1 John 3.
And I had hoped to deal this morning
with testing the spirits.
But as I wrestled with what exactly
I should pull out of
these verses and stress,
I was somewhat convinced that I should not
move beyond chapter 3 into 4.
Lord willing, next week,
I intend to deal with testing the spirits.
I want to kind of transition
into that today
by looking at these last two verses
of 1 John 3.
Let's read them together.
"And this is His commandment,
that we believe in the name
of His Son Jesus Christ."
Now, that's interesting.
I'll just pause right here for a moment.
I've always looked at this as kind of
a companion verse to that which we find
in Acts 17 where we are commanded -
"God commands all men
everywhere to repent."
Here we have a commandment to believe.
Yes, we are invited to believe.
Yes, God exhorts us to believe.
He earnestly pleads with us to believe.
He reasons with us.
"Come, let us reason together."
But remember, behind God's invitation,
when the people didn't show up
to the banquet,
the Master was angry.
It's expected that you will
answer the invitation.
It's commanded.
Isn't it amazing God has to command us
to not go to hell?
God has to command us to have life.
Do you recognize that?
You are not at liberty to go to hell.
Did you ever think about that?
God commands us
to believe on His Son and be saved.
And, we've been looking at this:
"...To love one another,
just as He commanded us."
Now, notice this,
"Whoever keeps His commandments
abides in God and God in him."
And this is what I want us to focus on.
We've been looking at those things.
Remember? I told you before,
John is circular.
He's like the bee that
flies around the flower.
He keeps hitting the same
things over and over.
Whereas sometimes as he's circling,
he begins to introduce some new truth.
Well, here in this last sentence
of 1 John 3,
John introduces something to us
that he has not yet introduced.
"By this we know that He..."
I'll just put "God" in there.
"By this we know that God abides in us,
by the Spirit whom He has given us."
That's where I want our attention.
That last sentence.
Now, let's think about this.
"By this we know that He abides in us."
Now, that may just seem -
He abides in us.
Stop and think.
He abides in us.
We have Scripture.
We have Scripture.
We live in an age - and I'm sure
all the ages have been like this
ever since man has fallen -
we're so circled by the ideas of the world
and by the deceptions
and by people's opinions.
But we have the Word of God.
We can come to it.
We can stand on it.
This is truth.
That's why we preach.
Have you ever thought about it?
The foolishness of preaching?
Do you ever think about
you guys actually come to
this place every week
and you sit there and you actually listen
to a guy that stands in a pulpit.
Does it ever just once in a while
you think that's ludicrous
that we do that?
Why do we do that?
Well, because God designed it.
But see, what it is, it's
the channel of truth.
Because I'm not preaching to you without
this book in front of me.
I have this thing here.
The idea of a preacher
is somebody who is able to come up
and stand before you and give you
the facts as they are found in this book.
That's what we do.
That's what this is all about.
This is all about giving you a steady diet
of God's Word - not of my opinions.
And the beauty is we can dive in here
wherever we dive into this book,
we find truth.
And one of the truths that we find
repeatedly in 1 John
is that the Bible does not shy away
from defining Christianity.
Over and over and over.
I mean, we need this.
We need this.
Because we've got religion all around us
that doesn't correctly
define Christianity.
We've got a world that looks out there -
they've got all their opinions.
We've got the news.
The news has ideas about Christians.
Who was it?
Oh, it was Brandon Davidson
who just did a message
on Coptic Christians.
You know how they were making a big deal
about the Coptic Christians in Egypt
because a number of them were beheaded
by ISIS?
And Brandon responded by showing
that these Coptic Christians
don't really fit the definition
of biblical Christianity.
But you see, the world,
they interpret things
however they want to interpret them.
But, John knows -
God knows who inspired John -
that we live in a world
where we need to be reminded
again and again and again
what true Christianity looks like.
That's what we have.
We need the facts.
Our only hope in this world -
is it not true?
Our only hope in this world rests
in being a Christian.
There is no hope outside
of being a Christian.
There is no other hope.
And so it's important that
we define what it is.
The title of my message:
"How You Know You're a Christian."
Now, obviously, John's been showing us
numerous ways we can
know we're a Christian.
What are some of the other proofs?
1 John 2:3 - you can just
glance right there.
You're right here in 1 John,
but we've already looked at these.
"By this we know that we
have come to know Him..."
How? "If we keep His commandments."
We read that in v. 23.
V. 24, "Whoever keeps His commandments
abides in God."
(There at the beginning of v. 24.)
We saw it back in 1 John 2:3.
"This we know, that we
have come to know Him,
if we keep His commandments."
Again, this is kind of
reiterated in 1 John 2:5.
"Whoever keeps His Word...
in him truly the love of God is perfected.
By this we may know that we are in Him."
See, you get these: "We know."
"By this we know..."
"We know that we know Him
if we keep His commandments."
"We know we know Him
if we keep His Word."
1 John 2:29,
"You may be sure
that everyone who practices righteousness
has been born of Him."
So you've got this:
"keeping His commandments,"
"keeping His Word,"
"practicing righteousness."
1 John 3:14, "We know that we've passed
out of death into life," how?
How can you know you're a Christian?
How can you know you've truly
passed from death to life?
"Because we love the brothers."
You see, he's been hitting this all along.
What we have here is we have a new one.
We have a new proof.
Before we look at the proof,
I just want you to see something
about what a Christian is.
I think sometimes we
need to stop and think,
what is a Christian?
Well, somebody that's been saved.
Yeah, but we have to think about
what it is that we've been saved from.
Do you ever recognize when Adam
would walk in the garden
in the cool of the day,
what happened?
God came to him and walked with him.
Have you ever thought about what he lost
when he fell into sin?
Brethren, look at chapter 3:24
and the beginning of
the last sentence there.
"By this we know that He abides in us."
John wants us to be clear
about what it means to be a Christian,
and here in this last verse of 1 John 3,
here is the basic premise.
A Christian is a home for God.
Let that sink in a second.
I mean, that's what it talks about.
Abiding. God abides.
You look up the meaning of that word.
That's to make a home with.
John is saying, Christian,
do you understand,
you are a dwelling
place for the Most High?
Does Paul not say,
"you are God's temple"?
God dwells in you.
That's what it is to be a Christian.
God comes to us.
God lives in us.
God makes His temple -
we are the dwelling place of God.
That's what we lost.
That's what Adam lost when he fell.
We lost God. We lost God with us.
We lost the life of God
in the soul of man - abiding in us,
dwelling with us, communing with us,
communicating, fellowshipping with us.
We lost Him.
Like the KJV says -
God says to Abraham,
"I am thy exceeding great reward."
That's the reward. That's the treasure.
It is Christ. It is God. It is the Spirit.
It is this Triune Godhead dwelling in us.
Manifestly dwelling in us.
That's what this is all about.
That's what he's laying on the table here.
Brethren, we need to face the reality
of what a Christian truly is.
A Christian is no ordinary man
like everybody else out there.
We're not just like everybody
else, but we go to church.
Brethren, think with me.
Think with me just about
dwelling places of God.
I mean, if you think in Scripture,
burning bush.
God dwelt in the burning bush.
Moses sees a burning bush.
It's burning. It doesn't get consumed.
I'm going to go over and check that out.
And God says, "Stop,
Moses. Stop right there.
You take your shoes off your feet."
Why? Because where God dwells,
it's holy ground.
You think about the holy of holies
inside the tabernacle.
The shekinah glory was so intense,
you did not go in there or you died -
except one man once a year
and only with blood.
The place where God
dwells is a holy place.
It is a fearful place.
It is a place unlike all other places.
Think about Heaven.
Heaven is the place where we think of
where God dwells.
And Isaiah looks at it as His beautiful
and holy habitation.
That's what it's like where God dwells.
And then you think about this.
John says to be a Christian
is to be one of these places -
we are the temple.
Inside that temple was the same thing
that was inside that tabernacle.
The tabernacle became the temple.
Inside there is the holy of holies.
It is where the manifest
glory of God dwells.
And what we are being told in Scripture
is we are that temple.
You see what God saves people for -
to inhabit them; to dwell with them;
to walk with them; to fellowship;
to manifest His glory there.
That's what it is to be a saint.
It's not this Catholic idea -
Saint Anthony - we were talking about
meanings of names the other day.
San Antonio. What's that?
I don't even know who Antonio was.
It might not have even been
a true saint whatsoever,
but we have true saints in here.
And what does it mean?
To be a saint is to be a holy one.
We're holy ones because we are
the place where God dwells.
What is a Christian?
We need to come back to that
again and again and again.
We need to be clear on this.
We are the church of the living God.
If there is going to be
somebody in this world
that need to be faithful
to be communicating truth,
it's got to be us.
It's got to be those of us
that have the Word of God.
What is a Christian?
A Christian is this -
is a Christian a moral person?
Is a Christian simply a good person?
Is it simply a member of this church?
No.
That's not it.
A Christian is one who God comes to
and manifests His presence in.
This is a spiritual reality.
The life of God possesses them.
Now, here's the thing.
Here's what you need to see
in the last part of the last sentence.
Read it with me.
"By this we know that He abides in us."
By this we know we are a temple of God.
By this we know we are
His holy habitation.
How?
"By the Spirit whom He has given to us."
See, John says, your
Christianity can be proven.
That's what he says here.
If you want proof of the fact
that a man is a Christian -
one who has God dwelling in him -
John says here it is.
Every individual who
possesses the Holy Spirit
may know that he himself
is such a dwelling place for God.
But then of course, the next question:
Well, how can I know if
I possess the Spirit?
But I think you can all feel this,
John expects that we can tell.
Don't you get that feel?
By this you can know
that God abides in you,
how?
"By the Spirit whom He has given us."
He expects us to be able to know
if we have the Spirit.
You can see that right off.
Every individual who
possesses the Holy Spirit -
he believes he's going to
know they possess Him.
That's the proof.
And that's the proof that God
has taken up residence in us.
How can we know?
What is the proof?
Holy Spirit.
He's certainly not the only proof,
but it's one of the proofs.
You know this very well, many of you.
Romans 8:9, "Anyone who does not have
the Spirit of Christ does
not belong to Him."
So here it is.
We're face to face with this
great truth of Scripture.
You have the Spirit or you don't.
If you have the Spirit,
God abides in you.
If you don't, He doesn't.
That's what he's laid on the table here.
It's very clear.
This is our Christian reality.
We have the Holy Spirit.
It's essential.
The Holy Spirit is essential
to your Christian life,
to your Christian standing,
to your Christian experience.
I'm afraid we forget
how essential this is.
I forget how essential this is.
You know what?
Every time I read through John
and I come across our Lord Jesus' words
where He says to His disciples,
"Nevertheless, I tell you the truth,
it is to your advantage that I go away."
Why? Why is it to our advantage?
"For if I do not go away, the Helper -
(or the Comforter) - will not come to you.
But if I go, I will send Him to you."
I often want Jesus to come.
I'm out in the field praying.
I want Jesus to come.
I long to be like the
disciples, like John,
who could lay at the breast of Christ.
I want that.
Don't you want it?
I mean, I want that,
and when I come to this,
I find I don't fully believe it.
Because I want that.
Because I don't have what I want.
I want to be able to touch.
I want to be able to see.
I want to be able to talk.
We want that!
And so when I come across
this verse time and again -
you know, we have to sit back and say,
I need to believe that that's true.
(Incomplete thought)
Listen, Jesus is saying having the Spirit
is more advantageous to you
than to have Him do the things He did,
incarnate, walking with His disciples,
the way He did.
This is better.
This is more advantageous.
We need to believe it.
Which means, there's some advantage.
And this is where John is pulling from.
There is an advantage in your life
that is observable.
And you can tell where that advantage is.
You can tell where the Spirit is.
And by that, by the
evidences of His presence,
you can know that you are one of these
dwelling places of God.
That's his basic argument through here.
And we see this truth reaffirmed
in chapter 4:13.
You can just look there.
1 John 4:13, "By this we know
that we abide in Him
and He in us
because He has given us of His Spirit."
So, the thing I want to ask is this -
this is the next obvious question.
What sort of proof is this?
I mean, you say to me,
"how can I know I'm a Christian?"
And I say to you, "by the Holy Spirit."
What sort of proof is that?
I mean, John the Baptist said this:
God told me the One upon whom I see
the Holy Spirit descend is Him.
Okay, John saw the Spirit
descend like a dove
and it remained on Jesus Christ.
And God had told him,
you're going to know the Messiah;
you're going to know the One
you're the forerunner to
because the Spirit of God is
going to descend on Him
and rest there.
But how do we know?
I mean, how do we know by the Spirit?
We don't see that.
I've never seen that.
What are the evidences?
What sort of proof is this?
Well, I'll tell you, I have twelve.
Jesus said it's to our advantage.
Well, there are advantages.
There's proofs.
And I get all these from Scripture.
I've got twelve of them.
And I don't want to go any
further than this today.
I'm going to give you twelve proofs
that Scripture gives to us
that are evidences of the presence
of the Holy Spirit, which in turn
is evidence that God abides in us
and we abide in Him.
That we're real; we're genuine.
So what are these things?
What are they?
How to know you are a Christian.
That's the title.
Or, how to know you have the Spirit
by which you know you are a Christian.
So here's the first one.
Jesus Christ told us this.
John 16:8 - you can mark these down.
You can try to turn to all of them,
but I'm going to go through them fast
and I think by the time you get there,
I'm already going to be
done with the point.
So, you might just want to hear these.
I'll give you the reference
because I want you to see
that all of these are
truly coming from Scripture.
John 16:8,
The Holy Spirit -
"He will convict the world
concerning sin and
righteousness and judgment.
Now, you think here.
We're going along in our life.
We're going along happy in our sin.
Remember that?
Remember how that was?
You're looking forward to your sin.
But then something happens.
What happens?
Something happens.
Something happens in the conscience.
Suddenly, there's a disturbance.
That's what conviction is.
It's a disturbance.
Suddenly, we're troubled.
We feel something.
Sin suddenly is not just
the vomit of the dog
that I want to run over and
can't wait to get to.
There's a hesitation.
That doesn't mean I totally
lose the pull of that sin,
but there's a check in my soul.
Something isn't right any longer.
That's what he's talking about here.
Conviction.
There's a gnawing disturbance.
There may be a hollowness
or an emptiness.
Things are not right.
Something is wrong.
Something is happening.
This is the Spirit's doing.
I used to be able to
easily dismiss my sin.
I could justify it like that.
But then something happened.
And you can't just dismiss it so easily.
I used to think of God out there.
Oh, He understands my sin.
He just overlooks it.
But now something had happened.
I could no longer enjoy
my sin as I once did.
I'm unsettled.
This is what Jesus says
the Holy Spirit will do.
You know, my friends, my family
couldn't understand me.
You know, the people out there
still enjoy all their sin
who are your companions in the sin,
who run with you in the sin,
suddenly there's a check in your spirit -
they don't understand you.
What's wrong with you?
You need another drink.
Shrug that off.
But you can't shrug it off. Why?
Because of the Spirit of God.
And He's speaking.
What's the next thing?
That's not all.
There's something else.
We read in Romans 8:14,
"All who are led by the Spirit of God
are sons of God."
So the Spirit not only convicts,
the Spirit leads.
I mean, something else happens.
Suddenly - well, it may not be so sudden.
Sometimes it's not as sudden.
In some it's sudden.
In some, it happens almost undiscernibly
like the rising of the sun,
but it's happening.
What's happening?
Desires.
My desires, my impulses,
I'm being led in ways
I was never led before.
What led me before?
Animal passions.
Base lusts.
My desire for what I wanted led me.
But something happens.
I'm being led by desires
I never had before.
There's impulses that shoot through me
that are rising beyond
my bodily appetites.
I'm being pulled by something else.
And you know what? You know it.
You know it. It's different now.
And people are looking at you -
what's wrong with you?
Well, you feel it inside.
I'm being pulled.
I'm being pulled away from that sin.
It's a pull towards God.
That's what it is.
It's a pull not just forward,
it's a pull upward.
You feel something happening.
There's leadership.
There's conviction. There's leadership.
How about the thought life?
You know, in Romans 8:5, we get this:
"Those who live according to the Spirit
set their minds on the
things of the Spirit."
So, if you live according to the Spirit -
what does that mean?
According to His power;
according to His presence;
according to His operation in your life;
what happens to your mind?
What happens to your thoughts?
The mind is drawn towards things of God.
You know that! You know that!
Not only did conviction come;
not only did this lead come,
but suddenly your mind -
you are thinking about spiritual things.
They're on your mind now.
You wake up and you start
thinking about eternity.
You start thinking that
there is a God out there
who I'm going to have
to give an account to.
You start thinking about
what is the cross all about.
What did Christ actually do?
You're troubled.
You're thinking of eternity.
You're thinking of judgment day.
Suddenly the mind is going
to these other things.
Any interest in religion before,
you know it was mechanical.
How can I do my thing?
I remember how it was.
It's this idea of the good and the bad
and hopefully the good will outweigh.
Once in awhile, you need to
do something kind for one another.
But suddenly, your thoughts
are not just mechanical thoughts
about religion.
The thoughts.
The Spirit pulls the mind towards God
and towards the Word of God.
The thought life.
Led to think about God
and think about sin
and think about eternity
and think about judgment.
One becomes amazed.
Isn't that what happens?
We wake up and suddenly we're amazed
that we didn't think about the things
that we're thinking about right now;
that we walked so long in the dark.
Then, oh, there's more.
What?
In John 16:14, Jesus says this.
The Holy Spirit will glorify Me.
You know what? We basically spend
our lost lives dismissing
the Christ of the Bible.
Trivializing Him.
But then, it happens.
I mean, it happens.
Suddenly, gradually, it happens.
We see Christ as we've
never seen Him before.
It sets us back.
The Spirit causes us to see.
He doesn't just make it
possible for us to see.
He sets Christ before us
and gives us eyes to see Him.
That happens.
He causes us to wake up.
I mean, there suddenly is an attraction.
We behold a beauty,
a magnificence in the Lord Jesus Christ.
Christians, do you
remember that happening?
He's no longer just a historical figure.
He is the historical figure.
You recognize that everything
revolves around Him.
You begin to recognize,
wow - everything in
Scripture is about Him!
Everything about creation is for Him
and in Him and through Him
and He sustains it all.
And suddenly, you just recognize,
He's not just one among many.
He is the One.
Everything else revolves around Him.
He is like the sun in the solar system.
Everything revolves around Him.
Everything has to do with Him.
Everything comes back to Him.
However you saw it,
Christ - when the Spirit comes,
Christ just is getting bigger
and bigger and bigger and bigger.
That's what happens.
There's no greater proof
of the Spirit's presence
in an individual or in a church than this.
You want to look for evidences
of whether the Spirit of God -
people love to talk
about the Spirit of God,
but one thing we find about the Spirit,
He is not self-promoting.
He is Christ-promoting.
You can tell His presence
not by where there's a
lot of talk about the Spirit.
You can tell the Spirit's presence
when you find them
preoccupied with Christ.
That's where the Spirit is.
That's what we find here.
Isn't that what happens?
You begin to find I have no hope
without Him.
I begin to face all the facts about Him.
It is Him.
I recognize without the incarnation,
there is no hope for me.
I recognize that if He
doesn't go to the cross,
there is no hope.
I recognize if He doesn't
rise from the dead,
there is no hope.
I recognize Him ascending to God -
in that is my hope.
All of this - what Christ did,
all the way through,
my hope is built on that.
I begin to see these things.
He came. He was incarnate.
He did these miracles.
He went on trial.
He faced Jerusalem.
He went there.
They beat Him and they buffeted Him.
They scourged Him.
They laid that cross on Him.
He went up there to Calvary.
They nailed spikes in His hands
and they crucified Him.
And you begin to look at all this
and you recognize,
this is not just some
other part of history
to throw out there
like the study of World War II.
This is it.
Everything revolves around this.
That's what the Spirit does.
Our eyes are opened to it.
We're rocked by the reality.
They crucified Him.
And suddenly, the Spirit does this.
How do you relate to this?
This is a proof of the Spirit's presence
which in turn is the proof
that we are God's temple.
We're going along.
We're going along absorbed
with all else but Christ.
Then something happens.
We sing it in the song.
Almighty love arrests that man.
We're arrested.
We're spiritually arrested.
And like Paul, we talked
about a few weeks ago,
"Who are You, Lord?"
"I am Jesus."
And suddenly, that name...
that name's not a curse word.
That name's not just
religious terminology.
The Spirit opens our eyes and our soul
and draws it out to Christ.
The Spirit always glorifies Christ.
Our estimation of Christ
is altogether reworked
by the power and
influence of the Spirit.
This is Christianity.
That's Christianity.
Being absorbed with Christ.
Honoring Christ.
Finding in Christ our all.
This is the heart and
soul of Christianity.
Brethren, I remember how it was.
Suddenly Christ's deity is
the most important thing
you ever imagined.
The cross is the most important thing
you ever imagined.
The resurrection -
the most important
thing you ever imagined.
Christ's perfect obedience -
the most important
thing you ever imagined.
Pleasing Christ - the
most important thing.
You say, they can't all be most important,
but that's the way it is.
The Spirit shows you one thing
about Christ after another,
and it's like that's the greatest thing!
Oh, look over here!
That's the greatest thing!
Because everything about
Him is just so great
and for the first time in your life,
you're made aware.
That's what the Spirit does.
What else?
What other proofs that the Spirit's there?
Romans 5:5 says,
"God's love has been
poured into your hearts
through the Holy Spirit
who has been given to us."
So when the Holy Spirit
has been given to us,
it seems like by nature all of us -
now, you think about this -
by nature, all of us create a god
of our own imagination.
This god approves of us.
This god loves us whatever
condition we're in.
I mean, that's the sort of god
that appeals to the natural man.
But what happens?
The Spirit brings conviction of sin.
The Spirit hits our consciences.
We're aware of sin and judgment
and how righteous God is
to bring us to judgment.
It breaks in upon us
that there is a living
Almighty God out there
with whom we have to do,
and He's so holy, He can't look upon sin.
I mean, this is what we're awakened to.
This god of our imagination -
like a mist that goes away.
Suddenly, we are face
to face with a big God.
And what this is all about
is when we see this holy God -
we see this God who cannot look upon sin -
not the God of our imagination.
The true God. The living God.
The terribly holy, holy,
holy God of Scripture
before whom the seraphim
shield their faces.
The Spirit says that God loves me.
He loves me!
He gave His Son for me.
That's what's being communicated.
You just look at the context of Romans 5.
He showed His love,
and it's shown on the cross.
And suddenly the Spirit communicates that.
I remember my brother-in-law Rick.
He said he was laying in bed one morning,
and just like a lightning bolt...
he was musing on, contemplating the cross,
and God just said, "Rick, it's for you."
"I did that for you."
That's what happens.
The love of God.
He sent His Son to die for me.
And this one's so closely related.
Romans 8:15
"You've received the Spirit
of adoption as sons."
Here's the Spirit.
The Spirit of adoption. We receive Him.
What does He do?
"...By whom we cry, 'Abba, Father.'"
There it is.
God is not just some
distant power anymore.
He's no longer the pushover
god of our imaginations.
He's the God of Scripture.
But He no longer presents Himself to me
as an angry God
whose wrath I'm under.
But now, look at that.
The Spirit makes us conscious
of the fact that He who
is the Most High God
is my Father.
He cares for me.
He loves me.
He sent His Son to die for me.
I cry to Him now as a Father.
Father, Father.
What a title!
Christian, when you pray -
I hear some Christians that
address God as God.
Now, theologically, there's
nothing wrong with that.
But it always feels impersonal to me.
To keep addressing God repeatedly as God,
when the Spirit comes and says,
He is God,
but He makes Himself known to you
as your Father.
Not just as Father - Abba.
I mean, what an endearing word.
Do you know this reality?
Brethren, we want true Christianity.
The kind of Christianity that God
is not just a far away power,
not the pushover god of my mind,
but it is the God of Scripture
in all of His highness and transcendence
and vastness.
He's personally come to me
and He says, "I'm your Father."
This is an operation of the Spirit.
By this we know God dwells
within and we're real.
How about this? Romans 8:16.
"The Spirit Himself bears witness
with our spirit that
we're children of God."
There's the Spirit on the witness stand.
The devil can come
and sling his accusations.
But the witness is this:
"I own you as My own.
You are My child. You are My son."
But there's still sin.
"Yes, but you're My child.
I've sent My Son to die for your sin.
You belong to Me.
I bought you with a price.
I brought you into My family."
The Spirit bids us
to see this sonship.
He witnesses to us.
What does a witness do?
What do you want a witness to
do when they go on the stand?
Just give the facts. Tell the truth.
That's it.
That's what the Spirit's doing.
You want to know what the truth is?
You haven't just been saved from sin,
you've been saved
from just wandering, lost.
God has brought you into His household.
He's your Father. You're His son.
He's bestowed His love upon you.
That's it.
The Spirit does that.
The Spirit witnesses.
How about number 8?
Romans 8:13,
"By the Spirit, you put to death
the deeds of the body."
If you do that, you live.
That's life.
Remember?
We're alive. We're Christians
if we have the Spirit.
By the Spirit, we know
that God abides in us.
If you have the Spirit, what do you do?
You put to death the deeds of the body.
The daily practice of killing sin matters
because it's an evidence of
whether the Spirit's there or not.
And look, a lot of people in the world,
they intend to make changes in their life.
They make New Year's resolutions
to make changes in their life.
They grit their teeth to
make changes in their life.
But I'll tell you this, true change -
radical change, the purity
that God desires from us -
the only way that we can do that;
the only way that we truly
can put off these deeds is by the Spirit.
God's Spirit is the Holy Spirit.
He will not leave God's people unholy.
God's Spirit is a mighty Spirit.
He is more powerful than our sin.
I mean, this is the thing.
When the Spirit is put
within the child of God,
you have to think about this.
You've got sin. You've got the Spirit.
Sin is viewed in Scripture as
this kind of dark force
or a dark lord.
"Sin reigning in the mortal body."
That's how Scripture describes it.
Then you have the Spirit who comes up
and takes residence in the Christian.
You've got these competing powers,
but who's stronger?
Of course, the Spirit is.
And the Spirit will always win.
The Spirit will always win.
He is in the business of making saints;
of making holy people.
Men can create.
Men in their own strength -
think about what men in
their own strength can do.
Well, they can come to church.
They can create religious settings.
They can do that.
They may create morality
or formality or civility.
Customs, rituals, ceremonies -
all that's possible.
Church attendance, baptism.
But there's no mistaking it.
Whenever and wherever somebody's desire -
you have to think about this.
This is really what it is.
We're not told that the Spirit comes in
and turns off bodily desires.
You know how it is we put to death
the deeds of this body?
It's not because all of a sudden
you've lost all your longings
to please this body and gratify this body.
What happens?
Your desires to please
Christ become stronger.
That's what happens.
It's a battle of desire.
And where the Spirit is -
look, just because you get saved
doesn't mean you lose sexual desire.
Just because you get saved doesn't mean
you lose desire to feel pleasure
or to feel relaxation;
to feel good; to eat food; to drink.
The body has appetites.
But what happens is it's like Joseph.
Do you think there
was temptation in Joseph
when Potiphar's wife came?
I mean, she's the wife
of a high ranking official.
She's probably beautiful.
And who's going to know?
God's going to know.
And there's a desire there.
I'm not going to sin against God this way.
I know He's watching.
My fellowship with Him is more important
than my gratifying this bodily appetite.
And that's where the battle is won.
Our desire for other
things become greater.
And that is the proof that
there's just no other
explanation when that happens
than the Spirit of God is doing that.
And where He does that,
God has taken up residence.
How about number nine?
Christlikeness.
2 Corinthians 3:18
Many of you know this.
"We all with unveiled face
beholding the glory of the Lord
are being transformed
into the same image..."
What same image?
Well, the image of the Lord.
"...From one degree of glory to another.
For this comes from
the Lord who is the Spirit."
Here's another operation of the Spirit.
What does the Spirit do?
Transforms us into the likeness of Christ.
Now, this is kind of
similar to the last one.
Killing the appetites of the body.
How is it similar?
Well, it's kind of the opposite.
This one here in 2 Corinthians comes at us
from the positive side,
whereas Romans 8 comes at us
from the negative side.
Romans 8 is the negative - we kill sin.
Here in 2 Corinthians,
we have the positive.
It's the image of Christ -
more and more resembling Him.
It's like the mercury
rising in a thermometer.
It's just going up and up and up.
That's how it is in our life.
What is that?
Well, if you imagine,
sometimes people do
these time lapse photography.
You've seen that kind of thing?
You know, I saw just recently,
I was on Drudge and I
saw somebody did that
on Hillary Clinton
from when she was in her
20's or whatever to now.
And they just went
through all these photos,
and they kind of morphed
them into one another.
But you've seen time lapse photography
maybe of a flower or something.
But if you can do time lapse
photography on a Christian,
this is an operation of the Spirit.
But if you do the time lapse,
they are becoming more and more beautiful.
And I'm not saying a time
lapse on your outer body.
Because that's getting uglier and uglier.
I say that based on Scripture.
The outer man is what?
(Wasting away). There you go.
Except for my wife.
Seriously, she is becoming
more beautiful all the time.
But if you could time
lapse us spiritually,
you know what you see?
It's like wow!
The ugliness, the blemishes
are falling off.
The wrinkles are disappearing.
How is that happening?
The Spirit.
That's what happens.
The Spirit. Christikeness.
We heard it from our brother.
It's like the dawn
shining brighter and brighter
until the full day.
That's how it is.
If you look at the sun,
you can't visibly see it,
but it is by degrees
climbing higher in that sky.
And it's the same way here.
You know how it is with people's children?
We just went out to
the Community conference
and you see people -
you see people and it's
like the last time I saw you,
you were this big!
And you just went forward and bang!
There's this difference.
Well, that's how it is
if a true Christian -
if you don't see them
for five years,
there should be noticeably
something more Christlike.
Why? Because that Spirit has operated.
This is exactly what He does.
How about fruit?
This is the tenth.
Galatian 5:22.
You know this very well.
"The fruit of the Spirit is love, joy,
peace, patience, kindness, goodness,
faithfulness, gentleness, self-control.
Against such things, there is no law."
Once the Spirit comes in,
fruit. Fruit begins to show.
And I know this is
similar to the last one.
I have fruit trees in my yard.
I have a lemon tree. (Thank you, Haney's.)
And it bears.
I have two fig trees.
And I have a number of peach trees.
And all of them are producing
already this year.
Fruit.
The fruit is coming out.
The trees are known by their fruit.
And I'll tell you this,
where the Spirit is cultivating
and fertilizing and gardening,
beautiful things come forth.
That's what we have.
Beautiful things grow.
Love. Love for God.
Love for the brethren.
A joy.
Brethren, a joy the world can't take away.
Why? Because our hope
is in something higher.
Our hope is outside this world.
Our hope is beyond our circumstances.
Brethren, do you know
that even if CPS showed up at my door
and took my two youngest children away,
my hope in Christ is unshaken.
I have a joy that transcends
my circumstances in this world.
A joy that passes understanding.
There's peace in the soul;
a sense of sins forgiven.
This is what the Spirit does.
The Spirit makes unkind people kind,
and harsh people gentle.
He changes people.
People say, "Oh, you got religion."
I'll tell you this, if
it's God's religion,
you're going to get more than that.
You're going to get a lot more than that.
You're going to get this -
self control.
You're going to become good by degrees,
but it's real, it's true.
Brethren, this is what
our Bibles teach us.
This is what it says about
what true Christianity is.
This is what it says
about where the Spirit is.
Eleven: Alienation.
You say, what do you mean by that?
Ephesians 4:30.
"Do not grieve the Holy Spirit of God
by whom you were sealed
for the day of redemption."
Look, the Spirit is the member
of the Godhead that we are told
is grieved by our sin.
I mean, listen,
David describes this
sort of thing in Psalm 32.
Don't turn there, but listen.
David says this, "When I kept silent..."
In other words, when I did not deal
with my sin before God,
"my bones wasted away
through my groaning all day long.
Day and night Your hand
was heavy against me,
my strength was dried up
by the heat of summer. Selah.
I acknowledged my sin to You.
I did not cover my iniquity.
I said I will confess my
transgressions to the Lord,
and You forgave the iniquity of my sin."
And I would just ask you, Christian,
do you know this?
Do you know this about
the presence of the Holy Spirit?
Do you know the reality of the
bone-wasting work of the Spirit?
You know what I mean.
(Incomplete thought)
You know how it was when you're lost?
You sinned and you were happy
and you wanted more.
That's not what
happens in the child of God.
You sin because you think
it's going to make you happy,
and your bones waste away.
And it's not happy.
Where'd the smile of God go to?
Have you had that happen?
You know what happens
when God smiles on us?
We can get careless.
Oh, this is great!
Sun shining. Birds singing.
Life is great! It's wonderful
to be a Christian.
And you get sloppy in your Christian life.
And what happens?
Suddenly, you look up -
where'd the smile of God go?
And beyond that, you begin
to feel it in your bones
like David did.
You feel this.
Bone wasting. Why?
Because God is grieved and it's the Spirit
who expresses His grief.
Why would He say don't
grieve the Holy Spirit?
Why? Because the Spirit of God is the one
who so actively is doing all these things
in our life.
And it's so much to our advantage
that we have Him,
even beyond the advantage of what it was
to have Christ Himself walking,
and you grieve that Spirit,
and you are going to
bear the consequences.
You don't want to say,
well, I'm saved by the grace of God
and I'm under the blood,
and so you know what,
my sin shouldn't matter.
It should be forgiven.
But you see what happened.
It was forgiven in David,
but it wasn't until he repented of it
and he acknowledged it,
and then the joy of
his salvation returned.
But this is another work of the Spirit.
Christian, do you not know what it is
to have that happen in your life?
The Spirit is going to see to it:
Sin is not going to be a joyful ride.
He's not going to allow you
to enjoy it like you once did.
Christian, the Spirit sees to it
that you hurt for sin.
He'll make you groan under it.
And here's the last one,
and this really is going to lead out
into what I want to deal with next week
in testing the spirits.
But you see this truth in 1 John 4:2,
where we're going next week,
but it would be this: right doctrine.
John argues that - this is interesting -
John argues that there are spirits
behind doctrine.
Whether good or bad.
In fact, Paul talks about demon doctrines.
When you hear people or religions
that speak truth or that speak error,
there are spirits behind that.
And what he says here in 1 John 4:2,
"By this we know the Spirit of God..."
In other words, those who have
the Spirit of God can be known. How?
"Because every spirit that confesses
that Jesus Christ has come
in the flesh is from God,
and every spirit that
does not confess Jesus
is not from God."
John argues that there's
always spirits behind doctrine.
The Spirit of God is the Spirit of truth.
The Spirit of God is the Spirit
who carried along
the authors of Scripture.
In fact, if you go down a little further,
you can find that whoever is of God;
whoever has the Spirit listens to us,
John says.
In other words, they
listen to the apostles.
They listen to the apostle's doctrine
which is in here.
You can know the Spirit of God
because the Spirit of God will always
affirm and assert what
is written in Scripture.
He will never contradict it.
We can test the spirits that way.
We can know the Spirit by which people
are indwelt by their doctrine.
And especially, he's saying,
by their doctrine of Christ.
Listen to what people say about Christ.
His Person. His work.
That's what we find here.
The Spirit of God - mark a man's doctrine;
especially His doctrine of Jesus Christ.
Who Christ is;
what Christ has accomplished.
The Spirit always proclaims
a glorious Christ.
I mean, when you see doctrine;
you hear doctrine;
you read doctrine - doctrine is teaching -
it sets forth Christ glorious.
The Spirit always is going to proclaim
a salvation that leaves us
not boasting in ourselves,
but boasting in the cross
and boasting in Christ.
That's absolutely essential.
The Spirit shows us a Person.
The Spirit shows the person
that He indwells,
that He is active in.
He shows them that Christ matters.
What we think about Christ matters.
The real Christ. The biblical Christ.
The true Christ.
This is the Spirit of Christianity.
Right doctrine.
So you think about all these.
If the Spirit is present,
we have conviction,
we have His leadership,
we have a thought life
with a mind set on
the things of the Spirit,
Christ is glorified,
five - the love of God is shed abroad
in our hearts by the Spirit;
six - the Spirit of adoption
causes us to cry, "Abba, Father;"
seven - the Spirit bears witness
that we are children of God;
eight - by the Spirit, you put to death
the deeds of the body;
nine - by the Spirit who is the Lord
we are transformed
from one degree of glory to another
in this image of Christ;
ten - the fruit of the Spirit:
love, joy, peace, patience, kindness,
goodness, faithfulness, gentleness,
self-control -
that is going to be evident;
this grieving of the Spirit,
the alienation that when Christians
fall into sin, we grieve the Spirit;
we reap consequences in the bone-wasting
work of the Spirit;
and then this last one, number 12,
was right doctrine.
The Spirit teaches us and leads us
into the truth -
especially the truth concerning Christ.
These are 12 evidences.
And remember what John says.
"By this, we know..."
By this, we know
that God abides in us.
We are the dwelling place of God.
How?
By the Holy Spirit.
So that's what John teaches us
in these passages.