Luke 1:74-75
Christian Liberty #07
In "Christian Liberty #07," Pastor Martin continues his series by expounding Luke 1:74-75, focusing on the goal of Christian liberty: to serve God. He details four qualities of this service: emotionally, it is "without fear" of defeated enemies or an offended God; ethically, it is in "holiness and righteousness," characterized by non-defilement and passionate commitment to God's will; personally, it is lived "before Him," in conscious awareness of God's presence; and enduringly, it is to mark "all our days." Martin applies these truths to daily Christian living, challenging believers to examine their motives and choices in light of God's liberating grace.
Primary Texts
Topics
Outline 9 sections · 68 min
- Introduction: The Goal of Christian Liberty 0:00
- The Goal of Liberty: To Serve Him 11:58
- Emotional Quality: Serving Without Fear 14:44
- Ethical Quality: Serving in Holiness and Righteousness 26:36
- The Change of Masters: Slavery to Righteousness 40:44
- God's Grace Teaches Holiness 45:54
- Personal Quality: Serving Before Him 48:44
- Enduring Quality: Serving All Our Days 59:43
- Conclusion: The Blessedness of True Liberty 65:52
Key Quotes
“And I have asserted that we are in no position to consider a subset of the doctrine of Christian liberty, that is, what should I or should I not do as a Christian, when contemplating certain activities that are neither commanded nor forbidden by the Scriptures, that we are in no position to wrestle with those issues of the subset of the doctrine of Christian liberty, until we have come to grips with two massive blocks of biblical revelation.”
“So, when you have people say, Well, once you appreciate what it is to be a son or daughter of God, once you appreciate what it is to have your chains broken and the prison door open, fear has absolutely no place in the Christian life. That's heresy. It's nonsense. It's destructive of a healthy Christian experience.”
“You're not always going to be flirting with the edge of the precipice and say, that's my liberty. No, that's your folly.”
“Instructing us to the intent that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, that is, in touch with reality, righteously and godly in this present world, looking for the blessed hope in appearing of the glory of the great God in our Savior Jesus Christ, who gave Himself for us, that He might, redeem us from all iniquity, purify to Himself a people for His own possession, zealously, to have the doctrine of the Word of God, to have a people, hope you don't live by it,”
“I mourn the sin, the sins that only He sees as much as the ones that my wife and my kids see.”
“Those verses used to strike terror to me. If I had to write the next ones, it'd be, not how wonderful are these thoughts to me, how great is the sum of them. I would, I would have had to write how frightening and terrifying is that reality. God's the one heavenly eye.”
“The world has no right to tell you what the dimensions and the contours of your life will be if it becomes a life lived in worshipful service unto Him without fear in holiness and righteousness before His face all the days of your life.”
“Now, my friend, if you're sitting here, this morning, saying to live like that would be a bummer. Well, that's just your chains rattling.”
Applications
All listeners
- Do not wrestle with specific Christian liberty issues (what to do/not do) until you have come to grips with your real slavery in Adam and real freedom in Christ.
- Understand that serving God 'without fear' means freedom from defeated enemies and an offended God, not the absence of reverential fear.
- Be passionately committed to doing what is right according to God's law and will in every area of life, not just seeking an ethical standard that passes muster with others.
- In your commitment to worshipful service, keep as close to the 'inside wall' of holiness as possible, rather than flirting with the 'precipice' of sin.
- Mourn the sins that only God sees as much as those seen by others, living with a conscious awareness of God's presence.
- When misunderstood or slandered for doing what is right, find comfort in knowing that God sees your motives and actions performed before His face.
- Apply the principle of living 'before the face of God' to choices about entertainment (movies, music), asking if you can welcome God's eye upon you in those activities.
- Wake up each day with the commitment to render worshipful service to God 'all our days,' regardless of physical discomfort or challenging situations.
- Do not let the world dictate the dimensions and contours of your life; instead, let God define what constitutes a complete life lived in worshipful service.
- If the idea of living a life of worshipful service seems like a 'bummer,' recognize it as your chains rattling and cry to God to set you free.
- Take Luke 1:74-75 as a devotion, praying that its framework of serving God without fear, in holiness and righteousness, before Him, all your days, becomes the reality of your life.
A full transcript is available on the tab. 177 paragraphs, roughly 68 minutes.
Introduction: The Goal of Christian Liberty
The following sermon was delivered on Sunday morning, March 21st, 2004, at Trinity Baptist Church in Montville, New Jersey.
Now may I encourage you to turn with me in your Bibles to that portion of the Word of God that was the focus of our study last Lord's Day, Luke chapter 1, Luke chapter 1. And rather than read the more lengthy portion that I read last Lord's Day, we'll pick up the reading at the beginning of the prophecy of Zacharias, the father of John the Baptist, on the occasion when Zacharias has taken his eight-day-old son, John, given by God's intervention by miraculously resuscitating the reproductive faculties of Zacharias and his wife, Elizabeth,
and now Zacharias. Zacharias, there in the temple, on the occasion of the circumcision of his son, John, prophesies, and these are the words of his prophecy, Luke 1 and verse 67. And his father, Zacharias, was filled with the Holy Spirit and prophesied, saying, Blessed be the Lord, the God of Israel, for he has visited and wrought redemption for his people, and has raised up all the nations of the world. A horn of salvation for us in the house of his servant David, as he spoke by the mouth of his holy prophets that have been from of old.
Salvation from our enemies and from the hand of all that hate us, to show mercy toward our fathers and to remember his holy covenant, the oath which he swore unto Abraham our father, to grant unto us that we, being delivered out of the hand of our enemy, should serve him without fear, in holiness and righteousness, before him all our days. Yes, and you, child, shall be called the prophet of the Most High, for you shall go before the face of the Lord to make ready his ways, to give knowledge of salvation unto his people in the remission of their sins,
because of the tender mercy of our God, whereby the day spring from unholy, the high shall visit us, to shine upon them that sit in darkness and the shadow of death, to guide our feet into the way of peace. And the child grew and waxed strong in spirit, and was in the deserts till the day of his showing unto Israel. I want you to imagine with me that for just a few minutes I were endowed with a very unusual and strange power,
the power that the moment I were to wave my hand from one extreme of the congregation to the other, everyone sitting in this auditorium would have materialized before his or her eyes, in the eyes of all others, his or her true spiritual condition. Now, you follow what strange power I'm given. And for a short period of time, once I raised my hand over there, all the way across, where you are sitting,
your internal, true spiritual condition for one minute, for 60 seconds, would be materialized. That is brought out to where it could be seen by you, and felt and heard by everyone else.
If that power were given to me, and I started over here,
and brought my hand across,
what would materialize in your case? Would you suddenly find yourself unable to see, because your internal spiritual blindness registered in your optic nerves for one minute?
If the blindness were removed, would you look down and see your hands manacled,
and chains that bound you round, and round and round down to your feet?
What would the materializing of your true spiritual state look like?
For the Scripture tells us that by nature, every one of us is born spiritually blind. The Apostle wrote, The God of this world hath blinded the minds of them that believe not, lest the light of the gospel of the glory of Christ, who is the image of God, should dawn, or shine upon them. And the Scriptures make plain that by nature we come into this world chained and bound by our sin. And it is because of this reality of our native spiritual bondage
that no little part of the glory of the gospel of Christ is both the proclamation of and the impartation of true, spiritual liberty. And so for several weeks now we have been studying together out of the Scriptures what I have entitled for this series, A Fresh Look at the Doctrine of Christian Liberty. And I have asserted that we are in no position to consider a subset of the doctrine of Christian liberty, that is, what should I or should I not do as a Christian,
when contemplating certain activities that are neither commanded nor forbidden by the Scriptures, that we are in no position to wrestle with those issues of the subset of the doctrine of Christian liberty, until we have come to grips with two massive blocks of biblical revelation. The first is our real slavery and bondage in Adam. And we looked at that five, that is, the reality of the experience of every religion,
regardless of any of the factors that set us apart one from another, racially, economically, intellectually, it makes no difference. The Bible makes one of us is in bondage, in this five bondage that we considered from the Word of God. But then secondly, we considered together our real freedom and liberty in Christ. Our Lord said, "...whom the Son sets free..."
The nine spiritual liberty comes to every man, every boy, every woman, every girl. "...is the Lord Jesus Christ as He is offered to us in the Gospel."
And it is only when we have experienced that liberty that is ours in Christ that we are in any position to talk about these details of the subset of Christian liberty. Then lastly, we began to wrestle with a very practical question. "...who the Son sets free is free indeed,
and that when Christ is embraced as Savior and Lord by that mighty operation of the Spirit of God taking out our heart of stone, giving us a heart of flesh, enabling us to respond to the Gospel in repentance and faith, we find our chains broken and lying at our feet. We find the prison door thrown open, this real liberty from bondage to the condemning power of the law, the sin-provoking influence of the law,
this real liberty from slavery to sin, the devil, the world, the fear of death, the rules and regulations of men, the nine-fold liberty when all the chains are broken. And I stand with the broken chains at my feet and the prison door open. What have I to do with this liberated life?" And I've suggested that there is no better condensed sexy in Christ than is found embedded in this prophecy of Zechariah.
God is breaking into space-time history in the sending of His only begotten Son into the world in the fullness of the times, in conjunction with the sending of His forerunner, John, who would come in the spirit and power of Elijah. Zechariah says, "...the end for which this sin,
salvation is being revealed, is this," verse 74, "...to grant us that we, being delivered out of the hand of our enemies, should serve without fear."
I've suggested that in this text, basic units have the goal of liberty identified in these simple words. We are delivered, broken, open, not just has been broken, has been broken,
the devil whose chain has been broken, idolatrous self, which chain has been broken, but we are set free of life, to be one sacrifice who has delivered us. So that in every facet of life, the great passion of the heart of the liberated prisoner. I want to consider the goal of liberty identified.
The Goal of Liberty: To Serve Him
Now we come this morning to the second major division in the text, and it's what I'm calling the goal of our liberty in Christ. It's identified in the words to serve Him. Then in the following words, it is qualified. Qualified can mean that you make in order to hedge up and modify and restrict.
You make a statement and say, but wait a minute, I want to qualify that. And by the time you're done qualifying, you take back what you gave. But the word can mean, and this is the sense in which I'm using it, and it's found as the first listing in my dictionary. To qualify is to describe by giving the qualities or characteristics of something.
By describing or giving the qualities or characteristics of something. And that's what God has given us here in this text. The end or goal to which we are set free in Christ will be rendered as worship gives us, Zacharias in his prophecy gives us, rendered to our Redeemer and liberating.
I want us to examine those four qualities. We have first of all the emotional quality. We are to serve Him without. And then we are given the moral or the ethical quality in holiness.
We are given the personal quality before Him or in His presence. And then I hope to get another word that ended with AL and had used temporal, but I found nowhere does temporal mean having to do with time. It means limitation of time. So I've had to slip in another word, the enduring quality all of our days.
Very simple. Comprehensive quality of the life that He has granted us of that life. Submitted to those qualities of life. We are in no position to talk about Christian liberty in the subset.
Emotional Quality: Serving Without Fear
Shall I listen to what beverages? No, no, no, no. You're in no position. Instead of you and of me, I have particulars above worshipful service
to be rendered without emotional quality. Look at the text. Delivered out of the hand of our enemies should serve Him. It's very emphatic in the original.
The without fear comes very early in the whole that having been delivered out of the hand of our enemies should serve Him. But without fear is a dominant concept placed within the structure. In the original, there's a place where we must allow Scripture to interpret Scripture. Does the phrase without fear mean that when our chains are broken, and we are free in Christ, that deeper form is to mark the life that I live
as a life of worshipful service unto God? The answer is no. Let me just give a couple of specials. And this is only special.
This is where you must let Scripture interpret Scripture. And as we shall see, let context bring the greatest bear upon our understanding of any one of the parts. Psalm 130 and verse 4 says, There is forgiveness with you in order that you may. The end of God's forgiveness is to bring us into a life of a certain quality of the fear of God.
If you, Lord, should mark iniquity, O Lord, who could stand? But there is forgiveness with you that you may be feared. God not only consists in awareness of forgiveness, but then shall fruit that joyful awareness. Furthermore, in Jeremiah 32, 40, God says, In terms of the new covenant, I will put my fear into their hearts, that they may not depart from God
in new covenant salvation that secures the dear. God says, I will put my fear into their hearts, that they may not depart. Or 1 Peter 1, 17 to 19. If you call on him as forjourning of your time in fear, redeemed with corruptible things such as silver and gold, but with the precious blood of Christ, we are commanded to pass the time of our sojourning in fear
in the light of the day of judgment and in the light of the consciousness of the pardon of all of our sins in the blood of Christ. So, when you have people say, Well, once you appreciate what it is to be a son or daughter of God, once you appreciate what it is to have your chains broken and the prison door open, fear has absolutely no place in the Christian life. That's heresy. It's nonsense.
It's destructive of a healthy Christian experience. I've only given you a sampling. I haven't quoted Jesus' words. I tell you my friends fear him who can destroy both soul and body in hell.
He says that to his friends. The other passages. Then what does it mean? It says, It has delivered us from the hand of our enemies that render worship.
Look at the context. Look at the context. Verse 71. The salvation that God is now bringing in sending the forerunner John and in the one who is now in Mary's womb and would soon be born will be salvation from our enemies and from the hand of all.
Down to verse 74. To grant us that we, being delivered out of the hand of our enemies, should serve Him without Think of yourself as part of that oppressed nation. Off into Babylon. Back to your own land amidst enemies hindering you all along the way from the reestablishment of your place of worship and your national life.
Think then of the conquest of Rome and being an oppressed, conquered people. Be where you turn. A Roman soldier here, a Roman soldier there. It means all about you.
And now God says, Redeemer is coming and in His redemption we will serve without fear having been delivered from the hand of all our enemies. Now the problem with the vast majority of the Jews is they saw this only in terms of political deliverance. But the true remnant, such as this dear man Zacharias, they saw that the great enemy was their sins. That's why they spoke of salvation from our enemies and then down in verse 77 to give the knowledge of salvation unto His people in the remission of their sins
because of the tender mercies of our God. They saw there was a far greater enemy than Roman oppression and Roman rule and Roman intimidation. They saw the great oppression of their sins, the bondage that they were in because of their sins. And when the prophet says, when Zacharias says in his prophecy we should serve Him without fear, it is obvious that the first dimension of that without fear is this.
Without the fear of our defeated enemies. No longer do we need to fear those enemies whom Jesus Christ by His redemptive work has brought to naught. Having broken our chains we need not fear that those chains will ever again bind us. He has broken them.
And having broken them they are broken indeed for whom the Son sets free is free indeed. And so in the context the without fear means that we render worshipful service unto God confident that in Jesus Christ those enemies whom He has defeated in order to set ever again be able to bring me into into subjection. This is why Luther could throw an inkwell at the devil. He knew he was a conquered foe.
Did we in our own strength confide? Our striving will be losing. We're not the right man on our side. The man of God's own choosing.
Thus ask who that may be. Christ Jesus it is He. Lord of armies is His name. You read that whole marvelous hymn and there is the element of triumphant confidence delivered from the fear of the enemies ever again bringing us into bondage.
And then the second dimension of this fear that is broken is the fear of an offended God. When you and I take seriously that we are God's creatures made to obey Him. We are God's creatures accountable to Him. We are God's creatures who have broken His law.
Fallen in Adam. Violated His precepts. Exposed to His judgment. That can only produce fear as it did with Adam.
The moment Adam was conscious of his sin he ran to hide among the trees and when God comes in grace and in judgment where are you Adam? He said I heard your voice and I was what? I was afraid. I was afraid.
The voice that once was like the voice of a lover beckoning the beloved into intimate embraces. This voice now scares him witless and he runs to hide. And if you've ever been delivered from your chains you know what that fear is. Because before God ever delivered you from your chains He made you aware of your chains.
And He made you aware of the fact that you were chained because of your sin that left you exposed and liable to the just and holy wrath of God. But when in Christ He has redeemed us from the curse of the law having become a curse for us Christ did what I could not do what the law in itself could not do. Sin was condemned in His flesh. Therefore now no condemnation to me because I am in Christ Jesus.
This is the kind of fear that John speaks about in 1 John 4.18 when he says fear has torment. Perfect love casts out fear. He that is fearful he that is afraid is not made perfect in love.
He has not yet grasped the message of the love of God in Jesus Christ. And when I have grasped that message I can say with the Apostle Paul in Romans 8.31 If God is full we now no longer have this. We have no fear of an offended God.
How we can serve and the joy and the liberty of one who no longer fears that my defeated enemies will ever come and repossess me. Serve without fear that God is going to zap me. That God is going to get me. God is going to do me in.
No. This God so loved His only begotten Son for me. And Christ loved me and gave Himself for me. If God is for me who can be?
Ethical Quality: Serving in Holiness and Righteousness
A few emotions are more crippling than fear. Someone will say I was paralyzed. God wants us to serve in the way that Paul describes in Romans 14.18 The kingdom of God is not eating and drinking.
It's interesting that's right in the passage dealing with you're all upset about matters of what you should eat and what you should drink. The kingdom of God is not eating and drinking. In its emotional quality.
Then secondly ethical quality. And I want to state it this way. Rendered without fear of worshipful services to be characterized by holiness and righteousness. Without fear its emotional quality righteous holiness and righteousness ethical interesting
that this combination of words to get into what the words are is used in reverse order in Ephesians 4 and verse 24. I could quote the verse but I want you to look at it with me. Ephesians 4 and verse 24. As so often the Apostle Paul is urging believers to whom he has opened up the riches of God's salvation saying in essence now live out what God has put in.
Don't walk anymore as the Gentiles. Verse 17 of Ephesians 4 in the vanity of their mind being darkened in their understanding etc. He said you did not so learn Christ. Verse 20.
If so be that you heard him and were taught in him even as the truth is in Jesus. If you have truly been brought under the tutelage of Christ in a saving relationship having embraced him not only as your priest to die and to intercede for you but as your prophet to teach you. If you've embraced Christ and you've begun to learn of Christ you did not learn from Christ to walk as those whose minds are darkened whose affections are...
No, no. You did not learn that lifestyle from Christ. What you learned from Christ was this that you put away verse 22 as concerning your former manner of life the old man that waxes corrupt after the lust of deceit and be renewed in the spirit of mind and put on the new man now notice that after God has been created in righteousness and holiness of truth. He says if you've really been brought into the tutelage of Christ you have learned that in that relationship
that you were in Adam with its chains with its bondage with its ignorance with its lusts on the new man as its pattern and its prototype being created in righteousness of the truth. Say you've embraced the truth of God's salvation you say you've embraced the truth that whom the Son sets free is free indeed
then this is what you've learned from Him who is the truth. You've learned from put on the new and in that putting on of the new the prototype and pattern for the totality of your life is nothing short of the moral excellence of God Himself. And that moral excellence is distilled into two words righteousness and holiness. Now the prophet Zechariah reverses them.
He says that we should serve Him without fear in holiness and righteousness. Now let's look at the words that are used. You say why they reverse? I don't have a clue.
Maybe no significance but they're both found in conjunction. The word holiness used by Zechariah and used by Paul is not the standard word the most frequently used word for holiness. The most frequently used word in the New Testament for holiness is the family of words the verb is hagiadzo hagios hagiosmos nouns adjectives the whole family of words the hagios family of words. And the basic idea in the hagios family of words is being separated unto God.
When it is said be ye holy for I am holy hagios family of words God says I'm utterly separate from apart from all that is sinful and all that is vile and all that is even human I am wholly separate from all of that. Hagios has as its fundamental concept separateness apart-ness and and and and and and and and and and and and and and and and and and and and
and and and and and and and and and and and and and and and and and
My priest became us, filed. You see, the family of words is pointing not so much to the concept of apartness, but utterly free in his being from every form of pollution. The word used in 1 Timothy 2, verse 8.
Will that the men pray in every place, lifting up, here we are, and without disputing. That have not been engaged in that which is defiling and polluting. The hand being the symbol of the whole of one's active life, particularly one's physical actions. Holy hands, undefiled, unpolluted.
Now come back to our text.
Why has he broken our chains? Why has he opened the prison door? That we should step out and do what? Flirt near the edges of what is the bondage to make my life full.
The physical quality is to be characterized by an uncommon, compromising commitment to a life of holiness. It's a life, God, I stand in. Carefulness.
Everything that enters my eye, enters my ear, enters my relationships. I'm committed. The other word, righteousness. What does that mean?
The fundamental idea, dikaios, dikaios, osune, a whole family of words, is that which conforms to God's. How it is used back in Luke chapter 1, verse 6. In this very chapter, Luke had already used the word in describing Zacharias and Elizabeth. Luke chapter 1, and verse 6.
And they, that is Elizabeth and Zacharias, were both righteous before God, walking in all the commandments and ordinances. They were sinless.
True Israelites, in the power of God's grace, could conform his life outwardly, and inwardly to God's requirement. Such a one was called a righteous man, a righteous woman. Now their righteousness in the court of heaven was exactly the same righteousness with which we stand in Christ, in the court of heaven. The righteousness of Christ's perfect obedience, and his substitutionary death, was credited to all Old Testament saints before Christ came, just as it's credited to us subsequent to his coming.
But this is describing, the quality of their life, here on earth. And they are described as righteous. Walking in all the commandments and ordinances of the Lord, blameless. Look at Zacharias when he was going in to his role as a priest in the temple, and nudge one another and say, saw him on Wednesday.
Paper rack ogling at the girly magazines, like all the other guys on their way to work. Look at old Zachy, horny old Zachy. Point the figure. Look at old Zachy.
He was blameless as a husband. Not sinless. And if he were irritated, you would have heard him saying, oh dear Elizabeth, I sinned by that irritated word. Will you forgive me?
Blameless. Not sinless, blameless. That's what it means. Now listen.
If you're in Christ, and the chains are all there, broken at your feet, and the prison door is open, he has set you free. To render worshipful service unto him, not only emotionally, without fear, but ethically and morally, in holiness, non-pollutedness, non-defilement, and righteousness. A life in which you are passionately committed to do what is right, according to the law and will of God. In every single area,
you're not content to simply have an ethical standard that will pass muster with others, that your profession of faith may, well, in the judgment of charity, be real. No. You see, your great question concerning the so-called issues of Christian liberty is not what's wrong with it. You're committed to do what's right.
The question is, what is right with it? What is to the great paradigm of a righteous and holy life? Which, after God, has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth? And this was the truth that we saw a few weeks ago in Romans 6.
The Change of Masters: Slavery to Righteousness
Come back to it now. Perhaps it will make a little more sense. In verses 17 to 19, where Paul is describing the conversion of the Roman Christians under the imagery of a change of masters and the implications of that change. But thanks be to God, verse 17, that whereas you were slaves of sin, you became obedient from the heart to that form of teaching whereunto you were delivered.
That is, the gospel came as a form of teaching, and by the Spirit you were cast into its mold. One of the most beautiful descriptions of what it is to be converted. You get thrown into the mold of the gospel. There's a gospel mold with free forgiveness and power to deliver from the enslavement of sin and the love of the world and all the rest.
And you see, you got thrown into that mold. And when you came out, you were molded by the gospel. Isn't that beautiful? Well, it didn't get you excited.
It gets me excited. All right. Unto which you were delivered. And what happened?
When you came out of that mold, verse 18, being made free from sin, you became slaves of righteousness. I speak after the manner of men because of the infirmity of your flesh as you presented your members, eyes, hands, feet, ears, everything, slaves to uncleanness and to iniquity, even so now present your members as bond slaves to righteous sanctification.
What's right that overwhelms me and buries me by its magnitude, ye shall be holy as I. Be ye therefore perfect among men, and I shall make ye earnestly
and every day I'll also be what ye have known me to be for you. But, ye also are free, and also this earth shall be defined, eat thy milk, and Diane from the east shall be going into him, which shall be given to the oğlumanness, and to the faithful in Christ. Take me not grace, and Lord, and Elizabeth, then bone to me,
but the things which displeased the things wellest me also shall I, which are un supremacy, which make the holy things good, and on the wrong the who Gad arise and are formed. His твоi carry the flax, that thine spirit as teeth. Worth is gone, �녣minister Anastasios. road that was cut into the side of a mountain, and when he was putting out the news that he wanted to hire a new carriage driver, he would ask each carriage driver, how close can you come to the edge of the precipice and still keep the carriage on the road?
Oh, one said, I can go this far, I can get within a foot, I can get within six inches. And one man said, I keep as close to the inside wall as possible. He said, you're my driver. You're my driver.
See the point? He said, if I'm committed to render worshipful service unto my gracious liberator, I will do so not only without fear of my former enemies and without fear of this God who has so graciously redeemed me in Christ, I'm committed to do so in an ethical context of holiness and of righteousness. I want to keep as close to the wall as possible. I'm not going to do that.
I'm not going to do that. You're not always going to be flirting with the edge of the precipice and say, that's my liberty. No, that's your folly.
Flirt with the precipice is your folly, not your liberty.
Wherefore, let him who thinks he stand take heed lest he drop off the precipice, lest he fall. That's in the context of Christian liberty. 1 Corinthians 10 and verse 12. To what are we set free in Christ?
To render worship. To render worship. To render worship. To render worship.
To render worship. To render worship. To render worship. To render worship.
To render worship. To render worship. Without fear in holiness and righteousness. Because this is what Jesus died to get.
God's Grace Teaches Holiness
Do you know Jesus had some very committed heart passions when he went to the cross? Not just to offer up an acceptable sacrifice to God. But this is our final text under this head. I want you to turn to Titus chapter 2.
Titus chapter 2. Paul has been giving very detailed instructions. about a life of holiness and righteousness to old men, to old women, assuming that some would admit they were in both those categories, to young men, young women, etc., slaves.
Now then, he comes and he said, why am I giving all of this detailed instruction about a life of holiness and righteousness? Here's why. Titus 2, verse 11. For the grace of God has appeared.
That's a beautiful summary statement about all the things that were happening in Luke 1 and 2. God is breaking into space-time history, sending His Son, sending the Forerunner. The grace of God has appeared in the person and work of the Lord Jesus and all the redemptive activities surrounding it, bringing salvation to all men, and instructing us to this intent. How does the grace of God in Christ teach us?
What does it teach us? Here it is. Instructing us to the intent that denying ungodliness and worldly lusts, we should live soberly, that is, in touch with reality, righteously and godly in this present world, looking for the blessed hope in appearing of the glory of the great God in our Savior Jesus Christ, who gave Himself for us, that He might, redeem us from all iniquity, purify to Himself a people for His own possession,
zealously, to have the doctrine of the Word of God, to have a people, hope you don't live by it,
Personal Quality: Serving Before Him
the doctrine of liberty, of worshipful service, is to be lived consciously before the face of God. This is its personal quality. We've looked at its emotional quality, without fear, its ethical and moral quality, holiness and righteousness, now what's its personal quality? This life of worshipful service is to be lived consciously
before the face of God. Look at the text again.
Here's the end for which we're set free, blessed be God, to serve Him without fear, in holiness and righteousness, before Him.
Now if we drop out the intervening clauses, phrases, we could read it like this. To grant that we being delivered out of the hand of our enemies should serve Him before Him.
You say, well that really doesn't add anything new, does it? Oh, yes it does. We should serve Him before Him. Now this Greek word, anopion, before, is sometimes translated in the presence of or in front of.
Look at Luke 1.19. Luke had already used, in this chapter. And the angel answering said unto him, that is to Zacharias, I am Gabriel that stand anopion God.
I am Gabriel, it's translated in my American standard, in the presence of God. That's our word. I'm Gabriel. My posture is that of being constantly before the face of my God.
And when a direction, perspective comes from His mouth, I'm quick to fulfill it. But that's my posture. I am Gabriel that stand anopion God. In the presence of God.
It's used again in Luke 1, in verse 6. And they were both righteous. Here it is. Anopion, God.
They were righteous, not just in the eyes of men. They weren't hypocrites. Jesus could say to the Pharisees, you appear beautiful unto men, but God knows what you are. You see, Zacharias and Elizabeth were before men what God knew they were before Him.
They were righteous before God. The gay angel Gabriel comes from the presence of God. You see, the bottom line of the goal of our liberty is to serve Him, to render worshipful service, but it is not an impersonal rendering of service. This little prepositional phrase, this little phrase, brings it into the realm of the most personal, intimate context.
This worshipful service is to be rendered by us in the climate of a present, personal awareness that we are living before the face of God. Serving Him as those that always have their eye upon Him and who are glad that He always, were never out of eyeshot before Him. You see, this takes away any sense of this is some kind of a legalistic, tight, am afraid of doing the wrong thing. I'm living before the face of God.
This glorious, infinitely pure, holy, loving, majestic, wise being who is called God. And I live as before His face. Therefore, I can't be a hypocrite. I mourn the sin, the sins that only He sees as much as the ones that my wife and my kids see.
The vile thought to which none was witness but God drives me to cry, Oh God, how long, how long before I have a mind free of filth. The inadvertent or perhaps even the willful glance for a moment or two or a minute at the television at something your conscience said. Turn your eyes away from beholding vanity. No one was there.
Your wife and kids weren't there. But you looked and the chambers of your mind were stained with what you saw.
And you don't go look out the window. Did anybody see me? You say, I live before the face of God. Oh God, you saw me.
You saw me, Lord. When will I learn? Oh God, forgive me. Forgive me.
Have mercy upon me. Before the face of God. And then you see it works the other way around. You set yourself to do something that you know is according to the word of God.
And you do it out of your sacrificial loving service to God as before His face. And you're misunderstood. You're slandered. You're maligned.
What keeps you going on? You say, oh Lord, I'll know this.
Other eyes misjudged what I did. But Lord, you know I did this before your face as unto you. And you see it in me. It puts a blessed cocoon around you.
If you have any kind of profile, I mean, it's one of the most grievous things. Have your motives misjudged. You know what it's like in husband and wife? Man, that cuts the gizzard out of you, doesn't it?
Best you know before God, there's something God put in you that you're doing. Behold, out of this kind of heart, by nature so full of rottenness, God's put some goodness in there and you're doing this thing out of a motive of goodness and your own wife misunderstands it. I mean, that hurts. But what a wonderful thing to be able to say, sweetheart, God knows.
God knows. This was my motive. And the more intimate you are, the more sensitive you are to the slightest fracture of that intimacy.
Hmm? Right.
But you see, it's liberating. Get hold of this principle. He set me free from these chains and opened the prison door that I might go out into a life lived without fear, in holiness and righteousness before the face of my God. Which is the essence of what I'm going to have forever and ever for Revelation 22, 4 says, they shall see His face.
His servants shall serve Him and they shall see His face. The glory of the life of heaven is that this element of the personal relationship will be brought to its heightened and most pure expression and it will grow and grow forever and forever.
You see, what was a terror to us, in our unconverted days, Psalm 139, O Lord, Thou hast searched me and known me. You know my down-sitting. You know my uprising. You understand my thought from afar.
Not a word in my tongue, but, O Lord, You know it all together. You have beset me behind and before and laid Your hand upon me.
Those verses used to strike terror to me. If I had to write the next ones, it'd be, not how wonderful are these thoughts to me, how great is the sum of them. I would, I would have had to write how frightening and terrifying is that reality. God's the one heavenly eye.
He sees me. He hears me. He's recording all of my filthy thoughts and my dirty words and my dirty jokes.
But when you come to know that God, you can read Psalm 139 the way David wrote it. He said, this is such a wonderful truth. He said, if I jump down into my grave earlier, you're there. If somehow I could be shot up into the stratosphere, Lord, how wonderful are Your thoughts to me.
It's a wonderful thing to live before the face of God. And that's why He set you free. He set you free to live before His face. Now, when you start applying that to Christian liberty, you're going to watch that certain movie?
Can you walk into there and say, O gracious God who redeemed me in Christ, that I might serve, you without fear, in holiness, and this I welcome your eye upon me, right as I expose
before the eye of this holy God? Then you watch your movie. You listen to the plot. But if you can't,
you don't care who else does. Those kind of CDs. I do not make my icons, these half-converted little bimbos,
of professing Christians.
You won't get my bucks.
And you're willing, young people, to say no. I'm going to live before the face of God. What goes in my ears, what goes in my eyes,
Enduring Quality: Serving All Our Days
I live before the face of God. Well, very quickly in closing. Number four. The life of worshipful service is to mark us all our days.
I originally had, this is its temporal quality, but I had to throw the word temporal away. So it's its enduring quality. Look at the text.
Why did He set us free, deliver us from the hand of all of our enemies? This is why. To grant that we, being delivered out of the hand of our enemies, should render worshipful service to Him without fear, in holiness and righteousness, before His face all our days.
It's interesting. It doesn't say for the whole of our life. You see, that's a collective noun. The whole of my life.
But all of our days. You get the emphasis of it? That means that as I wake up and kick the covers off, in a new day, I say, this day God has given to me. And this day, it is my privilege as a free man, a free woman, a free boy or girl in Christ, with my chain committed to and trusting in Him for grace,
universal holiness, and righteousness. On a particular day, you get up, and your arthritic joints are particularly intense and sending signals to your brain. And you've got a headache. You're going to face some horrible situations in the home, at work, in the church.
It doesn't make any difference to say, I'm set free.
Your son died that he would have. When it's easy, it's convenient. That's not just for old people. Young people sit there and say, yeah, you're all right.
Some of us never had a fling. It saved us in our youth. Some of us, God laid adult responsibilities on us in our youth. I don't often give anything of my testimony.
I'm one of the most
wonderful compliments I've ever had some years ago. A man said, Pastor Martin, I've listened to about 300 of your tapes and I know so little about you. I said, good, I'm not supposed to preach myself. But at age 17, God made me the de facto pastor of a little group of six or seven kids.
And a few months later,
I had the burden and responsibility of being freshman chaplain to 800 students. And a short time after, being a student pastor of a little group of people in the white trash section of Augusta, Georgia.
And all, all of my hormones and all of my athletic energies and capacities still at their height, I'd sit at my desk in my dorm and look out and see the guys out playing basketball and everything in me wanted to go. But I had to go Sunday and open up the Word. And I sat there with my Greek Testament preparing sermons.
Not fair! Did a 18-year-old kid, a 19-year-old boy, can't go play ball? No, it may not be fair! But that's what God marked out for this man.
Now, do I look back with regrets? As I've told you more times in recent years. Whatever I am, you know I ain't a sour old man. I'm a happy old man.
I got no regrets. Now, that means I never went out and played basketball, got any exercise. No, no, don't take that to extremes. What I'm saying is this.
The world has no right to tell you what the dimensions and the contours of your life will be if it becomes a life lived in worshipful service unto Him without fear in holiness and righteousness before His face all the days of your life. Now, if we get that stuff in place, then we're ready to sit down and talk about Christian liberty. And frankly, if that stuff is not in place and has begun to be the framework within which you passionately live, then don't talk to me
about Christian liberty. I don't want to hear it. I don't want to hear it. Because all you're doing is talking about a way to wiggle out from admitting you're still in your chains.
And you just got to have this that the world says you've got to have to be fulfilled. And you've got to go here and you've got to see this and you've got to hear that. Because the world says without it, your life is not complete.
You're free from that. You're free from that. And you're ready to let God tell you what you need to have a complete life. And let anybody say what they will, think what they will.
It's a wonderful thing to be set free. That's Christian liberty.
Conclusion: The Blessedness of True Liberty
To be Christ's bond slave. All of my days rendering to Him worshipful service without fear in holiness and righteousness before His face all the days of my life. Now, my friend, if you're sitting here, this morning, saying to live like that would be a bummer. Well, that's just your chains rattling.
Cry to God to show you. That's just your chains rattling. Cry to God to set you free. And show you the blessedness of the words of Jesus, whom the Son sets free is free indeed.
The Apostle Paul picks them up and says, for freedom did Christ set you free. And for you who are the liberated ones, pray in these perspectives. Maybe, it would be well to take the next couple of days as part of your devotions to take Luke 1, 74 and 75 and pray it in and say, oh God, let this become the framework within which I live my life by your grace and by your power. Let's pray.
Father, we're again thankful for the richness of your word. Thank you for this prophecy of old Zacharias.
We long to meet him in heaven. Tell him, how much we appreciate the words that you spoke through him. We pray that they will be powerful words to all of our hearts. Grant us, God, to know these realities in the days to come.
To the praise of your name and to the good of our souls for Jesus' sake. Amen.
This transcript was generated by automated speech recognition and may contain errors. It is provided for study and reference only; the audio recording is the authoritative source.
Passages Expounded
This passage from Zacharias's prophecy is the central text, defining the purpose and qualities of Christian liberty as serving God without fear, in holiness and righteousness, before Him, all our days.
This passage is expounded to define the ethical qualities of holiness and righteousness, showing that the new man is created after God in these virtues.
This passage is used to illustrate the conversion experience as a change from slavery to sin to slavery to righteousness, reinforcing the ethical commitment of the liberated believer.
Texts Expounded
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