THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"Epiphany of Gods Kindness and Love"Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) |
Dear radio friends,
In our remembrance of the birth of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ, we are
following a series of messages under the theme Epiphany. This is a Greek word meaning
appearance, the word that the Holy Spirit uses to describe Christs
coming in the flesh.
Our passage today is
Titus 3:3, 4:
For
we ourselves also were sometimes foolish, disobedient, deceived, serving divers lusts and
pleasures, living in malice and envy, hateful, and hating one another. But after that the kindness and love of God our
Saviour toward man appeared. I speak to
you today on The Appearance of Gods Kindness and Love.
We should notice that the passage begins with the word for. So we are going to be given a reason for
something, a reason to practice the exhortations of Gods Word in verses 1 and 2. In these verses God tells us that we are to be
obedient to magistrates, or to civil rulers. Put
them in mind, Paul says to Titus, to be subject to principalities and powers,
to obey magistrates, to be ready to every good work.
Then, in verse 2, God gives us the exhortation that we are to be kind to our
neighbors. To speak evil, says
the apostle, of no man, to be no brawlers, but gentle, shewing all meekness unto all
men. We are not to revile another
person. We are not to be quarrelsome,
contentious, soon angry. But we are to yield
personal advantage, to help the needy, and to be considerate of the fallen. This was especially applicable to Titus as he was
laboring among the Cretians. According to
Pauls letter to Titus, the Cretians were notorious as being a quarrelsome and
contentious people.
So God brings to us two exhortations: Be
obedient to the authority over you; and be kind to your neighbor. Why? The
apostle (really the Holy Spirit) gives us the reason in the appearing, the
epiphany, of Gods kindness and love in our Saviors birth. In other words, the Word of God is saying,
consider yourself. Just exactly what kind of
a person are you? How do you stand before
God? Then, you must consider that the
kindness and love of our God appeared toward us in the gift of His Son. Then we too must live in kindness and love one for
another.
When our Lord Jesus Christ, then, appeared in our flesh on that glorious night long
ago in Bethlehem, the kindness and love of God, our Savior, toward man appeared. The word appeared, is
epiphany, a word that means to shine out. The love and kindness of God shone out of the
gloom and the darkness of a world of sin. It
sparkled, it became very apparent.
No, there was not an earthly glow of light out of the manger. It was not the glow of some kind of mystical
light. And it is not the glow that is
glamorized in Christmas cards and all of the ideas of a warm Christmas setting and a cozy
fireplace. You see, you need to have eyes,
new eyes, to see this light. You must be
given faith, the gift of God, and your eyes must be opened by a divine operation of the
Holy Spirit to be able to see the light of Gods love and kindness.
But what appeared in Bethlehem was something of God.
Gods own virtue shone out of the stable.
But apart from Gods work of grace in your heart, you do not see those
virtues. When you do, you hate them. It is the grace of God that opens our eyes to see
that, when Christ was born, the soft and comforting virtues of the kindness and love of
God towards His church shone out brilliantly.
The kindness and love of God are bound together in the text that we are considering
(and throughout all of Scripture). Love is
the cause of kindness, and kindness is the action of love.
Gods love and kindness are always bound together. They look upon Gods own heart towards His
elect, toward those whom He has chosen freely of His grace, as He is moved toward them and
sees them in their misery and wretchedness and impotence.
Gods love and kindness is the soft and piteous tenderness of Gods heart
directed toward those whom He has chosen, who of themselves are wretched, cruel, fallen
sinners.
It is Gods thoughtfulness. In
His kindness and love He thinks upon us for our good.
Do we not say that to each other: How
kind that was of you! We mean,
How thoughtful that was of you. The
kindness and love of God refer to that virtue of our God as He is tender, soft-hearted,
thoughtful to the ones whom He has chosen, who are, in themselves, utterly hopeless and
vile sinners.
The Scriptures present this virtue as being all-sufficient for the believer.
Psalm 63:3,
The lovingkindness [of my God]
is better than life [to me]. How can
our hearts remain dejected and hopeless when we entertain the thought of Gods
lovingkindness toward us a lovingkindness that faileth never? We read this, for instance, in
Psalm 42:8,
Yet the Lord will command his
lovingkindness in the daytime. There
the psalmist is reasoning his way out of depression.
His soul has been cast down within him. He
is far from Gods house and Gods people. He
is in the midst of a land of enemies and strangers and different tongues. His comfort?
The Lord has commanded His lovingkindness He has given the command for His
lovingkindness to be with the psalmist always.
We have a similar thing in
Psalm 48:9,
We have thought of thy lovingkindness,
O God. There the psalmist says that the
joyful child of God, as he goes forth to worship, finds a great motivation and impulse to
worship God when he begins to think of the lovingkindness of God to us.
The lovingkindness of God appeared when Jesus was born. This is what caused the shepherds to return
glorifying and praising God for all the things they had seen and heard even as it was told
to them of the angel. This is what Mary
pondered in her heart that night. She turned
it over and over and over again. Do you not
do the same?
To return to
Titus 3,
what would you expect verse 4 to say after you read verse 3? Verse 3 said that we ourselves were
sometimes foolish, disobedient, deceived, serving divers lusts and pleasures, living in
malice and envy, hateful, and hating one another.
What would you expect to follow that verse? Would
you expect verse 4 to read: And God
justly damned them for their awful treason, horrible perverseness, and for the sin that
they had committed? If we did read
that, then all we could say is this: True and
righteous are Thy judgments, O Lord God Almighty.
But, after all of that, we read that the kindness and love of God our Saviour
toward man appeared. The idea of
man is mankind or all of those chosen from mankind by
Gods eternal election. For the apostle
is talking about salvation. And salvation is
not an attempt on Gods part, it is not an offer on Gods part, it is not simply
that God says, I have this salvation and I would like the hand of the dead sinner to
please accept it. Oh, no! Gods intentions are particular, they are of
grace. Therefore, the lovingkindness of God
appeared toward fallen man, man who of himself is fallen from God, man who has been chosen
by the grace of God unto salvation.
Toward them the kindness and love of God appeared when Jesus Christ, Immanuel, was
in the manger. There was the kindness of God. He gave His Son.
The mission of the Son was our help. It
was thoughtful. He came to take us from the
groveling of sin and from the dunghill of our misery to a palace of fellowship and
friendship. It was kind. God did not need our friendship. He is the eternally blessed one. Yet He gave His own Son in our flesh, for those
who had betrayed Him, for those who had spoken evilly of Him, for those who have ruined
His gift and challenged His sovereignty and transgressed His righteousness and blasphemed
His name! Is it not amazing? The kindness and the love of God shone forth when
He gave His Son in Bethlehem for His children.
For us, for the ones who are described in verse 3: For we ourselves also were sometimes
foolish, disobedient
. If you have your Bible open and you are looking at
Titus 3:3,
I ask you a simple question: Who is verse 3 talking about? Is it talking about child predators, movie stars
who get married four, five, six times looking for true love? No, the Holy Spirit is not talking about them in
verse 3. Is the Holy Spirit talking about the
Cretians? You remember I mentioned earlier in
the message that the Cretians were noted as a most contentious lot. So, is the Holy Spirit talking about those
Cretians who formed a church back then and who were known to speak evil of other people
and to degrade authority, and were quarrelsome and explosive and brawlers? The answer to that is, No, the Holy Spirit,
technically, is not even talking, first of all, about them.
If we want to be strictly technical, the we refers to Paul and Titus: For we ourselves
. This is Pauls letter to Titus. It refers to Paul and to Titus.
You see, the Holy Spirit is talking about us, as children of God, what we are in
ourselves. For we ourselves, that is, those
who are recipients of the free grace of God, we ourselves are foolish, disobedient
and hating one another! That is what the Word
of God is saying to us.
We are being exhorted by Gods Word, of course, that, in Christ Jesus, we are
to repent and to be gentle and meek. We are
to mature in Jesus Christ. We are not to be
contentious. We are being exhorted to see the
wonderful grace of God in the appearing of His Son Jesus Christ. Gods love and kindness appeared to us,
who were totally undeserving.
This is who we were by nature. We were
sometimes foolish, that is, senseless, unable to discern the reality of God, unable to
discern the reality of His judgments. We were
disobedient, that is, an innate rebellion against God is within our hearts. We will not have Him to rule over us. We are deceived or deluded, we are blind to what
is behind our own nose, our own sins. We
would serve divers lusts and pleasures. That
is, of ourselves, we would be enslaved to passions and to lusts. We would live in malice and envy that would
be our inward attitude, that would be our code of life.
We are hateful and hating one another. That
is really the summary of it all. By nature we
hate, we are full of hate. That is the
description of what we are.
And we cannot change that in ourselves. Only
Gods mercy can do that. That is the
gospel. You cannot become a better person by
yourself. Look at verse 5, which follows
immediately after our passage: Not by
works of righteousness which we have done, but according to his mercy he saved us, by the
washing of regeneration. You see, God
does not find in us anything that He ought to love, but He loves us because of His own
names sake. If there is one drop of
good in us, if there is one impulse of repentance found in us, if there is a surge of love
within us, if there is a desire of compassion and forgiveness toward others in us, it is
all because of the amazing gift of God in sheer mercy.
You and I cannot give ourselves credit for it.
Now, we who fully believe, and must believe and ought to believe, that these things
are true of us in ourselves do we not stand speechless before Gods kindness
and love in giving His Son for us? What
kindness and what love of God!
Then there will be a result. And that
result is implied: We will manifest the
kindness and love of God. That love of God
and kindness will now begin to appear, to shine forth, to be reflected out of our own
lives. His kindness and His love are powers
to change us, to crucify that ferocious nature and to make us humble members of the church
of Jesus Christ. A wonderful change takes
place. And that change takes place through
the coming of our Savior, through the grace and through the love and through the kindness
of God revealed in our Savior. It takes us,
who are of ourselves hateful and proud and filled with all types of evil, and it changes
us, by the grace of God, so that we turn and we desire to live in true love with our
neighbor and true submission to all authority that is over us.
Gods grace that appeared in Jesus Christ makes us kind one to another. We read in
Ephesians 4:32,
Be ye kind one to
another, tenderhearted. We read in
I Corinthians 13,
Love suffereth long and is kind. And we read in
Luke 6:35
that our God is
kind unto the unthankful and to the evil.
The wonderful grace of God, the kindness and the love of God, has appeared in the
birth of Jesus Christ. And that kindness and
love of God is powerful, saving us and renewing us so that now we, too, are kind.
That means that it is that virtue of grace in us that makes us friendly, that makes
the individual child of God attractive, that leaves behind a profitable and edifying
atmosphere, that encourages others unto love and affection in the church and home and
family. That we are made kind by the grace of
God means that we are given the ability to bear with one another, we are not inclined to
react with harshness but rather with kindness, and we become thoughtful one of another,
considerate.
Are you kind? Girls, are you kind to
your sister, or are you catty? Do you
bristle, or are you kind? Are you the kind of
person who is safe to be with? Boys, are you
kind, are you thoughtful? Do you show this
forth in your very deed and word one to another?
And, not only kind, but loving, for we cannot separate, as we said, the kindness
and the love of God. The love of God, you
know, always humbles us. It is a great
mystery to us. We ask the question, Why would
God love me? We cannot find the answer to
that question except in the eternal heart of God: He
has loved us for His names sake. There
it is. As God has shown the lovingkindness of
His heart toward us in the gift of His Son, and in that gift of His Son has redeemed us,
made us His own, we, too, are given to love. Love
God and love one another.
And then we repent. We repent of our
sins. We do not look to ourselves for the
reason for God to have loved us. But we look
to Him and to what He has done. And we bow
before Him in humble worship, resolved that we, too, shall live in all kindness and love
one to another.
The wonderful love and kindness of God appeared in the birth of the Savior.
When
you see that, by His love and mercy, you will arise and you will live in kindness and love
to the praise of His name.
Let us pray.
Last modified: 05-Jan-2004