THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"One in a Thousand"Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) May 14, 2006; No. 3306 |
Dear radio friends,
Today we celebrate the wonder of God’s
grace in believing mothers and in Christian women and girls. The Scriptures tell us that a God-fearing,
believing woman is an exceedingly rare thing today. You might call it an endangered species. We read in the Word of God in Ecclesiastes
7:27, 28: “Behold, this have I found,
saith the preacher, counting one by one, to find out the
account: which yet my soul
seeketh, but I find not:
one man among a thousand have I found; but a woman among all those have
I not found.”
The one who is conducting the survey there
is not simply a picky, selective bachelor who has all of his requirements for
“Miss Right” and cannot find her. It is
not even Solomon, the world’s wisest man.
But this is Scripture and, therefore, it is God’s accounting of the
matter. God says that a believing woman
is an exceedingly rare thing upon the earth.
God looks among women for the qualities of
His grace: of wisdom and grace and a
meek and quiet spirit, of faithfulness and of the beauty of God. And God says, “Today it is rare, almost
extinct.”
Is your mother a believing woman? Oh, you must give God thanks for that! You have a believing wife today, man? You must be on your knees in prayer, not
agitated, picking apart all of her faults.
The world today has a tender regard for
species that are threatened by extinction.
Is there a bird, a spotted owl, a tadpole, which, due to man’s sinful
abuse of the creation (now, I know, they do not call it that!) is near
extinction? Well, the world will do
something about that. They will handicap
industry, they will cripple the economy, they will cause taxes to soar and they
will save, if it is in their power, what is rare and threatened. But I can assure you that the world of sin
has no anxiety over this endangered species:
a woman who fears the Lord. They
have no concern about the holy women of God to which I Peter 3 refers. And they will not spend a dollar to preserve
them. One godly woman for the world is
too many! The world spends billions on
pornography, on devilish propaganda. The
world adjusts the whole economy to see to it that the few godly women who are
left are slain.
As in Solomon’s day, when wicked nations
and ruthless bands would invade villages and take Israel’s daughters, wives,
and girls captive, to dedicate them unto their gods, so this world of sin (the
devil, the media, the television, the movies, the magazines, the cultures, the
Internet) seeks to eradicate a godly woman and either turn her into an object
of lust or sex, or turn her into a man!
One in a thousand, says the Word of
God. No, says the Word of God. Even among a thousand He did not find this
woman. This woman is rare who fears the
Lord.
But although this woman is rare who fears
the Lord, our risen Lord Jesus Christ has promised that there shall be a place
where they flourish, where they are found in abundance. That is in the church. We read of the church in Thessalonica (Acts
17:4), “And some of them believed, and consorted with Paul and Silas; and of the
devout Greeks a great multitude, and of the chief woman, not a few.” So the word of God in Ecclesiastes has said,
searching among all the earth, a godly woman is exceedingly rare. And the Word of God has said that under the
preaching of the gospel and in the
No, these mothers, wives, and women are not
perfect. They are sinners. But they are saints in Christ Jesus. Their sins have been forgiven, and implanted
in them is the beauty of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Now they fear the Lord and they love Him. And they would say with the psalmist: “Look upon thy handmaid, O Lord.”
How we must then today be on our knees as
the church, how we must be on our knees as men and husbands and boys, thanking
God for godly mothers! You say
beamingly, when God gives you to see how rare a godly woman is, “She’s one in a
thousand!” And God says, “You don’t know
the half of it. You don’t know how true
your words are! They are one in a
thousand.”
The verse that I quoted from Ecclesiastes a
while ago, in which God says that a godly woman among the many is not to be
found, that Word of God is not the conception of Solomon. Surely Solomon was gifted with wisdom. He functioned as king, and probably wrote
this as he looked at a multitude of guards and diplomats and soldiers and women
in his court. But this is not simply the
word of Solomon. This is the Word of
God.
Now, what does that mean? It for sure does not mean, and you must not
read the verse to mean, that there is some type of spiritual defect in women
when compared to men. When the verse
says, “One man among a thousand I have found, but a woman among
all those have I not found,” it does not say that in some
way man is more harmonious to the way of grace than a woman. That is utterly false. Most emphatically men and women, boys and
girls, both sexes alike share in the depravity and the devastation of Adam and
are received only in grace through Jesus Christ. Not only do both share in utter depravity,
but both man and woman share equally in the redeeming mercy and grace of
God. There is, in Jesus Christ, neither
Jew nor Greek, male nor female, bond nor free.
For ye are all one in Christ Jesus (Gal. 3:28). That verse does not mean that God has
obliterated the roles that He gave to male and female. Of course not. Redemption does not destroy what God has
created as male and female and the place that He has given to each in
marriage. But it is a declaration that
male and female share equally in the redemption that is in Christ Jesus.
What then
does that verse in Ecclesiastes mean? Well, it means just this: A God-fearing woman is a rare blessing of
God. And that is the way that God
insists that we are to view them — as exceedingly rare and precious.
A godly woman is exceedingly rare and
precious when considered against the backdrop of what she would otherwise be,
that is, against the backdrop of the daughters of this world. How does Scripture consider the daughters of
this world? The Scriptures declare to us
that the woman is lost in sin. She has
now become the source (as far as men are concerned) of seduction. Women of this world are identified as sex
objects. And, apart from the grace of
God, women willingly comply. The way to
catch a man is by the swing of the hips, the suggestive look of the eyes,
the use of sinful seduction to entrap a man — to lead him
about as an ox is led by a ring in its nose.
Now the evil there is not to be found simply in the woman. She tempts.
And then we would say, “Well, what can a man do?” That is the way they reason in the world. No, the truth is that men want this from
women. Men pressure them into this. They have to have this type of figure. Their hair has to be just this way, according
to the standards of the world. The world
says, “Girl, you’ve got to be seductive.
You’ve got to drive them out of their minds. You’ve got to look beautiful. You’ve got to be slimmer. It is all about what you wear, and it is all
about the shake of your head and the swing of various body parts. That is what it is all about to be a woman.” That is drilled into the women of the world
from little Miss Beauty Pageant to tight-fitting styles to display of the body
for seduction.
Is that true of you? Is that the way you look at femininity? A child of God responds, “No, I believe that
my body (male or female) belongs to the Lord Jesus Christ. It is His possession. It to display the worth of
His righteousness. It is to be
adorned in all modesty.”
As you look at the women of the world,
then, and you look for a God-fearing woman, you would have to say they are
exceedingly rare. I can well imagine
that they were rare to Solomon, considering where Solomon had been
looking. Before in his life, when he
followed his flesh, Solomon married many wives.
I Kings 11:3 tells us that he had 700 wives and
300 concubines. And his wives turned
away his heart from the Lord. If his
search for a God-fearing woman were confined to the walls of his harem, it is
no wonder that he did not find a God-fearing woman among the thousand
there. Living in violation of God’s law,
having cast away sexual purity from his life, having sold his soul to lust, in
today’s terms going through the Internet and lusting — how could he expect to
find a virtuous woman? If you look where
you have no warrant to look, then please do not be amazed that you cannot find
a good woman.
Young man, where do you look? Would you search for pearls from an oyster on
the polar ice cap? Would you search for
diamonds on the polar ice cap or in
Young women, where do you go? With whom do you have fellowship? Where do you look for a man? Genesis 34:1 says, “And Diana, the daughter of
Leah, which she bear unto Jacob, went out to see the daughters of the
land.” Before the fornication that she
fell into, she began by seeking the daughters of the land. It can happen this way. You meet a girl at work or college. You hit it off. She says, “Hey, on Friday night come along
with me. There’s going to be ….” And it turns out to be a bar, a party, and
guys. What kind of a girl-friend do you
have?
A woman who fears the Lord is exceedingly
rare and, therefore, valuable. The only
way that you can account for such a woman is the grace of God. That is the only way you can account for a
God-fearing man. They are so rare and so
precious when you see them as created by God — the lofty God, the God of
infinite grace, the God of pure mercy.
This God has had mercy upon us.
And the wonder of His grace is displayed in His salvation of the woman. The woman, according to sin, was cast down
into a life of sorrow, subjected to hopelessness. The daughters of Eve — under the darkness of
sin, there to abide of themselves in the hopelessness of emptiness, subject to
abuse, not the stronger one positionally over the man
and, therefore, subjected to the lust and to the evil of men. But God has raised them up out of sorrow and
has made them His daughters. God smiles
upon His elect, believing women. And God
says, “Hephzibah” (Is. 62) — “My delight is in her.” The Christian woman is the object of the
Savior’s wonderful love and grace. Now
what value will you place upon that grace, upon that blood of Jesus Christ,
that blood of Jesus Christ that washes away our tears, scatters the darkness,
gives to us an everlasting smile, and earns for us the embrace of the arms of
God in His covenant? What price will you
place upon that? That is what is
represented in the Christian mother.
So, are you on your knees today, thanking
God for your Christian wife and Christian mother? Are you thanking God? Maybe you look for a reason to value who your
wife or your mother is. Or, for that
matter, you look into the Christian church and say, “Well, what is there about
them that is good?” And you say, “Not much.” You look at her and say, “It’s not hard to
criticize them. They are catty,
irritable.” You look at your wife not in
terms of how God looks upon her in His grace and mercy, but you look at her
through your own pride and say, “She’s not all that I thought she was going to
be.” Then there comes bitterness, wrath,
anger, clamor, and evil-speaking (Eph. 4:31).
God says, “You have to know how to look or you won’t see it.” You need to look through His eyes, the eyes
of God, which looked upon you as a desperately wicked sinner —and in grace,
grace alone, saved you.
Such a woman who confesses faith in Jesus
Christ is beautiful. She believes. She struggles with her sin. She hopes in Christ. She is one in a thousand. And that is why you love her and you care for
her.
So, on this day, as every day, the
You understand that I am not talking here
about interpersonal problems in a family.
That is not what I am talking about.
If you sin against your mother or against your wife, I am talking about
a problem you have with God. And I am talking
about a problem you have of your soul with God.
You are not aware, are you, of what God says and of God’s grace given to
her and to you, and of God’s gift in a believing woman. Therefore, the gospel of Jesus Christ calls
us as the
We are to thank God for all believing women
and girls in the church — mothers and those who are not mothers. The church is to say very clearly: We don’t want seductive, loud, discontented,
gossipy women. But a woman who fears the
Lord — she is to be prized above all other things. A Christian woman — for her we are filled
with humble thanks. God places high
value, high regard, upon her.
Maybe you struggle as a woman with the
issues of self-esteem. You struggle with
guilt. You struggle with being content
with yourself. You begin to hate
yourself. You do not like yourself — the
way you look, or anything about yourself.
Now, listen. Listen to God
speak. His Word makes the difference,
you know. He speaks not the way
Elkanah spoke to Hannah (I Sam. 1). There Hannah was grieving because she could
not have children. Elkanah,
foolishly, had another wife who could have children. And that other wife ridiculed Hannah. Hannah came to her husband with the grief of
her heart and her husband said, “Hannah, is not my
love enough?” Well, if his love was just
for her, maybe. But, no, that was not enough
when he had another woman in the house.
Now listen to God. “To me you are
one in a thousand. I have redeemed you
in the blood of Jesus Christ. I love you
and I will never forsake you. And I have
marked out your way (as a mother or not as a mother) with tender care just so.”
So, your esteem for yourself is not found
in a Barby-doll figure. It is not found in the latest fashion. It is not found in being able to keep up with
men. It is not found in being able to keep
up the house, being handy, and all those other gifts. But it is found in this: in the eyes of God, you are one in a
thousand. God has had grace upon you in
Jesus Christ. God has forgiven you. God dwells with you. God will glorify you. God intends to adorn His house with beautiful
daughters who are rare, valuable, and prized.
They are called Christian women.
Let us pray.
Father, we thank Thee for the Word. We pray for its blessing upon our hearts. And we pray in the name of Jesus Christ. Amen.
Last modified: 26-may-2006