The Folly of an Empty
Profession, Part 2
by
John MacArthur
Copyright 2005-2008,
Grace to You.
All rights reserved. Used by permission.
For an audio copy of this file: please contact
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To You (1-800-55-GRACE)
Matthew 7:21-27
GC 80-327
When all is said and
done in terms of the ministry of the
Word of God, the most important
thing we do is preach the gospel of
Jesus Christ. The most important
thing we do is to tell people there
is a heaven and there is a hell. And
you will spend eternity in heaven or
in hell. And then to tell people
that there is a way to heaven,
guaranteed, absolutely sure and
final. There is a way therefore to
avoid hell. And since heaven and
hell are forever, this is the most
important message that anyone can
ever give or anyone can ever hear.
Every human being lives forever.
Every human being is eternal. After
this life is over, we will live
forever. We will live consciously,
personally, intelligently. We will
live fully aware of every detail of
our existence. We will experience
every moment of our eternal
existence in a sense that we have
never experienced any moment in this
life...without distraction, with
full comprehension, full
understanding of every moment and
every experience in eternity without
ever sleeping, or being unconscious.
The experience of every person in
the life to come will be unlimited
and unmitigated and unrestrained and
unprotected. We will have in our
final form fully functioning minds
and bodies. We will feel, we will
think, we will emote at a level that
far exceeds the most exhilarating
moment in life here. We will be
fully conscious of every detail in
the eternal experience of heaven or
hell.
The biblical description of hell
makes this obvious. It is described
as a place of a relentless accusing
conscience, unrelieved guilt,
remorse, sorrow, regret, isolation,
agony, suffering, punishment by God,
described as fire, darkness, where
there is gnashing of teeth and
weeping and wailing forever. On the
other hand, the biblical description
of heaven is stunningly attractive,
unending, unlimited joy, bliss,
happiness, satisfaction, no pain, no
sorrow, no suffering, no loss, no
remorse, sheer joy forever.
It should be obvious that heaven is
the place to be and hell is the
place not to be. The most important
choice a person makes is the choice
of heaven. And it’s a challenging
choice. And sad to say, there are
many people who think they have made
that choice...but they have not.
They think they are set to avoid
hell and enter into heaven, but they
are mistaken.
Open your Bible to Matthew chapter 7
and hear the words of our Lord Jesus
Christ...who is, by the way, Lord of
heaven and Lord over hell. Matthew
chapter 7 verse 21, and I want to
read down to verse 27. Matthew
chapter 7 verse 21, “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 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 didn’t 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 like 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.”
Surely there are no more serious
words for religious people to hear
than these. No more serious words
for people who profess Christianity
than these because our Lord says
there will not be a few but many who
are mistaken about their future
destiny. He points out in this
passage for our consideration the
folly of empty words, and then the
tragedy of empty hearts...empty
words coming from empty hearts.
I don’t think there’s a more
sobering text of Scripture than this
one. I can understand that there are
people who reject religion, reject
Christianity, want nothing to do
with Jesus Christ, nothing to do
with the gospel of Christ, nothing
to do with the Bible, the Word of
God, and they are headed for hell.
But it’s a far more sobering and
stunning and shocking thing to
realize that there are many who are
going to say, “Lord, Lord,” to Jesus
Christ, there is a confession openly
of some attachment to Him that has
been carried so far that they have
actually functioned in His name only
to hear that they will not at all
enter heaven.
One’s final destiny then is not
determined by what you say. It is
determined by what you do. It is not
about profession, it is about
obedience. Now that is not to say
that verbal profession of Christ is
bad, it is not bad, it is good. It
is not just good, it is necessary.
If you would be saved, you must
confess Jesus as Lord, Romans 10:9
and 10, and believe in your heart
that God raised Him from the dead.
“For with the mouth confession is
made unto salvation and with the
heart man believes.” Confession is
good. Confession is not only good,
it is necessary. It is also the work
of the Holy Spirit because in 1
Corinthians 12:3 we read that no one
can make this confession, no one can
make this profession apart from the
Holy Spirit. So confessing Jesus as
Lord is necessary, it is also the
work of the Spirit to bring about a
true profession of Christ.
But it cannot stand alone, just the
profession. Let’s look at verse 21.
“Not everyone who says to Me,” the
operative word here is “says.” You
can underline that and you’ll get
the thrust of what our Lord is
saying. “Not everyone who says to
Me, ‘Lord, Lord...’” Now there is
nothing in that confession that is
anything short of right. It is
correct to say Lord, and to say it
twice is to affirm a certain level
of devotion. Lord...that’s
respectful. Lord, Lord...that’s
orthodox, that’s fundamental, that
is certainly true. And so here you
have what is correct, what is true,
what is to some degree zealous and
passionate, showing some strength of
devotion...Lord, Lord. And you add
to that that this person is
convinced that in Your name we have
prophesied and in Your name cast out
demons, and in Your name performed
many miracles. Here is a life given
over to the purposes connected to
the name of Christ. This is not a
fringe person. This is not somebody
on the edge. Three times in verse
22, “in Your name” appears. It’s
emphatic. There is devotion here.
There is an open confession that has
passion and zeal. And backing up
that confession and that profession
is a life given over to ministry
associated with the name of Jesus
Christ. And even the activities
themselves...prophesy doesn’t mean
to predict the future, it means to
speak forth. They have taught,
spoken, proclaimed in the name of
Christ. They have engaged in
spiritual conflict. They claimed to
have actually exercised power over
demons in that name. And even to
have done some miracles. Here is a
life that could basically be defined
as the life of a minister, the life
of a missionary, the life of a
preacher or a teacher of the gospel
or even the life of an Apostle who
was able to perform wonders and have
power over Satan. This is not then
some superficial marginal person
making the claim, Lord, Lord.
How stunning then to hear in verse
22 many saying that. And then in
verse 23, in response to their
confession, the Lord makes His
confession, “And then will I declare
to them I never knew you.” They may
claim Him, He does not claim them.
Why? Because salvation doesn’t come
to those who only profess it, who
only speak of it. It’s not the
"sayers" who are saved, it’s the
doers. And if you look a little
closer into verse 23, you can see
that these people are not known to
the Lord because they are doers of
lawlessness. Depart from Me, you who
practice lawlessness. Literally in
the Greek, “You that do always work
lawlessness. You that do always work
evil.”
Professing Christ and living a
sinful life will expose you one day
as a hypocrite. Profession is
valueless if it stands alone. In
fact, profession is a kind of
profanity. I’ve always felt that
it’s pretty clear in the Old
Testament that you’re not to take
the Lord’s name in vain. I know as a
kid I was raised in such a way in my
family to never ever even think of
taking the Lord’s name in vain, in
any way, shape, or form. And my
parents educated me about what they
called minced oaths where you would
intend to take the Lord’s name in
vain, but you substitute another
word, and that is equally wrong and
a violation of that command. I was
raised to avoid all manner of
profanity and have raised my own
children in the same way and I think
it’s right to keep that commandment,
not to take the Lord’s name in vain,
but I would suggest to you that
there is a far greater profanity
than from time to time using the
name of God, a greater profanity is
to all the time use the name of God
and have no real commitment to Him.
Now you have a life that is one
total act of profanity.
The blasphemy of the sanctuary is
far more awful than the blasphemy of
the street. The blasphemy of the
sanctuary is far more awful than the
blasphemy of the street. Taking the
Lord’s name in vain, claiming to
belong to the Lord, claiming to
represent the Lord, claiming to
speak for the Lord, claiming to do
ministry for the Lord while all the
time having no relationship to Him
but living a wicked, sinful,
self-indulgent life is a kind of
profanity that exceeds all other
profanities. It’s a profane life.
And I suppose no one would argue
that the worse of all kisses ever
rendered in the Bible was a Judas
kiss...to say, “Lord, Lord,” while
in your heart you have nothing but
resentment.
The world is full of people who call
Jesus Lord, who say it with emotion
and passion, Lord, Lord. And yet
never ever do they turn from their
sin and submit to that lordship,
never do they obey the will of the
Father who is in heaven. The church
is full of people like this. That is
why we are told in the Scripture, 2
Corinthians 13:5, “Examine
yourselves to see whether you’re in
the faith.” And you don’t look at a
past event, you look at the
character of your life. The only
thing that makes you acceptable to
God is a pattern of obedience to the
Word of God that is the product of
repentance and genuine faith in
Jesus Christ and truly abandoning
your life in obedience to His
lordship. “Faith without works”
is...what?... “dead.” It has no
life.
In the text in the original, if you
just look at that statement, “I
never knew you,” in the original
language, if you drew out all the
components of that, it would
probably be better to read it this
way, “Not for a single moment have I
acknowledged you as My own. I have
never known you.” That doesn’t mean
He doesn’t know who you are. The
Lord knows who everybody is. He not
only knows who everybody is, He
knows everyone’s heart and He knows
what everyone is thinking. You
remember in John 2 it was said of
Jesus that He didn’t need to ask
anybody a question because He knew
what was in their hearts. When I
says, “I never knew you,” it doesn’t
mean I don’t know who you are,
you’re a stranger to me. It means I
have no intimate personal
relationship with you. That’s
knowing in the biblical sense.
For example, in the Old Testament
book of Genesis, Scripture says that
Adam knew his wife and she had a
son. It means a lot more than he
knew who she was. He knew here in
the sense of physical intimacy and
she conceived and brought forth a
child.
With regard to Joseph and Mary, Mary
became pregnant and in the New
Testament it says, “Joseph had not
known her.” It’s a beautiful
traditional ancient euphemism for
sexual intimacy.
But it has an even greater
metaphorical meaning. It is to have
an intimate relationship. For
example, Amos 3:2, God says
regarding Israel, “Israel, only have
I known.” It doesn’t mean that only
Jews were known to God in terms of
awareness. It means with Israel God
established an intimate
relationship. That’s why He calls
Israel His wife. And He calls
Himself her husband. When Jesus says
at the day of judgment to the person
making an empty profession, “I never
knew you,” He is saying, “We never
had a relationship of any kind.” You
may have respect for their claim of
interest in Christ, you may have
respect for the fact that they talk
about Jesus, they talk about Him as
Lord, you may have respect for a
certain measure of orthodoxy, you
may have respect for the fervency
that is exhibited in their public
devotion, you may see people like
this singing hymns or even
performing hymns and songs of
testimony to Christ, you may have
respect for some who can actually
preach, some who claim to cast out
demons, some who claim to do
miracles. This sounds a lot like
what is claimed today by those
leaders of the Charismatic Movement,
doesn’t it? And the preachers of the
devilish prosperity gospel. There
will always be those who make these
claims.
Were their deeds genuine? Not apart
from God they weren’t. False
miracles, false exorcisms, false
prophecies because they have no
relationship to Christ. They never
came, by the way, through the narrow
gate. Back in verse 13, Jesus said,
“Enter by the narrow gate for the
gate is wide, the way is broad that
leads to destruction. Many are those
who enter by it for the gate is
small and the way is narrow that
leads to life and few are those who
find it.” they didn’t come by the
narrow gate. They didn’t come with
an attitude of repentance. They
didn’t come knowing they were
sinners. They didn’t come stripped
bare. They didn’t come naked,
destitute, hungering and thirsting
for righteousness, that Beatitude
attitude.
It’s a scary thing to think about
this, folks. It’s a frightening
thing to think about, that there are
going to be people cast into hell
who have spent a great portion of
their life giving testimony to their
faith in Jesus Christ. But they’re
only empty words. Show me your life.
Go back to verse 18. “A good tree
cannot produce bad fruit. Nor can a
bad tree produce good fruit. Every
tree that doesn’t bear good fruit is
cut down and thrown into the fire.
So then you will know them by
their...what?...fruit.” Look at the
life. Jeff O’Hara wrote these words,
“Why call Me, Lord, Lord, and do not
the things I say? You call Me the
Way and walk Me not. You call Me the
life and live Me not. You call Me
master and obey Me not. If I condemn
you, blame Me not. You call Me bread
and eat Me not. You call Me truth
and believe Me not. You call Me Lord
and serve Me not. If I condemn you,
blame Me not.” Empty words.
The so-called church of Jesus Christ
is filled with those speaking empty
words. These empty words rise from
empty hearts. Notice verse 24, this
illustration demonstrates the real
condition of the heart beneath the
empty words and the heart beneath
the true profession.
“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 didn’t 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 like 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.”
Now here again there is this very
familiar contrast that we’ve been
looking at through this entire text.
Two gates, two ways. Two crowds, two
destinies. Two trees, and now two
houses. Both subjected to the same
judgment. The contrast here is not
between people who hear the Word of
God and people who have not heard
the Word of God, but between people
who hear the Word of God and act
upon it, and people who hear the
Word of God and do not act upon it.
Or those who are exposed to the
truth and who obey and those who
exposed to the truth do not obey.
This is about obedience as over
against disobedience. And the
contrast between the obedient and
the disobedient is painted for us in
a picture of two builders of houses.
The words here you will understand
then are addressed to those who
profess to know God. These words are
addressed who profess to know the
Lord. The Lord-Lord crowd, the ones
who have given their life over to
preaching and confronting Satan and
doing things in the realm of
ministry associated with
Christianity and with the gospel and
with Jesus Christ. But that group is
divided into two groups, those who
really obey and those who do not
genuinely obey. You see then in
verse 24 those who hear these words
of Mine and act upon them, and in
verse 26, those who hear these words
of Mine and do not act upon them. So
you have the professors and the
possessors.
You have the false claimants and the
true claimants, but both look alike.
And the stunning thing about this
illustration is that you really
can’t tell the difference on the
surface. Both appear the same. You
have a house, the only difference
that is made distinct here in the
building of these two houses, in
either case you have a house, the
only difference is the part you
can’t see, right? It’s not the roof,
it’s not the side walls, not the
windows and the doors, it’s the
foundation. That is to say, we’re
talking to people who belong to the
visible church. We’re talking to
people who have been exposed to
Scripture. They have heard the
sayings of Mine. They attend
meetings, they attend preaching,
they go to Bible study, they may
attend a Christian college. They may
end up in a seminary, They may read
Christian books. On the surface they
look like everybody else who is a
true Christian and the foundation is
not visible.
The real question here then is not
whether they have heard the gospel.
It’s not about whether they’ve heard
the teaching of Christ. But what do
they do about it genuinely. It’s not
just that they have heard the
teaching about Christ, they’ve
actually done it, done ministry in
His name.
Now what Jesus says here is that
there is no way to tell the true
from the false until the storm
comes. The storm will manifest the
truth. Then we’ll find out who built
like a wise man and who built like a
fool.
Let’s look at these similarities a
little bit before we look at the
contrast. They both built a house. A
house constitutes a life of
religious activity, a life within
the broad framework of what we would
call Christianity or the gospel.
They both built it in the same
place. How do you know they built it
in the same place? Because the same
storm got both houses. So we could
say they were next door to each
other. Both are subject to the same
events. They built within the same
area. True believers and false
believers, side by side. Much like
our Lord said in Matthew 13, that
the wheat and the tares would grow
together. And the time of separation
would be at the judgment. So similar
are these houses that it’s hard for
us to tell. Sunday night after
Sunday night we come, we gather
here, we hear the testimonies of
those being baptized, and never does
a Sunday night go by that we don’t
hear somebody and we heard it again
tonight, say, “I lived like a
Christian on the outside, I was not
a Christian on the inside, I was
raised in the church, I was in the
church, I reiterated the things I
needed to do, I acted the way I
needed to act but I didn’t know the
Lord.” That is not an unusual
experience. That is a very common
one.
They both built a house. They built
a house in the same vicinity which
puts them within the framework of
the true believers. They actually
built it in the same way. It looks
the same. You could say that they
built a house consistent with the
Christian development. It’s a tract
house. It looks like all the other
Christian houses on the outside. The
only difference here is the
foundation. That’s the only
difference the Lord makes.
And this is significant for us to
understand. That’s why the Lord
says, “Don’t you take on the
responsibility to separate the wheat
from the tares, you can’t know that,
only the Lord can know that until
the judgment day reveals it. The
difference is the foundation. One
builds on petra, rockbed...rockbed.
Not petros, that’s boulder or stone.
Petra, rockbed. One has a concrete,
if you will, or stone foundation.
The other builds on sand. The Greek
word for sand is ammon for which the
capital city of Jordan where I have
visited a number of times gets its
name. Ammon Jordan, it is aptly
named, it is one big sand pile,
ammon Jordan.
So, there is a foundation of stone
in one place and rock. There is a
foundation of sand in the other
place. A man is a fool to build on
sand because when a storm comes, it
will wash the house away. And that’s
exactly what happens. Look at verse
27. Verse 26 says, “The foolish man
builds 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.” On the other
hand, “A wise man,” end of verse 24,
“built his house on the rock, and
the rain descended, the floods came,
the winds blew and burst against
that house yet it did not fall for
it had been founded upon the rock.”
Here, by the way, again is a
powerful rebuke of the religion of
the Pharisees who were hypocrites.
But of any false religion, but most
particularly in this context of
false profession of Christ as Lord.
What does it mean to build on sand?
No foundation. What does that mean?
Well the one who builds on sand has
no regard for the Word of God in
terms of obedience, not committed to
a life of devout obedience, willing
obedience, loving obedience, eager
obedience. No regard for true
spirituality of the soul. No regard
for true purity of the heart. No
integrity in behavior. No love for
the law of God. No longing to please
God. The one who builds on sand
prays, occasionally fasts, gives
money, works within the framework of
Christian life, and does it to
enhance his or her reputation. Does
it to feel good about himself or
herself. It’s the religion of
externals. The outside looked good,
but the foundation was non-existent.
They bring their bodies to prayer
but not their souls. They worship
with their mouths but not their
hearts. They boast of their
orthodoxy but have no love for
obedience.
What is the rock? Clearly, the rock
is these sayings of Mine, or these
words of Mine, verse 24, “Everyone
who hears these words of Mine...”
Verse 26, “Everyone who hears these
words of Mine...” The Word of
Christ, the Word of God, this is the
word that saves, is it not? Faith
comes by hearing the Word of Christ.
This is the gospel. This is the
truth of Scripture. So in both cases
these people have heard these
sayings of Mine. But where they act
upon them, where they obey them,
there is a foundation that will
stand the test of divine judgment. A
life of obedience manifests true
salvation. If it isn’t there, it’s
deception. John 8:31, “If you
continue in My word, then you’re My
real disciple.” John 8:31. If you
continue in My Word, then you’re My
real disciple.
Do you remember James 1, and there
are a number of scriptures we could
look at. But a couple to keep in
mind. James 1:22, “Prove yourself
doers of the Word and not merely
hearers who delude themselves.” If
all you do is hear it, and you don’t
obey it, and you don’t obey it
because you love it, you are
self-deceived if you think your life
will stand the test of the flood of
divine judgment. In the opening
chapter of Titus, verse 16, speaks
of people who profess to know God,
“But by their deeds they deny him,
being detestable and disobedient.”
One thing marks the difference
between a true believer and a false
believer, and that is a pattern of
loving, eager, submissive, obedience
to the Word of God. Obedience is the
key. Hearing the Word and doing it,
that is the only genuine authentic
valuator of true salvation. If you
say, “Lord, Lord,” “Kurios, Kurios,”
“Master, Master,” then immediately
you should say, “I am Your slave.”
If He is kurios, you are doulos. If
He is Lord and Master, you submit.
And if you say, “Lord, Lord,” with
zeal, and devotion and you do not
submit, that is a blasphemy above
all blasphemies, that is the
blasphemy of the sanctuary that
takes His name in vain. You would be
better off, frankly, to use the name
of Jesus Christ, or God, in an
occasional curse word than to live
an ongoing hypocritical life that
blasphemes His name from beginning
to end.
We’re not talking about perfection
here, we’re talking about direction.
I’m not perfectly obedient, I am
imperfectly obedient. But I long to
be perfectly obedient. That’s my
passion, that’s my heart longing. I
have recognized that I fall short. I
have recognized that I am a sinner.
I have repented of that sin and
embraced Christ as the only hope of
salvation and my life has been
transformed and my heart longs to
obey. True Christians build lives of
obedience, built on the rock of
biblical truth.
Let me take you a little more deeply
into the differences. What does it
mean to really build your life on
the things that Christ has said that
are revealed in Scripture? To build
your life biblically? As compared to
building on sand? Just some things
to think about.
One, in the one case you build the
easy way, and the other, you build
the hard way. It’s really to build
on sand. You don’t have to do
anything, start building. You don’t
have to dig. You don’t have to
prepare the site. You don’t have to
set the footings. You don’t have to
put in the foundation. You don’t
have to lay in the concrete slab.
It’s easy to build on sand, you just
put your building up. This speaks of
the fool in a hurry, the easy way,
shortcut, quick results, fools are
always in a hurry. Fools always want
to get it fast. And in many ways, in
Christianity in our time, in our
place, we aid and abet the fools by
making everything quick and easy.
Quick and easy evangelism, quick and
easy gospel presentation, keep it
moving, no time for soul conviction,
no time for building a deep sense of
one’s sinfulness. No time for the
cultivation of conviction by the
Holy Spirit, regret over sin, no
time for deep soul searching, no
time for counting the cost. The fool
is in a hurry, he wants it quick and
easy, and very often we accommodate
the fool by making it quick and
easy.
Also, not only is the fool in a
hurry, but he’s very shallow. And
again I say, we live in a time when
shallowness is at a premium as if it
had some value. It’s a shallow
approach to almost everything in our
culture. There’s so much
superficiality and shallowness in
the name of Jesus that is accepted
as if it’s legitimate that one can
hardly get one’s arms around this.
It’s so common. No deep plowing. No
hard spade work in the soul. No
foundation exercises. No brokenness
of heart. No grief over sin. No
mourning over waywardness. We lack
depth. We lack sincerity. Everything
is superficial.
On the other hand, the wise man,
Luke 6:47 and 48 says, “The wise man
dug deep.” The wise man dug deep.
Went down into the rock. What does
it mean? Not in a hurry, not in a
hurry. Not looking for the fast
track to heaven. Not looking for the
quick conversion, for the light
confession. You know, I agree with
Arthur Pink who once said, “There
are some who say they are saved
before they ever have any sense they
are lost.” And it’s almost against
the rules now to give someone an
overwhelming sense that they are
lost. To drive them down deep into
the ugliness of their own heart, the
wretchedness of their own sin.
But the wise are not in a hurry.
They want to make sure that what
they’re doing is the real thing.
There are many who would claim
Christ as Lord who have no thought
of what that means. In fact,
strangely but truly there are many
people who confess Jesus as Lord and
don’t think that means He’s in
charge. Many rush into a profession
and later rush out again. But the
one who is wise digs deep. He’s not
shallow like the parable of Matthew
13. The rock is plowed out of the
soil. The weeds are removed so he
doesn’t have a superficial shallow
faith. That’s why, folks, we have to
preach against sin. You have to
expose the true lostness of the
human heart. The sinner must feel
far worse before he ever has a right
to feel any better. The person who
is wise is not in a hurry. He is
willing by the working of the Spirit
of God to take the full blast of
condemnation that comes at him for
his condition. He embraces that “God
be merciful to me, a sinner”
attitude that the publican had when
he pounded his chest.
And secondly, and unlike the wise
(meant foolish) man, he’s not
superficial in his house building,
he gives maximum effort. He counts
the cost. Jesus said that. Look, you
don’t go to war without counting the
cost. You don’t build a tower
without counting the cost. You
understand what the Lord is asking.
He’s asking for your life, for your
whole life. Deny yourself, take up
your cross, follow Me. If you say
this is going to cost me my family,
then let it cost you your family,
your father, your mother, your wife,
your husband, your sister, your
brother, your friends. If it means
you have to be persecuted even to a
cross, let it be. But you deny
yourself and all other things and
follow Me.
This person wants to do it right.
Counts the cost. Learns the right
way and willingly submits. He is
emptied of self-righteousness. He is
emptied of self-sufficiency. He digs
way down. He knows he has nothing
commendable. He’s overwhelmed with
his sin. He makes the maximum effort
in the Lord’s strength to place the
Word in his heart. He’s interested
in genuinely submitting to Christ
and loving Christ. He longs to know
the Word in order that he might obey
the Word. He doesn’t want to know
the Word so he can wow the ignorant,
he wants to know the Word so he can
compel his own soul into a life of
obedience.
Nothing superficial about him. Oh,
there are so many people in
Christianity today who want the
quick, fast track. They want the
byproducts of a relationship with
God without the relationship. They
want the byproducts of salvation
without salvation. They want the
byproducts of repentance without
repentance. They want forgiveness
without repentance. They want
salvation without submission. They
chase the signs. They chase the
wonders. They fool around the Bible.
They have no real relationship with
God.
And so, our Lord says this is how
people build and the truth will not
be revealed until the storm comes.
What is the storm? It’s the day of
judgment. The rain descended, verse
25, and the floods came, the winds
blew, and burst against the house,
the same thing is described exactly
in verse 27. The first house did not
fall that was founded on the rock.
The second house fell, great was its
fall. This is divine judgment. This
is the final judgment. The day of
judgment will come when people will
say, “Lord, Lord, it’s us.” To which
He will confess, “Homologeo, depart
from Me, I never knew you, you who
continue to practice lawlessness.”
Listen, you may be respectful of
Christ. You may have orthodox views
about Christ. You may see yourself
as fervent and zealous. You may be
active in some level of devotion to
the church. You may make a public
proclamation. You may be busy
building your little religious house
adjacent to all the others, built by
those around you. You may be
deceived only to have our house
smashed to a million pieces in
judgment. Go back, dear friend, and
check your foundation. Go back and
check your foundation.
How do you know if you don’t have a
foundation? A few things you might
think about. Marks of the many with
only sand under their religious
house. Reservation in yielding to
Christ. Do you find in your life an
unwillingness to yield to Christ?
Are you irritated by the commands of
Scripture? Does it bother you that
Christ is restrictive? Does it
bother you that the Bible is
restrictive? Do you not like the
fact that there are sins that you
would like to do and you restrain
from doing them because pressure is
put upon you? That is evidence that
you have no foundation.
Another one, external religious
activities with no proper
motivation. Do you come to church
because your parents expect you,
your friends expect you. Do you come
to church because you’re trying to
make a good impression on someone?
Are you trying to earn your way in?
That’s a wrong motive. Unless you do
what you do in the cause of Christ
because you are compelled by your
love for Christ and a desire for His
glory, you may have no foundation.
Are you self-righteous? Is there
anything in you that thinks you can
earn your way to heaven? Even if
it’s a small component, even if you
believe in the cross and the
resurrection, if there’s anything in
you that thinks it can contribute to
your salvation, you have no
foundation. If you love the world, 1
John 2:15, if you love the world,
the love of the Father is not in
you. If you can’t let go of the evil
world around you. If you’re
characterized by pride. If you do
what you do for self-glory. If you
love pleasure more than you love
forsaking pleasure for the glory of
God. Any of these marks would
indicate that perhaps under your
religious house is sand...sand. And
that would be true, I hate to say
this, of most professing Christians
because many will say, “Lord, Lord,”
but few come in the narrow door.
Examine your heart and examine it
carefully.
Our Father, we come to the
conclusion tonight of this
soul-searching message, a true
invitation on the one hand and a
severe warning on the other. We
thank You, Lord, for confronting
empty words and empty hearts, those
who profess to be in the Kingdom but
are not. Lord, rescue those who are
guilty of being hearers and not
doers. We pray, Lord, that for those
who may be in the hearing of this
message, who have been building a
very elaborate house and have now
found out that they have no
foundation and they will be swept
into hell when judgment comes, may
this be the hour of their true
salvation. May they dig deep. May
they come to grips with their
sinfulness, their helplessness,
their hopelessness, their spiritual
destitution and bankruptcy, their
desperate condition. May they see
all the glory of the cross in its
magnificence and may they truly
repent, confessing Jesus as Lord and
themselves as His slaves...willing
and eager and joyous in their
commitment to obedience. And we ask
that You would do this for Your
glory in the name of Christ. Amen.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "MacArthur's Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
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Columbus, New Jersey, USA, 08022
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Email: tony@biblebb.com
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