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THE GLORY OF GOD
Unless
otherwise denoted, all Scripture references are to the
New
International Version (NIV; British text)
LIVING
IN A WORLD
where the forces of evil appear to have the upper hand, and where the Apostle
Paul’s forecast of godless times to come has proved all too real, the Lord’s
people today in declaring their loyalty to Him must be willing to stand up and
be counted.
Doing
all to the glory of God is a deeply serious commitment. It will not endear us to
the worldly, who will be embarrassed in our company and will avoid us. It may
make enemies of some, whose licentious lifestyle cannot bear the light. Some may
even be angry at what they regard as our stubborn faith, and at the very least,
we shall be ridiculed.
But
we are in good company. Jesus forewarned his followers: “’No servant is greater
than his master.’ If they persecuted me, they will persecute you also” (John 15:
20).
But
while rebuking society as a whole for immoral behaviour and corrupt practices,
it is not our responsibility to draw attention to the wrong conduct of
individual unbelievers. We are not appointed as their judges, and they are in
fact already under the condemnation of the death sentence on the human family.
Rather, surrounded as we are on all sides by calls to condone – even approve –
what we deplore, it is the more vital that we do our utmost to live our own
lives according to the standards set out in the Word of God, and taught by our
Lord Jesus. Our first scrutiny must therefore be directed towards our own
conduct, and there are questions we must ask ourselves.
Am
I praying the prayer of David?
“Teach
me to do Your will, for You are my God; Your Spirit is good. Lead me in the land
of uprightness. Revive me, O Lord, for Your name’s sake!” (Psalms
143: 10, 11 – NKJV).
Do
I commit everything to God, asking
“Lord,
what do You want me to do?” (Acts 9: 6 – NKJV)
Having
dedicated all to God’s service, and being a disciple of Jesus, am I day by day
striving to live a holy life? The Apostle Paul exhorts:
“You
were taught, with regard to your former way of life, to put off your old self,
which is being corrupted by its deceitful desires; to be made new in the
attitude of your minds; and to put on the new self, created to be like God in
true righteousness and holiness” (Ephesians 4: 22, 24).
The
old self was captive to the common condition of mankind. Satan, called “the god
of this world,” has the minds and consequently the bodies of his victims under
his control, and the majority have no will to resist. His chief ambition is to
recapture those who have been freed from his tyranny and have become servants of
Christ. We are not to give any heed to his dictates, nor to yield to temptation
and revert to the old self. It is no sin to be tempted; the sin lies in
yielding. The new self belongs to Christ and was created to be like God in true
righteousness and holiness.
As
the hymn says, “Yield not to temptation, for yielding is sin.” We should daily,
in compliance with our consecration, yield ourselves to God – as though already
raised from the dead and having the promised eternal life. Our hearts and minds
and all our faculties are dedicated as instruments of righteousness and holiness
to the service of God.
“Sold
as a Slave to Sin”
Adam’s
race as a whole is a race of slaves – “sold as a slave to sin” (Romans 7: 14).
Looking back to see when it was that the human race became slaves of sin and how
this condition came about, we find that in Eden Father Adam sold himself and
incidentally all his race, which was then unborn. What price was paid by the
purchaser? What did Adam get when he sold himself and all his posterity to
become servants of sin? He got his own
way. He got his choice of companionship with his wife for a time, and in the
course of disobedience rejected God and His will, His law. For this price – this
self-gratification, he sold himself to sin and was cut off from his status as a
son of God, and in becoming a slave of sin he became also a slave of death
(Romans 5: 12).
Sin,
the great monarch ruling the world, has enslaved the entire human family. None
can escape this bondage, except in one
way. Under this bondage of sin all suffer disease, sorrow, disappointment,
death. Death is the inevitable climax of the rule of this great monarch. And so
we read, “The soul who sins is the one who will die”; “the wages of sin is
death”; “the whole creation has been groaning” (Ezekiel 18: 4; Romans 6: 23; 8:
22). They are all toiling in this slavery, which was pictured in the oppression
of the Israelites in Egypt under Pharaoh. The unavoidable truth is that the
whole world is alienated from God, banished from His favour and having no hope
of escaping the death sentence and experiencing everlasting life. Many learned
to make the best of their situation and chose to co-operate with the great
taskmaster, adopting his tactics and satisfying the desires of the fallen
nature.
But
not all have been willing captives. Thousands, even millions, have yearned to be
free from their bondage, desiring to serve a kinder master. The existence of a
loving Heavenly Father remained deep in the conscious – or sub-conscious –
conviction of many, and while the majority had lost all hope for recovery, these
kept alive the yearning for a perfect life, a perfect earth, where mankind would
no longer be slaves to sin and death, but restored to harmony with their
Creator.
Their
hope was well founded.
God’s
Glory to be Revealed in Man
In
due time God in His love, and without violating His just sentence upon
disobedient Adam and his race, provided a ransom for the purchasing back of the
slaves. Father Adam went into slavery of his own volition. His children – all
mankind – were born slaves, born under the sentence of
death.
God
“gave his one and only Son” (John 3: 16), that He might redeem the one who
sinned, that He might give as a ransom-price His own perfect human life to buy
back the perfect human life forfeited by Father Adam. “For since death came
through a man, the resurrection of the dead comes also through a man. For as in
Adam all die, so in Christ all will be made alive” (1 Corinthians 15: 21,
22).
How
will this wonderful recovery of mankind be achieved? At Jesus’ First Advent and
during the centuries that followed, a comparatively small number of godly men
and women came to understand His mission, and joined themselves to His cause,
laying down their lives in the service of Christ. These are referred to in the
Scriptures under various descriptive terms: the bride of Christ (2 Corinthians
11: 2), members of His body (1 Corinthians 12: 27, the elect (1 Peter 1:
1).
Because
of their utter faith in the efficacy of Jesus’ ransom sacrifice, and by their
consecration to do the will of God, they were counted as righteous and were
reckoned as passing from under the death sentence into eternal life. Theirs was
a heavenly inheritance, to be with their Lord (1 Peter 1: 3, 4). But the
unbelieving world remained subject to sin and death. Their rescue awaited a
special period of time which will begin after the promised Second Advent of
Christ – times of restoration (Acts 3: 21).
Adam’s
fallen race will then be given (1) the light, the knowledge of the Truth (John
1: 9), and (2) the benefit of Christ’s death on their behalf (1 Timothy 2: 3-6).
All will then have a full and fair opportunity to prove themselves worthy of
eternal life on earth, God’s original purpose for the human family (Genesis 1:
31). This will be the world’s judgment day – not a time of condemnation, but a
time of opportunity and rejoicing.
In
due time God’s original purpose for mankind will be reflected in their perfect
humanity and their new-found loyalty to His will. Earth will eternally be a
place of beauty and glory.
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