And take…the
sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.
Ephesians
6:17
THE
SPIRIT’S
SWORD
Volume 23, Number
38
10/17/2021
Published
by
Mt. Baker
church of Christ
Location:
1860 Mt. Baker HWY
Mailing Address:
P.O. Box 30821
Bellingham, WA 98228
(360) 752-2692
Sunday:
Bible Classes..........9:30 AM
Worship..10:30AM; 6:00PM
Wednesday:
Bible Classes.........7:00 PM
All sing last Wednesday
Web sites:
Mt. Baker church
Bible Answers
Editor......Joe R. Price
|
In this issue:
Kingdom Righteousness (5)
Sermon
Outlines:
Noteworthy News:
Crossing Borders
Kingdom Righteousness (5)
Joe R. Price
Matthew 6:28-30
Christ appealed to people’s reasoning ability when He preached the
gospel of the kingdom. For instance, reason compels us to understand that
life is more valuable than food and the body more important than clothing
(Matt. 6:25). In today’s passage, Jesus challenged His audience to think
about the world around them. He encouraged them to have greater faith in the
presence and provisions of God to care for His world, evidenced by the
flowers and grass. To build our faith in God and eliminate doubtful,
distracting anxieties, we are to trust God will provide the clothing we need
to cover and warm our bodies. See how He clothes the lilies of the field (v.
28-29)! Though short-lived, God arrays the grass with splendor (v. 30).
Therefore, He will undoubtedly clothe you and me. Our faith weakens when we
become consumed with temporary things. Instead, trust and depend on the
living God who made you and sustains your life. Keep your focus on faith and
not on things that fade away.
Matthew 6:31-33
Jesus drives to the heart of the matter. When we are consumed with
physical goals and concerns we start asking the wrong questions. Worry
(anxious care) distracts us from God who knows our needs and supplies them.
If we seek (crave intensely) physical needs (food, drink, and clothing)
before and instead of spiritual needs (the kingdom of God and His
righteousness) we are like the Gentiles (those who are separated from God
and are not living by faith, Eph. 2:11-12). Our primary craving must be the
rule and reign of God in our lives and the righteous He gives us through the
gospel of His Son. We trust Him to give us the things needed for our
temporary journey on this earth. At times we struggle to keep these
spiritual priorities in place while the world presses us to conform to its
values and expectations. Let us be strengthened in our faith and trust the
Lord to give us what we need now as we live for the eternal things that will
not pass away (2 Cor. 4:17-18).
Matthew 6:34
Jesus has given us multiple reasons not to be drawn away from the
righteousness of the kingdom in Matthew 6:25-33) by temporal cares,
including (1) Our value to the Father (Matt. 6:25-26), (2)
Worrying does not improve our condition (Matt. 6:27), (3) God proves
He provides for His creation, so trust Him to provide our needs (Matt.
6:28-31); and (4) God knows our needs (so seek first His kingdom and
righteousness, unlike the Gentiles who do not know God, Matt. 6:32-33).
Finally, today’s passage assigns distracting cares (which take us away from
kingdom righteousness) to the uncertainty of tomorrow (Matt. 6:34). We have
today, with no promise of tomorrow. Therefore, address today’s problems;
Don’t borrow trouble from tomorrow that may not come at all. The answer to
anxiety is not detachment from personal responsibility. The resolve to meet
daily duties with the focus of faith that relies on Him (“if the Lord
wills,” James 4:15) replaces worry with contentment. The most important
things to those who follow Jesus are the heavenly treasures that endure long
after our physical life with its needs have ended. God provides for our
needs on earth. How much more abundant are the eternal treasures He gives us
in Christ (Eph. 1:3). Do not worry; Have faith in God. Seek first His
kingdom and righteousness, and your reward will be far greater than physical
goods (2 Tim. 4:7-8).
Matthew 7:1-2
Jesus contrasted the righteousness of the kingdom with the scribes and
Pharisees (who broke the commands of God with their traditions and taught
others to do so, Matt. 5:19-20; 15:3; 23:1-2). He judged them to be
hypocrites for this conduct (Matt. 15:3-9; 23:23). To conclude from today’s
passage that we can never make judgments about right and wrong, good and
evil, is absurd (Rom. 12:9). Otherwise, Jesus Himself is a hypocrite for
judging the scribes and Pharisees to be hypocrites. In truth, Jesus is
warning us against making hypocritical judgments (Matt. 7:3-5).
Righteousness in the kingdom compels us not to judge others rashly,
prejudicially, vindictively, and hypocritically (Matt. 6:33). When we judge
unrighteously, we hinder conflict resolution, prevent forgiveness, and fail
to love others as God does (Matt. 5:21-26; 6:14-15; 5:43-48). When we do so,
we can expect to be judged (condemned) for our ill-conceived judgments.
Jesus challenges us to “judge what is right” (Luke 12:57; John 7:24). His
judgments are “true and righteous altogether” (cf. Ps. 19:9). Let us follow
Christ’s example of making righteous judgments by using the proper standard
(God’s revealed truth) with the proper motive (to seek the Father’s will)
(John 5:30). God will judge us for the judgments we make (Luke 6:37-38).
Avoid exposing yourself to condemnation by judging unrighteously.
(Continued next week)
Top
You can find the complete outline of this sermon
plus PowerPoint and MP3 Audio files
at
BIBLE ANSWERS
Revive Me, O Lord!
Joe R. Price
Scripture Reading: Psalm 119:153-160
1.
Revive: “To flourish anew, renewal, revitalizing, reinvigorating, rescue
from trouble.” Ps. 143:11.
2. We are warned not to grow weary and faint, Gal. 6:9; 2 Thess. 3:13 (Heb.
6:11-12 (cf. Rev. 3:15-16).
I.
SPIRITUAL REVIVAL COMES FROM THE LORD.
A. The
Lord is the True Source of Spiritual Renewal, Ps. 138:7-8 (Ezek. 37:1-14;
John 11:23-26; 5:25; Rom. 6:4).
B. Our
Revival Declares God’s Power and Righteousness, Ps. 143:11; John 5:26-27.
II. GOD REVIVES US.
A. God
Revives Us According to His Word, Ps. 119:154 (25, 107, 37).
B. God
Revives Us According to His Judgments, Ps. 119:156, 40, 149; Heb. 4:12-13;
James 1:21-25.
C. God
Revives Us According to His Mercy, Ps. 119:159; Titus 3:4-5; Rom. 2:4.
III. WHAT WE MUST DO TO BE REVIVED SPIRITUALLY.
A.
Respond in Faith to God’s Grace, Eph. 2:1-3, 5, 8; Acts 3:19.
1. be
humble and contrite, Isa. 57:15.
2.
Repent and pursue the knowledge of the Lord, Hos. 6:1-3; Rev. 3:18-19 (2
Pet. 3:18).
3.
Willing and obedient to call on the name of the Lord, Ps. 80:18 (Acts
22:16).
4.
Rejoice in His salvation, Ps. 85:6; 51:12.
Conclusion
God
has given our bodies life. He longs to give life to dead souls.
Top
You can find the complete outline of this sermon
plus PowerPoint and MP3 Audio files
at
BIBLE ANSWERS
Where False Doctrine Leads
Joe R. Price
Scripture Reading: 2 Timothy 2:14-19
1. We
can know truth, identify error, rebuke and avoid it, Jn. 5:38-39; Acts
17:11-12; Eph. 5:8.
2. Shun base, empty talk, 2 Tim. 2:16.
I.
FALSE DOCTRINE IS IDENTIFIABLE, 2 Tim. 2:15-16 (Detectable).
-
We
can know truth from error (1 Cor. 4:6).
-
False doctrine contrasted with “the word of truth,” 2:15; 1 John 4:1, 6;
Gal. 1:6-9.
II.
FALSE DOCTRINE LEADS TO MORE UNGODLINESS, 2 Tim. 2:16.
III.
FALSE DOCTRINE LEADS TO MORE ERROR, 2 Tim. 2:17 (3:13).
IV.
FALSE DOCTRINE LEADS TO OVERTHROWN FAITH, 2 Tim. 2:18.
-
It
matters what you believe, Matt. 7:21-23.
-
Falling away, 2 Pet. 3:16-18.
V.
FALSE DOCTRINE LEADS TO STRIFE, 2 Tim. 2:23.
-
Contend for the faith without being contentious, Jude 3.
-
To
avoid error, do not begin to listen to it, and do not receive those who
teach it (2 John 10-11).
VI.
FALSE DOCTRINE LEADS AWAY FROM GOD AND HIS TRUTH TO LAWLESSNESS AND DEATH,
2 Tim. 2:19.
-
Error brings penalty it is due, Rom. 1:27.
-
Penalty is death (eternal), James 5:19-20.
Top
NOTEWORTHY NEWS
(Current events in the light of Scripture)
Crossing Borders
Joe R. Price
The
Canada-U.S. border is set to reopen for “non-essential” purposes (tourism,
recreation, or just because) in November, when fully vaccinated foreign
nationals will be allowed to cross the land borders of the two nations
(Canada-U.S. Border: Everything You Need to Know About Reopening, Travel,
wsj.com).
Borders, boundaries, barriers, fences, walls, doors – call them what you
will – are essential. With them, we keep intruders out of our homes. With
them, we set property rights and responsibilities.
God
sets borders and boundaries we must respect.
(1)
God transfers us from the land of darkness to the kingdom of His Son by
redemption through Christ’s blood. “He has delivered us from the power
of darkness and conveyed us into the kingdom of the Son of His love” (Col.
1:13). Crossing the border from sin to salvation happens when we believe and
obey the gospel of Jesus (Mark 16:15-16; Acts 2:37-41, 47).
(2)
We must cross the border of compromise with sin to dwell with God. “Come
out from among them and be separate, says the Lord. Do not touch what is
unclean, and I will receive you” (2 Cor. 6:17).
(3)
Crossing the border of Christ’s doctrine forfeits fellowship with God and is
therefore, sin. “Whoever transgresses and does not abide in the doctrine
of Christ does not have God. He who abides in the doctrine of Christ has
both the Father and the Son” (2 John 9).
God’s
boundary of truth is for our moral protection and spiritual safety. We
thrive spiritually by living within the borders set by God. However,
crossing His boundary brings sin and death, not freedom.
Top
Created by Chuck Sibbing, last updated.
10/18/2021
The Spirit's Sword is a free,
weekly publication of the Mt. Baker church of Christ, Bellingham, WA
Send all questions, comments and subscriptions to the editor at:
ssword@bibleanswer.com |