Series: The DisciplesÕ Prayer

The Pardon of Prayer—Part 2

 

by

John MacArthur, Jr.

All Rights Reserved

 

A copy of this message on CD may be obtained by visiting www.GTY.org or by calling 1-800-55-GRACE

 

Matthew 6:12, 14-5     GC 2242

 

We get a lot of mail at Grace Church from people who listen to tapes, radio programs, read books, visit the church and so forth. Hundreds and hundreds and hundreds of letters a week. Once in a while one letter just draws everyoneÕs attention. WeÕve had one like that that came just a few weeks ago and I want to share it with you this morning because it ties in so well.

 

ItÕs from a man who is a prisoner in upstate New York in a penitentiary. And he is writing to thank us for the tape ministry which he has received. HeÕs been studying the tapes quite diligently and is expressing his gratitude. This is what it says in part:

 

ŅBrother, I received your beautiful gift of a set of tapes by John MacArthur your pastor. IÕm still listening to them and sharing them with some of the brothers as the Lord leads. IÕm taking notes on each tape as I listen. Praise the Lord. I may not only understand His word better but I may be able to teach and lead those whom He has enabled me and placed in my care.Ó

 

I would just add a footnote. Apparently this man has become a pastor of what he calls The Church at Green Haven Prison.

 

He said, ŅI want to thank you for your fine gift and share a little of what the Lord is doing in my life as I promised in a previous letter. Brother, the Lord saved me seven years ago. At that time I was in a dirty and dark jail cell waiting for the opportunity to finish off what I had begun a few days before, end my worthless and wretched life. My family came to the United States from Puerto Rico when I was nine years old. My dad was killed in an auto accident when I was twelve. We had moved to upstate New York by that time and I as spared growing up in the big city. Mom was pregnant when our father died and she was left with me, my brother Tony and then my sister was born. We were poor from a minority group and living in a small town where not too many people knew us. But none of these things hindered me nor were they any excuse. I grew up in Rockland County in the town of Haverstraw, New York. I went to school there and played all the sports. I really enjoyed school and after graduation I married my childhood sweetheart whom I had known since the sixth grade. We both had good jobs and a couple of years later I became a police officer at the age of 21. By that time God had given us two children and we were prospering materially. I had been born and raised a Catholic but I never heard that being born again was necessary. I hated the dry and dead church scene so I stopped going. I moved into a life of adultery and fornication. GodÕs judgment did not come upon me suddenly though I had plenty of warning. I thought I was something big, nothing or no one could touch me and God was the furthest thing from my mind. I had plenty of money now that I was working with the District AttorneyÕs office; I was the only Spanish speaking police officer in the county and was in great demand for my interpreting ability. My wife was making good money as a secretary. We had our own home and I was Mr. Respectable Citizen on my way to hell. With all of these material benefits and carnal pleasures a well as the satisfaction of being recognized among my friends in the community I was empty and bored with life. I was always looking for a new adventure and nothing really satisfied me permanently. Finally, as a member of the narcotics bureau I began to use drugs myself. I began with pot and then I used pills and acid. I never shot any drugs because I was afraid of needles but I have eaten, snorted, drunk and smoked everything but hard stuff because I had seen what that did to others. Needless to say my family life as well as my job began to suffer and deteriorate as soon as I began fooling with drugs. And like I said it didnÕt happen right away but the word of God says that if nothing else we can be sure of one thing and that is that our sins will find us out. It took a period of about ten years but from the moment I began stepping out on my wife until the period when I did three things I never thought I could do, my sins were catching up with me and would eventually take their natural course destruction.

 

ŅEven though I ran around on my wife I always claimed to love her and I believe I did. Of course I didnÕt know the love of God so it was mere human love which is just not strong enough. But I did the first thing I never thought I would do I left my wife and children. I took off for California with a young girl and abandoned my family. The drugs, my wounded conscience and the sin made me paranoid. And I was always staying high in San Francisco and always looking over my shoulder. As a police officer before, I would sometimes go on duty with an empty revolver because I could never see myself hurting anyone physically. I was just not a violent person even though I was wicked. I donÕt think I have ever been involved in more than two fights in my whole life yet I wound up murdering another person. I had done the second thing I never thought I could do. And then I wanted to die. I couldnÕt live with myself. For three horrorfilled days I tried various ways to end my life in a motel room but God didnÕt allow it. I tried taking an overdose only to awaken 17 hours later after having vomited the poison and by all rights I should have drowned in my own vomit as is usually the case with overdoses of alcohol and barbituates. And when I awoke I tried to electrocute myself in a bathtub, but as I was about to place the cables in the water the wires touched and I was left in darkness with all the lights in the room going out. But I was too far gone. I was a man possessed. I climbed into the tub and slashed myself up with a blade until I passed out from the loss of blood only to awake to a third day of madness and horror. God had been trying to reach me for a long time; my mom had become a Christian a few months before. Other people had tried to tell me about Jesus but I wouldnÕt hear them. I finally turned myself into the authorities and confessed to a crime they werenÕt even aware of. When I was taken to the jail I was kept under observation for a few days because they knew I was suicidal and brother I had all intentions of killing myself. I even took a spoon and was waiting the right moment to sharpen it and stick it in my throat. And then the letter came. It told me about Jesus Christ. Ray, it said, Jesus is real. He loves you and He wants to be your friend. He can make a way where there is no way. Do it for your family, Ray, come to Jesus. Well, I believed that Jesus was real in her life and that He was her friend but that He loved me--never. I didnÕt even like myself how could Jesus love me? What way could He make? I had tried every possible way. What could I do for my family? I had abandoned and scattered them. The answer came. I took it to be my mind. But now I know who it was who put those words there. The best thing you can do is go and kil 1 yourself and get out of everybodyÕs life. But God used that letter to stay my selfdestructive hand and people came and told me more about the love of God for sinners and even murderers like me. They told me about the good news of Jesus Christ and not only did He demand a new life from me but He was the only one who could give me the power to live it. I must be born again they told me. And they said if any man be in Christ old things are passed away. And I needed to have that old life put away. I needed a new life. Finally out of desperation I went down on my knees in my cell. I was contemplating suicide and really being oppressed by the devil. I had been granted a phone call home. I confided in my mom and told her the devil was there telling me to kill myself. She handed the phone to another new Christian who was there with her and instead of being gentle with me like I expected he said Ray, you must repent before God. You must ask Him to give you a new life and forgive you. Well, that kind of shook me because I expected him to baby me. I realized that even though I had been sorry for the things that I had done I had not asked God to forgive me. I had the sorrow of the world that works death but Godly sorrow works repentance unto salvation. So on my knees I cried to God and I asked Him to forgive me and to take away the burden of guilt which was driving me mad. I asked Him to give me new life. I told Him I didnÕt even know if He was out there or not but if He heard me please, please forgive me and help me live a new life through Him.

 

ŅWell, for the first time in my life I knew God heard me and that I had been forgiven. I knew He had forgiven me because the burden I had been carrying, the burden of guilt and shame was lifted off me. I felt a peace I had never experienced before. I sensed a freedom I had never known on the other side of those walls. I could live with myself because I knew that my conscience was clean. I had been forgiven and my conscience was purged. I knew what truth and reality were. I had taken a life and I had to face trial. I had done many things for which I had been ashamed and there were con sequences. Men would not forgive nor forget. But I knew that my God had and for once in my life I could be at peace with Him and with myself. From then on I would serve Him and all those who would be of like mind would understand that I had been forgiven--that I was a new man. The old Ray was dead. The Bible came alive to me. I became a fanatic. And the guys warned me not to read the Bible too much or IÕd go crazy. Man, I was crazy before. The Bible is the only thing that helps me know the truth. Now I could understand GodÕs spiritual word and it was no longer the giant crossword puzzle it once was to me. I had been born again and now I could see the kingdom of God. IÕve been sentenced to fifteen years to life in prison. This means I must serve a minimum of fifteen years before I am even considered for parole. And then they donÕt have to let me go. But, brother, I wouldnÕt trade the freedom that Jesus Christ has given me behind these prison walls for the prisons which were mine in what the world calls freedom.

 

ŅI surely would love to be home with my family some day. But Jesus has given me something in this prison which many on the out side neither know nor have. My family had been scattered through those years. For two years I cried out to the Lord and claimed the promise that my wife and children would come to Christ. Although I had not heard from my wife for all that time, I continued trusting Him and serving Him. He gave me a ministry. For three years I read nothing but the Bible. No books, no commentaries, no newspapers, no magazines, just the Bible. And His Word became real to me. And finally, God reached out and saved my wife. And she came to see me. Later she brought my daughter Debby and I had the pleasure of leading my own daughter to the Lord. And my nine-year-old Christine received the Lord, too. Brother, what can I say? Forgive my lengthiness but thereÕs so much more that I could say. God has given me a ministry of teaching and preaching His Word. I want to serve Him to the fullest. IÕve seen many broken and desperate men come to know our Lord and be transformed. Praise God. Greet the saints. Your brother in Christ, Ray.Ó

 

Well, youÕre the saints and youÕve been greeted. ItÕs great isnÕt it? Can I add a footnote? There used to be a prisoner in Green Haven Prison, he wrote us for some tapes. And when he left, he left them there and asked God to help them to fall into the right hands. They fell into the hands of Ray. HeÕs a second generation tape listener in Green Haven Prison. And through the study of the word of God has become the pastor of the church in the prison. ThatÕs what forgive ness is all about. I donÕt know what the future has for him in this world but I know what it has in eternity. And for that we can be excited.

 

LetÕs turn in our Bibles again this morning to the sixth chapter of Matthew as we continue in our series on the discipleÕs prayer. Today we come to a continuation of what we began last time as we look at verse 12 but we must see it in its context so letÕs read the prayer and the two verses following. Matthew chapter 6 beginning in verse 9:

 

ŅAfter this manner therefore pray ye; Our Father who art in heaven hallowed be Thy name. Thy kingdom come, Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven. Give us this day our daily bread and forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. And lead us not into temptation but deliver us from evil for thine is the kingdom and the power and the glory forever, Amen. For if ye forgive men their trespasses your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if ye forgive not men their trespasses neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.Ó

 

As you know if you were with us last week we began to look at verse 12 the second of the three petitions related to us. The first of which is one for physical sustenance. The second and the third are those of a spiritual nature. Going back to verse 12 we are reminded again of this petition, ŅForgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors.Ó And that petition is footnoted in verses 14 and 15.

 

Now weÕre endeavoring as we examine this tremendously important petition to really understand this whole matter of dealing with sin in our Christian life. Even though we are believers we still have a sin problem. And we must face that problem. This petition in verse 12 is prayed by one who already belongs to God. The prayer begins ŅOur Father,Ó the prayer then affirms that there is a living and vital relationship with God through faith. So that as a believer we are to pray, Ņforgive us our debtsÓ after we have affirmed that it is GodÕs name that is hallowed and it is GodÕs kingdom that is to come and it is GodÕs will that is to be done and after we have again acknowledge that it is God who is the source of our physical sustenance we come to our spiritual problem of sin and there we are to acknowledge again that we need GodÕs forgiveness. WeÕre talking about Christians. I know there are some people who think that when you become a Christian you donÕt bother with confessing sin anymore or seeking GodÕs cleansing and forgiveness but thatÕs not true. Because here we find as those who can call God Our Father we must also say forgive us our debts.

 

Now in understanding the fullness of meaning in verse 12 and 14 and 15 which footnote it, we had to discover that there are four key words for us to study. And we began that study last time, we wonÕt finish it today but we will next time. And the composite of all three of these LordÕs days examining this I think will give us a new and far reaching and broad study of this whole area of sin in the life of a Christian.

 

First of all the problem is sin. We saw that last time. Forgive us implies that we have done something for which we need forgiveness. Debt in verse 12 implies a sin. Trespass in verses 14 and 15 equally implies sin. The problem here is sin. Sin is a reality in the life of a Christian. When you become a Christian you donÕt all of a sudden stop sinning. You donÕt all of a sudden lose your sensitivity to sin; in fact, the truth is that when you become a believer you become more sensitive to sin. And as you mature as a Christian and in your maturing experience there is a decreasing frequency of sin, along with a decreasing frequency of sin is an increasing sensitivity to it when it does occur. We know our sins. ThatÕs the problem.

 

Principle number one is sin makes us guilty and brings judgment. Sin makes us guilty and brings judgment. Where there is sin in our life there is judgment. Whom the Lord loves He what? Chastens. And every son He scourges. And part of that is a chastening for our sinfulness. We talked last time about five words used in the New Testament for sin, harmartia, which means to miss the mark. We donÕt hit the target. We fall short of GodÕs glory. Parabasis is to step across. Go draws a line and says stay here and we step across. Anomia mean lawlessness. We break His laws. Paraptoma which is trespass in verses 14 and 15 means we slip or fall. We canÕt stay on the straight and narrow. We fall. WeÕre unable to keep erect in righteousness. The fifth word is ophileema, thatÕs the word debt. Because of all these things we have violated GodÕs holiness and we are in debt to Him. And we have to deal with that debt by seeking His forgiveness. So the problem is sin. And if you deny it, thatÕs the biggest problem of all. Because if we say we have no sin we make God a what? A liar. And the truth is not in us.

 

Secondly, last time, we saw that there is the provision. The pro blem is sin and the provision is forgiveness. ItÕs six times in the passage. Twice in 12, twice in 14, and twice in 15. Six times the word forgiveness and principle number two is forgiveness is offered by God on the ground of ChristÕs death. Our problem can be dealt with because there is forgiveness. Must recognize the problem and seek the forgiveness. A Christian who says he doesnÕt sin is in a desperate situation because he doesnÕt seek the solution. There are some who teach that a Christian could reach a certain level in his life where he doesnÕt sin anymore. That isnÕt true. HeÕll continue to sin he just wonÕt seek the forgiveness and heÕll lose the meaning of his relationship to God.

 

Now how is it possible that God can forgive us? And how does that forgiveness work? Well, it is possible because of the death of Christ. So on the basis of ChristÕs death forgiveness is available because the price is paid.

 

Now, where we left off last time was this point. We suggested to you that there are two aspects of forgiveness. And thatÕs what I want you to see again this morning. There are two aspects of forgiveness. This is just thrilling to me. Number one was judicial forgiveness. And we talked about that. Judicial forgiveness. This is the full, complete positional forgiveness granted by God as the moral judge of the universe and by it our sins past, present, and future are totally, completely forever forgiven, we are justified, declared righteous eternally. That happens when you are saved. When you put your faith in Jesus Christ at that moment the righteousness of Christ is imputed to you and you who have sinned and come short of the glory of God are instantly made righteous in Christ, Romans 3. The righteousness of Christ is imputed to you, God drops the gavel of His sovereignty. He hits the table with it and says, ŅDeclared righteous in Christ.Ó That is an absolute; that is a positional truth; that is as eternal as God is eternal. That is inviolable, unchangeable, and forever. The moment I put my faith in Christ GodÕs righteousness is imputed to me. It is granted to me. It is placed upon me. It is put into my account. It is eternal. God is satisfied. That is settled. And thatÕs why Romans 8 says ŅNo one will ever separate us from the love of Christ.Ó ThatÕs why Romans 8 says ŅNo one can ever lay any charge to GodÕs elect.Ó That is settled. We saw didnÕt we when we looked at judicial forgiveness there are many words to describe it. But we said it involves God taking away our sin, God covering our sin, God blotting out our sin, and God forgetting our sin. It is done with. Judicially settled for good.

 

Now, if we have Christians then praying this prayer, ŅOur FatherÓ and all of their sins forever are forgiven and God has dropped the gavel and declared us righteous then why are we saying ŅForgive us our debts?Ó Why are we asking God for forgiveness? If all of that is a settled matter, what is the point of praying that prayer? The point is answered in a second kind of forgiveness. There is not only judicial forgiveness there is parental forgiveness. And maybe you can come up with a better word than parental but itÕs one that kind of stuck in my mind based on the fact that the ŅOur FatherÓ begins the prayer. Parental forgiveness. Now we are not dealing with God as a righteous judge we are dealing here with God as a loving father.

 

Now listen, even though we have been judicially forgiven and forever that is settled eternally and never changes we still sin donÕt we? And when we sin something happens in our relationship to God. The relationship doesnÕt end but something is lost in the intimacy of it. Right? If my children, my boys or girls, sin against me by disobeying the relationship doesnÕt end, theyÕre still my children. IÕm still their father. And there is a certain forgiveness in my heart that is automatic because they are in my family. But something is in the relationship that causes a loss of intimacy until they come and say, ŅDaddy, IÕm sorry.Ó And then the intimacy is restored. IÕm married to my wife, happily. WouldnÕt have it any other way. Getting better all the time. And if I should sin against my wife by a thoughtless deed or word or something that was unkind, it doesnÕt change our relationship. And there is a sense in which I am forgiven just because IÕm under the umbrella of her constant love. But there is something lost in the intimacy until I ask her forgiveness that is found again as soon as I do. ThatÕs what He is talking about here. This is not some unbeliever praying for salvation. This is not some Christian pleading that God would please forgive his sins. Like the guy I heard on the television and people were asking Bible questions and one person said If I sin a sin and I die before I get it confessed will I go to heaven? And the man said No. YouÕll go to hell. What a terrible, terrible lie that is to put someone under that kind of fear. WeÕre not talking about that; weÕre talking here about the forgiveness that gives us the fullness of joy in intimacy with God. It is all that the relationship can be. ThatÕs what He is talking about.

 

Let me illustrate it to you from Psalm 51, go back to Psalm 51. HereÕs David. Now David was redeemed. Mark it, David was saved. David had received Old Testament salvation. Righteousness was imputed to DavidÕs account. He believed God. He loved God. He trusted in God. His faith was in God. He had received redemption. The righteousness of Christ as yet future had already been imputed to his account by his faith. He was a regenerated, redeemed man. And he fell into sin. Terrible sin. Sin not unlike our friend Ray that we read about this morning for he committed adultery and then he committed murder. And had he been anybody else but the king he would have probably lost his life. But he was something other than the law, something above the law. And even though the sins were heinous he was spared because of his position. But I want you to notice the nature of his prayer in Psalm 51 because this is the prayer that comes out of his guilt-ridden bloodstained heart as he reflects on his sin.

 

And I want you to notice, first of all, verse 14. ŅDeliver me from blood guiltiness,Ó now watch, ŅO God, thou God of my salvation.Ó Listen, David affirms his salvation. David affirms that God is still the God of his salvation. He cries to a God whose presence is there, whose Spirit is there, whose salvation is His yet. No, I believe that David was truly redeemed. He was redeemed. And God was still there in His presence, in His Spirit. And He was still the God of my salvation. But even in affirming that the judicial forgiveness was there David canÕt help but feel the loss of something intimate in the relationship. And thatÕs what he means when he cries out in verse 2, ŅWash me thoroughly from my iniquity. Cleanse me from my sin for I acknowledge my transgressions and my sin is always before me, I canÕt forget it, against Thee. Thee only have I sinned and done this evil in Thy sight.Ó Verse 7, ŅPurge me with hyssop and I shall be clean, wash me and I shall be whiter than snow.Ó You see, be a sense in which judicial forgiveness and parental, if you will, forgiveness are so different. David was saved but there was something between he and God that made him lose the meaning of that salvation. ThatÕs why he says in verse 8, ŅMake me hear joy and gladness that the bones which thou hast broken may rejoice.Ó He wanted the joy back, didnÕt he? ThatÕs what he wanted. ŅCreate in me a clean heart, O God,Ó verse 10. ŅRenew a right spirit within me.Ó The capper is in verse 12, ŅRestore unto me the,Ó what? Ņthe joy of thy salvation.Ó He doesnÕt say Restore unto me thy salvation. He says restore unto me the what? The joy of it. Now here it is, folks. Judicial forgiveness takes care of the fact of salvation. Parental forgiveness takes care of the joy of it. You see? I can be forgiven, but if IÕm sinful and unconfessing and unrepentant in that sinfulness, I forfeit the joy of the fullness of that relationship. ThatÕs the issue.

 

Look with me for a moment at 1 John chapter 1. And John begins this wonderful epistle by saying that he preaches Christ, the word of life, from first hand experience: ŅThat which was from the beginning which weÕve heard, which weÕve seen with our hands, or seen with our eyes, looked upon and our hands have handled.Ó He says we have had personal experience with Christ, in verse 1. ŅThe word of life and the word was manifest. And we have seen it and bear witness and show unto you that eternal life which was with the Father and manifest unto us.Ó In other words, weÕre preaching Christ. WeÕre preaching the gospel. Why? Verse 3, ŅThat which we have seen and heard declare unto you in order that,Ó hereÕs why: ŅYou also may have,Ó watch it, Ņfellowship with us and our fellowship is with the Father with His Son Jesus Christ.Ó

 

Now listen, John says we preach to bring you into the fellowship. See? We want to get you into the fellowship. We want to link you up with God and Christ and everybody else who believes in God and Christ. We want to bring you into the family. ThatÕs judicial forgiveness. We want to get you into the fellowship--participating in the common eternal life, to be one in the koinonia. ThatÕs why we preach Christ.

 

Then he goes a step further. Verse 4, ŅAnd these things,Ó what things? ŅThe things we write unto you,Ó thatÕs the epistle, Ņwe write in order that your,Ó what? Ņjoy may be full.Ó Now on the one hand we preach the gospel so that youÕll come into the fellowship and on the other hand we write the epistle so that in the fellowship you will know the fullness of joy. Being saved puts you in the fellowship, being obedient to the standards and the principles we lay out makes you know the joy of that fellowship. You see? On the one hand is judicial for giveness putting you in the fellowship and there is the parental forgiveness that makes you know the fullness of the joy of being in the fellowship. And right off the bat he says, if youÕre in the fellowship, verse 9, youÕll be confessing your sin and HeÕs faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to keep on cleansing us from all unrighteousness.

 

Now look, he says, ŅIÕm writing this unto you that your joy may be full.Ó And the first thing he says if you want full joy, if you want full joy then keep on confessing your what? Sins. ThatÕs the point. The gospel brings judicial righteousness, judicial forgiveness, obedience and the obedience of confession to begin with brings you the fullness of joy that comes from parental forgiveness.

 

Look a John 13, 1 hope youÕre getting this, John 13. One of my very favorite chapters, IÕve shared it with you many times but IÕm going to pu11 a thought out of it that perhaps we havenÕt covered. John 13, our dear Lord is speaking of His love for the disciples here in this chapter, in spite of their waywardness and sinfulness, in spite of the fact that they were sitting around arguing whoÕd be the greatest in the kingdom. They were selfcentered, selfish, possessive, indifferent to Christ, unconcerned about His pending death, arguing, proud, egotistical, they were very ugly at this time. In the midst of it all, the dear Lord takes His outer garment off and puts a towel about His waist and starts to wash their feet. Humiliating, to Him and to them, for they should have done it for Him. He should not have needed to do it for them.

 

He comes to Peter in verse 8. Peter says, ŅYouÕll never wash my feet.Ó This is not going to happen, I wonÕt allow this. I believe Peter is convicted, I believe he wouldnÕt let the Lord stoop to do that. I believe heÕs facing his own sin. The fact that heÕs been arguing about who is the greatest in the kingdom, that heÕs been selfish, selfcentered, insensitive to Christ and he just wonÕt allow it. YouÕre not going to wash my feet! Jesus answered him, ŅIf I wash thee not thou hast no part with Me.Ó And He takes that whole physical scene and turns it into tremendous spiritual truth. He says Peter, if you want to really know what it is to fellowship with me, if you want to know what it is to be part and parcel of what I am, if you want the fullness of a relationship, you better let me wash you. Peter says, Lord, donÕt wash my feet only; wash my hands and my head. Do the whole deal. Again, a dumb statement. Jesus says to him, ŅHe thatÕs washed (He used the word bathed) needs not except to wash his feet.Ó HeÕs already entirely clean, and youÕre clean. He says Peter, I only want to wash your feet. First heÕs telling Him what not to do and then heÕs telling Him what to do. Peter, just be quiet. IÕm only interested in your feet because there is a tremendous spiritual truth here. YouÕre sitting around this table sinning, you are already clean, verse 10 says, except for Judas. Not all of you are clean, one of you is not. One of you is not redeemed. But the rest of you are already clean. YouÕve already been redeemed. YouÕve already been made righteous by faith. IÕm not talking about bathing you all over again. You only get made righteous how many times? One, you donÕt need that again. What IÕm interested in is keeping the dirt off your feet.

 

Now in those days, of course, you took a bath in the morning as you got up and bathed your entire body and then you started out for the day and wearing sandals in that part of the world the roads would either be muddy or dusty. Muddy when it rained and you can imagine the muck. And when it was dry, dust everywhere, and youÕre feet would be dirty and every time you would go into a home or into a place of business or commune with people or eat a meal it would be necessary for you to wash your feet just as a matter of very obvious propriety. And the Lord is giving them an incredibly great spiritual truth. He is saying to them, simply this YouÕve already had judicial forgiveness, youÕve had your spritual bath when you believed. All thatÕs necessary for Me to do to keep the fullness of our relationship open is to wash your feet. ThatÕs parental forgiveness, you see. And daily as we walk through the world we collect the dust of the world and those are the sins we commit. And as we confess those things theyÕre washed. An as we are confessing, 1 John 1:9, HeÕs faithful and still righteous to keep on forgiving and keep on cleansing. What a glorious truth. HeÕs simply saying Once youÕve been cleaned, bathed in the saving blood of Jesus Christ, youÕve received judicial forgiveness that doesnÕt have to be done again but parental forgiveness is something that goes an everyday as we keep the fullness of the communion pen. Positional purging needs no repetition. But practical purging has to be repeated every day.

 

Listen, beloved, when you pray you better pray in accord with Matthew 6. Somewhere in your prayers after you have acknowledged His name be Hallowed and His kingdom come and His will be done and after you have acknowledged that God is the source of your physical and daily sustenance, you need to face the fact that your feet are dirty. And you need to acknowledge the fact that as long as theyÕre dirty and youÕre unconfessing and unrepenting of that sin, there is a loss in the fullness of joy in the intimacy in the communion that you can have with God. Believers need to open their heart daily for that forgiveness that keeps the feet clean.

 

I think about David. Nathan told David, he says, ŅDavid, the Lord has put away your sin.Ó Oh what relief. David had committed the terrible sin of Bathsheba and Uriah and the Lord had put it away and said YouÕve got judicial forgiveness, the umbrella is over you, man, thatÕs done with. And you might today find someone whoÕd say in the same setting, Well, I realize that but the LordÕs already taken care of that, IÕm not going to worry about it. Not David. It wasnÕt long after Nathan had said to him the Lord has put away your sin, GodÕs taken care of that, thatÕs in redemption, that David wrote Psalm 32 and this is what he said: ŅI acknowledge my sin unto Thee, my iniquity have I not hidden, I will confess my transgression unto the Lord.Ó Do you get that? Listen to me, when he already knew that the judicial element was cared for he still cried out in confession to open the parental channel to keep the intimacy of the relationship. So what is the message of part one of this petition? Forgive us our debts? It is simply a plea that we experience the moment by moment cleansing that comes when we acknowledge our sin to the Lord. Very basic. Very necessary.

 

And you know what thrills me so much is that God is so eager to forgive. You know, you might think that if you were in some pagan religion or something that and you believe the gods to be like men, that God gets so sick of hearing you that one day He just says, - You know, this is the last time IÕm listening to you, fellow--from here on out take the consequences. IÕve given you more forgiveness than any ten people deserve. But thatÕs not the way God is. I think it was Nehemiah who said, ŅThou art a God ready to pardon.Ó Thou art a God ready to pardon. And thatÕs right. Eager. I love Micah, ŅHe delights in mercy.Ó You say But I go back everyday and I keep saying Lord I did this again, Lord, I had this problem again and you go back everyday and doesnÕt God get sick of it? No, because He delights in mercy because mercy is an act of His nature that gives Him glory for we glorify such a merciful God. ThatÕs why in Romans 5 it says, ŅWhere sin abounds grace does,Ó what? ŅMuch more abound.Ó God loves to forgive. And you know you can take all the forgiveness HeÕs got and it wonÕt diminish His resource at all. And you can come back as many times as you want and it will never diminish His love. Never. HeÕll forgive as often as you come.

 

Somebody said to me last week, You know, your sermon on judicial forgiveness I think ruined my son. I said Why? Well, because you said he could just do just sin and it was covered for eternity, so he just went out and did it. And he said ItÕs all covered anyway. Well, I question whether he knows Christ first of all. Because if I know God has forgiven all my sins and if I know no matter how many times I come back and ask His forgiveness HeÕs eager and anxious to do it, that kind of love retards me from sinning rather than compels me to sin because I canÕt trade on that love. I canÕt abuse that. Dr. Barnhouse told a great story to illustrate this. He was talking to a college professor and he told a story about a couple, this is what he said: ŅThe man had lived a life of great sin and immorality but had converted and eventually come to marry a fine Christian woman. He had confided to her the nature of his past life in just a few words as he had told her these things the wife had taken his head in her hands. And she drew him to her shoulder and kissed him gently and said, John, I want you to understand something very plainly. I know my Bible well and therefore I know the subtlety of sin and the devices of sin that work in the human heart. I know you are a thoroughly converted man, John, but I know that you still have a sin nature. And that you are not yet fully instructed in the ways of God that you will be. The devil will do all he can to wreck your Christian life. He will see to it that temptations of every kind are put in your way. And the day might come, John, please God that it never does, but it might come when you succumb to temptation and fall into sin. And, John, immediately the devil will tell you itÕs no use trying you might as well continue on your way and sin and above all heÕll tell you not to tell me because it will hurt me. But, John, I want you to know that there is a home for you in my arms. When I married you I married your old nature as well as your new nature. And I want you to know there is full pardon and full forgiveness in advance for any evil that ever comes into your life.Ó

 

Now thatÕs something like God. Barnhouse finished the story: ŅThe college professor lifted up his eyes reverently, and said, ŌMy God, if anything could ever keep a man straight, that kind of forgiving love in advance would sure do it.ÕÓ That is exactly and precisely the way God perceives His relationship to us.

 

Listen, weÕve seen the problem: sin. WeÕve seen the provision: forgiveness. I want to close with the plea: confession. The plea: confession. The third principle is simply that we received His forgiveness by confession of sin. We receive His forgiveness by confession of sin. The whole of this verse implies confession. You can know about sin and know about forgiveness but if you didnÕt confess your sin youÕd never receive it. As long as I harbor my sin and I never confess it and repent of it and turn from it and give it to God and agree with Him about it IÕm never free to know the joy that He wants me to know because a barrier is there that shatters the intimacy of fellowship. And so I must confess, I must open my heart and admit my sin and that is tough, isnÕt it? ItÕs tough. Just try to get it out of your little kid when theyÕve done something wrong.

 

I remember as a little boy I vandalized a school with another little boy. My father was holding a revival meeting in a small little town in Indiana. In the midst of the week a little boy and I went down and we did some bad things. And they went from house to house in the little town--it was so small--and they came to the house we were staying in and my father and the man that owned the house went to the door and the man said WeÕve had vandalism in the school, would your children know anything about it? And I was holding my fatherÕs hand applying my most angelic face, doing everything I could to show that I was as spiritual as my evangelist father, would never be caught doing something like that. I hung on and My son would never do anything like that and he patted me on the head Not Johnny, why heÕs a wonderful boy. And the other man was saying Oh, our boy is a wonderful boy too and I donÕt understand how this could happen. And he gave them this long thing and my father was expressing such love for me and such confidence in my life. That night at the meeting I went forward when he gave the invitation and I said I prayed with him on the steps I said I think I need Jesus in my heart. He never knew why. Ten years later before I told him about it. Ten years, I couldnÕt get the courage to do it. But IÕm not alone.

 

Adam and Eve sinned. And they were used to walking and talking with God in the cool of the day, but the minute they sinned, the next thing they did was what? Hide. ItÕs tough to confess. And as long as you donÕt you forfeit the joy. Proverbs 28:13 says ŅCover your sin, you donÕt prosper.Ó Cover your sin, you donÕt prosper. ŅWhoever confesses and forsakes shall have mercy.Ó Your spiritual prosperity is at stake. ThatÕs why he says you better say Forgive us our debts. Confession of sin is vital. ItÕs vital.

 

David said to Nathan, IÕve sinned against the Lord, 2 Samuel 12:13, David said to Nathan again in 2 Samuel 24:10 - IÕve sinned against the Lord greatly in what I have done. I have acted very foolishly. In 1 Chronicles 21:7 David said to God, I am the one who has sinned and done very wickedly. Isaiah said, ŅI am a man of unclean lips and I live amidst a people of unclean lips.Ó Daniel said in chapter 9 verse 20, ŅI was speaking and praying and confessing my sin.Ó Peter said in Luke chapter 5 verse 8, ŅDepart from me for I am a sinful man, O Lord.Ó Paul said, ŅIt is a trustworthy statement, deserving full acceptance, that Jesus Christ came into the world to save sinner among whom I amÓ what? Ņchief.Ó Confessing sin isnÕt easy but itÕs necessary to appropriate the intended joy that comes with parental forgiveness. DonÕt conceal your sin. Confess your sin.

 

John Stott says and itÕs true, ŅOne of the surest antidotes to the process of moral hardening is the disciplined practice of uncovering our sins of thought and outlook as well as word and deed and the repentant forsaking of the same.Ó If you donÕt do that it will harden. IÕve seen Christians, judicially forgiven and eternally secure, who are so hardened, so impenitent, so unconfessing, so in sensitive to sin, and so totally joyless, who didnÕt even know the meaning of a loving intimate fellowship with God. They blocked it out with the barricade of their unconfessed sin. Confession.

 

This week I sat in my room back in Indiana and watched the snow fall out the window. I thought to myself the world looks so white. The city I was in has three streets and a stop sign. That was it. And there was just fields of white everywhere. Little paths where people walked and trees were all covered with snow. I thought about sins being as white as snow. And then as I looked at my own life I was reading a little book I have, ŅThe Prayers of Puritans,Ó that sometimes I share with you. I came across one, set my life in stark contrast to the purity I saw out the window. And I thought it might be a fitting thought for us today. Confession is so necessary, people. Or you lose that purity that gives you joy. This is what I read:

 

ŅGod of grace, thou hast imputed my sin to my substitute and has imputed His righteousness to my soul, hast clothed me with a bridegroomÕs robe, decking me with jewels of holiness but in my Christian walk I am still in rags, my best prayers are stained with sin. My penitential tears are so much impurity; my confessions of wrong are so many aggravations of sin. My receiving the Spirit is tinctured with selfishness. I need to repent of my repentance. I need my tears to be washed. I have no robe to bring to cover my sins, no loom to weave my own righteousness. IÕm always standing clothed in filthy garments and by grace am always receiving change of raiment for thou dost always justify the ungodly. I am always going into the far country and always returning home as a prodigal and always saying, Father forgive me, and Thou art always bringing forth the best robe again. Every morning let me wear it, every evening return it in. Go out to do the dayÕs work in it. Be married in it. Be wound in death in it. Stand before the great white throne in it. Enter heaven in it, shining as the sun. Grant me never t o lose sight of the exceeding sinfulness of sin, the exceeding righteousness of salvation, the exceeding glory of Christ, the exceeding beauty of holiness and the exceeding wonder of grace. I am guilty but pardoned. I am lost but saved. I am wandering but found. I am sinning but cleansed. Give me perpetual broken heartedness. Keep me always clinging to Thy cross. Flood me every moment with descending grace and open to me the springs of divine knowledge sparkling like crystal flowing clear and unsullied through my wilderness of life.Ó Confession, purging of the soul. ThatÕs the plea of this petition.

 

Is it part of your prayer life?

 

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Added to Bible Bulletin Board's "John MacArthur Collection" by:

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