Saturday, November 22, 2014

The Struggle- My last chapel message back home (Spring 2014)


This is for anyone out there who could use/still use these words.  


The STRUGGLE

          Something is happening here and it’s not good.  Have you noticed it?  What would you call it?  I’d call it an anti-Christian culture but people get weird about labels.  But what is Christian about drug abuse, under aged alcohol use, physical abuse, sexual activity, cheating, bullying, vulgarities, or things like these?

          Come on now Mr. E every school has these issues.  Yes, you are right every school has students struggling with these issues.  Are struggling with it though?  Or have we embraced the alternatives.

          It started out good.  From my point of view the vast majority of us (students, parents, faculty, and administration) openly reject legalism and its wrongheaded point of view of God.  That’s good. It also appears that the vast majority also rejected discipline.  It took me a while to figure this out but legalism and discipline are not the same thing.  Doing something to make God more happy with me or more secure, or doing something out of fear is legalism.  Doing something hard or intentional because of who I am in Christ now is discipline.  Those aren’t equals.

          It started out good.  From my point of view the vast majority of us have subscribed to a worldview of grace.  God is pleased with me, has made me new.  This is good.  It also appears that the vast majority also adopted endorsement of sin.  Nothing is really evil.  Especially if it is also fun, entertaining, or promises satisfaction.  If I do something wrong I shouldn’t face consequences because…grace.  I can’t be held accountable for my wrongdoings because I don’t think they are that wrong, have you seen what other people are doing, that’s worse.    

          When you toss out Christian discipline and you adopt sin endorsement you end up swimming in the biggest pool of relativism that anyone can contrive.  Bible class might say one thing.  The Bible might say one thing.  I might hear one thing at chapel or church, but everywhere else in my life, even on campus everything else is relative. 

          We twist grace to mean that I can explore stupidity and or evil and there will be no consequences.  We twist discipline to be an ugly tool that only rigid fundamentalists are still into.  In this scenario, I no longer know what is right or wrong.  It can change from case to case.

          Your worldview is always going to be shaped by your world.  And (the school) is your world.  Whether you like it or not.  If (the school) is intentionally Christian, full of discipline and grace, then you will know that drug abuse, under aged alcohol use, physical abuse, sexual activity, cheating, bullying, and vulgarities are not compatible with Christ in you.  If we are not intentionally Christian than most of us don’t really feel that strongly about some of that list.  

          Hopefully Christ is in you, and you are no longer dead, and you can feel this struggle.  I’m afraid there is a multitude of people that have no idea what I’m talking about.  All you can hear is blah blah blah Bible God Jesus blah blah.  It breaks my heart.
Others of you have been made new creations but you have bought into the world’s lie that you didn’t change.  So I can repeat it over and over that you are new creations and you can’t hear me.  I speak foreign languages. 

Some of you haven’t been made new creations because you didn’t trust Jesus with your life.  You have your reasons, I respect your decision, wish you would see Jesus for who He is, but only He can find you. 

          I can’t really talk to those people today, unfortunately, unless the Spirit moves their hearts, to them I’m a crazy person and they will start counting down to the bell.  It’s ok, I get that.  The cross is foolishness to those who are perishing.   

So I want to talk to you Christian.  The Christian that can hear me right now.  The Christian that might be drowning in the anti-Christian worldview that surrounds them.  Or maybe you aren’t drowning but you’re in a lifeboat all alone.   Maybe you are the Christian that secretly likes chapel and wishes people be more respectful.   Maybe you are the Christian that got drunk last weekend because you have hit a slippery slope.  Maybe you are the Christian who got drunk last weekend and you secretly like chapel.  If you can hear me I am talking to you.  It doesn’t have to be this way.

          I’m going to turn to Ephesians and let Paul speak to our hearts this morning.  Because I still believe in absolutes and that the Bible is true.  Do you feel me?
   
Ephesians 4:17 in the ESV has a fun title called The New Life.  Paul is writing to the Ephesian Christian’s who have come out of Greek culture and have been made new.
I’m gonna read a portion and then we are going to break it down.

Now this I say and testify in the Lord, that you must no longer walk as the Gentiles do, in the futility of their minds.  They are darkened in their understanding, alienated from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, due to their hardness of heart.  They have become callous and have given themselves up to sensuality, greedy to practice every kind of impurity.  But that is not the way you learned Christ! Assuming that you have heard about him and were taught in him, as the truth is in Jesus, to put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires, and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness.

In this little passage Paul shows us our new relationship with the world now that we are in Christ.  How we learned Christ in a certain way.  And he shows us our new relationship with our old nature.

There are three important parts in this little passage. 
1.    Verses 17-19 is our new relationship to the world now that we are in Christ.
2.    Verses 20-21 is that we learned a new way to live from Jesus
3.    Verses 22-24 is our new relationship to our old nature.

Earlier in Ephesians Paul described our condition before Jesus as dead.  We had no life.  We were dead in trespasses and sin.  Some of those who can’t hear me now are this kind of dead.

I was this kind of dead.  You were this kind of dead.  But the point is…we aren’t dead anymore.  We are alive.  Christ made us alive.  We are new.  New is different.  Alive is different from dead.

When we were dead we did evil instinctually.  We were selfish.  We were pawns of the enemy. 
Now we are reborn in Christ and we have been raised from a dead state to newness of life.  Now we get to renounce the world and its dominion over us. 

This is why Hunger Games and Divergent speaks to your heart.  The new you is to break free from this world and it’s rules. 

Your world is (the school) culture.  It’s rules are drugs, alcohol, oral sex, cheating, bullying, etc.  You get to throw these off.

Being reborn means you are a reversal of who you used to be. 

Paul gives us a command right off the bat.  You must no longer walk as the Gentiles do.  You must no longer walk as the other (the school)ers do.  This isn’t a position of obligation or burden you cannot fulfill.  It’s a belief Christ has in the new you.  He re-made you for this mission. 

NO LONGER.  Yeah we were all like this before.  But we are no longer.  We were once part of the system, alienated from God.  We are no longer

The Ephesians lived in a world that still had Greek heathens.  Their neighbors were still this way.  There was a way to live with them and not live like them. 

Now this would lead to some hard times.  Some persecution possibly.  The anti-Christian culture around you will reject you.  That’s ok.  In 1 Peter 4 he writes about this scenario.  When you stop going with the flow and you are set apart of Jesus, intentionally Jesus, well he writes With respect to this they are surprised when you do not join them in the same flood of debauchery, and they malign you.
Why aren’t you drinking with me buddy?  Because I’m new.  Hmmmmm.  The struggle.

Here’s something to notice about Paul’s command.  He doesn’t just tell them to not join in with unbelievers he tells them specifically to not join in with their unbelieving peers.  For us it would be our unbelieving (the school)ers or those who lead you into evil. 

Mr. E do you really want me to stop hanging out with Jim cause he doesn’t know Jesus?  No.  I want to stop smoking with Jim.  Life together doesn’t equal sinning together.  Intentional sin doesn’t match life in Christ.

…you must no longer walk as the Gentiles do, in the futility of their minds.  They are darkened in their understanding, alienated from the life of God because of the ignorance that is in them, due to their hardness of heart.  They have become callous and have given themselves up to sensuality, greedy to practice every kind of impurity.

The people we want to stop following are futile in their mind, darkened in understanding, and excluded from life with God.  This is kinda serious.

Futility is not stupidity.  Futility is simply incorrect.

The unbeliever lives life as if it ends at death.  YOLO.  So he lives it for selfish purposes.  This life stinks but its better when im high or having sex.  This life is meaningless so I’m going to cheat and plagiarize on everything.    

The Christian believer knows that life is now continuous with Jesus and that they have been found and chosen by God for His purposes.  They have been re-made for His missions. 

The unbeliever or the blind believer sees life as revolving around themselves and so they view a person living Jesus’s way as annoying.  They are in the pursuit of satisfying themselves.  Whatever it takes.  Highs, lows, shortcuts, etc.   

The blind or dead are ignorant due to hard hearts.  It’s like Pharoah.  He suffered from a hardened heart.  So when God was plaguing Egypt Pharaoh remained ignorant and couldn’t see the hand of God working it. 

Like Pharaoh the people you are following are blind guides that can’t see the big picture.  They can’t see the signs of God and they are cut off from His life.  They stay dead.  Are your leaders dead?  Are your choices dead? 

Didn’t we learn Jesus?  Isn’t that what (the school) is supposed to do?  Help you learn Jesus?
After the command to no longer be like those guys.  And describe what those guys are into.  Paul says.

But that is not the way you learned Christ! Assuming that you have heard about him and were taught in him, as the truth is in Jesus…

“Learning Christ” isn’t a normal Christian phrase these days.  We say “born again”, “trust Jesus”, and things like that.  But we learn Christ through discipleship.

We trust in Him, we are made new, and we learn Him.  We learn Him and see all the opportunities we have to live with Him, live for Him.  Opportunities to trust Him further.  To live in the light of Him.  Opportunities to obey Him.  Opportunities to imitate Him in our way.  Opportunities to tell others about Him. 

Notice that we didn’t learn Christ as an abuser, cheater, liar.  He isn’t those things.  We learned that from somewhere else.  We were following someone else.  Jesus doesn’t say go ahead and push the limits and I will waive all the consequences.  He might have paid the piper of your death debt but you are still screwing up your life now.  That’s not what He saved you for. 

And just when it seemed to be too overwhelming and a hefty effort of self, Paul continues.

Assuming that you have heard about him and were taught in him, as the truth is in Jesus, to put off your old self, which belongs to your former manner of life and is corrupt through deceitful desires, and to be renewed in the spirit of your minds, and to put on the new self, created after the likeness of God in true righteousness and holiness.

Brilliant.  The work is completed in me.  I have been remade into the likeness of God’s holiness.  You Christian and been remade into the likeness of God’s holiness.  You have been re-purposed. 

What is required of you is to remember this and mentally throw off your old self and put on the new self, which is to simply live out of who God says you are now.

That new you has different wants than the people of anti-Christian culture that you are following.  Galatians 5:16-24 But I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh.  For the desires of the flesh are against the Spirit, and the desires of the Spirit are against the flesh, for these are opposed to each other, to keep you from doing the things you want to do.

Wait a second, what do I really want to do?  Sex, drugs, and self-gratification?  Surprisingly no.  The new me has been re-purposed.  But alas I live in my old flesh that does want the sex, drugs, and self-gratification.  Turns out that the flesh isn’t me, so those desires aren’t mine.  That’s why Paul says the flesh is full of deceit.  It tricked us.

If you are spiritually dead this isn’t true for you.  Your flesh and you are one in evil desires.  Sorry about that. 

If you are in a spiritual coma this doesn’t feel true for you, but it is.  Your flesh is winning because the Spirit in you in drowning.  But the new you wants something different.  Can you feel that?  Can you feel a struggle?

My flesh keeps me from doing what I want to do.  Paul continues.  Now the works of the flesh are evident: sexual immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry, sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, fits of anger, rivalries, dissensions, divisions, envy, drunkenness, orgies, and things like these. 

So that list of anti-Christian culture are things a new creation NO LONGER desires.  Interesting.  We are re-purposed to stand apart.

Paul continues…I warn you, as I warned you before, that those who do such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.    

This is serious.  But we are split on a consensus on how serious. 

Some of us read this and say, “Yes, now there is something I can do to help Jesus save me.  I can NOT do these things.”  But you can’t help Jesus. 

Some of us read this and say that people who still do these things will not go to heaven.  They have made the leap from inheriting the kingdom with a locational promise.  And we put all who struggle with envy and jealousy on hell watch. 

Some read this and they think inheritance is equal to eternal rewards.  Losing that inheritance would look like the man who suffers lost but remains in the kingdom itself that Jesus mentions of in one of His parables. Also such a case is explained in 1 Corinthians 3:15 by Paul.   From this point of view your eternal life is not snuffed out by these sins!  Your eternal inheritance rewards are lost.  Because our maturity will be rewarded!

If a Christian falls into a sin like getting drunk, or having a fit of anger he does not lose his salvation whether heaven or rewards. 

The Greek verb tense is present which indicates that this speaks of habitual continuance rather than isolated lapses.  So this becomes an identity issue again.  Are you the continual sin in you, or are you Christ in you?  Continual practice is evidence of a missing newness.  The struggle wakes up the sleeper.  Can you feel the struggle?

Charles Spurgeon once said…Christ came to save us from every evil work.  And this is the salvation that we preach-not simply salvation from hell, but salvation from sin.

What are we saved from?  Our sin!  The thing that is destroying us and taking things away from us that we wanted.

Jesus can clean this out of us.  Trust Him to do this work in you that has begun.  He has made you holy.  You get to live out of this! 

Paul tells us what we can expect out of our new nature.  Out of the holiness embedded in the new creation.   But the fruit of the spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, self-control, against such things there is no law.  And those who belong to Christ Jesus have crucified the flesh with it’s passions and desires.

Like he wrote to the Ephesians.  We put off the old and put on the new.  It’s a mental exercise of faith.  Who am I really?  God says I’m His holiness now.  Trusting that truth and living out of it with transform me today!  I am not my flesh.

Galatians 2:20 I have been crucified with Christ.  It is no longer I who live, but Christ who lives in me.  And the life I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.

I am Christ in me.  You are Christ in you.  We are still stuck in our flesh until the grand resurrection of the dead, but even so I can live by faith in Jesus in this flesh.

Truth trusted transforms.

Trusting the truth about Jesus work in me and my call to live out of my re-purposing can transform the culture of (the school).  Do you believe that? 

We tossed out discipline because we hated legalism. 
We started endorsing sins because we embraced grace.

We got confused.  Christian discipline and grace are not opposed.  They are married. 

Christ did not save us, remake us, implant holiness so then we could live however we want like we did before we met Him.

We aren’t compatible with that life any longer.  Do you feel the struggle?

Salvation and sanctification are complete works of God.  Our role in it is trusting and living out of those truths. 

Intentional Christianity is not lived out by those with a pagan mindset.  Pagan culture believes that the past is the key to the present.  What we think and how we act, we are told, is the result of our past.  It is only by understanding our past that we can live as we should in the present.  In other words, the past controls the present.  Our past is tied to our identity.

Jesus reverses this.  Our old life has no bearing on our present.  Christ in us overrides past settings.  He doesn’t hold those things against us going forward.  Yet as we go forward He will challenge you to live for Him, which will require discipline.

He is the Lord that said, “I do not condemn you.”
He is also the Lord who said “Go and Sin no more.” 

This is doable by His power, love, and discipline, in you. 

Let me close by addressing four types of people out there…

Dead person, I hope Jesus finds you as a treasure in a field and as you respond to His love He covers you with His holiness.  Because He already paid the price for you. 

Coma Christian, I hope you are starting to feel the struggle today.  It’s the tiny sign that you are not dead.  Follow that struggle to the feet of Jesus and trust Him to show you how to live out of your new self because living for your old self with your dead friends isn’t abundant life.

Struggling Christian, you are God’s anointed.  He chose you, He remade you.  You can do this.  You can live set apart from this culture that entangles you.  You are Christ in you, no matter what they say.  Even on your worst day, you are Christ in you.  You are Christ in you.  Trust that truth.   This is NOT the end.

Lifeboat Christian, you have kept apart from this mess.  It has cost you socially.  It has been a challenge and sometimes you wondered if it was worth it.  It cost to dress modest.  It cost to skip that one party.  It cost to listen to music that didn’t involve hedonistic lyrics.  It cost to study and work hard instead of cheating.  It cost to respect teachers.  It cost.  But it’s what the new you wanted.  Jesus in you trumped your flesh.  You cooperated with those hard tasks.  You aren’t a lifeboat, you are a lighthouse.  Well done.  You don’t hear this often enough but you’re doing it right.

It’s not about brownie points.  It’s not about earning God’s favor.  It is always going to be about living out of who God says we are now. 





Thursday, June 26, 2014

Abraham is my hero

I recently decided to take a job at a Christian High a School in Pennsylvania.  I move in three days and I've only seen the town and the school once. The house I'm renting was built in the 1900s and I've never yet seen it in person.  It's been such a stretch of trust in God.  And a God has been so kind!  Meanwhile,  I've had a going away party, and dozens of goodbye lunches and dinners.  I'm weary of goodbyes, my heart is truly ready for some "hello's".

Naturally my personal Bible study has led me to Abraham because he is the model for trusting God and heading to new land he has yet to see.  I expected to be impressed by his moving from Ur to Canaan but have found myself blown away by something else in his life.

Abraham was promised things by God.  When God promises things, it's all on Him, we can mess it up.  In fact, He has Abraham fall asleep during His promise ceremony that way there was no human involvement.

This all fine and dandy but what if what God promises is impossible or unbelievable?  Abraham is asked by God to count the stars in the heaven, if he is able. He says I will make your descendants that many.  (Gen 15:5).  Now Abraham was so old he considered himself dead and his wife barren (Rom 4:19).  Pretty hopeless circumstance for having a kid.

We wouldn't blame Abraham if he didn't believe he could have kids.  The natural facts of life said it was impossible.  Yet Abraham stacked up what he knew about Gods character and trustworthiness against his hopeless circumstance and allowed Gods goodness to prevail in his faith.

And this trust in God's promises was credited as RIGHTEOUSNESS to his account, as a gift.(Gen 15:6, Rom 4:20-22)

I bet he had to do the same thing to trust that as well.  All of the natural facts of sin and temptation tell us we can never be righteous.  Yet, God promises that if we trust Jesus in the fullness of His Gospel we are made the righteousness and holiness of God.  Credited to our account as a gift also.  (Rom 4:16, 23, 24)

But just like we would expect God to credit Abraham's ACTIONS of moving to Canaan or the raising of the knife to sacrifice Isaac, we expect to be credited as holy when we ACT more holy.

But God gave holy righteousness to Abraham when He just believed God's promises. Why would it be any different for us?

The apostle Peter wrote, 3 His divine power has granted to us all things that pertain to life and godliness, through the knowledge of him who called us to his own glory and excellence,
4 by which he has granted to us his precious and very great promises, so that through them you may become partakers of the divine nature, having escaped from the corruption that is in the world because of sinful desire. (2 Peter 1:3-4)

Do you trust that promise?

If we chose to believe it, we have rightly measured the character and trustworthiness of God against our hopeless circumstance.

If we chose to believe it, and then we can live out of it.

If we chose to believe it, our faith pleases God so. (Hebrew 11:6)

Tuesday, February 25, 2014

HOLY TO THE LORD

Did God ease up a little in the New Testament?  We seem to have big scary angry God in the Old Testament and then nice fuzzy bearded happy forgiving Jesus in the New Testament.  The thing is the Bible tells us that Jesus is the image of the invisible God.  Jesus Himself said that He and the Father are one.  So which is it?  Are they big scary angry God or nice fuzzy bearded happy Jesus? 

This is something the teaching team at my church have been processing over the last 8 weeks and it’s honestly been the most excited I've been to go to church in years. 

Life giving phrases that have been pulled from God’s word and proclaimed from the pulpit like…

-The Old Testament God has the same essence of the God who protected the harlot from   being stoned in the New Testament.
-Who is the Old Testament God?  He is Hesed “loving kindness” a Hebrew word used 176  times.
-The God of the OT gives unearned forgiveness over and over and over
-Grace is not an invention of the New Testament

This might not be news to you, but it’s easy to read the OT and forget it’s true.  We can easily distrust the OT God.  And distrust is unhealthy for our relationship with Him.

Here’s how God seems to operate…

For every unbeliever God’s emphasis is conviction of sin. 
For every believer God’s emphasis is conviction of His love.  

So what if the goal of God for mankind before Christ’s coming was conviction of sin and after His coming was conviction of His love and our new identity?

I drive home every Sunday thinking through my favorite Old Testament stories and I’m finding His loving kindness all over the place.  It’s overwhelming. 

This Sunday I drove home and I was drawn to the book of Zechariah.  It’s a tough book to read sometimes and so many stay away from it, including myself, but it has beautiful imagery of God’s plan for us.  Other than Isaiah and the Psalms, Zechariah packs the most foreshadowing of Jesus.

I want to look at Zechariah with you.  If you can get in your mental time machine we are going to Israel after the Babylonian captivity.  Nebuchadnezzar conquered Judah took them to Babylon.  Persia took over Babylon and eventually Persia let some of the Jews go home.  Any who wanted actually and it wasn't very many.

They went home, rebuilt the city walls of Jerusalem.  Another wave of Jews came under Ezra and they started to rebuild God’s temple, but they got distracted and sinful and  stopped construction.  During this pause God calls Zechariah to speak to the people as a prophet.

He is given so much information in a short period of time starting with 10 visions in one night.  They take up the first 6 chapters.  I want to look at the fourth vision this morning. 

Many Bible scholars say you can only understand the individual visions in the context of all ten.  For the sake of time here is the gist of all ten visions. 
1.    I AM a Jealous God.  God wants Israel to love Him so badly.
2.    I will punish your enemies
3.    I will live among you (just build my house)
4.    I will restore the priesthood
5.    This is My Work “not by might nor by power, but by my Spirit says the Lord”
6.    I will deal with sinners
7.    I will remove wickedness
8.    At my command are powerful angels.  

What does all this mean?  Judah had gone into captivity for many years because of their turning away from God.  They hadn't heeded Jeremiah’s warnings and they lost their home.  Now they had returned home but they were not yet restored before God. 

In the Old Testament an analogy is drawn of Israel as Gods wife.  Judah is what is left of Israel.  It’s His broken and wounded bride.  But He desires her so.  He wants to be with her.  We are not used to perfect love like this.

In Jerusalem at this time is a man named Joshua.  He is not the Joshua who fought the battle of Jericho.  He is the high priest of the people.  It’s his job to stand before the Lord on the Day of Atonement and represent the people.  Seek pardon for their sins.
The fourth vision opens up with Joshua standing before God.  Now before we read it I want to point out something we couldn't possible see so far today.  Zechariah asked questions through the first three visions and almost all of the last four.  This is the only vision in which he sees so clearly and understands so readily he asks nothing but instead has the confidence to add commentary.  Beautiful.

Zechariah chapter 3.
Then he showed me Joshua the high priest standing before the angel of the LORD, and Satan standing at his right hand to accuse him.
This is what my everyday feels like.  Satan loves to let me know what he thinks I stink at.

And the LORD said to Satan, “The LORD rebuke you, O Satan!  The LORD who has chosen Jerusalem rebuke you!  Is not this a brand plucked from the fire?  Now Joshua was standing before the angel, clothed with filthy garments. 

You get the picture, right?  Joshua’s garments are soiled.  Some scholars say they even have poop on them.  (Hebrew word tsow used once for vomit and a second time for poop) He has a poop shirt on. 

Joshua is covered in the people’s sins.  He represents not only himself but all of Judah as their high priest.  Satan has so much ammunition against him.  So much sin to bring the LORDS attention.  So much possible poop.  Joshua is powerless against Satan’s accusations.  He is wearing all the sin.  Yet he is adored and treasured by God.  A brand plucked from the fire. 

Back in the day we used to write on paper.  They even do so in the time period of Zechariah.  Imagine you have been writing all morning at your desk.  You know the picture of the writer tossing rough draft paper balls in the trash?  After three or so hours of work there is a heap of papers in the trash you need to get rid of, and you go to your fireplace because it’s an old school metaphor and those are always more romantic.  You place the unwanted papers in the fire and they begin to blaze.  Suddenly, to your dismay, you remember that your best idea of the day is in that pile!  This isn't Windows you can’t just get it out the digital recycling bin.  The papers all on fire! 

As quick as you can you rush to the kindling flames, and snatch away the paper, and attempt to stop the gnawing edge of the flame.  This precious paper smokey, charred, and a bit brittle round the edges, scorched and hot, it might even have holes- it’s a brand plucked from the fire. 

Would you have snatched it out if you hadn't treasured it?  After that whole ordeal is there is it likely you will throw it back in? Would God have snatched Judah out of Babylon, and expended so much time and care over her, if at the end He meant to destroy her?  The fact of His deliverance, not only proves His love, it implies it will continue on more powerfully!

God essentially can say to Satan.  “Nice, accusations, but you are too late.”

Something remarkable happens next.

And the angel said to those who were standing before him, “Remove the filthy garments from him.”  And to him he said, “Behold, I have taken your iniquity away from you, and I will clothe you with pure vestments.” 

Iniquity is an ugly word.  It’s the Hebrew word ‘awon’ which is a general term for the whole sinful disposition leading to distress and guilt.  Joshua had incurred the wrath of God, but this vision demonstrates that God accepted Joshua and the people he represented by removing all that offended Him.

On top of that Joshua is clothed in new apparel.  Holy robes Joshua could never provide for himself.  Not ever.

Zechariah the prophet chimes in on the scene.

And I said, “Let them put a clean turban on his head.”  (What?  Why?)

 So they put a clean turban on his head and clothed him with garments.  And the angel of the LORD was standing by.

This is actually beautiful symbolism.  The garments of the high priest included a turban, and on that turban were the words: HOLY TO THE LORD. (Ex 28:36)  Joshua had become just that.

But the big question Zechariah and us the readers might wonder is how?  By what power did this all occur?  Did God just make it so?  How is he holy now?

Jesus.  That’s where this vision is headed.  Think about the book of Romans.  The first three chapters mankind is set before us as a sinner before God.  We all stand dirty before Him.  And our righteousness-even on our best days-is just filthy rags in God’s sight.  It’s poop shirts.  We stand in Joshua’s prior condition.  What can we do? 

Nothing.  What can God do?

Romans 3:21-25
But now the righteousness of God has been manifested apart from the law, although the Law and the Prophets bear witness to it- the righteousness of God through faith in Jesus Christ for all who believe.  For there is no distinction: for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and are justified by His grace as a gift, through the redemption that is in Christ Jesus, whom God put forward as a propitiation by His blood, to be received by faith.  This was to show God’s righteousness, because in His divine forbearance he had passed over former sins.  It was to show his righteousness in the present time, so that he might be just and the justifier of the one who has faith in Jesus.

That’s what God did for you.  That’s what God demonstrates in this vision upon Joshua.  His righteous holiness was placed upon Joshua.  So where did the wrath go?

It went upon my favorite word.  PROPITIATION.  It means turning away wrath by an offering!

I like to think of it this way. Seniors, I’m sorry you have to hear this one more time.  A young soldier is in the battle field and has been for a long time.  He is tired, filthy, and hungry.  The fighting has been going on for days and all he wants is to find a quiet safe location out of the line of fire to eat a can of cold beans he has in his front chest pocket.  He doesn't have a trench to use because this war is being fought in a Croatian city, so he stumbles into the ruins of an old bank and hides behind a concrete pillar.  He hears the fighting all around him, but he desires those beans.  He pulls them out, tears open the can with his knife and begins eating the beans and refreshing his soul.  His captain slides up next to him, and asks “What in the world are you doing son?  Don’t you know we are at war?!”  The young soldier nods and answers, “Sorry captain, I was just so hungry.”  All of the sudden the two men hear the piercing sound of a heat seeking missile launched in their direction by the nearby enemy.  The missile will surely see past the cold concrete buildings and find the soldiers inside.  Death awaits, the wrath of the missile awaits!  But the wise captain without a moment to spare pulls out of his pack a flare…lights it…and tosses it into the sky above.  BOOM!!!!!!!!  The missile seeks and destroys the flare instead of the soldiers.  The flare had become the propitiation for the wrath of the enemy.  Jesus on the cross was like a flare for you.

God’s wrath was poured out.  Justice was paid.  But not on you.  It was absorbed by the cross.

You hear people say our sins past, present, and future were upon the cross and I’m sure that’s true.  But you know what else?  The prophet Isaiah said He bore our grief and sorrows.  All the ways we have been wronged, all the pain we feel.  Jesus took it.  He can make all things new.

Hold that thought.  Back to the vision in Zechariah.  The LORD wants to talk.

And the angel of the LORD solemnly assured Joshua, “Thus says the LORD of hosts:  If you will walk in my ways and keep my charge, then you shall rule my house and have charge of my courts, and I will give you the right of access among those who are standing here. 

It is so revolutionarily huge that God says this after Joshua has been made HOLY TO THE LORD and not before.  Before when He was sin if God said “If you walk in my ways and keep my charge…yada yada.”  Are you kidding me?  Never in life.

But Joshua has been made HOLY TO THE LORD so now he can walk in God’s ways and keep God’s charge.  He can.  Those are holy things and he is holy now.  It’s his new desire.

Why can he do it and we do it?  Because Jesus already has.  In all of these things the person and work of Joshua’s greater namesake Jesus, was being anticipated. 

Some people have the idea that if they are saved by grace they can do as they please.  Oh it’s so true but not like you think.  Those who are saved are now pleased to obey.  It’s the good they want to do.  

If you always do as you please then are you saved by grace?

If you trust Jesus you rest in Jesus.  If you rest in Him, you will grow in obedience to Him and do what He wants you to do because you trust Him. 

Hear now, O Joshua the high priest, you and your friends who sit before you, for they are men who are a sign; 

Joshua and his friends were the priesthood.  A symbol of the priest to come…Jesus and maybe a hint at the priesthood of all believers.  (1 Peter 2:9)

Jesus will now be described as the Branch.

behold, I will bring my servant, the Branch.  For behold, on the stone that I have set before Joshua, on a single stone with seven eyes, I will engrave it’s inscription, declares the LORD of hosts, and I will remove the iniquity of this land in a single day.  In that day, declares the LORD of hosts, every one of you will invite his neighbor to come under his vine and under his fig tree.”

The name Branch is a big Messiah reference in OT prophecy.  Isaiah uses that figure to predict Jesus first coming as Savior (Is 11:1) “There shall come forth a shoot from the stump of Jesse and a branch from his roots shall bear fruit.  Then Jeremiah uses the title for Jesus’ second coming (Jeremiah 23:5) “Behold, the days are coming, declares the LORD, when I will raise up for David a righteous Branch, and he shall reign as king and deal wisely, and shall execute justice and righteousness in the land.

A stone or precious jewel is not given to Joshua but laid before him.  This stone has seven eyes or seven facets depending on the translation.  It will be inscribed.  Seems like a cornerstone for a new building.  Perhaps the temple?  Some argue it is a well stone that gushes forth living water to cleanse sin from its eyes.  The only thing clear about it is that it was perfect clear to Zechariah when he saw it because he didn't ask “What’s that rock for?”  So we can ask him later. 

Joshua stands in his sin, He is made HOLY TO THE LORD by God’s decision to offer Jesus and by nothing on his own.  He can fulfill God’s commands now because Jesus has already fulfilled them and is working in us to complete us.  This Jesus was the long prophesied Servant, the twice visiting Branch. 

The One who will remove iniquity from the land in one day.

During all the years that Israel had sinned, they had still offered sacrifices, but their sacrifices had never taken away sin. 

No sacrifice of yours or mine can ever take away sin. 

There isn't any punishment you can give yourself to take it away.

There isn't any penance you can do to work it off.

The one sacrifice of Jesus upon Golgotha, the one sin-bearing act on Calvary has put away sin in one day, and put it away forever, so that no further sacrifice is needed, no new blood, no new Atonement.  It is done.

Heaven? Satisfied.  Justice? Content.  Mercy? Has freed you.  God? Is glorified.  In one day, without your help, without any help, alone, solitary God in the Person of His Son Jesus put away sin forever.

Jesus took our sin and the death that comes with it and was buried with it.  But only Jesus came back.  Sin and death are defeated.

What can Satan now say?  Of what can you be accused? 

Jesus says to Satan, “It’s too late.  I already love them.”

The God of the Old Testament is certainly the God of the New who in the person of Jesus dismissed the crowds who sought to kill the sinful woman caught in adultery.   She was caught.  She was dirty.  But He pardoned her and gave her new life.  Only He could.  

His request to her, He would request of us…”Go and sin no more.”

Don’t let these words crush your spirit.

Jesus didn't say, “Clean yourselves”
Jesus didn't say, “Do you laundry. Poop shirt.”
Jesus didn't say, “If you sin again I’m gonna be ticked off”
Jesus didn't say, “If you can’t get it right you are going to have to pay big time”
Jesus didn't say, “The only way to please me is by your perfection”

This isn't obedience by obligation.
This isn't obedience by ought.
This is obedience by can
This is obedience by want to

‘Sin no more’ isn't His expectation.

‘Sin no more’ is His empowerment.  It’s a battle cry.  It’s Jesus belief in who you really are.  The new you.  Jesus in you…underneath your flesh.

1 John 1:10 makes it clear If we say we have not sinned, we make him a liar, and his word is not in us.

We will sin.  But sin is no longer a lifestyle choice.  1 John 3:9 No one born of God makes a practice of sinning, for God’s seed abides in him,

When we sin, Jesus says ‘I love you, I got this, now sin no more’. 

When we fall we can fall forward.  We have no need to run away from God, He planned the work of the cross so you could be together.  We aren't used to this kind of perfect love.  But while you were still a sinner He died for you.  Abide in Him and then…sin no more.

We can practice His righteousness in us by trusting what He says is true about us.  We are HOLY TO THE LORD.  We can walk in that.  Through that faith in His work we please Him.

1 John 3:19-24 closes these thoughts perfectly...

By this we shall know that we are of the truth and reassure our hearts before Him; for whenever our heart condemns us, God is greater than our heart, and He knows everything.  Beloved, if our heart does not condemn us, we have confidence before God; and whatever we ask we receive from Him, because we keep His commandments (he will name 2 whole things) and do what pleases Him (trust Him fully).  And this is His commandment, that we believe in the name of His Son Jesus Christ and love one another, just as He has commanded us.  Whoever keeps His commandments abides in God, and God in Him.  And by this we know that He abides in us, by the Spirit whom He has given us.