Chosen in Christ – Ephesians 1:4

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For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love

Ephesians 1:4 New International Version (NIV)

Chosen in Christ

One of the most controversial doctrines of the Christian faith is election – the belief that God has chosen some for salvation and not others.  ‘That’s not fair,’ many say.  ‘Why doesn’t he choose everybody?’ is a frequent question.  Some of the questions cannot be answered – we are, after all, dealing with an infinite God whose ways are often beyond our understanding.  There are vital things about election that we can understand, however, because God has revealed them to us.

For the Christian, election is in fact a doctrine that is full of encouragement – a source of joy and thanksgiving, not a perplexing puzzle.  Let’s consider some of these great truths as we turn to Ephesians 1:4 Chosen in Christ

1. The nature of election

In v3 Paul gives thanks to God the Father for ‘every spiritual blessing in Christ’.  Salvation is rich and wonderful.  Why do we receive such bounty?  The answer is given in v4 ‘For he chose us in him…’  The origin of salvation is not in us but in the God who elects.  Note 4 elements:

(i). It is sovereign.  ‘he chose us’.  The reference is to ‘the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ’ (v3).  This does not exclude the Son and the Holy Spirit since all the persons of the Trinity are involved in all God’s works, but it is particularly the Father to whom election is ascribed.

By its very nature, this action is an exercise of sovereign authority.  The Father selects, sets apart for himself, a certain group of people.  From start to finish this is God’s work.  It is a bestowing of grace – love to the utterly undeserving.  It is something done freely by God, not conditioned in any way by the objects of his choice.  This is underlined by Paul in Romans 8:29 ‘those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the likeness of his Son’.  There ‘foreknowledge’ indicates the inauguration of a relationship of redeeming love that will result in salvation.

(ii). It is personal.  ‘he chose us’.  Who is in view?  This cannot be confined to Paul and his original readers.  The whole description is cast in terms of the universal church and the reference is clearly to all believers.  But the choice was exercised before they were believers.  Indeed most of those to whom Paul refers had not yet been born.  The biblical evidence forces us to conclude that it is sinners whom God has elected.  This fits with Romans 5:8 ‘While we were still sinners, Christ died for us’.  This is the wonder of grace – it is for the unworthy.

God’s gracious election does not apply to a faceless multitude but to specific individuals.  Those saved can delight in the personal love of God that they experience.  Notice Paul’s reference in Galatians 2:20 to ‘the Son of God who loved me’.  Election is not a cold, impersonal decree.

(iii). It is Christ-centred.  ‘he chose us in him’.  The identity of the one in whom we are chosen is clear from v3.  It is in Christ.  He is the foundation of election.

What does it mean to be chosen in Christ?  We find in the New Testament clear evidence of a people being given to Christ in eternity.  As he prays to the Father, he refers in John 17:6 to ‘those you have given me out of the world’.  He says that he will ‘give eternal life to all those you have given him’ (v2).  We also have a reference in Revelation 17:8 to names ‘written in the book of life from the creation of the world’.

For those given to him, the Son of God undertook to do all that is necessary for their salvation.  In the plan of God laid before creation he took on the role of the Representative and Surety of his people – ‘he is the surety [or ‘guarantee’] of a better covenant’ (Hebrews 7:22).  Christ assumes our debt of sin and at the cross discharges that debt fully.  The whole of salvation centres on the person and work of Christ.

(iv). It is eternal.  That is the significance of the words ‘before the creation of the world’.  Before ‘time’ even existed, only the timeless God existed.  Election is an eternal decree of God that is not dependent on any of his creatures.  As a result, it is certain to be fulfilled.  That is a great source of reassurance to his people.  Our sins and failures, and there are many of them, do not thwart his purposes.

This statement also underlines the fact that election is not due to any merit in us.  Think of the contrasting examples of Jacob and Esau: Romans 9:11 tells us that God chose Jacob ‘before the twins were born or had done anything good or bad – in order that God’s purpose of election might stand’.  Election is entirely by grace.

2. The purpose of election

Our all-wise God does all things for a purpose – nothing is random or by chance.  We can therefore be sure that election is purposeful.  The ultimate purpose of all of God’s works is the manifestation of his own glory.  He does, however, also have other purposes in what he does.  In this verse, Paul indicates what we could call the proximate purpose of election.  He mentions two aspects of it:

(i). Holiness.  ‘he chose us to be holy’.  The outworking of the decree of election is the redemptive work of Christ which transforms those God chooses into holy people.  We are changed from sinners into those who increasingly share in the holiness of God.  As Paul says in 1 Thessalonians 4:3 ‘It is God’s will that you should be holy’.  At conversion sinners are declared to be holy in God’s sight.  That is the justification that changes our standing in relation to God’s law.  Following on from that, sinners are throughout their lives made holy in thought, word and action.  That is lifelong sanctification, the work of the Holy Spirit in us as we use the means of grace that God has provided.  Ultimately, beyond this life, our holiness will be complete as we experience glorification.  All this flows from election.

(ii). Fellowship.  ‘in his sight’ or ‘in his presence’.  This indicates that those who are made holy are also brought into personal fellowship with our gracious God.  That is the supreme privilege conferred by election.  We have living communion with the Lord.  As John states in 1 John 1:3 ‘our fellowship is with the Father and with his Son, Jesus Christ’.  As our holiness grows, so does the closeness of our fellowship.  That is a great cause for thanksgiving and a stimulus to seek greater holiness, as we anticipate the day of perfection in glory.

David McKay

The Saviour transfigured – Mark 9:2-10

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The Transfiguration
After six days Jesus took Peter, James and John with him and led them up a high mountain, where they were all alone. There he was transfigured before them. His clothes became dazzling white, whiter than anyone in the world could bleach them. And there appeared before them Elijah and Moses, who were talking with Jesus.
Peter said to Jesus, “Rabbi, it is good for us to be here. Let us put up three shelters—one for you, one for Moses and one for Elijah.” (He did not know what to say, they were so frightened.)
Then a cloud appeared and covered them, and a voice came from the cloud: “This is my Son, whom I love. Listen to him!”
Suddenly, when they looked around, they no longer saw anyone with them except Jesus.
As they were coming down the mountain, Jesus gave them orders not to tell anyone what they had seen until the Son of Man had risen from the dead. 10 They kept the matter to themselves, discussing what “rising from the dead” meant.

Mark 9:2-10

The Saviour transfigured

‘I wish I had been there’.  Are there events in the Bible that make you wish you had been there?  Maybe the crossing of the Red Sea, the giving of the Law at Sinai, David defeating Goliath, or in the New Testament, the birth of Jesus or the raising of Lazarus?  One of the most striking episodes in the Gospels, and one which left a deep imprint on the memories of those who were there, was the transfiguration of Jesus – what would it have been like to be there?

In Mark 9:1 Jesus speaks about some people not tasting death before they see ‘the kingdom of God come with power’.  Immediately afterwards three disciples accompany him to the top of a high mountain and there see something of the glory of the King and his kingdom.  Let’s consider Mark 9:2-10 The Saviour transfigured.

1. His transformation

During the whole of his ministry on earth Jesus appeared to be just like any other man.  He grew up from a child and lived a normal human life, sharing our human nature with the sole exception of sin.  Although he was the Son of God, nevertheless, as Paul says, ‘he emptied himself, by taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men’ (Philippians 2:7).  He veiled his divine glory for the period of his humiliation on earth.  He never ceased for a moment, however, to be the perfect reflection of his Father.  He was ‘the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of his being’ (Hebrews 1:3).

The eternal Word (John 1:1) came in servant form.  On the mountain top, however, 3 disciples were privileged to see something of the radiance of the Son of God.  On the mountain, away from the other disciples, the veil was partly drawn aside: ‘he was transfigured before them’ (v2).  Each evangelist describes it in his own way.  Mark says, ‘his clothes became dazzling white’ (v3), using the homely image of a bleacher.  According to Luke, his clothes became ‘as bright as a flash of lightning’ (Luke 9:29).  In Matthew’s account, ‘his face shone like the sun’ (Matthew 17:2).  What the 3 disciples saw was almost beyond description.

The language used in the Gospels draws on the description of the ‘Ancient of Days’ in Daniel 7:9.  It is the very glory of deity, an indication of Jesus’ true identity.  Peter writes later that ‘we were eyewitnesses of his majesty’ (2 Peter 1:16).  He is the eternal Son of God, sovereign and glorious.  Here we have a foretaste of the glory to come at his resurrection and, ultimately, at the Last Day when he returns.  The suffering and death of the Saviour should not blind us to his deity and glory.  He is worthy of all of our worship and service.

2. His conversation

At the transfiguration, Jesus is not alone.  As v4 tells us, ‘there appeared before them Elijah and Moses’.  They represent the Prophets and the Law, summing up the whole of the Old Testament.  Their presence at this crucial event is a visible token that what they spoke and wrote about is fulfilled in Jesus.  They were permitted to appear with him and also they ‘were talking with Jesus’.  Here is an indication of the reality and the closeness of the fellowship enjoyed in heaven, even before the final resurrection.  That surely is encouraging knowledge for us to have.

What was the subject of their conversation?  We are told in Luke 9:31 ‘They spoke about his departure which he was about to bring to fulfilment at Jerusalem’.  The focus is on Jesus’ death.  Notice how it is described: it is (literally) ‘his exodus’.  His leading the people of God out of the bondage of sin was foreshadowed in the bringing of Israel out of Egypt.  In Jesus there is true liberation – as he says in John 8:36, ‘if the Son sets you free, you will be free indeed’.  In him, God’s eternal plan of salvation is being brought to fulfilment.  In his conversation with Elijah and Moses, there is a joyful anticipation of victory at the cross and the empty tomb.

3. His vindication

In v7 we are told ‘a cloud appeared and enveloped them’.  It is a manifestation of the presence of God, as in the pillar of cloud that led the Israelites during the exodus.  In it, God reveals himself yet at the same time veils himself.  There is also a ‘voice’ (v7), again a reminder of the voice heard at the giving of the Law at Sinai (Exodus 24:16).  The transfiguration recalls in so many ways God’s meeting with his people at Sinai, again at a mountain.

The voice of God speaks an authoritative word: ‘This is my Son whom I love’.  The Father identifies with his Son, as he did at the beginning of his ministry, at his baptism (Mark 1:11).  The words used signify ‘my only-beloved’.  The unique eternal relationship between Father and Son has not been broken by the incarnation.  The Father expresses his full approval and endorsement of the path that Jesus treads.  The Son has successfully resisted all temptations to turn aside and he is now strengthened for his final walk to the cross.  Thus the Saviour is given great encouragement by his Father at this vital moment.  He will lay down his life for his people and will accomplish full salvation for them.

‘Listen to him’ is the Father’s command.  Jesus is the authoritative Revealer and Redeemer.  We must hear and obey him.  The only proper response from us is to submit to his every word and trust in him for salvation.

4. His prohibition

It is no surprise that the 3 disciples are amazed, afraid and confused – who would not have been?  As usual, Peter is the one who speaks, although ‘he did not know what to say’ (v6).  He proposes putting up three shelters for Jesus, Elijah and Moses, perhaps to prolong this amazing experience.  They have been the privileged recipients of a special revelation of the Lord’s glory and they are still struggling to grasp its significance.  What does it tell them about Jesus’ identity and his mission?  As yet they are not ready to put all the pieces together – only later, with the help of the Holy Spirit will they do so, and realise that he is the Messiah who has come to save.

If you have undergone some amazing experience, your first thought will probably be to tell someone else.  The disciples’ natural reaction is certainly to try to tell others, probably beginning with the rest of the disciples.  Jesus, however, ‘gave them orders not to tell anyone’ (v9).  There is the danger of misunderstanding his true mission and raising expectations he will not fulfil.  An end to the prohibition will come: ‘until the Son of Man had risen from the dead’.  In the light of his completed atonement, the whole story can be told.  We have the duty to proclaim the message of what Jesus has done to save sinners and how we have met with him in a life-changing way.  We have seen his glory and look forward to the full revelation at his return.

David McKay

New every morning – Lamentations 3:19-26

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19 I remember my affliction and my wandering,
    the bitterness and the gall.
20 I well remember them,
    and my soul is downcast within me.
21 Yet this I call to mind
    and therefore I have hope:
22 Because of the Lord’s great love we are not consumed,
    for his compassions never fail.
23 They are new every morning;
    great is your faithfulness.
24 I say to myself, “The Lord is my portion;
    therefore I will wait for him.”
25 The Lord is good to those whose hope is in him,
    to the one who seeks him;
26 it is good to wait quietly
    for the salvation of the Lord.

Lamentations 3:19-26

New every morning

What would you expect when you come to read a book entitled ‘Lamentations’?  Surely it will be nothing but doom and gloom?  You would be partly right – there is much in the book about God’s judgment, but that is not the whole story.  There is also light and gospel hope.

Lamentations was written during the lowest point in the history of Judah – when the nation had been destroyed by the Babylonians and many of the people taken into exile.  The root cause of the disaster was the sin of the people and so they had no-one to blame but themselves.  There are, however, precious words of hope in the midst of the darkness, words that still speak to us today.  Let’s consider together Lamentations 3:19-26 New every morning.

1. The depths of despair

The tone of the first part of the chapter is one of unrelieved gloom.  Here is a man in the depths: ‘made me walk in darkness’ (v2), ‘He has walled me in’ (v7).  The description is vivid.  Even prayer seems futile ‘he shuts out my prayer’ (v8).  The writer (probably Jeremiah) speaks not only for himself, but for the people – ‘we’ (v22), ‘us’ (v40).  The whole nation is passing through the darkness.  Jerusalem has been destroyed and the land laid waste by the Babylonians.  It was the worst time in the nation’s history, hence the reference to ‘the bitterness and the gall’ (v19).

The reason for this suffering is that ‘we have sinned and rebelled’ (v42).  The people of Judah have broken covenant with the Lord and have been serving other gods, and so are now reaping the consequences.  The Babylonians are God’s instruments of judgment.

How can this apply to us in our troubled world, especially in the midst of the coronavirus crisis?  We know it is in God’s hands and is fulfilling his purpose.  The situation is certainly a reminder that we live in a fallen world which is suffering the consequences of human sin.  Surely the Lord is reminding the nations of the consequences of conducting their affairs without reference to him and his law.  We must, however, not fall into the error of Job’s comforters and attribute suffering to God’s judgment on particular individuals.  We are all called to look at our lives and ask if there are things amiss, sins that have crept in, which need to be repented of and forgiven.  God is summoning us all to take stock in the light of his Word.

2. The reason for hope

The prayer of v19ff marks a profound change of mood.  Note v21 ‘this I call to mind and therefore I have hope’.  Light dawns as he focuses attention on the nature of God.  This is what the psalmist does in Psalm 42:6 ‘My soul is downcast within me, therefore I will remember you’.  The danger is that when our soul is downcast, we turn away from the Lord.

When we recognise our sin, we need to focus not on ourselves but on the Lord.  Looking inwards will never change the situation.  All we will see is our sin.  We need to meditate on what the Lord is like, otherwise we will simply go round in a depressing circle.

The key for Jeremiah is ‘great is your faithfulness’ (v23).  That is the ground for his hope – solid ground because God does not change.  He has taken his people into covenant with himself, a relationship not based on their worthiness or effort to be good.  Although they have been unfaithful to their covenant commitment, he remains faithful to his promises ‘for he cannot disown himself’ (2 Timothy 2:13).  We cannot fathom God’s amazing covenant love to us.  Here is our hope, in the Lord alone, because he has not changed since Jeremiah’s day.

3. The answer we need

Note v22, where we read of ‘the Lord’s great love’.  Here is the covenant love of God that forgives sinners when we are spiritually dead and helpless.  His love provided the Substitute we need to bear the consequences of sin.  God ‘gave his only begotten Son’ (John 3:16).  This verse takes us forward to Christ who died ‘the righteous for the unrighteous’ (1 Peter 3:18), not waiting for us to be ‘good enough’ (which is an impossibility anyway).  It was in love that Christ laid down his life for us, and so the Lord’s ‘compassions never fail’ (v22).

Here is sympathetic love and kindness for the helpless.  The Lord Jesus Christ has felt the full power of temptation, without ever sinning.  We have fresh evidence of that love daily – God’s compassions ‘are new every morning’ (v23).  What wonderful reassurance.  It is often in the darkness of the night that our troubles most weigh upon us and seem at their worst.  Here is the encouragement that the dawn will come and bring fresh experiences of God’s love.

That is what we need to hear.  There is still forgiving grace to be found in the Lord when we have failed him.  Satan will try to convince us otherwise, telling us that God must have stopped loving us if we are enduring such a hard time.  We have God’s assurance in a text such as 1 John 1:9 ‘If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins’.  He forgives the repentant.  His promises will not fail, whatever our feelings tell us.  We are to listen to God’s Word, not to our hearts, or to the lies of Satan.

4. The proper response

So what are we to do?  As so often in the Bible, the proper response is described as waiting: ‘I will wait for him’ (v24), ‘it is good to wait quietly for the salvation of the Lord’ (v26).  We wait for the Lord’s help and cleansing, the things that we really need.  That does not imply that we are passive or inactive.  There is to be repentance and confession – ‘We have sinned and rebelled’ (v42).  We wait with a sense of anticipation, knowing that he will answer.  We do not give in to despair, but we are to rely on the Lord for the grace we need.  He alone is able to save and forgiveness must come from the God we have offended.  That’s why Jeremiah can say, ‘The Lord is good to those whose hope is in him, to the one who seeks him’ (v25).  We must go to the place where the answer is to be found.

When we understand that he is a gracious, covenant-keeping God, that encourages us to make him ‘my portion’ (v24).  He will never fail us, never betray our trust in him.  The key question is – can you say with Jeremiah, ‘The Lord is my portion’?  

David McKay

How to be right with God – Luke 18:9-14

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The Parable of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector
To some who were confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everyone else, Jesus told this parable: 10 “Two men went up to the temple to pray, one a Pharisee and the other a tax collector. 11 The Pharisee stood by himself and prayed: ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other people—robbers, evildoers, adulterers—or even like this tax collector. 12 I fast twice a week and give a tenth of all I get.’
13 “But the tax collector stood at a distance. He would not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, ‘God, have mercy on me, a sinner.’
14 “I tell you that this man, rather than the other, went home justified before God. For all those who exalt themselves will be humbled, and those who humble themselves will be exalted.”

Luke 18:9-14 (NIV)

How to be right with God

Some diseases and weaknesses run in families, from heart conditions to baldness. The same can be true of moral and spiritual character.  J C Ryle said, ‘We are all naturally self-righteous.  It is the family disease of all the children of Adam’.  Sin is rooted in pride and the exaltation of self.  God is displaced from his rightful position.  Luke 18:9-14 is a parable Jesus told to some who were confident of their own righteousness (v9).  From the two men described, we learn a vital lesson in today’s devotional, Luke 18:9-14 How to be right with God.

1. Two men

We must try to set aside our familiarity with this parable, especially regarding whom we are to admire.  How would Jesus’ audience hear it?  They would hear it in a very different way from us.  Their expectations of these two men would be almost the opposite of ours (and remember, we know how the parable ends).  To the original hearers, Jesus’ parables were often surprising, even shocking.  This one is no exception.  Consider these two men:

(i) The Pharisee: a pillar of the religious establishment.  The Pharisee movement may have had its origins in those who resisted foreign oppressors and their false religion in the period between the Testaments.  They had a history of courageous defence of religious orthodoxy.  The name ‘Pharisees’ may mean ‘pure ones’ and they were certainly very particular about ritual purity.  In Mark 7:3-4 they are said to wash themselves scrupulously and also the vessels they used.  Their obsession was with keeping the Law of Moses.  Many scribes would be Pharisees, from whom the highest standard of conduct would be expected.

(ii) The tax collector: his name and the job he did were regarded with revulsion by the Jews.  He was employed by the Romans, who farmed out tax collecting to ‘tax farmers’ who in turn employed men like this one.  Their aim was to gather as much tax as the market could stand since people did not really know what they owed.  Any money collected above what the Romans required went into the collector’s pocket.  They were known for greed and dishonesty and were regarded as traitors working for the occupying power, Rome.  From such a man Jesus’ hearers would automatically expect the worst.

2. Two prayers

The hearers’ expectations are immediately challenged when the men begin to pray:

(i) The Pharisee: he stands up (v11) – the usual posture for prayer, but Jesus knew his hypocritical desire for public attention.  In Matthew 6:5 Jesus describes Pharisees as ‘hypocrites’ who love standing to pray in prominent positions ‘to be seen by men’.  Very significant is the statement that he ‘prayed about himself’ (or we might even say ‘to himself’).  Though he addresses God, his thoughts never go beyond himself.  What seems to be a prayer of thanksgiving, beginning ‘God I thank you’, is in truth a ‘prayer’ of self-congratulation.  He is a striking example of the kind of person against whom Jesus told this parable.  He was among those ‘who were confident of their own righteousness and looked down on everybody else’ (v9).  The Pharisee was confident on two grounds:

First, he is not outwardly wicked.  He compares himself with those whose sins were open and public – ‘robbers, evildoers, adulterers’ (v11).  He deals only with what is outward and visible.  He never touches the issue of his heart which is hard and closed to God.  It is always tempting to compare ourselves with obvious sinners, with whom we think we compare well, forgetting God looks on the heart.  To the Pharisee, the tax collector was the lowest of the low: ‘even like this tax collector’.  He despises him utterly.

Second, he performs acts of exceptional piety, going beyond the Law’s requirements.  Instead of the required annual fasting, he fasts ‘twice a week’ (v12), and he tithes all his income, not just the portion specified in the Law.  In doing more than is required, he believes he is building credit with God.  He believes God is pleased with his spiritual state.  It is dangerously easy to forget or ignore Galatians 2:16 ‘a man is not justified by the works of the law’.  We must never forget we cannot be justified by any amount of religious activity or any number of good works.  These can never pay the debt of our sin or place God under obligation to bless us.

(ii) The tax collector: in total contrast to the Pharisee, he ‘stood at a distance’ (v13).  He did not dare to approach God’s holy presence.  His attention is on a holy God, resulting in a profound sense of sin.  He is like Isaiah, whose response to God’s holy presence was to say, ‘Woe is me!’ (Isaiah 6:5).  The tax collector dares claim nothing.  He ‘would not even look up to heaven’, but beats his breast in sorrow for his sins (v13).  Ashamed of his sin, he is desperate for forgiveness.

His words are crucial.  Literally he cries, ‘God, be merciful to me, the sinner’ – a heart-cry for salvation.  His own sin stands out so clearly, there is no attempt to console himself with the failings of others.  This is true repentance – claiming no merit, making no excuses.  He casts himself on God’s mercy, without any reservation.  He pleads, (literally) ‘God, be propitiated towards me’.  He recognises that sin requires atonement and a price has to be paid for forgiveness.  There is hope, however.   He is standing at the place of sacrifice in the Temple, where sin offerings were made.  Those sacrifices point to Christ the sin-bearer, whom God ‘made to be sin for us’ (2 Corinthians 5:21).  The tax collector is in the place where forgiveness is to be found.  If we are to be saved, we must come to the same place.  It is the righteousness of Christ crucified that is needed, not any supposed righteousness of our own.

3. Two results

The real shock comes in v14.  People may have seen nothing wrong with the Pharisee’s prayer, but God’s verdict is the only one that matters.  Jesus’ listeners would be shocked to hear that the tax collector is the one who is ‘justified’.  That means that he was declared righteous in God’s sight, his sins forgiven, a new life granted.  This is possible because at the cross Christ the Substitute paid the price for the sins of his people.  It is the work of God’s sovereign grace, received by faith.  The tax collector is ‘justified’, then and there, and will always remain so.  The Pharisee, far from being right with God, still bears all his sins, without repentance or any sense of need, believing he is righteous.  Jesus drives the lesson home in v14 – we must humble ourselves to seek salvation by God’s grace, truly repenting of sin.  The tax collector found a gracious God who justifies sinners on the basis of Christ’s sacrifice.

David McKay

The Returning Saviour – Colossians 3:1-4

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Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God. Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things. For you died, and your life is now hidden with Christ in God. When Christ, who is your[a] life, appears, then you also will appear with him in glory.

Colossians 3:1-4

The Returning Saviour

When Jesus was ascending into heaven, two angels assured his disciples, ‘This same Jesus, who has been taken from you into heaven, will come back in the same way you have seen him go into heaven’ (Acts 1:11).  Christians are looking forward to the return of Christ at the time decreed by God the Father.  Perhaps we allow the world’s mockery of the idea of Christ’s return to rob us of the joy and consolation we should have from this great certainty.  Our hope is centred on Christ and today we consider his Second Coming in Colossians 3:1-4  The Returning Saviour.

1. Our union with Christ

The most basic way of describing salvation is union with Christ in his death and resurrection.  When Christ died and rose again, the Bible tells us that those sinners given to him by the Father in eternity in principle died and rose spiritually with him.  This spiritual death and resurrection become our actual experience at our conversion.  Thus in v3 Paul tells us, ‘you died’ – that is a single, decisive event.  So too in 2:20 we read, ‘you died with Christ to the basic principles of this world’.  When we believe in Christ there is a radical, once-for-all break with our spiritual past of deadness and bondage to sin.

The same language of death and resurrection is used by Paul elsewhere.  Thus we read in Romans 6:4-5 ‘We were therefore buried with him through baptism into death…If we have been united with him in his death, we will certainly also be united with him in his resurrection.’  Also Galatians 2:20 ‘I have been crucified with Christ…Christ lives in me’.  It is amazing language.  That is how Christians ought to think of themselves.

A total spiritual change has taken place – we have gone from death to life.  We are united to Christ in his death and resurrection.  Paul says, ‘your life is now hidden with Christ in God’ (v3).  We occupy a totally secure positon.  This fact is invisible to the world and is often misunderstood.  The believer has a wholly new perspective, set out in Galatians 2:20 ‘the life I live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God’.  Christ and his will are central.  All we do is for his glory.  Our aim is to reflect his likeness.

2. The glory of Christ

This whole epistle emphasises the glory of Christ.  Hence v1 speaks of ‘Christ…seated on the right hand of God’, the place of supreme exaltation.  This is the fulfilment of Psalm 110:1 ‘Sit at my right hand’, the Father speaking to the Son.  Christ’s present position is the result of his atoning work and so Paul writes in Philippians 2:9 ‘Therefore God highly exalted him’.  The full price of redemption has been paid, hence the reward of glory is bestowed.  No longer is the glory of Christ veiled as it was on earth.  His seat at the Father’s right hand is also one of supreme authority – Ephesians 1:21-22 describes it as ‘far above all rule and authority, power and dominion, and every title that can be given…God placed all things under his feet and appointed him to be head over everything for the church’.

At the God-appointed end of history, that glory will be revealed to every creature – ‘every eye will see him’ (Revelation 1:7).  There will be no concealment – ‘When Christ…appears’ (v4).  Biblical images emphasise the radiance and glory of the One coming to complete the salvation of his people and judge unbelievers.  He ‘will come back again’ – the promise is in Acts 1:11.  It is a day believers can look forward to with anticipation, not trepidation.  We will meet our Saviour face to face.

3. The glory of believers

At present Christians are being transformed into Christ’s image by the Holy Spirit – ‘from glory to glory’, as Paul says in 2 Corinthians 3:18.  We are aware of how we fall short and we long for perfection.  By the Lord’s power one day the transformation will be completed.  We are told in v4 ‘When Christ…appears, then you also will appear with him in glory’.  For believers the best really is yet to come, when Christ completes his work.

Salvation includes the body, hence the certainty of resurrection.  The fullest description is in 1 Corinthians 15, including the assurance, ‘we shall be changed’ (v52).  We will be given ‘glorious bodies’ like Christ’s, as Philippians 3:21 tells us.  We will have bodies suited to life in the age to come, in the new heavens and the new earth.

Believers will share in the glory of their Saviour.  Note 1 John 3:2 ‘we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is’.  His image will be perfectly formed in us.  We will be free from all sin, beyond the reach of temptation and the possibility of falling.  The process will finally be complete.  All the efforts of Satan will have come to nothing.  There is much about this we cannot now know, but what we do know should stir our sense of anticipation.  This is what awaits every child of God since ‘no-one can snatch them out of my hand’ (John 10:28).  We will be as like the Saviour as it is possible to be.

This is not revealed to us for abstract speculation or argument.  It leads to practical results.

4. The responsibility of believers

The final glory we anticipate should shape the way we live now.  It is not just a matter of some event in the distant future.  Note ‘Christ, who is your life’ (v4).  He is the source and sustainer of our spiritual life and the one who means everything to us.  Hence we are commanded (literally) ‘keep seeking the things above’ (v1).  We are also told, ‘Set your minds on things above’ (v2).  The focus of our thinking, desiring and willing must be Christ and the things relating to his kingdom, the things revealed to us in the Bible.  Christ commands us in Matthew 6:33 ‘seek first the kingdom of God and his righteousness’.  That will decisively shape who we are and how we live.

We are to apply the fact of Christ’s lordship to the realities of everyday life.  We fill our minds with whatever is ‘true…noble…lovely…admirable’ (Philippians 4:8).  We are to do all for his glory (1 Corinthians 10:31).  Far from cutting us off from real life, this provides our motivation for living real life for Christ.  We live godly lives in the present because we will share Christ’s glory in the future.  May our hope rejoice your heart today.

David McKay

God’s Gracious Covenant , Leviticus 26:12

video is available here

12 I will walk among you and be your God, and you will be my people.

Leviticus 26:12

God’s gracious covenant

The Bible in one sense is a library of 66 books, but in a deeper sense, it is one book, given to us by God.  Some themes stand out particularly prominently in Scripture and serve to hold it all together.  One of these is covenant, which occurs all the way through the Bible, both Old Testament and New Testament.  God tells us that he is a covenant God.  This is a word used to describe the relationship between God and his people.  It is actually not a difficult theological word – its basic meaning is clear in the verse we are looking at today – Leviticus 26:12 God’s gracious covenant.

1. The provision of grace

It is vital to understand that in the relationship between God and his people it is God who takes the initiative.  Note the context of the promises of this chapter.  We read in v13 ‘I am the Lord your God who brought you out of Egypt’.  The Lord is reminding them that he set them free and then gave them his law.  The same pattern is evident in Exodus 20:1-2 at the beginning of the Ten Commandments.  The Lord stresses that liberation from bondage preceded the giving of the law.  It is the same in Leviticus 26.  Liberation from bondage is the context for the call for obedience in v3, and that is followed by the promises of blessing for the obedient and of curses on the disobedient.

The whole covenant rests on what God has done.  At a level deeper than the social and political liberation Israel had experienced, the covenant relates to the change of heart and life that is involved in the experience of salvation.  There has to be such a change if the covenant is to be a living relationship.  All sinners, both Jews and Gentiles, are ‘dead in…transgressions and sins’ as Paul puts it in Ephesians 2:1.  Salvation is impossible unless God takes the initiative.  Only God’s grace, his undeserved favour, can bring such sinners into covenant with himself.  That is why it is called ‘The Covenant of Grace’.

Notice what Jesus says in Luke 22:20, at the Last Supper: ‘This cup is the new covenant in my blood’.  By his sacrifice on the cross, foreshadowed by the Old Testament sacrifices, he has taken the burden of his people’s sins on himself and has redeemed them.  The price of redemption has been paid by Christ and so Paul tells us in Ephesians 1:7 ‘In him, we have redemption through his blood, the forgiveness of sins’.

2. The promise of fellowship

The covenant establishes a warm personal relationship between the Lord and his people.  It is a measure of the greatness of his grace.  He is not a distant God.  He says, ‘I will put my dwelling place among you…I will walk among you’ (v11-12).  God’s walking among his people recalls Eden before the Fall.  God walked with Adam and Eve, but fellowship was lost through man’s sin.  Now God graciously restores the covenant that was broken.

It should never cease to amaze us that this infinitely great and holy God should seek fellowship with us and should make it possible at such a cost.  ‘How great is the love that the Father has lavished on us, that we should be called children of God’ (1 John 3:1).  In the Covenant of Grace God gives himself to us.  He promises, ‘I will be your God’.  We can never exhaust the meaning of those words, but in the full light of the person and work of Christ, we can understand it so much more clearly.  He will be to us everything that we need.  Not only does he save us from sin, he indwells us by the Holy Spirit, enabling us to serve him, and he remakes us progressively in the image of Christ.  All of our spiritual life and growth flow from our covenant relationship with the Lord.

God’s covenant people have real living fellowship with him.  As we use the means of grace, especially Bible study and prayer, we grow in the knowledge of him.  As Jesus tells us in John 17:3 ‘this is eternal life – that they may know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent’.  We are addressed by him in Scripture and we address him in prayer.  We are the objects of his infinite love and we respond with a growing love for him.  ‘We love’, we are told in 1 John 4:19, ‘because he first loved us’.

3. The privilege of belonging

We are told in Genesis 1:27 that we are made in the image of God. What does that mean?  The God who reveals himself in the Bible is a Trinity, one God in three Persons, a community.  As those who are made in the image of this God, we are made for community.  It is a denial of our basic nature to live an isolated, solitary life.  Human beings find community in various ways, especially in families, but we find that the craving of the human heart for community satisfied above all in this covenant relationship with the Lord.  That is what we were created to experience.  He promises in this verse, ‘you will be my people’.  He gathers his people into a community, a body.  In the Old Testament, this took the form of the nation of Israel and in the New Testament, it takes the form of the international body of the church.  Together they form one community – as Paul writes in Galatians 3:29 ‘If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham’s seed and heirs according to the promise’.

As members of this community, we have a place of service.  The nature of our service is stated in 1 Peter 2:9 ‘that you may declare the praises of him who called you out of darkness into his wonderful light’.  All our work, however seemingly unimportant, is to be done for his glory.  That includes telling others about him and what he has done to save sinners.  Such privileges, of course, entail responsibilities.  Our responsibilities include in particular the pursuit of holiness.  ‘Be holy because I am holy’ is the Lord’s command in 1 Peter 1:16.  That holiness is expressed in the obedience described in v3 ‘If you follow my decrees and are careful to obey my commands’.  Because we have received his grace, we do not find the Lord’s commands a burden.  In fact, we show our love for the Lord by obedience.  ‘If you love me, you will keep my commandments, Jesus tells us in John 14:15.

In this warm, loving covenant fellowship with the Lord and with his people we find life as he made us to live it.  This is the only path to the fulfilment that every person seeks.  And it is not just for this world.  This fellowship will be enjoyed in full in heaven and in the new creation, when Christ returns.  In Revelation 21:3 we read, ‘he will live with them.  They will be his people and God himself will be with them and be their God’.

David McKay

Prevailing Prayer – Luke 11:5-13

link to the video is here

Prevailing Prayer

One area of the Christian life where we experience most struggle and defeat is undoubtedly that of prayer.  It may seem that nothing could be easier than talking to God, yet often when we come to pray we find ourselves lethargic and uninterested, with our attention wandering.  There may be various reasons for this, including tiredness or anxiety, but above all, it indicates our lack of sanctification.  It is certainly a point where Satan will be especially active in attacking us.  If prayer is a powerful weapon in our spiritual warfare, his attacks should not surprise us.

The Lord, however, graciously gives us all kinds of encouragements to stimulate our praying.  John Calvin said, ‘There is nothing better to stir us to make our prayers, than a firm assurance that we shall succeed in them’.  The Lord Jesus provides the kind of assurance we need in our passage today.  Let’s look at Luke 11:5-13 Prevailing Prayer.

Then Jesus said to them, “Suppose you have a friend, and you go to him at midnight and say, ‘Friend, lend me three loaves of bread; a friend of mine on a journey has come to me, and I have no food to offer him.’ And suppose the one inside answers, ‘Don’t bother me. The door is already locked, and my children and I are in bed. I can’t get up and give you anything.’ I tell you, even though he will not get up and give you the bread because of friendship, yet because of your shameless audacity[a] he will surely get up and give you as much as you need.
“So I say to you: Ask and it will be given to you; seek and you will find; knock and the door will be opened to you. 10 For everyone who asks receives; the one who seeks finds; and to the one who knocks, the door will be opened.
11 “Which of you fathers, if your son asks for[b] a fish, will give him a snake instead? 12 Or if he asks for an egg, will give him a scorpion? 13 If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!”

Luke 11:5-13 (NIV)

1. A parable (v.5-8)

After providing an example of the content of prayer in what we now call ‘The Lord’s Prayer’ (v1-4), Jesus uses a vivid story to illustrate the right attitude to prayer – ‘the parable of the friend at midnight’.  The situation is easy to visualise: ‘a friend of mine on a journey has come to me’ (v6).  Travel would take place at night to avoid the heat, so the host is caught totally unawares by his visitor – ‘I have nothing to set before him’.  We can imagine the reaction of the sleeping friend.  Most of us would say, ‘Don’t bother me’ (v7).  He doesn’t want the trouble of waking his family, who would probably be sharing the room with him, preparing food for the visitor, and generally being burdened.  But the friend at the door will not give up.  He stretches friendship to the limit, and beyond, yet he succeeds.  As v8 says, ‘not…because he is his friend, yet because of the man’s boldness (or shamelessness) he will get up’.

What is Jesus’ lesson here?  He argues from the less to the greater – if a human friend in such circumstances would give ‘as much as he needs’ (v8), how much more will our heavenly Father do so?  Consider the comparison Jesus is making: our relationship with the Father is richer and deeper; there is no night with God and he never sleeps or makes excuses; we are not asking on behalf of strangers, but we are his children, fully known and loved by him; our needs are not small (like the ‘three loaves of bread in v5) but are very great, both physically and spiritually; the Father gives great promises to encourage our asking.  He offers no self-interested excuses for not responding.

On all these grounds we can come and expect a positive answer.  We can be bold, not letting anything deter us.  That does not encourage in us an attitude of presumption or a demanding spirit.  Our praying relates to our needs, not to our selfish wants.  Keeping that in mind, we have everything in our favour when we approach the Lord in prayer.

2. A promise (v.9-10)

Building on his parable, Jesus gives us direct encouragement to prayer.  Notice that the commands ‘Ask…seek…knock…’ are continuous tenses, indicating persistent asking and repeated coming to the Lord with our needs, We do not come with the ‘meaningless repetition’ of Matthew 6:7, but we are to come every time we have a need, with no limit to our requests.

Ask’ implies humility and a consciousness of need.  We have to set aside our pride, unlike the Pharisee in Jesus’ parable in Luke 18:10-13, who actually asked for nothing.  Asking implies faith in a God who can and will answer.  Without faith, prayer is an empty ritual.

Seek’ implies action, doing what we can to gain what we seek.  We are not to be passive as the means of answer may be at hand.  Above all we should seek a deeper knowledge of the Lord, making use of Bible study along with our praying.

Knock’ – there needs to be perseverance until the door is opened.  We are often commanded to persevere in prayer: we should ‘always pray and not give up (Luke 18:1), ‘Be faithful in prayer’ (Romans 12:12).  God sometimes delays in order to stimulate our prayers.

When we obey these commands we meet with a 3-fold promise – ‘will be given…will find…will be opened’ (v9).  These promises are full of encouragement for Christians.  The response will exactly meet our need, and the Lord knows that need perfectly.  It is not a blank cheque so that we ask for anything we think we would like.  In I John 5:14 we read, ‘if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us’.  That is vitally important.  How do we know what his will is?  Sometimes we not sure, but the closer we are to God, the better we understand his will, and so we know better how to pray.  Verse 10 is a great promise to all who come in this way: ‘everyone who asks receives…’  Every Christian can testify to the many ways in which the Lord has kept his promises regarding answering prayer.

3. A pattern (v.11-13)

To clinch the argument Jesus again argues from the less to the greater.  He uses a very homely image that everyone can identify with – ‘Which of you fathers, if your son asks for a fish…?’ (v11).  Any good parent wants to provide the best for his child.  When asked for what the child needs (bread, fish, egg), he will not provide what is useless (stone) or potentially harmful (snake, scorpion).  A parent’s love moves Him to give what is best for the child.  Verse 13 provides the application of the illustration to our praying.

Human love is inevitably limited and imperfect, even in the best of us.  Jesus mentions ‘though you are evil’ to take account of our imperfection, yet we ‘know how to give good gifts’.  He then makes the comparison with our perfectly loving and all-knowing Father.  Hence he asks, ‘How much more will your Father in heaven give…?’  Already he has given the greatest gift: ‘He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all, how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?’ (Romans 8:32).  In particular, Jesus mentions that he will ‘give the Holy Spirit’ to those who ask him’.  Does it surprise you that Jesus speaks particularly about the gift of the Holy Spirit?  The Spirit is, in fact, the chief gift bestowed on the Lord’s people, the one through whom all other provision flows.  We should above all be praying for more of the ministry of the Spirit in our lives.

Based on the nature of our heavenly Father and the rich promises he has made, we can be sure of the perfect answer to our prayers and have the strongest encouragement to give ourselves to prayer.  No matter what our circumstances, we can engage in the ministry of prayer.  We may be locked down, but our prayers can circle the world, a world in the palm of the Lord’s hand.

Rev David McKay

Habakkuk 3:16-19, Rejoicing in Adversity

video available here

16 I heard and my heart pounded,
    my lips quivered at the sound;
decay crept into my bones,
    and my legs trembled.
Yet I will wait patiently for the day of calamity
    to come on the nation invading us.
17 Though the fig tree does not bud
    and there are no grapes on the vines,
though the olive crop fails
    and the fields produce no food,
though there are no sheep in the pen
    and no cattle in the stalls,
18 yet I will rejoice in the Lord,
    I will be joyful in God my Savior.
19 The Sovereign Lord is my strength;
    he makes my feet like the feet of a deer,
    he enables me to tread on the heights.
For the director of music. On my stringed instruments.

Habakkuk 3:16-19

Habakkuk the prophet was given a really hard message to deliver.  Because of Israel’s sins, the Lord was sending the pagan Babylonians to devastate their land.  Habakkuk struggled to understand how a holy God could use such unholy people to do his will.  God assured the prophet he would also judge the Babylonians for their wickedness, but it was a hard message to accept and hard to preach.  Tough times lay ahead, but at the end of his book, Habakkuk shows us how a believer is to face testing times such as those we are living through.  Let’s look at Habakkuk 3:16-19.

1. Waiting upon God

In the first part of chapter 3 Habakkuk thinks about the greatness of God and the way in which he has judged evil in the past.  That gives him encouragement, yet as he thinks of what he and Israel are going to have to endure in the near future, he is almost overwhelmed.  His language is very vivid: ‘my heart pounded…my legs trembled’ (v16).  He is rendered almost helpless by fear.  The storm is coming and he can imagine something of what it will be like.

It is good to realise that even a prophet may feel overwhelmed by what God is doing.  He is a man of flesh and blood, just like us.  He is not some cold, unfeeling person, immune to the trials that he and others have to pass through.  He trembles in fear.  At one time or another, we all face such situations, times when we feel we are at the end of our resources and cannot cope.  We may well be fearful about the future, especially in these very uncertain times.  We can identify with Habakkuk.

But notice too he says, ‘I will wait patiently for the day of calamity’ (v16).  He had resources to meet the trials, and we can have the same help in our times of need.

2. Rejoicing in God

In verses 17 and 18 we have a testimony to the power of faith in a fearful man.  Habakkuk is able to overcome his fears because of the strength provided by his God-given faith.  For this reason, he will be able to rejoice, even in the deepest adversity.

First of all the prophet faces up to the worst that may happen – ‘Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vine…’ (v17).  He depicts the worst situation imaginable since the fig, vine and olive were staple crops for the Israelites.  If these fail, there will be no food and no income.  The same applies to the flocks and herds he mentions.  It is a picture of economic disaster followed inevitably by famine, and probably starvation and death.  All of this could happen as a result of the Babylonian invasion.  It may not turn out to be as bad as this, but Habakkuk considers the ‘worst-case scenario’.  He does not buoy himself up with false hopes, telling himself ‘it could never happen’.  The hope that God’s people have in dire situations is not some kind of psychological trick, pretending that things will not really be too serious.  As we face a very uncertain future, in both the short term and the long term, we need something better than telling ourselves the worst will not happen to us.

Notice that Habakkuk’s rejoicing is ‘in the Lord’, it is ‘in God my Saviour’ (v18).  That is crucial.  He rejoices in the Lord who keeps His Covenant of Grace with his people in all generations.  However bad circumstances may become, the Lord will not forsake his people, and on both the personal and the national scale his purpose will be worked out for his glory.  Whatever Habakkuk himself may be called to suffer, he is assured that God will be at work in the situation.  For that reason he can not only accept whatever comes – he can rejoice and praise God.

By faith in the Lord, we too can rejoice even in adversity.  We do not know what God in his providence will bring to anyone of us.  It may include suffering, sickness, or even death.  Just because we are the Lord’s people, we are not spared all the hard experiences of life.  We can, however, be assured of his direction of events according to his wise and loving plan, and we can thank him for that knowledge.  This is not ‘keeping a stiff upper lip, nor is it self-deception: it is trust in the God who has saved us by Christ’s redeeming work, and who has committed himself to us in covenant grace.  Only the child of God can respond to crises in this way.

3. Strengthened by God

Habakkuk has not finished yet.  In v19 he makes another great assertion of confidence in the Lord: ‘The sovereign Lord is my strength’.  It lifts him above the present crisis and lets him see beyond it to the fulfilment of God’s purpose.  He is confident that God will give him the necessary strength to endure the test that is coming.  He uses the image of the deer – ‘he makes my feet like the feet of a deer’ – an animal proverbial for its speed and agility.  In v16 his feet were faltering, his legs were trembling, but now the Lord enables him to be sure-footed.  The fearful arrival of the Babylonians will not cause the prophet to stumble in doubt concerning the goodness of God’s plan.

At the end of the verse, Habakkuk expresses firm assurance in the Lord: ‘he enables me to go on the heights’.  His language suggests a degree of control over his situation – looking down on the trials from high ground.  He is also expressing his freedom from fear – if he stands on the high ground, he does not need to hide.  In difficult times it can be very tempting to try and hide from the struggles that confront us.  It may seem safer, but it is misguided.

Habakkuk has found the secret of true strength.  It lies not in self-confidence, but rather in trusting the Lord.  That is why he is confident of coming through his trials with his faith intact.

Here is a lesson every believer needs to learn.  Salvation begins with abandoning trust in ourselves and turning to Christ.  That is how we are then to live the Christian life – depending on the Lord’s strength.  Only thus can we face testing times.  Whatever comes to us – whether fear, anxiety, illness, loss or some other hard experience – we can face it with confidence in the God who gives us all the strength we need.  As the Apostle Paul learned, his strength is made perfect in our weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9).  May we know that strength in these testing days.

David McKay

1 Corinthians 15:3-8, 12-20 “Christ is risen!”

video is here

1 Corinthians 15:3-8, 12-20

For what I received I passed on to you as of first importance[a]: that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures, and that he appeared to Cephas,[b] and then to the Twelve. After that, he appeared to more than five hundred of the brothers and sisters at the same time, most of whom are still living, though some have fallen asleep. Then he appeared to James, then to all the apostles, and last of all he appeared to me also, as to one abnormally born.

12 But if it is preached that Christ has been raised from the dead, how can some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead? 13 If there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised. 14 And if Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith. 15 More than that, we are then found to be false witnesses about God, for we have testified about God that he raised Christ from the dead. But he did not raise him if in fact the dead are not raised. 16 For if the dead are not raised, then Christ has not been raised either. 17 And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins. 18 Then those also who have fallen asleep in Christ are lost. 19 If only for this life we have hope in Christ, we are of all people most to be pitied.

20 But Christ has indeed been raised from the dead, the firstfruits of those who have fallen asleep.

Christ is Risen!

Does the resurrection matter?  It might seem that it doesn’t. A recent survey of over 2000 adults (commissioned by the BBC) found that 25% of those who would call themselves ‘Christians’ do not believe in the resurrection of Christ, against 31% who believe the Bible’s account ‘word for word’.  Among ‘active’ Christians (who attend a service at least once a month) 57% believe in the resurrection. Of all those surveyed, 50% do not believe in the resurrection. Perhaps it really is a matter of opinion, and not that important.

The attitude of the Apostle Paul was very different.  He writes in 1 Corinthians 15:14 ‘if Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith’.  In fact, the resurrection of Christ is crucial to Christianity – a dead Christ means an empty and futile religion.  Let’s look at 1 Corinthians 15 and remind ourselves that ‘Christ is risen!’

1. Did he rise?

The whole of the New Testament, including all 4 Gospels, answers ‘Yes!’  The evidence for Jesus’ resurrection is overwhelming (however you explain it).  There is no doubt he died on the cross – the Romans made no mistakes about things like that – and equally there is no doubt that on the third day he rose again.

All the Gospels contain accounts of the empty tomb – it is an essential part of their message.  To suggest that despairing, defeated disciples could or would steal his body and pretend he had risen is incredible.  If the authorities had still had the body, they would have produced it and snuffed out the Christian movement at its very beginning.

Notice what Paul says in v5-7 – he provides a list of post-resurrection appearances of the Saviour – to ‘Peter…the Twelve…more than 500 of the brothers at the same time…James…all the apostles…me’.  It is impossible that this could be some kind of psychological hallucination or delusion. Many of the witnesses were still alive when Paul wrote and could be consulted. Our conclusion must be – he has risen!

2. What did he achieve?

Accepting that Christ really did rise, we now ask – what does his resurrection mean?  What did it accomplish? The New Testament clearly leads us to view the resurrection as a victory.  It is a victory in 3 ways:

  1. Victory over sin: Note v3 ‘Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures’.  In fulfilment of the prophecies of the Old Testament, Christ in his death took the sin of all who would ever believe in him, along with the punishment they deserve.  All that our sin deserves from a holy God has been taken by Christ. In 1 Peter 3:18 we read, ‘Christ died for sins once for all, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God’.  God’s Son was a willing sacrifice. All we need in order to be forgiven is provided in him. The resurrection proves that the full payment has been made.
  1.  Victory over Satan: It is sin that gives Satan power over sinners.  If our sin is dealt with, Satan’s claim on believers is destroyed.  Jesus’ death on the cross, therefore, includes victory over Satan. The first gospel promise is in Genesis 3:15 the promise that the ‘seed’ of the woman will crush the head of the serpent – the promise has been fulfilled in Christ’s defeat of Satan at the cross and the empty tomb.  In Colossians 2:15 Paul writes of how God ‘having disarmed the powers and authorities, he made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them by the cross’. The resurrection is the guarantee that Christ really won the victory.  Satan’s dominion over believers is broken.
  1.  Victory over death: Death is ‘the last enemy’ (v26).  It is a fearful thing for most people, but the empty tomb is proof that Christ has conquered death.  Death exists because of sin – the sin of Adam (v21) that we inherit.  Christ has dealt with sin and so, in the words of Peter in Acts 2:24, ‘it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him’.  Those who belong to Christ will share in his victory – he is the firstfruits (v20), and at his return, the very presence of death will be abolished (v26).

3. What does it mean for us?

  1. The answer to sin: Christ crucified and risen is the answer to our sin.  Note Matthew 1:21 ‘he will save his people from their sins’.  Having taken the burden of our sin, he saves us from the punishment due to us.  As Isaiah 53:5 tells us, he was pierced for our transgressions’.  There is now no punishment due to those who trust in Christ as Saviour.  We are righteous in God’s sight. Christ also saves us from the power of sin as day by day he gives us grace and strength to ‘walk in newness of life’ (Romans 6:4).
  1.  The answer to tragedy: In the resurrection, we have proof of Christ’s victory over all the forces that damage our lives and cause us pain.  The risen Christ is ‘head over everything for the church’ (Ephesians 1:22). All his power and authority are used for the benefit of his people.  Thus he gives us all the grace and help we need to face pain, loss, uncertainty, disappointment, bereavement. For the Christian, Satan is a defeated enemy and so we may, by the Lord’s strength, resist his attacks and temptations.  The Lord always says to us, ‘my grace is sufficient for you’ (2 Corinthians 12:9).
  1.  The answer to death: Those who believe in the Lord Jesus Christ share in his victory over death.  As ‘the firstfruits’ (v20) he guarantees that the rest of the harvest will follow – ‘when he comes, those who belong to him’ as Paul puts it in v 23.  Having been raised from spiritual death at conversion, we will be raised from physical death at his return.  Our bodies share in salvation.  Although much must remain mysterious, we know Christ ‘will transform our lowly bodies so that they will be like his glorious body’ (Philippians 3:21).  There is nothing for us to fear in death. On account of Christ’s resurrection, Paul can ask triumphantly, ‘Where, O death, is your victory?’ (v55). We have a glorious hope in the risen Christ.

David McKay

Philippians 4:14-20 ‘My God will supply’

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Reading: Philippians 4:14-20

14 Yet it was good of you to share in my troubles. 15 Moreover, as you Philippians know, in the early days of your acquaintance with the gospel, when I set out from Macedonia, not one church shared with me in the matter of giving and receiving, except you only; 16 for even when I was in Thessalonica, you sent me aid more than once when I was in need. 17 Not that I desire your gifts; what I desire is that more be credited to your account. 18 I have received full payment and have more than enough. I am amply supplied, now that I have received from Epaphroditus the gifts you sent. They are a fragrant offering, an acceptable sacrifice, pleasing to God. 19 And my God will meet all your needs according to the riches of his glory in Christ Jesus. 20 To our God and Father be glory forever and ever. Amen.

One of the first effects of the arrival of coronavirus was panic buying.  Suddenly supermarket shelves were cleared of a range of goods, sometimes the obvious, sometimes the unexpected.  Whoever thought that toilet rolls would be so valuable? The results were unnecessary shortages and unfair pressure put on the vulnerable.  Most stores have had to introduce some form of rationing to ensure that all customers are provided with the basics.

Uncertainty is hard for most people to live with.  Fear of not having the essentials can be paralysing.  Concern for survival would crowd out most other thoughts.  For the Christian in such circumstances the temptation may be to focus on those needs to the exclusion of spiritual matters.  Our proper Bible-based perspective can be lost and our outlook becomes very like that of the world around us. Paul in prison faced great uncertainties, yet his focus was on the Lord and he was confident God would provide whatever he needed.  In Philippians 4:14-20 Paul shows where our trust is to be placed.

1. Thanksgiving for God’s provision

Sometimes the pressure of trying circumstances makes us forget God’s goodness to us in the past.  Paul does not fall into that trap. He recognises that gratitude for past blessings and past answered prayers stimulates us to depend more fully on the Lord’s provision now and in the future.

‘It was good of you to share in my troubles’ (v14), he writes.  Paul’s certainty that God will supply the strength he requires (v13) does not lead him to despise material help sent from Philippi during his time in prison.  In fact, it is clear this is one of the ways in which God supplied his need. The God who provided manna (Exodus 16) can equally well provide by means of his people’s actions – ‘I am amply supplied’ (v18).  The provision is viewed from three points of view:

(i) Paul.  Their generosity relieved his material needs (v18), but even more important was the expression of fellowship the gifts represented.  Note ‘share in my troubles … shared with me’ (v15) – they expressed love and unity in Christ. That explains Paul’s joyful spirit despite hardships.  Fellowship should be expressed in all kinds of caring actions.

(ii) The Philippians.  They were enriched by their giving – how is that possible?  Note ‘what may be credited to your account’ (v17) – as if by giving to Paul they made an investment of material things that would produce a spiritual dividend.  This is not a crude ‘payoff’ mentality, yet God does bless generosity (Proverbs 11:25). Giving is not to be done for profit yet God blesses the generous.

(iii) The Lord.  The giving of the Philippians pleased God.  Note the very striking words ‘They are a fragrant offering, an acceptable sacrifice, pleasing to God’ (v18).  The act of giving and its motivation delighted the Lord. This emphasises the God-ward dimension of giving – it is to be done as service to him, for his glory.

2. Trust in God’s promise

The Philippians’ gifts are but one example of a general principle stated in the promise of verse 19 ‘my God will meet all your needs according to his glorious riches in Christ Jesus’. These words are full of encouragement for God’s people.  They help us face difficult and challenging times, such as those in which we are now living. There are several things here to notice:

(i) The Scope.  We need to be careful, of course, that we do not try to make the verse say something that it does not say.  This is not a promise that Christians will receive from God absolutely anything that they request. There are varieties of supposedly ‘Christian’ teaching that suggest we can ‘name it and claim it’ – that if we have enough faith, God will give whatever we ask.  That is not what the Lord promises. He does not offer us a blank cheque that we can fill in however we wish. Often we do not know what would be best for us – we ask amiss or with selfish motives. No good parent will give his child everything he asks for, and our perfect heavenly Father will certainly not do so.  The promise relates to ‘all your needs’ – the things we need in order to live for his glory and to serve him as he has planned.  We are assured unequivocally that these things will be provided, and we can rest content with not having things we think we need or would like.

(ii) The Author.  Paul speaks of ‘My God’ – the God who loves him, who has saved him and who will provide for him.  This is the God who accepted the ‘fragrant offering’ of the gifts made to Paul by the Philippians (v18).  Our God is concerned for both bodily and spiritual needs. The physical is not beneath the notice of the Creator (see Psalm 145:16 ‘You satisfy the desires of every living thing’).  More than that, as Ephesians 1:3 reminds us, God has ‘blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ’. Have we not proved his ability to provide many times?  People make promises that often they are not able to keep, but God is able to supply our needs. Paul says that [literally] God will ‘fulfil all your need’.  His infinite love and wisdom decide what is a need and what is a desire, and he makes no mistakes.  Desires are sometimes granted: needs always are.

(iii) The Source.  Problems have arisen in shops recently when demand has outstripped supply, sometimes by a considerable margin.  The resources of the Lord, however, are unlimited. Paul refers to [literally] ‘his riches in glory’. The resources are infinite and can never run out.  The key to blessing is made clear – the riches are ‘in Christ Jesus’. All God’s provision flows to us through Christ. How is that so? The answer is that his saving work secured every blessing that his people will ever require.  By his death and resurrection, Christ has secured not only forgiveness of sin (wonderful as that is). He has also secured all that we require to live the Christian life, to face every trial that he permits to come to us and to reach final glory.  Christ is now ‘head over everything for the benefit of the church’ (Ephesians 1:22). Our Father has already given the greatest gift – Christ himself as our Saviour – and so all other gifts will certainly follow. Listen to Paul’s assurance in Romans 8:32 ‘He who did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all – how will he not also, along with him, graciously give us all things?’  United to Christ, we are in the place to receive God’s infinite provision.

(iv) The Supply.  It is abundant, not just the bare minimum for survival.  Notice that God supplies ‘according to his riches’.  It is not merely ‘out of his riches’, but ‘according to his riches’.  The Lord supplies in proportion to his infinite resources. He is not like a millionaire throwing a few coins to a beggar – that would be ‘out of his riches’.  To those who themselves give generously, God will give ‘A good measure, pressed down, shaken together and running over’ (Luke 6:38).

Note also the certainty of the supply.  Paul does not use the language of possibility.  He does not suggest that God ‘might’ or even ‘probably will’ meet all our needs.  He simply states that he will meet them. This is not an arrogant statement since it expresses the very opposite of self-confidence.  Our confidence rests on the nature of the God who promises and on the full the provision made in Christ once for all. You can share Paul’s confidence when you look to the Lord and trust in him.

In view of such a promise, Paul bursts out in praise in the doxology of verse 20 ‘To our God and Father be glory forever and ever’.  He ascribes ‘glory’ to ‘our God and Father’ because this is his doing, from start to finish, and all the glory is his.  Evidence of our Father’s provision should fuel worship and praise from his people, even when they are called to endure hardships and trials.  Sitting in prison, writing this letter, Paul knew what it was to practise what he preached. Let us do likewise.

David Mckay