THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"The Marks of Gods Children (2)"Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) |
Dear
Radio Friends,
What are the marks of Gods
true children? I would like to answer that in
this message.
In the light of the Reformation,
look at those marks that especially were restored and emphasized during the sixteenth
century Reformation. Let me explain. When we talk about the marks of a child of God,
what a child of God will look like, we could go into a whole plethora of the spiritual
graces that are to be seen in our life: humility,
meekness, love, holiness, and patience as all of these things, the Scriptures say,
are to adorn our life.
We are not going to do that in
this message. What we would like to do is
look into the inward work of the Holy Spirit: what
does the Holy Spirit work in every saved child of God?
What is the Christian experience as taught by the Reformation? I will give three marks that the Reformation
restored once again, the true marks by which the child of God is known, the true Christian
experience.
Now before I mention those three
marks, remember that these marks are all of God. For
the Reformation and the Scriptures loudly and beautifully declare the glory of God
that God is God! All of these marks, then,
are of His power. As God made man from the
dust in the beginning and breathed into him the breath of life, so God alone can make a
child of God and breathe into him these marks. It is the Lord God, we read in
Exodus 11:6,
that puts a difference between the Egyptian and
the Israelite, between the child of the world and one who is redeemed from it.
Remember, also, as we go through
these marks, that they are now imperfect or, better, that they are in us as we still have
our sinful flesh. Thus these marks will never
be in us to the degree that they ought to be or with the power that we desire them to be. As you read of these three marks that I am about
to mention to you from the Scriptures, as emphasized in the Reformation, if you are for
real, if you are a true child of God, if you are not sitting here proud and indifferent,
then you will respond each time saying, Yes, but it seems so small in me. These feelings, these experiences, are so faint in
me that I sometimes wonder if they are there.
...
these marks will never be in us
to
the degree that they ought to be
or
with the power that we desire them to be.
What are these marks?
From the Reformation, and from
the Scriptures, the marks of Gods children are, first of all, an exclusive trust in
Christ for righteousness.
What is the mark of one who
shall come into eternal life? What is the
most basic and non-negotiable mark? We read of it in
Romans 5:17:
They who have received
the gift of righteousness shall reign in life by one, Jesus Christ. Those who trust, by grace. Those who completely and exclusively depend upon
Christ for acceptance with God for righteousness, for the favor, and for the smiling face
of God. Including, then, the forsaking and
the rejecting, from the heart, of all sinful self-sufficiency and work-righteousness as
being the ground of eternal life.
We read in the Scriptures
(Rev. 7:13)
where one of the elders asks John, What are these which are arrayed in white
robes? and whence came they? Who are
they who are in heaven? John said, Sir,
thou knowest. And he answered,
These are they which came out of great tribulation, and have washed their robes, and
made them white in the blood of the Lamb. They
are ones who have sought and found righteousness only in the work of Christ on the cross. We read in
Psalm 71:16,
I will make mention
of thy righteousness, even of thine only. A
real Christian is convinced of the excellency and the sufficiency of the righteousness of
Christ, of Christs work on the cross.
Isaiah 45:24,
Surely, shall one say, in the Lord
have I righteousness and strength. That
is, the mark of a child of God will be this: That
I cannot obtain heaven on my own only in the work of Christ. That was the Reformation!
The Roman Catholic Church had
taught the people to place the weight of their souls upon duties. It taught them to look upon their works as so much
gold paid out for heaven. It taught them that
their own deeds would be sufficient to begin to weave a coat to clothe them throughout
eternity. This is hypocrisy. This is the false Christianity. The false Christian is the one who rests upon what
he does and never looks so high as to Jesus Christ. As the Pharisee in
Luke 18,
he says, I prayed, I fasted, I tithed.
What is the first mark of the
child of God? The first mark taught in
Scripture and by the Reformers is this: We
must, by the grace of God, renounce our own righteousness and, by grace, embrace the
righteousness of Christ as our acceptance with God.
You say to me, That is
very obvious. But do not be too quick. For sin has twisted our minds with regard to this
question: How shall I get right with God? Sin has so twisted mens minds that they are
either indifferent to that question or they give the wrong answer to it. They are either indifferent and respond: Is there a God to get right with? and
live their life in hedonism, giving no thought to God. Or, men respond as the Pharisee of
Luke 18,
who came to the temple and brought his
works to God as the basis of His acceptance and said, Lord, I thank Thee that I am
not like other men. I must be accepted of
God. Of course I have the marks of Gods
children. Of course I am going to heaven. Dont you understand, I have all of these
brownie points all these things that I have done. And, upon these grounds, certainly God shall
accept me.
Now I say to you, no matter who
you are, be careful. Understand the gospel. Whether you are respectable or, in your past, very
non-respectable; whether you have been reared in a Christian home or in a den of sin
when the searching light of God shines, there must be one confession: Im undone. All my own works are as filthy rags. There is no righteousness in me. It must be given to me merely of grace.
Would you look for the mark as
to whether or not you are one of the Lords? Do
you trust completely and exclusively in Christs righteousness and therefore turn in
your heart from all self-sufficiency and righteousness?
Do you take your works, then as far as being the basis upon which you will
assure yourself to be saved do you take all of those works and do you forsake
trusting in them and place the whole weight of your soul upon the righteousness of Christ?
...
when the searching light of God shines,
there
must be one confession: Im
undone.
I say, not so fast. Do you cling to something you have done? Do you still whisper in your heart that you are at
least a little better than someone else? That
certainly God notices your sweet attitude in the church, or your prayers? This is very difficult, you see, because the cord
of pride must be cut repeatedly.
What was the apostle Pauls
problem? In
Philippians 3
he tells us that
of himself he was the most religious of all men. As
for righteousness ... before the days of his conversion he would say that he had the best
of all breeding Pharisee of the Pharisees, the best of all trainings, activities,
learning. But when he came to see his own sin
and the surpassing excellency of Jesus Christ, he called all of that, as to its being the
basis of his salvation, dung (manure).
Renounce, then, by the grace of
God, your works as the ground of your acceptance. How
can I state it plainer? One strand, one
dependence upon any work that you have done, is forbidden.
Yes, we are to live a new and holy life. But
the mark of the child of God, in principle and foundationally, is a trust in Christ alone
as the ground of his acceptance with the Father. He
that glorieth, let him glory in the Lord!
You see, the hypocrite is always
going to trust in something or someone other than Christ to pacify the wrath of God. The mark of the child of God: exclusive trust in Christs righteousness.
But there is another mark that
was emphasized from Scripture in the days of the Reformation. That mark was this:
A sincere repentance of sin. The word
repentance in Scripture is a word that means change of mind. And it is rooted in a knowledge and a love of
Jesus Christ in the heart, which now makes every sin exceedingly loathsome and something
from which I want to be delivered. The
Scriptures say that all who come into the kingdom are given this mark of repentance.
I Thessalonians 1:9
For they
themselves shew of us what manner of entering in we had unto you, and how ye turned to God from idols to serve the living and true God; and to wait for his Son;
Acts 5:31,
Him (that is Christ) hath God exalted with his right hand to be a Prince and a Saviour, for to give repentance to Israel, and forgiveness of sins;
Acts 11:18,
When they heard these things, they held their peace, and glorified God, saying, Then
hath God also to the Gentiles granted repentance unto life. The mark of the child of God is repentance.
The Westminster Confession of
Faith and the Shorter Catechism give a very concise, biblical definition of repentance. We read, Repentance unto life is a saving
grace whereby the sinner, out of a true sense of his sin and apprehension of the mercy of
God in Christ, does with grief and hatred of sin turn from it unto God with full purpose
of and endeavor after new obedience.
Very briefly, let me describe to
you the biblical truth of repentance using the picture of a tree. A tree, of course, must have roots. The roots of repentance are twofold: there must be a conviction of sin (I did not say a
sense or even an awareness or an admission of sin I didnt say that I
said conviction by the Holy Spirit). For all men know they are sinners.
Romans 1:32
tells
us that they know the judgments of God against those who commit such things; yet they go
on and they do them and find pleasure in them. You
can get somebody to admit many things that he has done wrong. But repentance is rooted first in that
spirit-worked conviction of sin, so that now life is seen, not on the horizontal, but in
the vertical over against God. It is rooted
in the knowledge that I have sinned against God, and in the light of God giving me to know
the inward thoughts of my heart as corrupt in sin. Repentance
is rooted in understanding that my sin is not simply those things that I have done,
but it is what I am. I am a sinful
man.
Secondly, the root of repentance
is a laying hold of Christ. Repentance is not
simply a resolution rooted in my own will that I have to do a little better and
stop certain things in my life. It is a look
unto Christ in faith.
Then out of those two roots
comes the main trunk of the tree of repentance, and that is a change of mind or a
conversion, a daily conversion, a conversion in my thoughts about God, no longer as
someone to dread, no longer as someone to have enmity toward, but to love. It is a change in my mind toward sin, not as
pleasurable but as loathsome in the light of Gods love for me. It is a change in an understanding of myself that I no longer live, as we read in
II Corinthians 5,
unto myself but unto Him who
died and rose again.
Then, finally, repentance is not
a barren tree, but it will bring forth fruits worthy of repentance sorrow before
God. You may read of these fruits more
explicitly in II Corin-thians 7:10 and 11, where the apostle speaks of the marks and
the fruits of a thorough repentance before God.
Is this mark in you?
Faith in Jesus Christ, true
faith, is not dry-eyed. Have you, from the
heart, forsaken sin as the willful practice of your life?
I did not ask, Have you broken the practice of every sin? but, have you
found a change worked in your heart, by Gods Word and Spirit, toward all sin, toward
sin that you no longer love but now despise? The
hypocrite is never divorced from the love of sin. He
keeps back some sin. He makes a cage for that
sin. He takes it out and plays with it, and
then safely puts it back in, he thinks. The
Lords words were emphatic: If thy eye
offend thee, pluck it out; if thy hand or foot offend thee, cut them off. What was He saying?
He was saying: In My kingdom, the
citizens do not make peace treaties with any known sin.
We deal, then, with sin ruthlessly.
Beloved in the Lord Jesus
Christ, Satan does not care if you yield to God in many things, if you will be true to him
in one thing. For he knows that one sin
willingly lived in, one sin willingly loved and nurtured, will hold you fast enough.
What is dear to your heart? That envious spirit that you have nursed as a
little girl? That terrible lying tongue? That tongue of sarcasm? That evil eye of suspicion that puts the
worst construction upon the deeds of others? That
deep-seated spirit of unforgiveness? That
evil pride that makes you worship your fate? Cut
it off!
In
My kingdom, the citizens do not
make
peace treaties with any known sin.
A mark of Gods children
is, for sure, true repentance before God.
There is a third that was
emphasized by the Reformation and in Scripture: (An
exclusive trust in Christ for righteousness; a sincere, Spirit-worked, thorough
repentance; and then, thirdly,) a humble submission to the will of God. For the Scriptures declare in
Hebrews 12:6
and 7,
For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth, and scourgeth every son whom he receiveth. If ye endure chastening, God dealeth with you as
with sons; for what son is he whom the father chasteneth not? Every child of God who comes at last into the
eternal fold and house of God bears the necessary marks of chastening.
Another way of referring to
chastening is learning from the heart submission to the will of God. When at last Gods children are all home and
stand before His throne, and you look over the vast multitude, you will see that all bear
that mark, all give evidence of having been molded patiently, persistently by God to
submit to His will.
That speaks very loudly to us
when we grieve in the death of a dear brother, husband, or father. The marks of Gods children are not that they
do not weep and their hearts do not feel as if they will be crushed. But the marks of Gods children are that they
will find, deep down, even in this, to say: Have
Thine own way, Lord, it is good; whatsoever the Lord doeth is good.
Every
child of God who comes at last into
the
eternal fold and house of God
bears the necessary marks of chastening.
You see, every child of God must
receive this mark. Therefore, we are all tried.
Acts 14:22
tells us that it is only
through much tribulation that we shall enter into the kingdom of God. And under this tribulation the mark of the
hypocrite is exactly that he will not submit. He
will lash out against God. He will say,
I dont want that type of Christian faith that declares the sovereignty of
God. Or he will not hold out under the
discouragement that must come in the way of following Jesus Christ. In the words of
Job 27,
concerning the hypocrite,
Job asks the question: Will he delight
himself in the Almighty? Will he always call
upon God? And the answer is, No. For if the hypocrite knocks and pleads to God and
God does not answer immediately or according to his fancy, then the hypocrite will be out
of patience. If the cost is too high, he will
go away; if the trial is too much, he will curse his God.
For the mark of Gods children is submission peaceful, blessed
submission to the sovereign will of the heavenly Father in Christ.
Therefore, we know as children
of God that the way of the kingdom is that way that is uphill and a muddy path. Yet, for the joy that is set before us we go on
that path and we are ready to endure, for the Lords sake, all these trials, and we
understand that it is always the hand of God that comes upon us in order to mold us, in
order to chasten us, in order to scourge from us our sins.
What is the mark? The mark of
Gods children according to the Reformation and the Reformers (and all the people of
the Reformation learned this mark through Gods own sovereignty) was that they would
forsake their own will as the guiding principle of their life and submit to the will of
the almighty God as alone good. In the words
of David: Let him do unto me as seemeth
good to him; or in the words of Job: Though
he slay me, yet will I trust him. The
child of God, then, calls upon God in his trials. He
does not bellow or scream or mourn out of his own pride or self-pity. But he comes before God and he says, Lord,
from bitterness give me reception to Thy will; from complaining give me praise; make me
bright and hopeful and not toxic in my words.
The marks of Gods
children: exclusive trust in the
righteousness of Jesus Christ; sincere repentance; submission to the sovereign will of the
almighty God. Nothing profound or in the
sense of being new, I trust. And yet these
are the simple, irreducible marks of a child of God as proclaimed in Scripture and again
heard in the Reformation.
Where will you find these marks? How shall these be worked in you? Christ, in the Reformation, restored the church
and the preaching of the Holy Scriptures. And
through the preaching of the Holy Scriptures in the church, these marks are again placed
upon Gods children. If you covet these
marks, then you will covet a true ministry and true church of Jesus Christ.
Are you, then, for real? You cannot take that question for granted. You cannot be indifferent to that question or
ignorant of it. There are three marks, at
least, of a child of God: Trust in Christ for
righteousness; repentance unto life; and submission to the almighty will of God. Are these in you?
I know they are in us so weak, but are they in you? Then you are Gods child. God is your Father; Christ is your brother; heaven
is your home. All things are for your sake.
And then, when these marks are
in you, others will see you and they will learn what God is like, and God will be
glorified in His children. Amen.