Tuesday, May 15, 2007

God's Invincible Embrace Wrap Up

This past Sunday I preached part four of a series within a series on the Holy Spirit and His work in salvation. My desire was to finish the series on the Holy Spirit. I was preaching from I Corinthians 2:1-16 and just flat out ran out of time. What I have decided to do is to “complete” the series through a few writings on the last verses of I Corinthians. I will include these writings on my weblog and in the Redemptive Presence newsletter.

We left off in I Corinthians 2:10 as we learned about effectual calling and conversion. It is the Holy Spirit who reveals to us the simple truth of the cross. This is what we call “effectual calling” or God’s invincible embrace of grace. Conversion is the result of effectual calling. The Holy Spirit regenerates us, implants new life in us and the soul is made holy. We respond in faith and repentance which are the gifts of God (not by works so that no man should boast!). Paul leaves verse 10 by saying that God has revealed the Truth of salvation to us by his Holy Spirit.

As Paul continue he follows up this revelation of effectual calling by writing a hyperbole. A what? A hyperbole is when a figure of writing or speech where a writer uses one example to amplify his point. In verse 11 Paul says that only a man knows what his true intentions and thoughts are. No one outside of that person can know what his inward thoughts are. We basically take each other’s word on faith. We believe a person because they have asked us to do so. After Paul makes this statement about a person’s thoughts he relates the example to God’s thoughts. In other words, Paul is saying, “If we can’t possibly know what a person is truly thinking, and we are just like that person, how is it possible to imagine that we can know what God is thinking?” To know God’s thoughts is to know the mind of God. Something miraculous has to happen for us to have any knowledge of God’s thoughts.

The only persons who know the thoughts of God are the persons of the Trinity. The Father, the Son and the Holy Spirit know each other intimately. Paul answers his own hyperbolic question. Who can know God’s thoughts? The Holy Spirit! And we have been given the Holy Spirit! Now we can understand what God has freely given us. God has freely given us the Gospel. When I read a passage like this I think about language barriers. There is this one language out there that only young people speak. It is the language of text messaging. It is almost a secret language. Mark my words, the time is coming, if it hasn’t already, when text messaging dictionaries will be required reading for communications majors! When we receive the Holy Spirit, the message of the Scriptures are no longer foolishness to us (much like text messaging is to most parents of teens and tweens). No! The Gospel makes perfect sense because the Holy Spirit has enabled us to embrace grace. He has persuaded us of the truth of the person of Jesus Christ.

Paul makes a further distinction in the following verse when he says that the man without the Spirit “does not accept the things that come from the Spirit of God.” Why? Because his mind, heart and soul are totally depraved! He is dead until someone wakes him up. Dead in foolishness. Dead in the pursuit of “happiness”. Dead in the love they have for this world.
The person who is foolish comes up with all kinds of excuses to continue on in foolishness. They believe they can get religion later on in life. They believe they can walk the line between the world and God’s Kingdom. They believe that the message might be a good message for others but not for them. They believe that there is a God but that Jesus is not the only way to God. Why do they believe these things? Why do they continue to live their life this way? Because Jesus is foolish to them! Is he foolish to you?

The message of the Gospel is to drop what we are doing and follow Jesus NOW! The Gospels speak of many who wanted to follow Jesus but were unwilling to drop what they were doing—even good things. Why would we drop what we are doing when it seems to give us so much fulfillment? Jesus promises a life that is hard, traveled down a beaten path, a life of humility and servanthood all for the glory of God. This is foolishness to those who are perishing. So what happens? Those who are perishing reject grace and reject the foolish message of the Cross.

Paul rounds out his passage on the Holy Spirit when he poses another question in verse 16. For who has known the mind of the Lord…? I love how he ends the passage in such a profound answer. “But we have the mind of Christ.” Paul once again answers his own question. He is literally saying, “Who has known the mind of the Lord? We know the mind of the Lord because we have the very mind of Christ who is the Lord.”

This is another great statement of the theology of the person of Christ. Jesus was not just a prophet or great teacher. He is the very God of the universe as the second person of the Trinity. He is fully God and fully man. He bridges the gap between us and God. Because we have been given the Holy Spirit we now have the mind of Jesus Christ. The message makes perfect sense to those who are being saved by the power of God. The Gospel is salvation to all who believe.

In a way, this passage rounds out the work of the Trinity in Salvation. The Father predestines and elects his people, the Son agreed to provide redemption and did so, the Holy Spirit finally applies salvation to God’s people by calling them, regenerating them and applying the merits of Christ to them. What a wonderful message of grace! Notice how it is the work of God all the way through.

However, we’re not done yet. Not only has the Triune God saved us, but we will certainly persevere until the end because of his saving grace. But we will talk about Perseverance of the Saints over the next week or so. Until then continue to keep your eyes fixed on Christ, not on earthly things.

0 comments: