THE REFORMED WITNESS
HOUR
"The Light of a Holy Example"
Rev. Carl Haak
(e-mail: Rev. Carl
Haak) |
Dear radio friends,
Have you considered my servant Job? This
was the question that God put to the devil himself.
We read in the book of Job, 1:8, And the Lord said unto Satan, Hast thou
considered my servant Job, that there is none like him in the earth, a perfect and an
upright man, one that feareth God, and escheweth evil? Satans attempt is always to ridicule the
work of God. The devils purpose is to
expose the work of God as being a fake and a phony, as something that is defeatable. The devil is attempting to say that the Word of
God is not true and that the promises of God fail.
This has been his attack and his motive since the fall of Adam in Paradise. And in the Old Testament we learn that the devil
was given access to heaven. You may read of that in
Revelation 12
where he would come to heaven itself to make accusation against the
work of God. So, we read in the book of Job,
the devil also appeared before God when the holy angels appeared before Him.
Satan has appeared before God. And God
knows exactly what Satans intent is. Now
God will bring a rebuff to the devil. The
devils whole point is that the work of the Lord is defeatable, that the work of the
Lord is not true, that the work of the Lord is not genuine, there is no substance to the
work of salvation in Jesus Christ.
God will bring rebuke to the devil. But
note the rebuke that He brings. The life of
one believer, born by Gods grace, is enough to silence the devils arguments
and accusations. Note carefully that God did
not say to the devil, Have you considered, Satan, My faithfulness? He could have done that. He may answer the devil, and certainly He does
answer the devil, with His own character: I
am God, I am faithful. Therefore you, devil,
are a liar. You are a liar because I am the
true God and you oppose Me. That makes you a
liar. But God does not say that.
He could have said to the devil, Have you considered the veracity, the
truthfulness of My word? I have said that I
shall save My people in Jesus Christ. Therefore
when you oppose that, and you contradict it, you are a liar because you oppose My
word. For Gods word is true. And let every man who opposes it be a liar
(Rom. 3:4).
God could have said that, too. And that would have made sense.
But God did not say that. He said,
Have you considered my servant Job. That
is, Job himself, as one who had been born by the grace of God to a new life in Jesus
Christ, constituted an adequate reply to the slanders of the devil. Jobs life evidenced a passion for God. Jobs life gave proof of a desire to be
pleasing to God. God is saying that the lives
of believers are the gospels convincing argument to the world.
Let that sink in.
In heaven, does God say that of you and of me?
Would He present your life, as a child of God, as proof that there is such a thing
as a believer, that there is such a thing as a work of Gods grace? Would He point to your life and say, There
is the evidence of My mighty grace and of the certainty of My purpose to save a people in
Christ?
Would God present your life as a convincing argument of the truth of the gospel? Would God be so bold, as in the day of Antichrist,
the Antichrist who will exalt himself above everything that is called God, would God be so
bold as to say to the Antichrist himself, Do you want to see the reality of My
saving grace and love? Have you considered My
servant (now put your name there)?
The life of a believer is to be a convincing argument of the power of the gospel of
grace. The life of a believer is to be a
light, the light of a holy example.
That is what God is saying to us. And
that is what He is saying to Satan. He is
saying to Satan that the lives of those whom He saved by grace is a convincing argument of
the truth of the gospel of His Son Jesus Christ. That
is the teaching of the entire Word of God. For instance, in
I Thessalonians 1:7, 8,
when the apostle Paul is speaking to the infant
church of the Thessalonians, he says that ye were ensamples to all that believe in
Macedonia and Achaia. For from you sounded
out the word of the Lord not only in Macedonia and Achaia, but also in every place your
faith to God-ward is spread abroad; so that we need not to speak any thing. Those are strong words from the apostle Paul. We need not speak any thing because your
example has done the speaking for us. Paul
was bold and eager to speak the gospel. But
he says, When I am among you, and when your example becomes evident, I need not say
any thing.
We find the same in
I Timothy 4:12
where Paul, speaking to Timothy, who was,
relatively speaking, a young pastor in the church of Ephesus, he says to Timothy,
Let no man despise thy youth; but be thou an example of the believers in word, in
conversation, in charity, in spirit, in faith, in purity. He is saying, Timothy, you are finding those
in the church who are criticizing you because of your youth. They look down on you and say, Why should we
listen to such a young man? Now you
would be tempted to argue your way, to feel hurt, or to get mad. Dont do that, Timothy. The best way to silence such criticism is to show
in your life that what you say is true by being an example of it. Timothy, go about your life in the church as a
pastor with a consistent, humble devotion to Christ.
And your example must do your talking.
Another illustration of this truth is found in the Lords prayer in
John 17,
the prayer that He offered to God on the eve of the cross.
In verse 21, after having prayed that God would sanctify His disciples through the
truth, and that through their life, their sanctified life, others might be brought to
believe upon Him through their word, He says, That they all may be one; as thou,
Father, art in me, and I in thee, that they also may be one in us: that the world may believe that thou hast sent
me. The Lord is saying that the life of
the church, when the grace of God is powerfully working in the church and working in that
church a unity under the truth of the Word of God, a unity expressed in the preaching of
the Word of God and expressed in the life of the believers with each other, then that life
of the church will convince the world itself that God has sent His Son into the world. The world itself must say, perhaps through gritted
teeth, that the only explanation for the church and for the way the church lives in unity
with each other, the only explanation is that God has intervened in time, that God has
sent His Son. The life of the church is an
argument for the truth of the gospel. The
life of the believer is an argument for the truth of the gospel. Hast thou considered my servant Job?
Now, make no mistake. This life that
Job lived was a life that he lived by the grace of God alone. Notice that God says, Hast thou considered
my servant Job? Job was
Gods servant, not because of any choice that he had made. You see, to become a member of Gods family
and to be saved in Jesus Christ is not like enlisting in the army: you sign up.
No, there are no enlistees in Gods army.
We are all conquered, by the grace of God. By
nature we are not the servants of God but are the servants of sin. We read in the book of Romans (chapter 6) that we
are born servants of sin and we give ourselves willingly (the members of our body) unto
the service of sin, and we would receive the wages of that sin which is eternal death. But thanks be unto God, says the apostle in
Romans 6,
ye became the servants of God by a wonderful work of Gods grace, subduing our sin
and creating in us a desire to be pleasing to God, to live as the servants of God in
holiness and righteousness. Not by nature
are we the servants of God. By nature we are
the servants of the devil and we are the enemies of God.
But when we become servants of God, it is due to Gods grace. So when God says, Hast thou considered my servant
Job? He does not mean to say that the child of God, by his strength, becomes a
convincing argument of the truth of Gods Word.
But He means to say that when He makes a child of God by grace, the life of His
grace in that child of God will be a convincing argument of the truth of the gospel. Is that true about you?
Job lived in isolation. He lived,
probably, at the time of Abraham or thereabouts. He
lived in the land of Uz, far off in the east, probably in Mesopotamia. He lived in a very remote area where, evidently,
there were not others around him who confessed the name of God. If you have a Bible at hand, please turn with me to
Ezekiel 14:14,
where the prophet says that there were especially three men in the Old
Testament who were exemplary in their holiness. Though
these three men, Noah, Daniel, and Job, were in it, they should deliver but their own
souls by their righteousness, saith the Lord God. In the context, Ezekiel is saying that so great
was the sin of Judah, so rebellious and stubborn were they, that they would receive the
judgments of God, and that even if Noah, Daniel, and Job were among them, that would not
change the course of Gods judgment.
Now the question is: Why does the Holy
Spirit speak of these three men: Noah,
Daniel, and Job? What do they have in common? The intention of the Holy Spirit is this, that
these three men are examples of holiness, living in isolation in a sinful world. Noah he was one of eight in the whole world
who believed God. He stood alone at the time
of the flood. Daniel he was a captive
in the land of Babylon. He and his three
friends also stood alone in the sinful world of Babylon.
Job, too, stood in a foreign land. And
yet, although he was not supported by many others believers around, yet God preserved him
in purity. Job was an example, a pattern, of
the truth of salvation in a dark and wicked world.
He was an example of holiness, of a wonderful holiness. We are told about Job that he was a perfect man. That word means complete, entire. He was not hypocritical. What you saw on the outside of his life came from
what was inside of his life. He was not like
a storefront in Chicago, perhaps a laundry or a meat market all respectable
business on the outside. Only when you get
inside you find that it is a front for the mob, or in the back halls drugs and cocaine are
sold. No.
What was on the outside of Jobs life was a reflection of what was inside. He was a man who was upright, that is, he had
integrity. Not an integrity in himself, but a
righteousness promised him in Jesus Christ. And
by faith he held on to that integrity. He
feared God, that is, he reverenced God. He
lived in a profound humility, knowing himself as a sinner and knowing the wonderful grace
of God that God had loved him and had promised to save him through Jesus Christ.
And he was a man who eschewed evil, that is, he kept himself from evil. He desired to withdraw from the stains and the
pollutions of this world and to live a life that was delightful to God.
Job was an example of holiness in a wicked world.
He was an example of the power of Gods grace that out of a fallen, sinful
world God could create in the heart of a man holiness and a desire to please God.
Is that true of you?
But not only was Job an example of holiness. He
was an example of patience. That is the whole
book of Job. The whole book is to teach us
that it belongs to God to order our lives and to direct them according to His good
pleasure and that we are called in Christ to submit in all humility before Him. When God sometimes tries and afflicts us with His
own secret judgments and under those judgments, we are to confess that God is good.
Now Job was a man of like passions as ourselves.
He was a sinful man. Yet the grace of
God was operative in him and produced in him a holy life and a life of patient endurance. And God said to the devil, That life of Job,
that life of holiness and of patience before Me, is enough to shut your mouth when you
come with your derogatory comments. You come
to ridicule My work. You come to spread your
slanders and blasphemy in My face. I respond
to you, devil, have you considered My servant Job?
The life of a true believer, born by grace, is a convincing argument to silence the
very ridicule of the devil himself.
Is that true of your life? Is your
life a persuasive argument of the truth of the gospel?
Is it a persuasive argument of the grace of God which brings holiness, a purity of
mind and body, an example of what it means that your body and your mind belong to the Lord
Jesus Christ, not for debasing it in lust but in purity before God? Are you an example to your son of sexual purity? Are you an example to your fellow young people of
what it means to belong to Jesus Christ, body and soul, and to be resolved in this present
life to keep yourself pure in your body, sexually pure?
Little boy and little girl, fourth and fifth grader, second grader, seventh grader,
is your life an example of holiness in honesty that you do not cheat or lie? The way you take a test, by keeping your eye upon
your own paper and not cheating, is that a testimony that you worship and serve the God
who knows the heart, who knows the truth, and that Jesus Christ has redeemed you, that you
might live in the truth?
Are we examples in love? Young people,
are you examples of the love of God? It is
terrible today among the young people of all the hazing that is done, of all the terrible
things that young people do to each other. Is
your life different? Do you care for your
fellow young people? Do you live a life of
selflessness and gentleness? Is your life an
example of what it means to love God? An
example of what it means to keep the Sabbath day? An
example of what it means to show respect to authority for Gods sake? Is you life, man and woman, an example of what it
means to keep vows of marriage for Gods sake? Is
our life an example of the love of God in the issues of drinking and modesty of dress and
music that we listen to?
What about patience? Job was an
example of patience. That was a powerful
example. The world groans and grumbles and
complains under adversities. The child of
God, in the midst of adversities, expects the salvation of the Lord. And what a wonderful and powerful example it is
when the child of God, under affliction and adversity, patiently trusts in God. The world simply cannot understand that, except to
say that there is something different about you, except to say that God has sent His Son
into the world.
The example that we leave is important. The
example of the life of the child of God is used by God to judge men and women. Sometimes all that a reprobate person will see of
the Word of God is what is written in the life of Gods people. And it is also an example that may be
instrumental, under the grace of God, to bring others under the Word of God and to come to
know God in that Word.
Especially the life of a young person is a powerful example. The world might concede that, after all, if you
have grown up in a Christian faith for fifty years, they would expect to see something
different about you when you reach your fiftieth or sixtieth birthday. After all, when you get a little older you settle
down, and a little religion comes to you when you begin to think about death. So, that old people have faith, as far as the
world is concerned, is, well, I suppose, to be expected.
But young people? When the whole world
is before you? With a youthful body filled
with hormones and testosterones? When they
see your life as a young person conformed to the Word of God, what a powerful example! When they see that you do not use the language of
the world, your aspirations are not that of the world, your commitment is to Jesus Christ
and to His church, that is a powerful example.
Young people, it is a powerful example to the world.
But it is also a powerful example to the children of the church. Do you think about that? Little boys and little girls want to follow an
example. In the world, the examples for young
boys are taken from sports and from entertainment and from music, from those who are
crazed in this world cocaine addicts, alcoholic wife-beaters. Who will serve as examples to the children of the
church? You must. Does God say of you, as a young person, Have
you considered my servant?
You see, we are examples of something. We
cannot help but be examples of something. Now,
by the grace of God, God has come with the power of His grace. And now in Christ Jesus we are so to live that the
world may take note that we have been with Jesus. This
is the purpose of our salvation. And this is
possible by grace and grace alone.
Have you considered my servant __________ (put your name there)? Does God call Satan and all who would ridicule His
Word and truth to witness of the truth of His gospel as it is seen in your life?
Let us humble ourselves before God. Let
us be resolved by the grace of God to look to Him for strength. And may He create in us this desire, that our life
is the life of a holy, consistent example of the light of the glorious gospel of Jesus
Christ.
Let us pray.
Father, we thank Thee for the Word of God. Work
it in our souls through Jesus Christ, we pray, Amen.