Jesus Plus Nothing
Equals Everything
by
John MacArthur
Copyright 2005-2008,
Grace to You.
All rights reserved. Used by permission.
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Colossians 2
GC 80-329
It seems to me that
if I were not a Christian and if I
were just out there living in the
world, and some well-intentioned
person approached me and asked if I
would be interested in being a
Christian, the first question that I
would ask would be, “What does
Christianity provide for me? What
does Christianity offer?”
And I’m afraid that I might get a
whole lot of different answers. It
seems to me that there is widespread
confusion with regard to those who
present themselves as the purveyors
of Christianity and its benefits.
Just exactly what do you think
people assume Christianity offers?
Health, wealth, success, peace of
mind, a certain level of
tranquility, perhaps the promise of
a better job, a better career, the
fulfillment of your dreams and
ambitions and desires, perhaps even
everything you can think of and
articulate, that would be a fairly
common presentation of Christianity.
But I think the overall general
sense of Christianity is that it
offers you whatever you want.
Whatever it is that makes you happy,
whatever it is that satisfies you,
whatever it is that fulfills your
ambitions, your desires and your
dreams, that’s what Christianity
offers you. Christianity offers to
make you everything you really want
to be.
That is a very confusing message and
a very unbiblical one. It also lays
out a complex answer to what should
be a very simple answer. In a word,
what Christianity offers you is
Christ, Jesus Christ, that’s what
Christianity offers. That is a very
simple, straightforward, one word
answer to what has become a very
complicated issue. We offer Christ
in offering the gospel. The
surpassing theme of the Scripture,
the surpassing theme of the New
Testament, in particular, is Jesus
Christ. And in not having Christ,
you have nothing. And in having
Christ, you have everything.
The writer of Hebrews says that
Christ makes us perfect forever. The
Apostle Paul in writing his first
letter to the Corinthians sums up
other significance of having Christ
with these words, chapter 1 verse
30, “By His doing, by the work of
God, you are in Christ Jesus who
became to us wisdom from God and
righteousness and sanctification,
and redemption.” All wisdom, all the
benefits of wisdom, divine wisdom,
all righteousness, all the reality
and benefits of righteousness, all
sanctification, that is the pursuit
of and the attainment to holiness,
all redemption including not only
our soul redemption but our bodily
redemption, all of that is found in
Christ. Everything is found in
Christ.
In Ephesians 1 we read this, verse
3, “Blessed be the God and Father of
our Lord Jesus Christ who has
blessed us with every spiritual
blessing in the heavenlies in
Christ.” There is little wonder then
that the Apostle Paul in that same
epistle of 1 Corinthians and that
same section in chapter 2 said this,
“I am determined to know nothing
among you except Jesus Christ.” That
is our message and our message
alone.
Christ is Christianity and He is all
there is to offer because He is all
that we need.
The Apostle Paul concerned about the
Corinthians, deeply concerned about
them, as he comes to the end of his
second letter to them in chapter 11
says in verse 2, “I am jealous for
you with a godly jealousy, for I
betrothed you to one husband, that
to Christ I might present you as a
pure virgin. But I’m afraid lest as
the serpent deceived Eve by his
craftiness, your minds should be led
astray from the simplicity and
purity associated with Christ.”
Christianity is very simple, it is
very pure, it is about having
Christ, knowing Christ. Paul says in
Philippians 1:21, “For to me to live
is Christ, to die is gain.” He says
in Philippians chapter 3 that when
he saw the glory of Christ,
everything else became manure. Verse
8, “More than that, I count all
things to be lost in view of the
surpassing value of knowing Christ
Jesus, my Lord, for whom I have
suffered the loss of all things but
count them as rubbish in order that
I may gain Christ, that I may know
Him and the power of His
resurrection and the fellowship of
His suffering, being conformed to
His death.” And so he says, “One
thing I do, forgetting what lies
behind, reaching forward to what
lies ahead, I press on toward the
goal which is the prize of the
upward call of God in Christ Jesus.”
What is that? What is the prize when
we’re called up? It is to be like
Christ. Paul says, “One day I will
be like Christ. Until then, my goal
is to pursue that Christlikeness.”
We have only one message, and that
is Christ. We tell sinners they can
have a relationship with Christ and
in that relationship with Him, they
will receive everything they need,
all spiritual blessings in the
heavenlies. And yet in the name of
Christianity, in the name of the
gospel, in the name of the church,
in the name of evangelism, people
are told all kinds of things,
promised all kinds of things, sold
all kinds of things and in the
middle somewhere is, if
recognizable, a significantly
diminished Christ. Anything that
diminishes Jesus Christ is a
perverted presentation, it is
another gospel, a false gospel.
To understand the centrality of
Christ, you could go just about
anywhere in the New Testament
epistles, but for tonight I want you
to look with me at Paul’s letter to
the Colossians...Paul’s letter to
the Colossians. This entire letter,
I think, assumes that the church at
Colossae was being beleaguered by
people who were trying to convince
them that Christ was not enough,
that Christ was not sufficient, that
they needed more, because this
entire letter pounds home the theme
of Christ’s complete sufficiency.
You will notice chapter 1, for
example, and verse 14. Verse 13
ends, “His beloved Son,” which
becomes the antecedent for verse 14,
“His beloved Son in whom we have
redemption, the forgiveness of
sins.” And who is He? “He is the
image of the invisible God, the
prototokos, the premiere one of all
creation, by Him all things were
created both in the heaven and on
earth, visible and invisible,
whether thrones or dominions, or
rulers, or authorities,” speaking of
angelic beings, “all things have
been created by Him and for Him and
He is before all things and in Him
all things hold together. He is also
head of the body, the church. He is
the beginning, the premiere one ever
raised from the dead so that He
Himself might come to have first
place in everything, for it was the
Father’s good pleasure for all the
fullness to dwell in Him.”
All what fullness? All the fullness
of God. That takes you back to John
1:14, “And the Word of God became
flesh and dwelt among us and we
beheld His glory, glory as of the
only begotten from the Father, full
of grace and truth.” He is the
everything. He is the all in all. In
Him all fullness dwells.
In the second chapter of Colossians
and verse 2, the verse ends
referring to Christ. Christ, the
antecedent then to verse 3, “In whom
are hidden all the treasures of
wisdom and knowledge.:” Verse 9,
“For in Him all the fullness of
deity dwells in bodily form.” Verse
10, “In Him you have been made
complete.”
In chapter 3 and verse 3, “For you
have died and your life is hidden
with Christ in God.” And then this
great statement, “When Christ who is
our life is revealed, then you also
will be revealed with Him in glory.”
When you ask...what is a Christian?
It is one for whom to live is
Christ. Christ is our life. We have
no other life. We have nothing but
Christ and we have everything in
Christ.
Apparently the Colossians had been
told that there was a lot more
needed than just Jesus Christ.
Something beyond Christ was
necessary. There was some
insufficiency in Christ that prompts
the Apostle Paul to write these
words. The insufficiencies in Christ
can be made up by philosophy, human
wisdom. The insufficiencies of
Christ can be made up by legalism,
ceremony, ritual, externalism. Or
the insufficiencies in Christ can be
made up by mysticism. Or the
insufficiencies in Christ can be
made up by asceticism, some efforts
at self-denial. These, the
Colossians were told, will make up
what Christ lacks. Christ is not
enough.
Though this is a long time ago,
nothing has really changed. There
are people today who tell us that
Christ is not enough, we need more
than Christ, more than all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge
that are found in Him. We need
Christ plus philosophy, human
wisdom.
Let me take you to verse 8. “See to
it that no one takes you captive,”
chapter 2, “See to it that no one
takes you captive through
philosophy.” This is human opinion,
the mind of man. There are no human
solutions to spiritual problems.
There are no human insights that
take us places the Bible doesn’t, or
can’t. That is to say, there is
nothing necessary for life and
godliness that is not delivered to
us by the Word through the Spirit.
We don’t need Christ plus insights
into human wisdom, spiritual
intuition. You can take all the
philosophers the world has ever
known, in ancient and modern times,
all the authors, all the writers,
all the playwrights, all the movie
producers, all the talk-show hosts,
all the psychologists, sociologists,
religious leaders and you can take
all their endless verbosity about
truth and life and morality, and all
their solutions to human problems
and dilemmas and they add nothing to
what is already in Christ.
We don’t even have much classic
philosophy anymore. New Age
philosophy is not about thinking,
it’s about feeling. Philosophy used
to be rational exercise, now in a
post-modern world it is an
irrational exercise. I remember when
I was in my university days I
decided to take an emphasis in
advanced European philosophy. In
fact, the class I was in was so
advanced, there were only two of us
which always means you’ve got to do
your daily work because the
professor is going to check every
day.
I wanted to understand just exactly
how philosophers approached truth.
In studying the history of western
philosophy, I found nothing but an
exercise of the degenerate mind of
man without God trying to find
reason and purpose and reality in
the universe in life and inside
himself...a hopeless effort. First
Corinthians chapter 1, if you’ll
notice it for a moment, verse 19,
“It is written,” quoting from Isaiah
29, “I will destroy the wisdom of
the wise and the cleverness of the
clever, I will set aside, where is
the wise man, where is the scribe?”
That’s the legal expert, the
scholar. “Where is the debater of
this age? Has not God made foolish
the wisdom of the world? For since
in the wisdom of God the world
through its wisdom did not come to
know God. God was well pleased with
the foolishness of the message
preached to save those who
believed.” Here is God’s own
commentary on the uselessness of
human philosophy, the bankruptcy of
any effort to discern truth that
relates to the soul of man and his
eternal life and destiny outside
Christ.
I’m pretty sure Colossae had its
list of purveyors of human wisdom
and since the church at this time
was only about six years old and
sitting in a sea of corrupt human
reasoning, it was easily engulfed
like an island surrounded by a
turbulent ocean could easily have
been a wash in the surging
philosophies of the day. And so the
Apostle Paul warns them that they
must understand that all they need
is found in Christ. It is a call to
vigilance and a call to affirm the
sufficiency of Christ.
Verse 8 actually could be
translated, “Be continually being
aware.” See to it could be spread
out in that way because that’s the
Greek verb. Be continually being
aware. The truth is never very far
away from being attacked and the
attacks often call from human
efforts to discredit or add to
Scripture. You need to be sure of
this so that no one takes you
captive, sulagogon, sulao, booty,
ago, to carry off, so that nobody
takes you captive, good translation
in the NAS. Nobody kidnaps you. It
was actually referred to kidnapings
in Greek usage to plundering a
house, seducing a maid, taking war
captives. Paul uses it in Galatians
5:1, being led into bondage by human
reasoning when Christ is utterly
sufficient. Philosophy, it says,
through philosophy is just human
reason. It has to do with explaining
the world, explaining origins,
explaining laws, explaining
creation, explaining spiritual
reality, values, ultimate truth, the
meaning of life apart from Christ.
This is described here in verse 8 as
empty deception. That’s philosophy,
it is empty deception...an empty
lie, a delusion. It is deceitful
because it sounds good and because
it is purveyed by articulate people
but it has no value.
Further, it is according to the
tradition of men. It is inadequate
human thinking. Further he says, it
is according to the elementary
principles of the world, rather than
according to Christ. And he goes
back, that all truth, the riches of
knowledge and wisdom reside in
Christ, all you need is in Christ.
This does not advance you, this
regresses you. This takes you back.
It is rudimentary.
What does that mean? It is according
to the elementary principles of the
world, the basic elements of
learning. It is not advanced, it is
backward. Rudimentary here simply
means ABC’s, baby talk, principles
for children, not adequate for
adults. It is an explanation of
nothing. It is like when your son
comes to you fathers and says,
“Daddy, what makes the car go?” And
you say, “The engine.” That is a
very simplistic answer. Or you say,
“Gasoline.” Or when your little one
says, “Where do babies come from,
mother?” And you say, “God sends
them down.” That is anything but a
complete answer and pretty soon they
figure that out. Why would you go
back to such rudimentary solutions
when you have the most complex
spiritual realities of the universe
delineated clearly in Scripture and
made clear to us in Christ?
Rather than advancing human wisdom,
philosophy regresses it away from
mature truth to the infantile
musings of children, poverty
stricken, puny minds offering their
opinions. Galatians 4:3 calls this
beggarly elements. Hebrews 5 calls
it rudimentary elements.
The truth of the matter is, the
philosophers of the world tend to
look at Christianity’s purveyors,
those of us who are believers and
proclaim the true gospel, as
ignorant, lowlife, simplistic,
unsophisticated. The truth is, we
possess the mind of Christ because
we have Christ. We have all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge in
Him, we have all spiritual blessings
in the heavenlies in Him. We are
complete in Him in whom all fullness
of deity dwells. Philosophy adds
absolutely nothing...absolutely
nothing.
It is a myth that somehow the simple
gospel is not sufficient. He is all
we need. Follow the text. Verse 9,
“All the fullness of deity dwells in
Him in bodily form, in Him you have
been made complete, full.” He is the
head over all rule and authority.
There are no spirits above Him, no
angels above Him. He is all we need.
He has provided for us, let’s look
at verse 11, a complete salvation.
You were also circumcised with a
circumcision made without hands, in
the removal of the body of the flesh
by the circumcision of Christ,
having been buried with Him in
baptism in which you were also
raised up with Him through faith and
the working of God who raised Him
from the dead.” That is a
magnificent statement about the fact
which was demonstrated to you again
tonight of our union with Christ in
His death, burial and resurrection,
as we saw illustrated in baptism
again. We have literally died with
Him to the old life, the removal of
the body of flesh, been buried with
Him in His death, raised with Him in
His resurrection all through faith,
complete salvation, transformation
from death into new life.
In verses 13 and 14, not only a
complete salvation but a complete
forgiveness. “And when you were dead
in your transgressions and the
uncircumcision of your flesh, He
made you alive together with Him,
having forgiven us all our
transgression, having canceled out
the certificate of death consisting
of decrees against us...that’s the
record of all our sins which was, of
course, hostile to us...and He has
taken it out of the way, having
nailed it to the cross.”
I want you to notice something.
Verse 9, “In Him.” Verse 10, “In
Him.” Verse 11, “In Him.” Verse 12,
“Buried with Him. Raised with Him.”
Verse 13, “He made you together
alive with Him.” It is about being
in Him, in Him, with Him, with Him.
And because we have Christ, we have
complete salvation and complete
forgiveness...so complete that He
has literally blotted out our
transgressions, canceled out,
erased, wiped off our sins.
In verse 15, “On our behalf He
disarmed the rulers and authorities,
the host of hell, the demons,
Satan.” He made a public display of
them, having triumphed over them.
Again, through Him. When He disarmed
the rulers and authorities, we
triumphed over them through Him.
Because we have Christ, we have
complete salvation. Because we have
Christ, we have complete
forgiveness. Because we have Christ,
we have complete victory over all
the hosts of hell. Philosophy adds
nothing whatsoever to that. What we
offer in offering the gospel is what
this text presents. We are offering
a transformation through faith in
Jesus Christ from death to life. We
are offering the forgiveness of all
our sins for Jesus paid in full the
penalty for those sins, the list of
our sins literally was nailed to His
cross. We are offering in the gospel
true, total, complete, triumph over
Satan and demons. Philosophy can do
nothing to embellish that.
But another attack comes on the
sufficiency of Christ. It comes not
from philosophy or rationalism, but
from legalism.
Legalism...verse 16, “Therefore let
no one act as your judge in regard
to food or drink or in respect to a
festival or a new moon, or a Sabbath
day, things which are a mere shadow
of what is to come, but the
substance belongs to Christ.”
In the first point about rationalism
or philosophy, we saw that we don’t
need philosophy or human wisdom, we
have everything we need in Him. In
Him we have the fullness of deity.
In Him we have been made complete.
In Him we have been cleansed, saved,
had the flesh, as it were, removed,
died to the old and risen to the
new. In Him we have the total
forgiveness of all our sins and
through Him complete victory over
Satan and all his hosts, all in Him.
Here in verses 16 and 17, the
substance, again at the end of verse
17, belongs to Christ. All external
things are only a shadow of that
substance.
Now what are we seeing? Well we’re
looking at something very familiar
to the Apostle Paul because he was a
legalist. He was a faithful Jew,
loyal to the law, a Pharisee,
circumcised, zealous, he was a
Pharisee in the extreme sense. Read
Philippians 3:4 through 6 where he
describes the fastidious extreme
nature of his externalism. But his
heart was wretched until he found in
Christ a righteousness that was not
his own, a righteousness of God
given to Him by faith in Christ.
Prior to that he was trying to
achieve a righteousness on his own
which he could not do.
And so Paul says in verses 16 and
17, “Don’t let anybody act as your
judge. Render a spiritual verdict on
your life by some external measure,
such as food, or drink, or a
festival, or a new moon, or a
Sabbath day.” Don’t let anybody
judge you based on those kinds of
things. If you will remember Romans
chapter 10, you will remember Paul’s
clear assessment of the problem with
the Jews. He says in verse 1 of
Romans 10, “My heart’s desire, my
prayer to God for them is for their
salvation.” But here’s the problem.
“They have a zeal for God but not in
accordance with knowledge. They
don’t know about God’s righteousness
and they seek to establish their own
righteousness and therefore do not
subject themselves to the
righteousness of God for Christ is
the end of the law for righteousness
to everyone who believes.”
Here are the Jews and they’re trying
to achieve righteousness, they’re
trying to earn heaven. They’re
trying to gain righteousness by what
they do morally, religiously,
ceremonially. And this is a
misunderstanding of God’s
righteousness. They don’t know that
God is as righteous as He is, He’s
way too righteous for them to
achieve a righteousness that
satisfies Him. They work so hard to
achieve their own righteousness
which falls way short and they don’t
realize that Christ is the end of
the law for righteousness to
everyone who believes.
Christ when you believe in Him ends
the tyranny of the law. Christ
becomes our law-keeper in our place
and becomes the object of God’s
punishment for our sins. So,
righteousness is gained only through
the work of Christ and given only to
those who depend solely on that
work. Don’t let anybody think they
can render a verdict on your
spiritual life by what you eat, what
you drink, what religious festivals
or events you go to and whether you
observe new moon, Sabbath day laws.
Those were merely shadows...just
shadows. It’s not about sacraments
and ceremonies, and rituals, and
fasting. It’s not even about
baptism, that can be just an
external superficial act. Legalism
is the attitude that says true
spirituality is based on external
behaviors.
This was big with the Jews, even
among the Jews who gave some
recognition to Christ. They said
Christ is not enough. They can
believe in Christ but they must be
circumcised, they can believe in
Christ but they must observe the
Sabbath day. They can believe in
Christ but they must observe the law
of Moses or they will be rejected by
God.
That is not to diminish the moral
law of God, for when you come to
Christ, you have a capability to
obey that law by the work of
transformation and the work of the
Holy Spirit. There are so many who
would like to come to us and say,
“Yes, you may say you have Christ
but if you’re a real Christian,
here’s the kind of behavior that you
need to do ceremonially to validate
that, or to please God.” Those
things, and it’s so important to
understand that are merely shadows,
the substance is Christ. If you have
Christ, you have everything. Will
you love t he Lord’s day? Yes. Will
you love the Lord? Yes. Will you
desire to honor and worship Him?
Yes. Will you desire to come to His
table? Yes. Will you desire to be
baptized? Yes, from the heart you
will do that as the fruit of
transformation, not as the means.
And much could be said about that.
It’s an ever-present issue. But for
time’s sake, the third possibility
that had pressed itself against the
Colossians was that Christ was not
enough, there needed to be something
more. Let’s call this
mysticism...mysticism. I’ve had to
deal with this through my life. I
have preached on the ministry of the
Holy Spirit, the doctrine of the
Holy Spirit, what the Bible teaches
about spiritual life, what the Bible
teaches about the dynamics of
spiritual life. And I have been
accused by many people of being void
of the Holy Spirit because I’ve
never spoken in tongues, being void
of the Holy Spirit because I do not
recognize that some are saying the
Holy Spirit is doing a miracle
ministry in this age and if I don’t
acknowledge that then I am quenching
the Spirit of God, that I am somehow
the enemy of the Spirit of God and
therefore void of His influence and
His power in my life, that I need to
be open to deeper experiences, that
I need to be open to higher
experiences, that I need to be open
to more intuitive spiritual
realities. I’ve had strange
conversations with people who tell
me that Jesus talks to them and they
talk to Jesus and ask me if I’ve
ever had those personal
conversations. And they shake their
heads at the poor deprived guy that
I am because I’ve never had these
kinds of experiences.
There are people who talk about
conversations they have with angels
and conversations they have with the
Lord and things the Lord says to
them. And when I’m asked if I’ve
ever had any of those conversations,
my answer is...No, but God speaks to
me constantly, God speaks to me
every single day. In fact, He speaks
to me every single time I open the
Bible and read one word. And He
speaks crystal clear and I know
exactly what He is saying. And He
speaks to me every time I recite a
verse in my mind, or out loud. He
speaks to me every time I think a
biblical thought and a biblical
truth. But somehow I’m being cheated
and something profound is missing
because I haven’t had a mystical
experience.
Look at verses 18 and 19, this is
where Paul deals with that. “Let no
one keep defrauding you of your
prize.” That’s the idea that reminds
us again that this was an attack
coming on these Colossians, that
Christ was not enough, they needed
philosophy. Christ was not enough,
they needed legalism. There would be
Jews pressing the second one, there
would be Gentiles, no doubt,
pressing the first one. Then the
mystics show up. “Let no one keep
defrauding you of your prize.”
People telling you that somehow
you’re cheated, somehow you’re
forfeiting your reward, somehow
you’re missing the mark, you’re
falling short of all the spiritual
events, realities, that are
available to you by delighting in
self-abasement and the worship of
angels taking his stand on visions
he has seen, inflated without cause
by his fleshly mind.
Wow, that’s a pretty strong
assessment. Don’t let anyone deny
you your prize by saying you really
are unworthy of the best that God
has to give. Someone who comes along
apparently humble, delighting in
self-abasement. Now when you’re
happy about your humility, you
haven’t got it. When you’re
overjoyed to tell folks how humble
you are, you just missed it. This is
a person who is proud to be humble.
This was a kind of reverse pride in
which people were saying I know I am
nothing, I am the lowliest of the
low and it’s so remarkable how the
angels come to me and God speaks to
me because I’m really nothing and I
have these astonishing visions and
I’m so lowly. This is a smarmy kind
of hypocrisy. There are those people
who say they have encounters with
angels, who have visions, secret
revelations...the Lord told me this,
the Lord told me that. And they
become puffed up in their fleshly
mind and they are the opposite of
the self-abasing people they want
you to think they are.
Their problem? “They do not...verse
19...hold fast to the head.” Who’s
the head? Christ. I have Christ, I
need nothing more. I’m not looking
for conversations with angels. I’m
not looking for voices from heaven.
I only had one vision in my life and
I married her. I have had no more. I
want no more. I want no more, I seek
no more, I have Christ...I need
nothing more. If I need a vision of
Christ, if I want to gaze in His
glory and be transfixed, I open the
pages of Scripture where His glory
explodes on my mind. That’s all I
need. And it is not a distant glory
that I see, it is that very glory
that shines in my heart by the work
of God for Christ is mine and I am
His, and I’m actually not even sure
where I end and He begins. “For to
me to live is Christ. I am crucified
with Christ, nevertheless I live,
yet not I but Christ lives in me.” I
don’t know where He ends and I begin
or I end and He begins. All the good
is Him, all the bad is me. I seek
nothing else. I want to hold fast to
the head from whom the entire body
being supplied and held together by
the joints and ligaments grows with
the growth which is from God. That
goes not just for me but, friends,
that goes for all of you, the whole
body of Christ is held together by
its connection to the head. All we
need is the head, all we need is
Christ, the Christ revealed in
Scripture.
There were another group coming
along and making suggestions about
the insufficiency of Christ, not
only those who were the rationalists
saying you need Christ plus human
wisdom. Paul disdained that. That’s
why he said, “I’m determined to know
nothing among you except Christ and
Him crucified, and I do not come to
you with human wisdom,” 1
Corinthians 2. There were those who
said you need Christ plus legalism,
they were the Judaizers, the ones
holding on to their Judaism who
wanted to impose all that external
stuff on Christians which was but a
shadow and not the substance. There
were always those mystics, they’re
still around, who come along and
tell you somehow you’re falling
short of the best that God can give
you, you’re getting cheated out of
your ultimate prize because you’re
not living on the higher mystical
intuitive spiritual plain. You need
Christ plus so much more.
And then there are those, fourthly,
who come with the offering of
asceticism...asceticism...rationalism,
legalism, mysticism and asceticism.
What is asceticism? It’s a word that
means self-denial. In its extreme
form it is self-injury, inflicting
wounds on yourself.
Notice in verse 20, “If you have
died with Christ to the elementary
principles of the world, which would
include all of these things that are
supposedly additions to Christ, they
are regressions, in fact, but if you
have died with Christ, you now live
with Christ. If you are dead to the
elementary principles of the world,
why as if you were living in the
world do you submit yourself to
decrees such as do not handle, do
not taste, do not touch?” These are
those who we could call the
monastics, if you will. Those people
who think Christ is not enough,
you’ve got to go further in the
realm of self-denial and
self-inflicted pain. This again is
another form of the religion of
human achievement that looks not so
much at ceremony, not so much at
moral behavior and ritual, but it
looks at ways in which somehow you
can achieve a higher plain of
spirituality by self-denial. You
become a monk and you eat rice and
drink water for the rest of your
life and wear the same clothes and
live in a tiny little cell. And you
have no marriage, and no social
life, and no family and no hope and
no future. And if you’re really
serious, you become a monk who
decides it’s a sin to bathe because
if you bathed, you would see
yourself naked. And so, you acquire
vermin which you then designate as
holy vermin because they are the
evidence of your holiness. Or you
become a flagellante and you get a
whip and you beat your body raw. Or
you wear a belt. I’ve met people who
have them on. The inside of which
has nails that rip and tear your
flesh as you move about your day,
endeavoring by what is called here
some kind of self-flagellation, do
not handle, do not taste, do not
touch, some kind of self-denial. Or
crawling on your knees until they
bleed.
This is useless, verse 22. All these
things are destined to perish with
the using. All of this stuff dies.
It is just in accordance with the
commandments and teaching of men.
Monks waste their lives. Nuns,
priests, in their foolish attempt to
add something to Christ in their
forms of self-denial, all of that is
destined to perish. It is all human.
Verse 23 says, “These are matters
which have to be sure the appearance
of wisdom, of a kind of spiritual
wisdom.” We say, “Oh, so-and-so is
so sacrificial, so self-denying, a
vow of poverty, a vow of abstinence,
a vow of isolation, even a vow of
emasculation in the case of many in
the past history. Vows of
self-inflicted pain.” There are many
people even today who their whole
lives fill their shoes with bits of
glass and metal to wound their feet
as they walk. This to be sure has
the appearance of some kind of
spiritual transcendent wisdom. But
it is self-made religion,
self-abasement. And this severe
treatment of the body that has,
please notice, no value against
fleshly indulgence.
You say, “Oh they must be holy.”
Guess again. That does nothing.
Witness the scandal of the
priesthood. In fact, that’s like
pouring gasoline on a fire, it’s a
show of self-imposed fleshly
religion that means nothing.
One writer said, “Any asceticism is
to a great deal more to men’s tastes
than truly abandoning self.” Wow. In
fact, it was Alexander McClaren who
said, “They would rather stick hooks
in their backs and do the swinging
pujah(??) than give up their sins.”
It just indulges the flesh in a
different way and deceives the mind
about the true condition. And they
can’t repress the flesh with any of
that. And so they live in a kind of
self-imposed repression that makes
them moral time bombs that are going
to explode somewhere.
Now, “No,” people will say, “it’s
Jesus Christ plus human wisdom, it’s
Jesus Christ plus external rules,
it’s Jesus Christ plus visions and
experiences, Jesus Christ plus
self-denial, self-abasement, severe
treatment of the body,” and the Holy
Spirit says, “It’s Jesus Christ plus
nothing.” So the next time somebody
says to you, “What does the gospel
offer me? What does the Bible
offer?”, you say this, “Jesus
Christ.” That’s the person that
Christianity offers and in Him
complete salvation and in Him
complete forgiveness, and in Him
complete victory, and in Him
complete sufficiency. To have Him is
to have everything. Not to have Him
is to have nothing. John 1:16, “Of
His fullness have all we received.”
Is that not a great statement? All
that He is becomes ours. Ephesians
3:8 puts it this way, “In Him we
have unsearchable riches.” First
Corinthians 3, “All things belong to
you, whether the world or life or
death or things present or things to
come, all things belong to you
because you belong to Christ and
Christ belongs to God.” Pursue Him
and Him alone.
It was Jeremiah Burrows, the
powerful Puritan, who wrote in 1656,
“God the Father is infinitely
satisfied in Christ. He is all in
all to God. Surely if Christ is an
object sufficient for the
satisfaction of the Father, much
more than is He an object sufficient
for the satisfaction of every soul.”
God can find His satisfaction in
Christ. Surely you can find yours
there, as well.
All that is in Christ in abundance
then is ours. I’m going to close
with the story...when I wrote the
book Our Sufficiency in Christ, I
think it’s in that book, in one of
the chapters I told this really odd
story because it was true. Homer and
Langley Collier were sons of a
respected New York doctor. Both had
earned college degrees. Homer had
studied at Columbia University to be
an attorney. When old Dr. Collier
died in the early part of the
century, his two sons inherited the
family mansion and estate in New
York. The two were both bachelors
and financially secure because the
father had made a lot of money. They
chose a strange life style, not
consistent with the material status
their inheritance gave them. They
received a fortune. They lived in
seclusion, boarded up the widows and
padlocked the doors of the great
house. All the utilities, including
the water, were shut off. No one was
seen coming and going from the
house, it appeared empty.
On March 21, 1947, police received
anonymous telephone tip that a man
had died inside the boarded-up
house. It had been boarded up for
many years. Unable to force their
way into the front door, the
authorities entered through a
second-story window. Inside they
found Homer’s corpse on a bed. He
had died clutching the February 22,
1920 issue of the Jewish Morning
Journal though he had been totally
blind for years. This macabre scene
was set up against an equally
grotesque backdrop. The brothers for
decades had been collecting junk.
The house was crammed full of broken
machinery, auto parts, boxes,
appliances, folding chairs, musical
instruments, rags, assorted odds and
ends and bundles of old newspapers,
all of it was completely worthless.
They were what we now call obsessive
hoarders. An enormous mountain of
debris blocked the front door.
Investigators were forced to
continue to use the upstairs'
windows for weeks while excavators
worked to clear a path to the door.
Nearly three weeks later, as workman
were still hauling heaps of refuse
away, someone made a grizzly
discovery. Langley’s body was found,
buried beneath a pile of rubbish six
feet away from where Homer died.
Langley had been crushed to death in
a crude booby trap he had built to
protect his junk from thieves.
Eventually the authorities in New
York took out 140 tons of garbage.
When I read that, I thought, Homer
and Langley make a sad but fitting
parable of the way many Christian
people live. They have an
inheritance in Jesus Christ that is
sufficient for all their needs and
they live in unnecessary
self-imposed deprivation piling up
junk and neglecting the abundant
resources that are rightfully theirs
to enjoy in Christ. Homer and
Langley turned their home into a
squalid dump. Spurning their
father’s great legacy they lived
with trash.
Christ is all we need. He is more
than enough. The Bible calls Him
life, food, root, clothing, head,
hope, righteousness, refuge, light,
life, peace, Passover, portion,
substitute, freedom, fountain,
wisdom, standard, way, example,
door, dew, sun, shield, reward,
strength, song, sanctification,
supplier, resurrection, redemption,
teacher, ladder, shepherd, friend,
truth, treasure, temple, ark, altar
and more. And so we go back to where
we started, it was the Father’s good
pleasure for all the fullness to
dwell in Him. In Christ are hidden
all the treasures of wisdom and
knowledge. In Him all the fullness
of deity dwells in bodily form and
we are by faith in Him. He is
enough. Learn Christ and you have
all you will ever need.
Father, thank You for our time
tonight. There could be no greater
subject than this and we have
offered a meager attempt to grasp
the wonder of what it means to have
Christ. May we define our lives this
way, we love Christ, we know Christ,
we serve Christ, we worship Christ.
We desire Christ in all His glory to
be displayed through us. May it be
that for us to live is Christ and
when we are called Christians, may
it be true that we are, as it were,
little Christs. May we in gazing
into His glory be transformed into
His image. We ask nothing more than
Christ. Christ is all and in all.
Amen.
Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "MacArthur's Collection" by:
Tony Capoccia
Bible Bulletin Board
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