 9:3)
p. It is to be understood (Dan. 9:13)
q. It’s to be loved (Zech. 8:19)
r. We must “do” the truth (John 3:21)
s. Worship God in truth (John 4:23)
t.
Bare
witness to the truth (Jn. 5:33)
u. Truth makes you free (Jn. 8:32)
v. Abide in the truth (Jn. 8:44)
w. Jesus is the truth (Jn. 14:6)
x. The Holy Spirit of God is the spirit of
truth (Jn. 15:26; 16:13) who will lead believers into all truth (16:13)
y. The Word of God is truth (Jn. 17:17)
z. We are sanctified through the truth (Jn.
17:17, 19)
aa. The wicked hold, or suppress, the truth
in unrighteousness (Rom. 1:18)
bb. The wicked change the truth of God (Rom.
1:25)
cc. Truth is to be obeyed (Rom. 2:8)
dd. Truth is to be rejoiced in (1 Cor. 13:6)
ee. Being sealed with the spirit is
contingent on you hearing and believing the truth (Eph. 1:13)—It is a condition
of the seal of the Spirit. Violate the condition and lose the Spirit of God.
ff. The truth is in Jesus (Eph. 4:21)
gg. The fruit of the spirit is in all truth
(Eph. 5:9)
hh. Gird your loins with truth (Eph. 6:14)
ii. You must receive the love of the truth (2
The. 2:10)
jj. It’s to be believed (2 The. 2:12)
kk. God has chosen us, in Christ, through the
belief of the truth (2 The. 2:13)
ll. The church is the pillar and ground of
the truth (1 Tim. 3:15)
mm.
False
prophets are destitute of the truth (1 Tim. 6:5)
nn. The truth is to be rightly divided (2
Tim. 2:15)
oo. You can err from the truth (2 Tim. 2:18)
pp. You can be ever learning and never able to
come to knowledge of the truth (2 Tim. 3:7)
qq. You can resist the truth (2 Tim. 3:8)
rr. The acknowledging of the truth is after
godliness (Tit. 1:1)
ss. You are to receive the knowledge of the
truth (Heb. 10:26)
tt. Believers are begotten of God by the word
of truth (Jas. 1:18)
uu. You can lie against the truth (Jas. 3:14)
vv. Purify your souls in obeying the truth (1
Pet. 1:22)
ww.
The
truth is in not in those who don’t acknowledge and confess their sin (1 Jn.
1:8)
xx. The truth is not in those that do not
obey God’s commandments (1 Jn. 2:4)
yy. The anointing that believers receive of
God is truth (1 Jn. 2:27)
zz. The Spirit is truth (1 Jn. 5:6)
aaa.
Love
in the truth (2 Jn. 1:1)
bbb.
We
can be fellowhelpers to the truth (3 Jn.
1:8)
III.
The
Importance of Pleading for Truth
a. As you consider that lengthy list of
things having to do with truth in the scriptures it is quite a sobering thing.
This alone should show you the importance of pleading for truth.
b. Many people quote Acts 17:11, which says,
“These were more noble than those in Thessalonica, in that they received the
word with all readiness of mind, and searched the scriptures daily, whether
those things were so.” Few people though seem to understand that just as the
Bereans’ searching the scriptures was good to lead them to salvation, even so,
after salvation all of us are to continue in the same mindset of examining all
things by the word of God.
c. The Lord said through Isaiah the prophet
that in Israel at the time there was none that called for justice or any that
were pleading for truth. Many newer translations render the words with a little
less force, in my opinion. I don’t believe that it’s just a passing reference
to bad court practices by people.
d. In addition to Isaiah 59:4, in Jeremiah
5:1 it says, “Run ye to and fro through the streets of Jerusalem, and see now,
and know, and seek in the broad places thereof, if ye can find a man, if there
be any that executeth judgment, that seeketh the truth; and I will pardon it.”
The Lord here valued a man who sought after truth so much that He offered
pardon if the prophet could find one such man in Jerusalem.
e. The Lord delights in those who plead and
seek after truth. Too many people in professing Christianity today have no
understanding of what it is to plead for truth. It is a mindset, and an
uprightness of heart, that values and desires what is true above all else. It
abhors error and lying vanities, and the scripture tells us that no lie is of
the truth.
IV.
My
Testimony
a. My grounding in the faith was in the
Independent Fundamental Baptist movement—I have since left that denomination. I
was deeply grounded in their doctrines, and I even attended a Bible Institute,
and later I briefly attended a Bible College. All these were IFB in their
statements of faith. If I am to be plain and honest, I value very little of anything
that I was taught in these years. One thing I do though, I was taught that the
scriptures were the only valid authority for a Christian; and though many
groups profess the same thing, in practice they deny it. Every other supposed
authority derives their delegated authority only as far as they are in
agreement with the true authority of God’s Word. Everything, person, preacher,
doctrine, practice, desire, etc., is to be examined by the authority of God’s
Word. If it isn’t then it has replaced that God’s Word with itself.
b. Now the entire time I was in the IFB
movement I was continually praying for God to teach me His truth. I wanted
whatever God’s truth was—the problem was that in my mind I esteemed
Fundamentalist doctrine to be synonymous with the truth. You see, whatever you
hold to be your ultimate standard of truth is what you examine all other things
by. This is why many people say, at least in their hearts, “Well I know that
isn’t true because it doesn’t line up with what I’ve been taught.” And that
thought takes many different forms.
c. The proper biblical standard of truth,
and therefore the proper biblical mindset, is that God is true and His Word is
true. God cannot even conceive of a lie we’re told in Titus 1:2, therefore
whatever God does, says, and is, is absolutely true. Since the Lord does not
change, as He is the same from everlasting to everlasting, neither does truth
change. It is not different between people or situations. There is no such
thing as “situational ethics” where lying may be appropriate at a certain time
in a certain place. If that were true then God could not say that all liars
shall be cast into the lake of fire. A lie is a lie regardless of the intended
purpose of its use—because the intended purpose is intentional deception.
d. Neither can God say something through His
Spirit that contradicts His written Word, when it is taken in context
appropriately. God cannot contradict Himself, He is truth and the source of it.
If He were to contradict Himself in any way He would be speaking an un-truth…a
lie. The Lord cannot do this, and neither can those who themselves are
partakers of His nature through Jesus Christ.
e. But…after “x” number of years in this
movement, through a series of events, I was provoked to go back and examine my
doctrine. Not because I believed I was wrong, but because I saw that I had been
unwilling to be corrected. IFB doctrine had been esteemed in my mind to be
synonymous with truth and right doctrine so therefore it had never been
examined by me. I saw the error in this and settled in my mind that though I
believed I was correct in my doctrine I wanted to strictly go through the
scriptures without presupposing anything and come to an understanding of
Biblical doctrine. What could possibly go wrong with prayer, a willing mind for
God’s instruction, and the study of the scriptures?
f.
What
followed, very quickly I might add, was a very difficult correction. I
consistently was seeing fallacies in my reasoning, errors of plain
interpretation, errors of grammatical interpretation, things had been assumed
as true that had never been proven, conclusions I had assumed to be true that
did not follow the reasons that had been given to me. After a certain doctrinal
question in particular I was so grieved that I almost couldn’t stop crying for
3 days. I would go to work and as soon as I would walk in I would just start
crying. People could see it on my face and would pull me aside and say, “What’s
wrong with you?”
g. I was so unsettled in my mind and spirit
towards the Lord because I realized that I had taught and preached before to
people these things in Jesus’ name. I had put words, doctrines or teachings,
into God’s mouth that He neither said nor intended. These things were so
clearly not taught in the scriptures that the only mind that could receive them
was either unconverted or unconcerned with the truth. That is a dangerous place
to be. I had been unconcerned enough with truth to examine these things. I had
not been willing to be corrected, and so therefore I never was.
V.
The
Spirit of Truth
a. In John 14 we read, “If ye love me, keep
my commandments. And I will pray the Father, and he shall give you another
Comforter, that he may abide with you for ever; Even the Spirit of truth; whom
the world cannot receive, because it seeth him not, neither knoweth him: but ye
know him; for he dwelleth with you, and shall be in you… But the Comforter,
which is the Holy Ghost, whom the Father will send in my name, he shall teach
you all things, and bring all things to your remembrance, whatsoever I have
said unto you.” (John 14:15-17, 26)
b. And in John 15:26 we read, “But when the
Comforter is come, whom I will send unto you from the Father, even the Spirit
of truth, which proceedeth from the Father, he shall testify of me:” (John
15:26)
c. And again in 1 John 5:6 we read, “This is
he that came by water and blood, even Jesus Christ; not by water only, but by
water and blood. And it is the Spirit that beareth witness, because the Spirit
is truth.” (1 John 5:6)
d. The Spirit of God, the spirit that a
Christian is born of, is called the Spirit of Truth. We are told by the Lord
Jesus that He teaches us the truth and shall guide us into all truth. What then
can explain to us the reason why we have so many denominations that contradict
each other? I think I can tell you.
e. In John we read, “If any man will do his
will, he shall know of the doctrine, whether it be of God, or whether I speak
of myself.” (John 7:17) Now the immediate application of this is directly to
Christ’s teaching while He was ministering on the earth and people were
examining His doctrine if it was true.
f.
But
there is a principle very clearly laid down here: there must be a willing mind
in the person before they will receive instruction and discernment. People too
many times trust in intuition or feelings and say things like, “As soon as you
said that it greatly troubled my spirit,” or, “that doesn’t sit well with me.”
While these things are not necessarily wrong in and of themselves, unless there
is a SCRIPTURAL reason for these feelings it is foolishness. All conviction of
sin and correction will make you feel uncomfortable. The question is whether or
not the charge is correct and biblical.
g. I can count on one hand the number of
teachers, preachers, pastors, etc., that I have ever heard actually express a
true willingness to be corrected. I say a TRUE willingness to be corrected.
Many say that they will believe anything the Bible says but as soon as you
point something out you receive hostility. You’ve threatened their pride,
reputation, and the safe little kingdom of “their” ministry, by your desire for
them to search the scriptures whether these things are so.
VI.
Why
is it so difficult for people to be willing to be corrected?
a. Now why is that the case? Why is it such
a difficult thing for people to maintain a desire for truth? I believe I
understand a few reasons why it is so:
i.
People
seek comfort. Nowadays it’s very easy to join a church somewhere, get involved,
feel the sense of community and belonging, and feel satisfied. Happy, fat, and
lazy; without a care in the world. Keep up the status quo because it keeps us
comfortable. This is completely contrary to the Acts church. They were
constantly examining things, provoking unto greater love and holiness, denying
themselves, giving up any claim to the right of a good reputation in the sight
of men, and giving up any claim to control of their lives. They were constantly
stretching themselves forth to please God more, and to be more zealous for His
name and His gospel, to be more zealous for the truth. That is the exact
opposite of the maxim today of, “sit back, relax, and enjoy your salvation.”
ii.
People
want to be nice people or good people in the sight of the world, instead of desiring
to be godly and holy people. You will find today an insatiable desire to not
rock the boat. Church is done today to maintain church, not to glorify God.
People want community instead of what the Bible proclaims: persecution. I’m
guilty of it just as much as anyone else. We naturally want to avoid trouble.
In the world, Christ said, you will have it if you follow Him. The only way to
avoid trouble, and to be perceived as just a nice person, is to not follow
Jesus wholly. It’s not a buffet, and you can’t pick which commandments or
conditions of discipleship you want to act on. Jesus is the truth He said, and
it’s either all of it or none of it. You must understand God has called
Christians to be holy, not just nice. Not just good people. You see, because a
nice person is not going to chase people out of the temple with a scourge of
cords—but Jesus did. He was zealous for the truth of God’s name and person, and
it moved Him to defend it.
iii.
I
believe that all of these flow out of the same vein, which is pride; and I
believe a strongly contributing factor is because they don’t want to be alone.
We’ve been deceived today into the mindset that if you’re alone you’re wrong.
That’s not what the Bible says. While we are a body of believers, we’re told
that we are still members in particular. That is, we are still individuals.
There comes a point of apostasy and sin that is necessary to separate from. I
believe many churches have passed this point already, and it follows from
having no real desire for the truth of God. Many ministers are unwilling to
examine things that they might have taught for 25 years. That’s because they’ve
exalted their ministry above God’s Word. They care more for their reputations
than to please God. That’s why I have so much respect for the boldness of the
ones who do receive correction. That’s a man, and ministry, that is founded
truly in delighting in God. That’s a man who is walking in the Spirit of truth.
VII.
Why
are we to seek for truth after already having been converted?
a. Someone might think that since they’ve
been converted and have already turned from sin to follow Christ that they have
no need to seek for truth anymore. “God will tell me if I’m wrong” because “if
I be otherwise minded he shall make it known unto me.” All things being equal
that would be true. But those who say such things assume one thing: that
they’re listening.
b. How is it exactly that God is going to
make known to you that you are in error? A voice? That’s dangerous. Any spirit
can speak to you in a still small voice. How do you know its God. You’re told
to test the spirits if they are of God. By what? By that which God has already
said. Truth is consistent and in unity.
c. Christ told the Pharisees to search the
scriptures because they were that which testified of Him. Paul said the Bereans
were more noble because they examined his words in light of scripture. I’ve
talked a lot about this in other episodes so I won’t go in-depth now.
d. The reason that we’re supposed to keep
seeking truth is because truth is something that is acted on. It is something
that is to be understood, learned, and taught. Any time there is information or
principles that must be acted on, understood, learned, or taught, then there is
the chance of corruption and error. And since it is your mind that is to
understand these things and act upon them you must acknowledge that you are
fallible.
e. You are not complete in your
understanding of the Bible, doctrine, or God. And again, every Christian will
admit that, but very few act like it. You are fallible. You make mistakes just
like me. God is infallible. He never makes mistakes. So which is going to be
your ultimate standard of truth, God or man? It could be any man, or even a
group of people. A church is nothing more than a group of fallible people. A pastor,
teacher, preacher, evangelist, commentator, whatever, is nothing more than a
man. That’s why every one of these people, or groups of people, are to be
examined by that which is infallible.
f.
To
not be examining all these people by God’s Word is to exalt them over God. This
is exactly what Christ told the Pharisees. He said, “But in vain they do
worship me, teaching for doctrines the commandments of men.” (Matthew 15:9)
This is exactly what we do in churches nowadays. People don’t search the
scriptures to see if what their pastor or church doctrines are what the Bible
actually says. We’re taught to be immoveable stones for our church or
denomination, and that’s wrong. We are to be immoveable servants of Christ, and
those two things are not synonymous.
g. I really challenge you to examine your
thought processes when you read the scriptures, study them, or listen to your
favorite teacher or minister: are you really testing them? Or is it that you
are just receiving what they’re saying?
VIII. Aren’t their multiple interpretations?
a. At this point I’ll address a very common
argument that comes up. People often say, “But the Bible can be interpreted any
number of ways.” That’s true. Any written document can be interpreted any
number of ways. This kind of philosophy is called “deconstructionism.” And I’ll
tell you right now…it’s ridiculous. Someone who actually holds to
deconstructionism is someone who really just doesn’t want to have be morally
bound by anything, especially not God.
b. Regarding this viewpoint, Dr. Jason Lisle
says:
i.
“A
given text has an unlimited number of potential interpretations, but it has
only one meaning. Thus, it is reasonable for us to define the term ‘correct
interpretation’ as ‘the interpretation that matches the meaning of a text’—the
one that is faithful to the author’s intention. All other interpretations will
be ‘faulty’—that is, they are not true to what the passage means. Since
communication involves the transmission of an idea, and since communication is
only achieved when the recipient understands the meaning, it follows that only
a correct interpretation of a text accomplishes genuine communication. Anything
else is merely introspection.” (Lisle, Understanding
Genesis, p. 29)
c. The fact of the matter is that though a
passage can be interpreted any number of ways it has, by necessity of its
design, only one correct interpretation: the one the author intended to convey
to the reader. We are not free to say, “What does that verse mean to you?” I
really don’t care what it means to you, what does it mean to God? The correct
interpretation of the scripture will always be constrained by the rules of
grammar, logical consistency, and the proper historical context. Let me briefly
state why I chiefly mention these three things:
i.
Grammar
is important because God chose language to convey His intended message and
commandments to men. “Holy men of God spake as they were moved by the Holy
Spirit” Peter said. Since it is then God the Spirit speaking through men, and
directing what they had written, grammar would then be expected to be followed
accurately. When this is violated in interpreting scripture you get such
results as the “now faith” movement.
ii.
Logic
is important because God does not make any errors in reasoning. All true wisdom
and understanding come from Him. Some people believe that the study of logic is
a science man created, and this shows that they have never actually looked into
the matter. Logic is the science of reasoning; it’s not rhetoric or homiletics.
It is a science that was developed by observing things ordering things in a
consistent manner so as to lead to a conclusion that follows properly from the
arguments presented. If there is one thing that I wish would be required for
all pastors, teachers, evangelists, and missionaries, it would be that they
studied at least basic logic. Most false interpretations would be cleared up
quickly in their minds if they actually applied them. Sadly though, even most
of the men who have studied it don’t actually apply it to their own doctrine.
iii.
A
proper historical context is absolutely necessary for understanding the Bible
for a number of reasons. Some people take phrases like “Holy Ghost” and they
look up in a modern dictionary the words. They see that ghost has something
more to do with a spirit of a dead person. Then they say, “See, this Bible
version is endorsing necromancy and teaching that God is dead!” Do you see the
error? That’s a real example of someone’s bad bible study practices that I
found on Youtube. You must interpret things first in their proper historical
context. You see, if that person had simply checked to see how the word “ghost”
was defined at the time it was written then they would have seen that it was
merely synonymous with the word “spirit”. There are specific customs, cultural
practices, terms, and figures of speech that were used in time past that if we
interpret in modern terms would lead to foolishness. I’ve seen a History
channel special try to say that the early Christians might have had some
homosexual ceremony before because of ridiculous practices like this.
d. Perhaps at another time I’ll do a series
on Bible interpretation and study practices, but for right now you should get
the basic idea that a lot of times people misinterpret the Bible because they
don’t actually know what they’re doing. Even a well-meaning believer can do
great damage because they don’t have the tools to understand their Bible. Some
denominations, such as the one left, almost come to point of refusing to allow
you to use such things. The reason being because if you did learn them you
would probably see the error of the entire denominations statement of faith
pretty quickly.
e. But just remember this before we move on,
if you hold fast to the true biblical mindset that God is true and His word is
true then you will be more concerned with correctly interpreting it. You will
be more motivated to understand the Bible’s truth than for preserving a
reputation, a denomination, or a church ministry. Let all those things be cast
away if they get in the way of you staying true to God’s Word.
IX.
One
last thing
a. Unfortunately I can’t spend endless time
going into things. But I would like to point out one very important verse
clearly before wrapping things up. Proverbs 18:13 says, “He that answereth a
matter before he heareth it, it is folly and shame unto him.” You see in that
verse is the majority of people who profess Christ. They don’t really want
what’s true, they just want community or comfort.
b. If you want what’s true, if you plead for
truth and seek it, then anytime someone comes to you and says, “You know you’re
doing this or believing that and it’s contrary to the Bible,” then your
response is not a dismissive, “Well that’s your interpretation.” It’s not,
“Well I’m glad that works for you and that the Lord has led you that way but
it’s not what works for me.”
c. Do you understand that in those
statements is a denial of God’s very unchanging nature? Do you realize that it
denies that God has given us His word to be our plumbline and our guide? The
Psalmist didn’t write, “Thy word is a lamp unto my feet and a light unto my
path…unless its contrary to what I want or believe.” Proverbs 23:23 says, “Buy
the truth, and sell it not; also wisdom, and instruction, and understanding.”
d. You see people may say that they don’t
know everything but they act like it. Especially church people. Especially
pastors, preachers, and teachers. I’m not trying to just be insulting but I’m
just stating a fact. They answer a matter before they hear it. If you try to
talk to people with this mindset at the best you get a quiet little nod and a
smile on their face that says, “Oh poor little soul that has no understanding.”
You know why I can say that’s exactly what’s going through their head? It’s
because that’s why my mindset used to be. I learned it from them. Most people
sincerely believe it too.
e. They think that they’ve got a handle on
the scriptures because they read so-and-so’s book on the subject whose book is
sold through CBD so they’ve got it. They heard that series of sermons their
pastor did so they got it. They went through a discipleship program so they got
it. They went to Bible College so they got it. Let me relate an encounter I had
some months ago to you, and this might make some people who are listening to
stop listening. And before I relate it to you let me tell you that the proper
response to a challenge of your doctrinal beliefs is not, “Well he’s wrong,”
it’s, “Why does he believe that, and is he right?”
f.
But
some months ago I was at work—I work in a big postal facility. A certain older
fellow who had been through 4 years of Bible College of the denomination that I
had left was working next to me. Now, I had intentionally been trying to avoid
certain subjects because I don’t go looking for an argument usually…usually.
This fellow, who is a very nice guy I’m not saying that the guy is someone you
can’t get along with, he asked me the one question that I did not want to have
a conversation about. He saw that I carried my Bible around, and he ascertained
that I was someone who desired to study and understand things so he naturally
would ask what I thought this or that. He just never got a normal churchgoer
response from me. But the question that he asked me was, “Do you believe in
eternal security?”
g. What then ensued was 45 minutes of me
trying to do my work while this fellow grilled me with arguments and reasons
why it was true. What he was unaware of was the fact that I had once believed
the doctrine much deeper than him and had been taught it better than him. I
had, at that point, spent about 4 years studying out the issue from beginning
to end and had quite simply reduced the arguments and supposed supports for the
doctrine to nothing. He would give a small lecture or reason and I would refute
it with a verse of scripture and a sentence. He would do another small lecture
and reason, and I would do the same. Well, after about 45 minutes of this he
stopped talking and was quiet for a minute. Then he looked me right in the eyes
and said very soberly, “If that’s true…then it makes me very afraid.” I looked
him right in the eyes and replied very calmly, “It’s supposed to.”
h. Now do you think I made a lasting
impression on him? Not really. You see, in the entire conversation there was
not a single moment where he expressed a real desire to simply just be in the
truth. What I have found is that most people who are backed into a corner by
the scriptures, and they come to the point where they don’t have any more
reasons to give…they simply just keep believing what they want anyways. Now can
I ask you a question? Are you listening to what I’m saying and turning it over
in your mind, or are you stuck thinking “he’s wrong about eternal security
being unbiblical.” Are you seeking truth, or just what keeps you comfortable?
X.
Grieving
the Spirit
a. Before I end this episode let me point
out something from the scriptures regarding truth. I went over the passage in
John 14 and 15 earlier where the Spirit of God is called by Jesus Christ the
Spirit of Truth who will lead believers into all truth. If the Spirit of God is
the Spirit of truth, who teaches believers the truth, leads us into all truth,
and as John said in 1 John 5:6 He IS truth…what do you think happens when you
refuse to be corrected?
b. Consider these verses: “And grieve not
the holy Spirit of God, whereby ye are sealed unto the day of redemption.”
(Eph. 4:30) See, most people pay attention to only part of this verse. The
question that came to my mind was why we are not to grieve Him, and upon what
conditions was I sealed. You see all promises of God are conditional. Salvation
is conditioned upon your exercising faith in God. If salvation wasn’t
conditional then it would universal because there would no distinguishing
between why should be saved and another shouldn’t be.
c. So when is a believer sealed with the
Spirit of God and upon what conditions? Well, thankfully, Paul answered that
question. In Ephesians 1:13 we read, “In whom ye also trusted, after that ye
heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation: in whom also after that
ye believed, ye were sealed with that holy Spirit of promise…” and in 2
Thessalonians 2:13 we read, “But we are bound to give thanks alway to God for
you, brethren beloved of the Lord, because God hath from the beginning chosen
you to salvation through sanctification of the Spirit and belief of the truth.”
d. What we see here is that after you hear
the truth, and believe it, you are sealed with the Spirit of God, the spirit of
truth. It is because you believe the truth that you are sealed with the spirit
of God. Some people try to say that it is just the gospel that is being
referenced ultimately. Well let’s consider some things:
i.
Paul
said the Galatians had been removed from Christ unto another Gospel (Gal. 1:6)
and that they had ceased to obey the truth (Gal. 3:1; 5:7) the result being
that they had fallen from grace (Gal. 5:4). And it is not just saying that they
lost their blessing from God because it specifically states that Christ was
become of no effect unto them. Christ’s sacrifice was no longer applicable to
them as long as they continued believing a false teaching about salvation.
ii.
In 2
Timothy 2:18 Paul said, “Who concerning the truth have erred, saying that the
resurrection is past already; and overthrow the faith of some.” The Greek word
for “overthrow” here is “anatrepo”, meaning, “to cause something to fall or be
overturned.” What happens when a court verdict is overturned? It’s reversed and
undone. Did you know that the term “justification” is a legal term? Here Paul
is saying that your state before God can be overthrown, overturned, reversed,
undone by believing a false teaching. This one Paul specifically mentions is
denying the future resurrection of believers. He states very specifically that
believing that there is no future resurrection of believers undoes your right
state before God.
e. This is just two such examples from the
scripture that demonstrate how important it is for you to plead for truth. You
must plead for truth. You must seek it from God in His word with all of your
heart, soul, mind, and strength. Not because of a checklist salvation that
says, “If I do a-b-c then I’m right with God.” No, we’re right with God by a
living confidence in Jesus Christ and His atonement—that’s called faith. But
what you put your faith in is derived from the word of God; and if you get it
wrong then you put your faith in that which cannot save you. The difference
between those who plead for truth and those who don’t…can be the same as the
distance between the Kingdom of God and Hell.
f.
I
strongly urge you to make God’s word your true compass, and cast everything
that tries to come between you away.
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