Monday, April 30, 2018

Our Father's Unchanging Love


James 1:16-21 The words that precede our text deal with the trials and temptations of the Christians.  We Christians are not magically immune from hardships and difficulties and earthly sorrows.  The Bible says:  blessed is the man who remains steadfast under trial.  In other words, there are going to be trials for the child of God.
Neither are we immune from temptation.  All of us struggle to be the people that God wants us to be.  The Bible says that we are “lured and enticed by our own desire.”
And so we experience earthly trials and temptations just like those who do not share our faith at all!  Christians have always struggled with this. 
We want to believe that since I am God’s child, surely he will make my life’s journey smooth.  We want to believe that since I have faith in Jesus, I will go from spiritual victory to spiritual victory.
But of course we know that is not true and that “disconnect” from who we are as God’s children- and what we actually experience in life- has always been a faith struggle for Christians.  It makes us wonder:  why is life this way and why do I feel this way?
Satan uses these difficulties to call into question the goodness of God.  He says, “Maybe the problem is not with you—maybe the problem is not with the world—maybe the problem is with God”. And he tempts us to doubt God’s goodness and love.
The Holy Spirit inspired James to write an answer to these questions we have and respond to these temptations of the devil.  The Bible says:
Do not be deceived, my beloved brothers.  Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above,
            The idea that somehow God has failed us when it comes to trial and temptation—the Bible calls a deception—just the opposite of the truth.  The fact of the matter is that our heavenly Father can be counted on to give his children good gifts.
But we also need to understand that God gives good gifts AS our Father.  In other words, it is his wisdom and his values and his foresight and his plans for us that govern the gifts he gives and when he gives them. 
That fatherly wisdom and love begins to explain some of the “disconnect” between our identity as God’s children-- and what we actually experience in life in trials and temptations.
All of us who are parents know that it is neither good nor wise to give our children everything they ask for.  Some things are not good for them.  Some gifts are inappropriate for their age.  Some things are not part of the values of our family.  Some gifts are not even things that they would ask for. 
For example, when we get braces for our children’s teeth it costs us thousands of dollars and is not all that pleasant for them—but we know that it is for their own good.  So it is with God and the good gifts he gives us.
None us would choose some trial for ourselves.  None of us enjoy pain.  But God already knows the kind of person he wants us to become and we mature in our faith as we face those challenges and endure that pain and learn to trust his wisdom—confident that he is working good in our lives because that is who he is.  The Bible says that he is
the Father of lights with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change. 
Our heavenly Father has always been good to us and will always be good to us because he does not change—even though we change by the moment. 
Sometimes our faith is strong—sometimes it is a flickering flame.  Sometimes we do a pretty good job walking in obedience to his will—sometimes we live in open rebellion.  What a blessing to know that we can count on a heavenly Father who is good to us simply because he is good and always be good! 
The truth of that goodness and steadfastness is shown most clearly in God’s desire to save us and make us his children.  The Bible says that:  Of his own will he brought us forth by the word of truth
            It is the will of God to save us.  The Bible says that:  “this is what love is—not that we loved God but the he loved us and sent his Son Jesus to be the sacrifice for our sins”—that “God has chosen us in Christ before the foundation of the world to be his own”—and that our Father who “did not spare his own Son will graciously give us all things in him”.
The Father’s steadfast will to save us is seen most clearly in the perfect gift he gave to us in his Son Jesus.  God has always loved us and will always love us and has given his Son to prove that love beyond any shadow of a doubt. 
Yes, there may be times of trial and temptation when the love of the Father and his attitude towards us is in doubt—but we are directed to the cross where the proof of his unchanging love and saving will for us is seen again and again.
And not only has he given us his Son but he has graciously and providentially ordered our lives so that we could come to faith in Jesus and be saved.  He is the one who has brought us forth, causing us to be born again unto eternal life. 
Many of us were born to Christian parents who taught us the faith.  All of us have been baptized into the death and resurrection of Jesus and had the good news of forgiveness preached to us.  We are fed with Christ’s true body and blood.
Our salvation from beginning to end is the work of a loving Father who has chosen to give us life through faith in his Son by the power of the Holy Spirit working in our lives through the Word.  He did this for a reason…
That we would be “a kind of firstfruits of his creatures.”  Now, what does the Bible mean by that?  Just this:  It is in the lives of Christians who have been born again by the power of the Gospel that we can actually see the fruit of Christ’s redeeming work.  We can see what he has accomplished for us in his death and resurrection. 
One day there will be a new creation--but we can’t see that with our eyes, we have to accept it by faith.  One day there will be no more sorrow or suffering—but we can’t see that with our eyes, we have to accept it by faith.  One day there will be no more trials or temptation—but we can’t see that with our eyes, we have to accept it by faith.
But the fruit of Christ’s redeeming work can be seen in people who have come to faith in Jesus Christ.  In the lives of Christians, we see and hear living and breathing examples of God’s saving purpose in the world—the firstfruits of a new creation where sin and death and the power of the devil have no place.
But what happens when we Christians (who are the fruit of Christ’s redeeming work) do not show the saving work of God because we continue to live in sin as if Christ hadn’t saved us at all?  The Bible says:
Know this, my beloved brothers: let every person be quick to hear, slow to speak, slow to anger; for the anger of man does not produce the righteousness of God.
            James uses the specific examples of anger and sins of speech to make his point—but the effect of sin in our lives, whatever it is, is the same:  it does not produce the righteousness of God in our lives.
Here the Bible is NOT talking about the righteousness that counts before God as salvation (that only comes through Jesus!) but the Bible is talking about the righteous life that ought to come from our faith in Jesus.
In other words, the righteousness that we have by faith in Jesus ought to produce a righteous life in us—hating sin and doing the RIGHT thing.
The specific example from our text has to do with our relationships and the things we say.  Just imagine to yourself what your marriage and family would be like if you were always quick to listen to others, slow to speak, and slow to become angry. 
Of course, we know about ourselves that just the opposite is much too often true—we don’t listen carefully to others—we are much too willing to make sure that we are heard—and we become angry quickly.  And so what is the solution when we find that our lives are not showing the fruit of Christ’s saving work?  The Bible says:
Put away all filthiness and rampant wickedness and receive with meekness the implanted word, which is able to save your souls.
            One of the greatest gifts our heavenly Father gives us is the opportunity to start over.  He never washes his hands of us.  He never says you can’t come back home.  He never tires of forgiving us and lifting us up again.
We don’t always live the righteous way we ought to live as those who are the first-fruits of Christ’s redeeming work.  We give in to temptation.  We let the trials of life lead us to doubt God’s love.  In those moments we need to be clear:  God hasn’t failed us—we’ve failed God. 
That is when it is time to call the sin and doubt what it is-- and put it way by being sorry for it and repenting of it and confessing it to God.  And then listen to God when he tells us that he forgives us and loves us and we are his children and he is our Father and he can be trusted for salvation.  Amen.

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