The Folly of an Empty
Profession, Part 1
by
John MacArthur
Copyright 2005-2008,
Grace to You.
All rights reserved. Used by permission.
For an audio copy of this file:
please contact
Grace To You (800
55-GRACE)
Selected
Scriptures
GC 80-326
I want you to begin tonight as we
return to the Word of God by
following as I read Matthew chapter
7, verses 21 to 27...Matthew chapter
7 verses 21 to 27. Here are the
words of our Lord Jesus Himself. And
they are stunning words, shocking
words, and tragic words.
“Not everyone who says to Me, ‘Lord,
Lord,’ will enter the Kingdom of
Heaven, but he who does the will of
My Father who is in heaven. Many
will say to Me on that day, ‘Lord,
Lord, did we not prophesy or preach
in Your name? And in Your name cast
out demons and in Your name perform
many miracles?’ And then I will
declare to them, ‘I never knew you,
depart from Me, you who practice
lawlessness.’ Therefore everyone who
hears these words of Mine and acts
upon them may be compared to a wise
man who built his house upon the
rock. And the rain descended and the
floods came and the winds blew and
burst against that house and yet it
did not fall for it had been founded
upon the rock. And everyone who
hears these words of Mine and does
not act upon them will be alike a
foolish man, who built his house
upon the sand. And the rain
descended and the floods came and
the winds blew and burst against
that house and it fell and great was
its fall.’”
Perhaps this is the most tragic text
in all the Bible. The reality is
there will be people one day who
stand before the Lord, many of them,
who will assume that they are about
to enter heaven only to be told
they’re on their way to hell. This
is the worst possible illusion that
someone can have, to be mistaken
about your eternal destiny, to be
mistaken about your salvation.
I’m often asked the question, “Are
Roman Catholics Christians?” And I
would pose this question, “Are
Protestants naturally or always
Christians?” How about another
question, “Are evangelicals
necessarily Christians?” But a more
important question than any of those
is, “Are you a Christian?” Could be
that you’re among the many who are
self-deceived. You’re not alone. I
am convinced that in the name of
Christianity there are many places
that call themselves churches and
they’re not churches. And they have
men leading them who call themselves
pastors and they’re not pastors. And
they have congregations who call
themselves Christians and they are
not Christians. They’re not
churches, they’re not pastors, and
they’re not Christians and yet they
proudly post the label Christian.
Now we learned in our message last
time, from verses 13 and 14, that
there are only two possible options.
There is a narrow gate that goes to
heaven and there is a broad road
that says heaven but goes to hell.
The narrow gate is hard to find and
hard to go through because it
demands denial of self, denial of
self-righteousness, recognition of
sin, full repentance, submission to
Christ, commitment to obey Him and
follow Him no matter what the cost.
It’s hard to find that truth and
hearing it, it’s hard to act upon it
because of the love of self and the
love of sin which is natural to the
sinner. The true way to heaven is
hard to find. It is away from the
crowd. It is narrow, you come naked,
you come alone, you come penitent.
You strive to enter. At the same
time, most religious people are on
the broad road and there are plenty
of false prophets who are enabling
them. They are discussed, by the
way, in verses 15 to 20. The false
prophets, the false religious
leaders, the false representatives
of Christ, false agents of God who
really are the agents of Satan, they
are ministers of Satan disguised as
angels of light, leading people on a
road that says heaven but ends up in
hell. For all the years of my
ministry, there has been nothing
that has come to the level of my
concern for this issue.
Of course it’s a tragedy for Hindus
to go to hell, or Buddhists, or
Muslims. It’s a tragedy for atheists
and Jews who reject the Messiah to
go to hell. It’s a tragedy for
anyone to go to hell. But it seems
to me that the tragedy of all
tragedies is the oft repeated Judas
tragedy where you hang around Jesus
but end up belonging to Satan.
That’s the real tragedy. There are
pastors who fit into this category,
they’re not even Christians. And
churches are filled with people,
some quote/unquote churches are made
up almost all of non-Christians who
are deceived about their true
spiritual condition.
And so, it’s important for us to
hear the words of the Lord. If I’m
concerned about this issue, believe
me, He’s far more concerned about it
as well. And when the Lord said
these words, He was not speaking to
irreligious people, He was speaking
to fastidiously religious people. He
was speaking to people who were
religious to the max, I suppose we
could say. They were obsessed with
religion. In fact, they couldn’t
divorce their social life, their
civil life, their economic life,
their family life, their national
life from their religion. It
permeated everything in Israel.
These are THE most religious people.
These people are as religious as you
can get. But they have no
relationship to God and no
relationship to Christ. They are
religious but lost. They are on the
wrong road. To borrow the words of
Paul, they have a form of godliness
without the reality of it. They are
self-deceived.
We have that today, as I said. It is
everywhere...everywhere. People who
in some way or another are connected
to the idea of God and even Jesus,
but utterly devoid of any divine
life, any knowledge of God, any
salvation at all. We have multitudes
of deceived souls within churches
who are on some kind of Jesus trip,
thinking all is well. And the words
of our Lord in this text really are
the best words to deal with this
deception. And I’m sure it’s not
just a deception that’s out there
somewhere beyond us, I’m sure it’s a
deception that is here within us. Of
course it would be the tragedy of
all tragedies, but it will occur and
it does occur and it will continue
to occur that someone would sit at
Grace Community Church and end up
saying, “But, Lord, but, Lord,” only
to hear, “Depart from Me, you
workers of lawlessness, I never knew
you.”
Our Lord had this concern even in
the Olivet Discourse at the end of
His ministry when He told a story in
the twenty-fifth chapter of Matthew
about some virgins who had all the
trappings for the great event,
waiting for the bridegroom to come
for the wedding celebration. Only
one thing was missing. What they
needed on the inside, oil to light
the lamp because they had no oil,
symbolic of not having anything on
the inside of spiritual light, they
were shut out forever, though they
had all the external trappings.
I suppose the shocking word here, at
least the shocking word for me is
the first word of verse 22, “Many
will say to Me on that day...” And I
can’t help but tie that word back to
verse 13, “Many are those who enter
on the broad way through the wide
gate.” It’s the same many. It’s the
religious but lost. It’s the same
many who go on the broad road that
says heaven, but goes to hell. It’s
the same many who when they come to
the end of the road think they will
be admitted to heaven only to find
that the entrance to heaven is from,
as it were, the very portals
of...the entrance to hell, rather,
is from the very portals of heaven.
What a shock that is to think you’re
on the way to heaven, only to find
out you are in hell.
What lulls people into this
deception? What does it? How could
you get to that place where you’re
comfortable in your own deception,
your own self-deception, even
unaware of it. Well let me suggest
some things. There are some things
that contributed to this. And I
would say, first of all, is a
superficial understanding of the
gospel, which...by the
way...permeates if not dominates
quote/unquote Christendom, a failure
to understand the true terms of the
gospel, the real definition of
salvation and saving faith. We have
such a weak and shallow and
superficial and trivialized
emotionalized psychologized approach
to the gospel that most people who
call themselves Christians couldn’t
give you a meaningful explanation of
the great doctrines of redemption.
They don’t know them. Nor are they
expected to know them because in
many cases the people who teach them
don’t know them either. And so
people have a false understanding of
their spiritual condition because
they don’t even understand what
saving faith and what the saving
gospel are. And you would think that
someone like myself who has spent a
great portion of his lifetime trying
to clarify the gospel and clarify
what it means to genuinely repent,
and what it means to genuinely put
your faith in Christ, and what the
doctrine of justification really
means would be some kind of a hero
to the Christian church, but the
fact of the matter is, I’m an
anti-hero, I’m treading, as it were,
on people’s feelings, I’m invading
the comfortable bed of their
tolerances, I’m being divisive. But
the truth always does that...always
does that.
The church is so ignorant about the
gospel that when you preach the true
gospel, you’re very liable to be
vilified for it by the church. I
picked up another article today that
was sent to me in a journal, I think
about 15 pages long, attacking me
for what I say it means to become a
Christian, written by a man who is a
Christian pastor. I tell you to
preach the true gospel in the
Christian world today is to engage
yourself in more warfare than to
preach the true gospel in the world.
So the first reason why people can
be lulled into this deception is
because they don’t know the
definition of the gospel. They can
sit in a quote/unquote meeting
somewhere that poses as a church and
be taught by someone who poses as a
Christian pastor, and surrounded by
people who pose as Christians, and
be made to feel good about whatever
situation they’re in.
The second contributor to this is a
false sense of assurance...a false
sense of assurance. The idea is that
if you feel good about God, and if
you have some emotional attraction
to God which might be called love,
if you believe in Jesus and you want
to connect to Jesus, and you want to
sort of associate with Jesus and be
a part of what Jesus is doing, and
you want Jesus to kind of work with
you and make you what you want to
be, you’re in. And this will be
affirmed. You will be told if you
just pray this prayer, “You’re a
Christian.” You’ll be certified. In
some cases if you come to an altar
and pray this prayer, you’re going
to be doubly certified. In some
cases if you show some kind of
faithfulness to the meetings that
you go to and they’re all about
Jesus, quote/unquote. That’s a
certification. But mostly if you
feel good about Jesus and you want
Him to fix your life and take your
life, you’ll be affirmed, you’re
okay. As long as you say you want
Jesus in your life and as long as
you say you believe in Jesus and as
long as you pray to Jesus and ask
Him to fix your life, say the right
things, show the right emotional
responses to the events that are
done in the name of Jesus, you’re
okay. In fact, you’ll be built up.
You’ll be affirmed regularly. God
loves you and He loves you
unconditionally. And all He wants to
do is fulfill every dream and desire
you have in your life. And you’re
here and you’re showing your love
for God and that put you in the spot
where you’re going to be just
blessed.
And so, both the lack of definition
in the gospel and this overwhelming
desire to make everybody feel good
and to assure them that they’re okay
with God if they just hang around
the people who talk about Jesus,
lures people in and seduces them
into the dream that they are right
with God. And they’re not.
There’s a third thing. A failure at
self-examination...a failure at
self-examination. When somebody says
to me, “I’m not sure I’m a
Christian,” what should be my
immediate response? “Well, of course
you are. You’re here. Have you ever
prayed the prayer? Have you gone to
the prayer room? What are you
talking about, of course you’re a
Christian, look at you. You have a
Bible. Hey, you have a MacArthur
Study Bible, you have to be a
Christian. What do you mean?”
But if anybody says to me, “I’m not
sure I’m a Christian,” my immediate
response is, “The reason you may
feel you’re not a Christian is
because you’re not a Christian.”
It’s much more important to demand
an honest self-examination than it
is to ride across somebody’s doubts.
If you doubt your salvation, there’s
a reason you doubt your salvation.
It may not be a legitimate one, but
it may be a legitimate one. You may
have every right reason to doubt
that you’re on the way to heaven.
You may have every right reason to
doubt that you’re a believer. And
until I can see a pattern in your
life and make a good guess that this
is unnecessary doubt, and that
you’re succumbing to temptation not
to trust God who has saved you, and
even then I can’t be certain. I’m
going to question the fact that if
you doubt, maybe you have reason to
doubt.
But that’s not popular. In fact, the
words that I’m saying right now to
you are words that would be rejected
soundly in many, many quote/unquote
Christian churches. What? You are
calling into question people’s
salvation? Who do you think you are?
Well I’m only endeavoring to make
certain that the words of Jesus in
Matthew 7 are brought to bear upon
this generation, that people are
living under a massive illusion
about their relationship to God and
there are many, many in that
category. This is not my message,
this is the message of the great
Shepherd, I’m only His
undershepherd, passing the message
on.
And we’re so grace oriented. We want
people to feel so good. We want
people to like us. We don’t like
confrontation. So we don’t want to
call people’s spiritual life into
question. We’re so grace oriented,
we don’t want them to feel bad about
their sins, we want them to feel
happy about God’s love. But that’s
not biblical. In 2 Corinthians 13:5
there is a word that we all need to
hear and it comes from the Apostle
Paul to a church, to a church where
he had spent about two years of his
life, to a church where people had
professed Christ, where they had
been baptized, where they had been
taught by Paul, the Corinthian
church, a church to which by the
time he writes 2 Corinthians, he’s
already written three other
letters...1 Corinthians and two
other letters that aren’t in
Scripture. This is a church that has
heard so much from this man. And by
the time you come to chapter 13
here, you’ve now got a total of 29
chapters written to them just in the
two epistles that are inspired by
the Spirit and placed in the
Scripture. And yet he says to them
in chapter 13 verse 5, “Test
yourself to see if you are in the
faith, examine yourselves. Do you
not recognize this about yourselves
that Jesus Christ is in you unless
indeed you fail the test?”
After years of ministry under the
Apostle Paul, after years of
instruction from Paul and from his
emissaries sent to that church on
behalf of Paul, after years of
professing and confessing Christ, he
says, “You must go back to the very
beginning and examine yourselves to
see whether you are really in the
faith.” In fact, this should happen
in the life of the church as a
normal course. What do you mean by
that? Every time you come to the
Lord’s table, 1 Corinthians chapter
11, every time you come to the
Lord’s table, as often as you eat
this bread...verse 26...and drink
the cup, you proclaim the Lord’s
death till He comes, therefore
whoever eats the bread or drinks the
cup of the Lord in an unworthy
manner,” and that would be someone
who is not genuinely saved, for
sure, “shall be guilty of the body
and blood of the Lord.” If you are a
false Christian and you take
communion, you become guilty of His
death. “Let a man examine himself.”
Every time you come to the Lord’s
table, it is a time of
self-examination. If you don’t do
that, if you’re unwilling to do
that, the likelihood is you have
found a comfort zone in your
self-delusion.
There’s a fourth matter that I think
seduces people into this
delusion...a fixation on religious
activity...a fixation on religious
activity. Being in a church, being
with people who call themselves
Christians, reading quote/unquote
quasi-Christian literature, talking
about God, as so many people feel
today, feeling spiritual, even being
in a Bible study, being a part of
some Christian organization. This
lulls people into the deception that
that’s the equal of being saved.
O my, Christianity is filled with
people in all kinds of religious
activities. Just think of all the
Christian organizations, there’s no
end to them. Think of all the
Christian publishing, books, music,
literature of every imaginable kind,
television, radio. It’s endless. How
many people are involved in all of
this? Think of all the churches from
Roman Catholicism, the Orthodox
Church down through everything that
purports to be Christian, including
cults, all the way through to
liberal Protestantism,
denominations, all the way down to
every different kind of church. And
churches now pop up everywhere, the
idea today is to start your own
church. You’re not supposed to be
called or gifted or trained or
ordained, you’re just supposed to be
entrepreneurial. Everywhere these
churches pop up and then reinvent
what a church should be around the
personality of the leader. And they
involve people.
I just got a little deal somebody
showed me the other day, it came out
to everybody in my part of town. The
New Techno Church, and it features
break dancing Jesus boy...break
dancing Jesus boy in the New Techno
Church. Now that’s involving a lot
of people. And when they meet, it
says, when you come bring your
stuff, bring your rap albums, bring
your turntable and you can be a disc
jockey...and who knows what’s going
on in that situation. It involves
all kinds of people who feel like
they’re connected to break dancing
Jesus boy. And we laugh at that
because it’s so absolutely ludicrous
and ridiculous, but it’s a tragedy
beyond all tragedies. Religious
activity everywhere...everywhere.
There’s a fifth feature that I think
lures people into deception, I like
to call it a fair exchange
approach...a fair exchange approach.
It’s so typical. It usually starts
like this, I’m basically a good
person, it’s the idea that you
believe in God and you’re a good
person as over against a bad person,
which means given a twenty-four hour
day, most hours in that day you’re
not committing a violent crime.
That’s the way it works. It’s all
about stacking up the hours. How
many hours a day do I commit crimes?
Well, it’s a rare day when I do a
crime, but there are a lot of other
days when I don’t do a crime, so I’m
basically good. Or how many hours a
month am I raping someone.
Occasionally, but most of the time
I’m basically a good person. That’s
how it works. They sort of balance
off the timetable. We tend to also
balance off our sin with something
good. Hey look, I support my
family...I support my family. Yeah,
I know I stumble once in a while and
I’m unfaithful to my wife and I
cheat on my Income Tax, but I’m
telling you this, I take my kids,
you know, to the Saturday Little
League, I’m a good dad. Really?
Yeah, God wouldn’t keep me out of
heaven, after all I believe in God
and hey, I believe in Jesus, I’m
basically a good person.
Now, of course, that’s the biggest
lie in religion. You have to forget
in order to buy that lie that God
only justifies the ungodly. So it’s
not until you’re ungodly and you
know it, you’re already ungodly, you
just don’t know it. But when you
come to the knowledge that you are
ungodly, then there’s hope that you
could be justified...but not until.
This works for most people. Some bad
over here, some good over here,
balance...I’m on the good side, I’ll
be okay. God certainly couldn’t keep
me out of heaven.
There’s another element in this
little list of attitudes that give
people a false sense of assurance.
Familiarity with biblical
morality...familiarity with biblical
morality...they say, “Well hey, I
don’t deny what the Bible says, I
believe in a biblical morality. I’m
not pro-homosexual, I’m not
anti-marriage, I’m not anti-family.
I agree with that. I think sexual
activity should be between a husband
and a wife only inside marriage. I
hold that morality, I must be on my
way to heaven.
And there are lots of people who fit
into this category. Take, for
example, the Mormons. They say this
is their way of life...although it
doesn’t always work out so. I’m not
certainly trying to twist the
Scripture. Look, I don’t have any
argument with the Bible. Actually I
don’t know what it says, but I think
these are the kind of things that
the Bible advocates and I’m for
them.
And all these things are just a big
deception because none of these
things have anything to do with your
salvation...none of them. The real
issue is this, people who are
deluded and deceived have failed to
come through the narrow gate. They
have failed to come through the
narrow gate. What does that mean?
Repentance for sin, confession of
sin, submission to the Lordship of
Christ, brokenness, humility,
contrition, obedience to the Word of
the Lord no matter what. Martyn
Lloyd-Jones wrote, “What our blessed
Lord wants, most of all, is
ourselves, what Scripture calls our
hearts.” He wants the inner man, the
heart, He wants our submission. He
does not want merely our profession,
our zeal, our fervor, our works, or
anything else. He wants us. God does
not want our offerings. He does not
want our sacrifices. He wants our
obedience. He wants us. It is
possible for a man to say the right
things, to be very busy and active,
to achieve apparently wonderful
results and yet not to give himself
to the Lord. And that is, finally,
the greatest insult we can offer to
God. What could be a greater insult,
says Lloyd-Jones, than to say,
“Lord, Lord,” fervently to be busy
and active and yet to withhold true
allegiance and submission from Him
to insist upon retaining control of
our own lives and to allow our own
opinions and arguments rather than
those of Scripture to control what
we do and how we do it. This is the
greatest insult of all to the Lord.
And the deceived come in several
categories. There are the
superficial. They are the ones who
call themselves Christians because
at some point when they were kids
they accepted Christ. We’ll use that
buzz phrase. Or they believed in
God. They are ignorant and they are
uncommitted. I call them superficial
because they have a superficial
exposure to Christianity, some event
in their life, probably reinforced
by their parents. They think there’s
a real connection to God because of
that. But they’re just kind of
superficial, it’s all about a past
event. They think they’ve put that
to rest. They’ve settled that issue.
They’ve taken care of that sort of
necessary item in their lives. And
the only time you ever see them is
on Christmas and Easter. When they
roll into the church on Easter, you
want to wish them Merry Christmas
because you won’t see them again
till then.
And then there are the deceived who
are not the superficial but the
deceived who are very involved.
They’re all through the church.
Jesus called them tares sown among
the wheat. They know more about the
church. They know about the life of
the church, they’re involved in the
life of the church. They know a
little bit about the Bible. They
know Bible stories. They know what
the buzz phrase is, the Jesus
narrative to some extent. They could
tell you some Bible stories. They
know a little bit of theology, just
enough to be dangerous. But there’s
no real humility, there’s no
brokenness, there’s no godliness.
They’re just there. They’re
involved. They don’t think deeply
about things. They’re not trying to
be deceivers. They’re not trying to
be false Christians. They are, but
they don’t really know it. They’re
just kind of going along with the
church activity, thinking...Hey,
these are my people, this is where I
belong.
And so you have the superficial,
then you have the involved. And then
you have, thirdly, the hypocrites.
They know they’re not believers.
They show up on church on Sunday and
they can’t wait to get out of the
place to go back to pornography,
illicit relationships, wicked evil
behavior. Oh the involved, they’re
trying to work on their ethics,
they’re trying to work on their
morality and trying to be as good as
they can be without any help from
the Holy Spirit, pretty
tough...actually impossible. But the
hypocrites, they’ve given up trying
to be what they can’t be and they
just pretend to be one thing when
they show up at the church and the
rest of the time they are exactly
who they are.
Are these people all aware that
they’re being deceived? Oh I think
the superficial probably are really
deceived and they don’t know it. I
think the involved are deceived and
they don’t know it. I think, for the
most part, the hypocrites, they
aren’t deceived, they are deceivers.
I don’t know what they think they’re
going to gain out of it.
Now let’s say you’re here in a
church like this, or any church, you
want to help. And you say, “Okay,
we’ve got some tares here, and we’ve
got some people who are here,
they’re doing things in the church.
They’re involved. They’re working at
this Christianity thing. We’ve got
some other folks who show up now and
then, only sporadically, they’re the
superficial ones. And we’ve got some
well crafted hypocrisy going on that
is articulated very effectively by
some people who have been practicing
it for a long, long time. How are we
going to help these people? How do
we get to these people to unmask
them for their sake? What do you
look for? How can a deceived person
know he’s deceived. How can we spot
someone who is deceived and
deceiving?
Let me give you a few suggestions.
And by the way, in this message I’m
only giving you the introduction.
Here’s what to look for. When you’re
looking for people who are deceived,
look for people who are seeking
feelings, blessings, experiences,
healings, angels, whatever that are
only interested in the byproducts of
the faith, not in Christ. They’re
not consumed with the glory and the
honor and the wonder and the beauty
and the magnificence of Christ.
They’re not consumed with honoring
Him, loving Him, serving Him,
obeying Him, submitting to Him,
exalting Him, proclaiming Him,
worshiping Him, confessing Him.
They’re only there for the
byproducts of that which is attached
to Him...give me blessing, give me
spiritual experience, give me a
spiritual high, give me good
feelings, give me healing, give me
prosperity.
That’s an interesting thing to
realize that some years ago the
prosperity gospel was just a small
part of the larger Pentecostal
Movement. Now it has swallowed the
whole movement. The whole movement
is predicated on giving people the
products of God, but not God...the
products of Christ, but not Christ.
They’re not looking for Christ. Let
me have Christ whether I’m sick or
well. Let me have Christ whether I’m
rich or poor. Let me have Christ
whether I’m alive or dead. Let me
have Christ for my sins and Christ
for my guide and Christ for my power
and Christ for my King. I don’t care
whether I have anything but Christ.
That’s not what you hear today. In
fact, if that’s you message, it’s
very likely the crowd will thin out
fast. So when you’re looking for
people who might be deceived, look
for the people who are seeking only
the byproducts that are going to be
what they want and not Christ. And
as John Piper says, “The gospel does
not offer to the sinner what the
sinner wants naturally.” What does
the natural sinner want? Huh, good
feelings, blessings, healing,
happiness, riches, money, success, a
bunch of angels working for him, all
unregenerate people want that
naturally. That’s not the product of
the work of the Spirit in an
unregenerate heart. The gospel does
not promise the sinner what the
sinner already wants. It promises
what the sinner does not want and
that is righteousness, holiness,
forgiveness, heaven and dominating
all of that, Christ. And what is the
attitude of the world toward Christ?
They hate Him. That’s why we study
about Christians being persecuted,
right? You’ll be hated by all
because of My name. They hate Me,
they’ll hate you. The unregenerate
man has no affinity for the gospel
that redefines him as a wretched
sinner on his way to hell,
desperately in need of salvation.
And to get that salvation he has to
abandon himself and embrace Christ.
So you look for the people who are
looking for all the byproducts that
they want in their unredeemed
condition, rather than Christ.
Secondly, you can look for people
who are more committed to churches
than Scripture...more committed to
quote/unquote churches and
Scripture, denominations, movements,
groups because it very likely is a
social thing. Oh not just purely
social, but it’s sort of social with
a spiritual twang, you know? Ah, it
feels good to be involved in a God
thing. And you even hear people say
that. Hey, come and meet with us, we
have a God thing going here. It’s a
kind of a God social amalgam. And
that’s what they’re committed to,
not to the Word of God. How could
you be committed to God and not to
His Word? How can you say, “Oh yeah,
I really want to connect with God.”
Okay, you want to connect with God?
Here’s what God says. Confess your
sin, repent and embrace His Son as
your only hope of salvation. That’s
the first thing He says. And if you
don’t agree to do that, you’re going
to hell forever.
Now do you want to hear the next
thing God says? Maybe we could start
there and then we’ll work on, “Deny
yourself, take up your cross and
follow Him.” Then we could work on,
“Hate your father, hate your mother,
sister, your brother and even your
own life.” And then we’ll talk about
count the cost.
Wait a minute, He’s asking all that?
And then, by the way, the Law of God
is the Law of God because it’s a
reflection of His holy nature and
the Law of God doesn’t change, God’s
moral Law will have to become your
passion. What? Which is another way
of saying everything you love to do
now, you have to hate. Everything
you hate to do now you have to love.
Are you ready for that? Look for
people who have a commitment to some
organization, some place, some group
of people that is far more than
their commitment to know the Word of
God so that they can obey the Word
of God.
I’m not under any illusions. I know
why people come to this church. I
know why you’re here. You’re here
because you take the Word of God
seriously, correct? And this is not
a dog and pony show. Look, I get up
here every week and do the exact
same thing I did last week. There’s
no variety in this church. But
you’re not looking for a variety act
here. It isn’t a juggler this week
and a dancing horse next week. You
don’t need to be entertained. You
don’t need a rock band. You’re here
for one reason, tell me what the
Word of God says. That’s why you’re
here. I know that. We all know that.
That’s why we’re here.
And sometimes people will say,
“Well, you know, we came to your
church for a little while but it was
a fifteen minute drive and we found
a place closer by.” Really? Do they
teach the Bible there? “Oh no,
no...not like you do. But it’s close
to where we are.” Oh, okay, yeah.
Not hard to figure out where you’re
at, is it?
There’s one reason people come here
and one reason they don’t come here,
because they don’t want the constant
exposure. I wouldn’t come here if I
didn’t want to hear the Word of God.
I’d take about one sermon from me
and say, “I’m not going there
again.” Look, if you don’t listen to
the Word of God, and you’re not
interested in the Word of God, this
isn’t the place to be because
nothing else is going to happen. So
if you’re waiting for the new wave
to show up, it’s not coming.
There’s a third kind of person you
might look at and wonder if these
people are really converted. They’re
more involved in theology as an
academic interest than for personal
holiness. I hate to say it but
seminaries all over this country are
filled with professors who have a
academic interest in Scripture, an
academic interest in theology, who
don’t know God at all. And so
whatever they think the Bible means
is probably not what the Bible
means, since the natural man even
though he’s a scholastic, cannot
understand the things of God. It’s
no wonder that seminaries full of
liberal professors can’t get the
gospel right, can’t get Genesis
right, can’t get the Old Testament
right, can’t get anything right
because unregenerate people no
matter how well they’re educated or
theologically trained still can’t
get it right. Because, as 1
Corinthians 2 says, only the Spirit
of God knows the mind of God and
only the Spirit can give
understanding.
So you look for people who have an
academic interest in theology and
the Scripture rather than an
interest in the Word of God for the
sake of personal holiness and
personal worship. You know, that’s
the two things that I draw out of
Scripture. The first thing is the
work of the Word in my own heart,
the cleansing, purifying. It’s like
a knife, John 15, that prunes. It’s
like water that washes. And the
second element is that it not only
convicts and cleanses my heart and
the heart of a true believer, but it
also enables us to worship in fresh
ways. Every new passage releases new
things about God. Every verse that I
go to, and I go so slowly through
every verse explodes on me in a kind
of cacophony of angelic voices
praising God and opens new vistas of
understanding for me.
And so what do I draw out of
Scripture? That which produces
personal growth and holiness in my
own life, and that which expands my
worship. I never read the Bible for
academic reasons...never.
Another thing to look for in a
person who is deceived is someone
who is always stuck on one point of
theology. I have run into these
people all my life. They deal with
only one over-emphasized point of
theology and they’re just seeking a
platform to expound this sort of
wacky view. And when they write me
letters, you know these kinds of
people, they write tiny writing,
never spaced down all sides of the
paper and then they write all over
the envelope. And everything they
say is all about the same point. And
all they want is a platform, driven
by some ego need. You’re going to
find with true Christians that there
is not this obsession with some
quirky aspect of theology, but
rather there is this open balance in
which they embrace all the treasures
of wisdom and knowledge that are
found in Christ.
Another and I’ll just give you two
more, another thing to look for when
you’re looking for people who might
be in a condition of being
self-deceived is that they are
over-indulgent in the name of
grace...they are over-indulgent in
the name of grace. Another way to
say that is they lack penitence.
With true Christians, there’s just
an ongoing brokenness. There’s just
an ongoing kind of recognition that
they fall short. We are the ones
always confessing our sins and
thereby, 1 John 1, we give evidence
of being ones that are always
forgiven.
When you find people who are
over-indulgent in their sins, who
are going to defend their right to
conduct their life in a certain way
and live a certain way because of
grace, sort of super-grace,
indulgent grace, and they lack
penitence and brokenness and a
measure of humility, it might well
be that you’re dealing with someone
who is deceived.
And just one last one, and we’ve
kind of talked about it, but you can
put it in the list, number six, look
for people who see God as the means
to their own ends...who see God as
the means to their own ends. I want
to be...I want to get to God because
I’ve got all these deals that I want
to do, I’ve got all these plans,
I’ve got all these dreams, I’ve got
all these ambitions and hey, if you
tell me God will help me get there,
that’s Joel Osteen. He’s a heretic.
That’s not Christianity. That is not
Christianity. And that is not a
church. It’s heresy. God is not the
genie in your bottle who jumps out
when you rub it and says, “Tada,
three wishes.” That is not
Christianity. It doesn’t even
approximate true Christianity. You
need to help those people who see
God as the means to their own ends.
Sad to say, people who live like
this even though they hang around
churches, called churches, and
sometimes hang around real churches
and some of them are even here in
our church, they are on the road to
destruction. They’re among the many
who will say, “Lord, Lord, it’s us.”
Only to hear, “Depart from Me, I
never knew you.” These are the
people who think they’re going to
heaven, but they’re not.
Now with that, we introduce this
text. I’m glad you still think
that’s humorous. That gives me hope
that there is a future. We’re going
to return to this text and we’re
going to look more deeply into what
is one of the most provocative and
powerful of all of Jesus’ teachings,
the folly of empty words. Profession
without possession, the tragedy of
all tragedies. But for now, we bow
in prayer and thank the Lord for
what He’s given us tonight.
Father, it is such a tragic thing to
think of empty words coming from
empty hearts of lives that will be
destroyed when the rain of judgment
and the flood of divine wrath comes
in the end who will stand at the
tribunal and say, “Hey, Lord, it’s
us, Lord, Lord.” Only to hear, “I
never knew you. Depart from Me, you
workers of iniquity.” Father, we
know that all are deceived who have
not ceased by Your power doing
iniquity and begun to do Your will.
What marks a true believer? They as
we heard in baptism tonight are not
longer a slave to sin but have
become slaves of righteousness. On
the other hand, if we look at this
all positively, how can you tell a
true believer? Consumed with the
love of Christ, consumed with a
hunger for the Word of God, longing
to be holy and righteous, longing to
be humble and broken, desirous to be
above all things obedient from the
heart, longing to worship, can never
get enough obedience, can never get
enough worship...all these evidences
of a transformed life. And, Father,
we would pray that if there are any
with us tonight who are deceived
about their true spiritual
condition, Lord, may the light go on
and may they see the reality. Give
them a hunger and a thirst for
righteousness. Give them an
overwhelming love for Christ. Give
them a desire to humble themselves,
turn from their sin and submit to
Christ as slaves submitting to a
sovereign and all-gracious, merciful
Lord. Give them a desire to worship.
Free them from the longings of the
natural heart, the unredeemed heart.
Fill their hearts with the longings
that belong only to the
regenerate...obedience, submission,
humility, holiness, worship.
Now, Father, just do your work,
that’s all we can ever ask. Ours is
but to bring the truth and to bring
the warning and to repeat the words
of our blessed Savior. And we pray,
Lord, that Your Spirit would do a
mighty work in hearts through what
we’ve heard tonight. We thank You
for it in the Savior’s name. Amen.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "MacArthur's Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
Box 119
Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
Our websites: www.biblebb.com and
www.gospelgems.com
Email: tony@biblebb.com
Online since 1986