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Delivered to Satan--Part 1
by
John MacArthur
All Rights Reserved
(A copy of this message on cassette tape may be obtained by calling 1-800-55-GRACE)
1 Timothy 1:20 Tape: GC 54-9
First Timothy 1:18: "This command I commit unto thee, son
Timothy, according to the prophecies which pointed to thee that
thou by them might war a good warfare, holding faith and a good
conscience which some having put away have made shipwreck
concerning the faith, of whom are Hymenaeus and Alexander whom I
have delivered unto Satan that they may learn not to blaspheme."
My intention for this Lord's day was just to finish up the
third point in the outline and move on next Lord's day to chapter
2. But as I began to look at verse 20, which was the final point
in this brief outline looking at the passage, I was struck by the
statement "whom I have delivered unto Satan." And I found myself
pressed to pursue the meaning of that idea. What does it mean to
be delivered to Satan? And so, as we understand the significance
of verse 20, we must understand a greater context of being
delivered to Satan. Then this will make good sense to us.
So, if I might, this morning and next Lord's day, I want to
expand that idea of being delivered to Satan. I even desire to
illustrate it with some very pointed and specific illustrations
out of our own congregation so that we'll understand exactly what
that phrase comes to mean. It is a frightening line, delivered
unto Satan. It is a startling thought that someone would be
given over to the devil himself, but that is precisely what it
says, that is precisely what Paul has done to these two men and
it is precisely what he is inviting Timothy to do as well to
others who are worthy of such a fate. It is a portion of the
ministry of the church as it is a ministry of God Himself to
deliver people to Satan.
Now the word "deliver" in verse 20, paradidomi means to hand
over, to give over, to commit. Or the best translation to get
the sense here, to abandon...to abandon, hands off is the idea,
to remove protection and abandon someone to Satan. It is the
same word in Acts 15:26 that the Authorized version translates
"hazarded." Because it intends to convey the idea of being
exposed to great danger, to be out from under any insulation, any
protection, any shelter and given over totally to Satan.
Now Paul did this at the church at Ephesus as he says and he
invites Timothy to carry on the same kind of work. So it is a
work of importance and it is a work of God.
There is a parallel to this, one other passage which uses
the same terms and I want you to turn to it in 1 Corinthians
chapter 5. First Corinthians chapter 5 speaks of a person who is
guilty of a form of incest in the church and it says in verse 5
of this person, this person living with his father's wife in a
fornication relationship, verse 5, "Enjoins the church at Corinth
to deliver such a one to Satan for the destruction of the flesh."
Those two places, 1 Timothy 1:20, 1 Corinthians 5:5, are the two
places in the New Testament where we have the idea of abandoning
someone to Satan explicitly stated in that way.
Now listen carefully to what I say because it's essential
that you understand this. There are some people who go around
today and say there are no conditions under which any Christian
should ever be subject to Satan. I hear that from Charismatic
people continually and that is not what the Scripture teaches.
The Scripture clearly teaches that not only is it a possibility
to be handed over to Satan but it is a ministry of the church to
do that. There are times and places and circumstances under the
plan of God in which individuals are definitely to be turned over
to Satan. And there are times and occasions when God Himself
does that very thing.
Now listen carefully as we analyze this biblically. Being
turned over to Satan in both of these references that I have
mentioned to you has the idea of being put out of the church, of
beingdisfellowshipped, or in theoldterminology,
excommunicated. It has the idea of being cut off from any
further association with the saints of God and the Lord's table.
It would be in the terms of Matthew 18 to take one who has by
continual sin been put out of the church and treat them like an
unbeliever. It is to say then that to turn someone over to Satan
means that prior to that they were not fully in his power else
there could be no turning over, there could be no committing and
no abandoning to Satan if they were already in his power.
Now 1 John 5:19 says the whole world lies in the lap of the
wicked one. The world is already in his hands. The world has
already been delivered to him by sin. The instruction to the
church to turn someone over to Satan means that that someone is
not at that time fully in Satan's control. So we must therefore
be talking about people who are in one way or another under the
umbrella of protection provided by the church. And there is in
the church the insulation and the protection and the care and the
love and the blessing of God. So we're talking here about people
who are under the care of the church or within the community of
redeemed people, under the protection of God, a part of the
pouring out of His blessing who are at some point in time put out
of that protection and left fully exposed to Satan.
Now, this could be true of believers or unbelievers. You
say, "How so?" Because there are unbelievers in the church as
there were unbelievers within the community of the redeemed in
Israel who by virtue of their association with the people of God
were therefore under certain amount of protection. And by virtue
of a splash effect, people who are around those who are receiving
the showers of blessing are also going to get wet. And so God
has given even to an unbeliever by virtue of his proximity to or
his involvement with the redeemed community a certain amount of
protection...a certain amount of blessing.
Let's look at some illustrations of that. The first one is
in Genesis chapter 18...Genesis chapter 18. And I think you're
going to see some very startling things as we examine this. In
Genesis chapter 18 and verse 26, God had articulated that He was
going to destroy the city of Sodom, a city filled with evil, a
wretched city known for its flagrant violent homosexuality. And
in verse 26 the Lord says in His conversation with Abraham, "If I
find in Sodom fifty righteous within the city, then I'll spare
all the place for their sakes." Isn't that amazing? You have a
whole city, the sin of which has risen to the nostrils of God,
gross evil, a whole city which deserves the wrath of God to be
poured out and the Lord says, "If I can find 50 righteous people,
I'll spare the whole city." Now that's the insulation that comes
to the undeserving simply because of their proximity to the
righteous.
Abraham says, "What about 45?" in verse 28. And the Lord
says, "All right, if I can find 45, I won't destroy it."
Abraham's on a roll at this point, so he says, "What about 40?"
The Lord says, "I'll not do it for 40's sake." "Suppose 30?"
"I'll not do it for 30." Gets all the way down to verse 32 and
he says, "What about 10?" And the Lord said, "Suppose there
shall be 10." Abraham says the Lord said, "I won't destroy it
for 10's sake." Amazing. A whole city of thousands and
thousands of people would be spared because of God's desire to be
gracious to 10 people who belong to Him. By the way, there
weren't 10 and God did destroy the city.
But the point is this, proximity to, and involvement with
the redeemed people of God acts as a protection and an insulation
even to unbelievers. And that can be seen in the history of
Israel. There were within the nation Israel many unbelieving
Jews, many--in the words of Paul--Jews who were not true Jews,
were Jews by nationality but not by faith, and yet all of God's
abundant blessing to the nation, giving them the promised land
with all of its riches, pouring out the wondrous blessing of the
ceremonial sacrificial system and the priesthood, all of God's
protection and care and defeating of their enemies was a blessing
to the secular Jew in that nation as much as it was in one sense
to the religious Jew for it acted as a protection and insulation
for the unbeliever as well.
The point is the same in the church. The church has
unbelievers in it who by virtue of just being in the church
visibly, by attending and associating, are therefore the
recipient of the blessing that the Lord pours out on His church
in a secondary sense. To see that illustrated, turn in your
Bible to 1 Corinthians chapter 7 where it is most significantly
made clear. And here Paul is discussing marriage and the
question of whether an unbelieving partner should...a believing
partner rather should stay with an unbelieving partner. If
you're a Christian wife, should you stay with a non-Christian
husband? If you're a Christian husband, should you stay with a
non-Christian wife? And in verse 14, Paul answers the question
by saying, "The unbelieving husband is sanctified by the wife,
the unbelieving wife is sanctified by the husband." And then
goes on to say, "Else were your children unclean but now they too
are sanctified."
In other words, an unbelieving spouse and children within a
family where there is a non-believer are all the beneficiaries of
God's blessing. Sanctified doesn't mean they're saved, it
doesn't mean they receive redemption by virtue of their family
relationship, what it does mean is that there again is that
splash effect. They're around when the showers of blessing come
and they get wet.
So, the point that Paul is making is don't unload your
unchristian spouse because of the benefit to him or her in just
being around you when God pours out His grace. And even the
children are blessed and often led to salvation. So the idea
then is this, that there is in the shelter of the people of God a
protection from the full blast of Satan's evil designs. And we
could conclude in the Old Testament that an unbelieving Jew in
the nation Israel was better off than an unbelieving Jew outside
the nation Israel where there was no promise of covenant
protection. And we can conclude in the new covenant that an
unbeliever associated with the church and involved with the
church is better off than an unbeliever out there under the full
fury of Satan and lying in the arms of the wicked one. Simply by
virtue of the fact that as God is good to His own, those who are
in proximity to His own will benefit in some way from that
goodness. And that explains why there are people who want to
hang around the church even though they do not want to receive
the Christ who is the head of the church.
Now it is important to note then that for someone to be
delivered over to Satan means that they are put out of the
insulation and protection of that believing community and they
are given over fully to Satan, God withdrawing all of His hand of
protection which they to what ever degree have enjoyed.
Now I want you to understand how this works so I want to go
back to the Old Testament and I want you to see as well as the
New Testament this morning that God has...listen carefully...for
his own reasons personally put people out from under the
protection of the believing community and into Satan's control.
God Himself has done that. And I want you to see that from
several biblical illustrations.
Let's go back to the book of Job. And this is where we
begin, the book of Job. In Job chapter 1, we are introduced to
this man who was perfect and upright and feared God and shunned
evil. It describes him as a man who had ten children, 7,000
sheep, 3,000 camels, 500 yoke of oxen, 500 she asses, a great
household. This man was the greatest of all the men of the east.
His sons went and feasted in their houses, everyone his day and
sent and called for their three sisters who eat and drink with
them. And when the days of their feasting were finished that Job
sent and sanctified them and rose up early in the morning and
offered burnt offerings according to the number of them all, for
Job said it may be that my sons have sinned and cursed God in
their hearts, thus did Job continually.
This man was so spiritually conscientiousness that he not
only kept his heart right before God but he offered sacrifices
for his children on just the presumption that they may have
thought something in their heart that was wrong and he wanted to
be sure that sin was covered. This is a good man, the best of
men, as well as the most prosperous man in the east.
Now in verse 6 there is a day when the sons of God, that
refers to angels, came to present themselves before the Lord.
Now we don't know what day it was. We don't know what the
occasion was. We don't know what the circumstances were. That's
as much as we know, that angelic beings came before the Lord and
Satan came with them, he being that fallen one, Lucifer. He came
and the Lord said, "Satan, where did you come from?" And Satan
answered the Lord and said, "From going to and fro in the earth
and from walking up and down in it," which tells us where he
spends his time. And the Lord said unto Satan, "Have you
considered My servant Job, that there is none like him in the
earth, a perfect and an upright man, one who fears God and shuns
evil? Have you considered My servant?"
You see, Satan is always wanting to diminish the work of
God, always wanting to destroy the work of God, always wanting to
show God up. And I'm sure he was there to make some accusation
against God before all the rest of the angelic beings that were
there. He wanted to make God look bad, that's his desire. And
so, God says, "Have you looked at My servant Job? And what a
good man he is. And Satan answered the Lord and says, Does Job
fear God for nothing?" You think he loves You and trusts You and
believes in You the way he does for nothing? You think he does
that just because it's in his heart to do that? Why, "You made a
hedge around him and around his house and around all he has on
every side, and You bless the work of his hands, and his
substance has increased in the land."
Why do you think he worships You, because he's a pragmatist,
he knows who's delivering the goods. I mean, it's simple, he
knows how to open the flood gate, he does his thing for You and
You unload on him, all the blessings, of course he's good. But
not for nothing. Hmph. "Put forth Your hand now," Satan says in
verse 11, "touch all that he has, he'll curse You to Your face."
Take away his stuff and he'll curse Your faith.
"And the Lord said to Satan," follow this, "Behold all that
he has is in your power." Underline that. Behold all that he
has is in your power. God turned Job over to Satan, no question
about it. God turned Job over to Satan. That was a divine act
by the sovereignty of God. Only upon himself don't put your
hand. You can do anything you want to his stuff, but don't touch
him.
So, Satan went out of the presence of the Lord. He was
turned over to Satan. "And there was a day when his sons and
daughters were eating and drinking wine in their eldest brother's
house, there came a messenger to Job and said the oxen were
plowing and the ass is feeding beside them and the Sabeans fell
upon them, took them away." Hymph. "They have slain the
servants with the edge of the sword and I only am escaped to tell
you. And while he was yet speaking, there came also another and
said the fire of God has fallen from heaven and has burned up the
sheep and the servants and consumed them and I am only escaped to
tell you."
Satan did several things. He got inside and infused hatred
into the Sabeans. They came and wiped out some of his animals.
Satan got some people to start a fire, burned up all his crops
and all of his sheep. The Chaldeans came, he motivated the
Chaldeans. You see, Satan moves upon all kinds of human
agencies. They fell on the camels, carried them away, slew the
servants with the edge of the sword, lost it all. Verse 19, "And
there came a great wind from the wilderness, smote the four
corners of the house where everybody was having a banquet. It
fell on the young man and they're dead and I'm the only one
escaped." Just wiped him out. Just wiped him out, all of his
crops, all of his animals, all of his sons.
"And Job tore his mantle, shaved his head, fell on the
ground and cursed God." Is that what it says? Fell on the
ground and what? Worshiped. And said, "Naked came I out of my
mother's womb and naked shall I return there. The Lord gave, the
Lord has taken away." Listen to this line, what? "Blessed be
the name of the Lord."
And in all this, Job did not sin, nor charge God with some
kind of folly. You say, "What's the point?" The point is this,
God made a point to the devil and to the whole world of people
who have ever read that account. And the point is this, that
true saving faith is not dependent on positive circumstances.
That's the point. What a point. You see, the devil thought
well, these people follow You because You give them all the
stuff. And what the Lord is saying is I'll tell you this, that
when I redeem a life and when I transform a life and when a soul
is converted and when a man truly loves Me, that love is not
built on circumstances. And in a sense, Job is just almost
superfluous to the point here. God is making a point with Satan
and to make the point He uses Job and the point is to show the
strength and the continuity and the unwavering character of true
saving faith, true love for God. Tremendous.
I hear all the time out of the book of Job that Job is to
teach us how to deal with suffering. Job, the whole point of Job
is to show the character of a godly man. And the character of a
godly man is that he loves God and worships God not because of
what God has done in giving him things, but because of a pure
devotion alone. He trusted God.
Satan came back. Another time there was a meeting in
chapter 2 and Satan goes through the same conversation. God
says, "Have you considered My servant Job? And he says, Let me
at him again." And so in verse 6 chapter 2 the Lord said to
Satan, "Behold he's in your hand, this time you can hit him but
you can't kill him....you can't kill him. Satan went right out
of the presence of the Lord and smote Job with sore boils from
the sole of his foot to his crown." Mark it, folks, Satan can
bring disease...Satan can bring disease. And here is Job with a
broken piece of pottery, scrapping off the scabs and boils as he
sits in the ash pile. And that was a symbol of his mourning and
his sadness. And his very helpful wife who was not a Proverbs 31
woman, comes up and says, "Curse God and die." And he said to
her, "You're a foolish woman. Shall we receive good at the hand
of God and not receive evil? In all this did not Job sin with
his lips."
This is incredible. God is making a monumental point about
the nature of true salvation, about the nature of true godliness,
about the nature of a really upright heart. The person who
really loves God is not the person who loves God because of what
he gets, but the person who loves God because of who he is.
That's the point. And you say, "Well, it wasn't very fair to
make Job the illustration just to make a point." Oh? You've got
to see beyond just the life of one individual to the fact that
God was making a point for all eternity. He has the sovereign
right to do that.
Well, you know how the rest of the story goes. He has a
bunch of well-meaning friends who come over and give him a bunch
of baloney, from chapter 4 to chapter 37. That's, you know, 33
or 34 chapters of double-talk. And in the middle of it all, Job
is sad and he's heartbroken. Chapter 3 through chapter 10
chronicle Job's sorrow and he's really hurting. He's in pain, "O
that my grief were thoroughly weighed and my calamity laid in the
balances," chapter 6 verse 2. Chapter 10, he says, "My soul is
weary of life." And he says in verse 2 of chapter 10, "God, do
not condemn me, show me why You're contending with me." What are
You doing with me? I just want to know what's going on. I can't
understand it. I can't explain it. I've lost my crops, my
animals, my sons, my home. I've lost my health. All I've got
left is a wife that I'd really like to trade in for a few of the
other things that I lost. And in all of this, I don't have any
clue about why this is going on. Why are You doing this?
There's no answer. The heavens are vaulted. They're
absolutely silent. And in the vacuum in the silence of God come
all these other people with their wrong answers. Finally,
wonderfully in chapter 38, God speaks. And it says, "Then the
Lord answered Job out of the whirlwind." You know what the Lord
said? The Lord didn't say, "Well, look, Job, I want to tell you
about this. Now here's why I'm doing this, see. First of all,
Satan came up there one day and he said...."
Listen, Job didn't know that until he read this book later,
which he probably never did. He didn't know. He didn't know
what was going on in chapter 1 and 2. That happened in heaven.
He didn't know that. And when the Lord comes the Lord doesn't
tell him. The Lord just says, in effect, why are you even asking
those kind of questions, where were you when I made the world?
Where were you when I laid out the foundation? Where were you
when I created mountains and seas? Where were you when the
morning stars, the angels sang together and all the sons of God
shouted for joy at the creation? What do you know about life?
What do you know about death?
In other words, what He's saying is I'll do exactly what I
want and who are you to question Me? And He just reveals
Himself, His omnipotence, His character.
And finally Job gets the message in chapter 42. "And Job
answered the Lord and said, O, I see, I get it, You can do
everything and no thought can be withheld from You and who's ever
going to hide counsel without knowledge, therefore have I uttered
that which I understood not, things too wonderful for me which I
knew not."
You know what he says? God, I understand, You're God,
You're sovereign, You can do anything. You know everything. You
have all the privileges. I'm a fool for even opening my mouth, I
apologize. I've been talking about things far beyond my
understanding which I knew not. Too awesome for me to
understand. "So hear me, Lord, hear me, and this is what I want
You to hear. I had heard of You with the hearing of mine ear,
but now my eyes seeth You." What does he mean by that? I knew
about You only from hearing, now I know about You from personal
experience. I've seen You in action. And I hate myself and
repent in dust and ashes.
This dear man showed his godliness. He had the right
response. O God, he said, the sin in all of this is my sin, for
not recognizing Your sovereign right to give and take away. What
I said in the beginning is true, the Lord gave, the Lord takes
away, blessed be the name of the Lord. Who was I to ever
question? God, You had every right to do what You did.
Listen, the whole point of this book is to show the
character of genuine godliness, is to show the unbreakable
reality of a redeemed soul, that under no pressure will he
abandon his God, under no pressure will he deny his God, under
the loss of everything he stands true. Someone came to me this
morning after the first service and said, "I think now for the
first time I understand why God has brought suffering into my
life, I never could understand it. We've examined every single
possible reason and now," he said, "people are always saying to
me, I can't believe that you can have such great faith in God in
the midst of this, and now I understand that that's the point."
If nothing else, it demonstrates the character of true
conversion, see, of true love for God. And it led Job from a
limited understanding of God to an even greater understanding for
God. And, of course, God poured out blessings starting in verse
7, gave him back more than he had to begin with. God blessed him
with tremendous abundance and he died, but not until he was old
and full of days, verse 17 says. He had the most beautiful
daughters. God gave him the most handsome sons. God gave him
the finest crops. Yes, there comes a time when God will reward
the faithful person. But, for a time--mark it--the Lord in His
sovereign purpose may choose to turn one of His own over to Satan
for His own purposes, if for nothing else then to demonstrate to
a watching world the strength and character of genuine conversion
so that the world will see people who love God not for what He
gives but for who He is. And our weak insipid shallow pop
theology of today is ignorant of that. Job was used by God to
prove the character of true love for God, true devotion to God.
What a thought.
And it was not without great benefit to him because he
learned about God's sovereignty. And he learned a deeper love of
God. He found in himself some sins he didn't know he had and he
understood the necessity submitting...of submitting himself to
divine rule no matter what it involved.
A true believer then can be given over to
Satan to bring greater glory to God. But Satan has limits to
what he can do, right? First, God said to him you can't touch
him. The second time around, you can touch him but you
can't...what?...you can't kill him. There's always a restraint
even when one is turned over to Satan.
Do not be surprised, beloved, that within the church of
Jesus Christ there are some who unable to find any reasons why
end up in a situation where it looks like God has totally removed
His hand of protection and blessing. And they are in the same
quizzical confusion of a Job, they cannot understand why it
happened, they cannot humanly explain why it happened. And the
answer is somewhere on a divine level which may or may not become
known to us. But God has His holy purposes. And in His grace
there will come a restoration and a time of great blessing.
Now turn with me as another illustration of this to Matthew
chapter 4. And I want to show you something that is equally
amazing, Matthew chapter 4. Now here we find another act by
which God turns over someone to Satan. And this time it's one
who is even more upright than Job, one who is even more perfect
than Job, one who was utterly and absolutely and totally without
sin, even the Lord Jesus Christ Himself. Notice Matthew chapter
4 verse 1. "Then was Jesus led up by the Spirit into the
wilderness." Let up by the Spirit...Mark 1:12 says He was
impelled by the Spirit. For what purpose? Notice, "For the
purpose of being tempted, or tested, by the devil."
Now listen to that. God not only turned Job over to the
devil, He turned Christ over to him also. That's exactly what it
says. He turned Christ over to Satan. As God put Job in Satan's
hands and proved the character of true salvation, and proved
Job's character, so God put His own beloved Son in the hands of
Satan to prove His character and to show that He would not break
and that He would not waver and that He would stand true as the
perfect God-man.
And you'll notice in verse 2, this temptation went on for 40
days and 40 nights. I believe that the temptation not only came
at the end but I believe if you compare all the gospel records,
you will find that there was temptation through all of those
times. Now a fast of 40 days and 40 nights is a tremendously
weakening experience. Jesus is at a highly vulnerable point.
And at the end of those 40 days and 40 nights there was a great
culmination to that temptation, but that is not to say that the
temptation didn't come until the end. I believe He was tempted
through all of that and a great culminating temptation at the
end. It was a time of great weakness physically, when He did not
eat or drink. It was a time of great aloneness.
And I read one of the Puritans this week who said that Satan
is a pirate who looks to find a vessel that sails without a
fleet. And Satan is a pirate who looks to find a vessel who
sails without a fleet, to find some believer isolated and alone
without the protection of others. And there is Christ alone 40
days and 40 nights, weak in a place that George Adam Smith called
the devastation of yellow limestone, a place of barrenness, on
the precipice over looking the Dead Sea on the backside of the
plateau of Jerusalem. And there the devil comes to Him by design
from God who led Him there by His Spirit and tempts Him. And
tempts Him in the areas where He had a right.
First of all, tempts Him to bread. And was He not the Son
of God and did He not have a right to eat and did He not make
everything that was made? And if He could make bread for a
multitude, could He not make it for Himself? And then tempted
Him to dive off the temple and thus be hailed as the Messiah and
take the right that was His, and was it not His? And then to
take the kingdoms of the world, and were they not His by promise?
He tempted Him in the areas where He had a right, but Christ
resisted in the midst of weakness and aloneness all of those
temptations. Verse 11 then says, "The devil left Him and the
angels came and ministered to Him."
God put His own Son in the hands of Satan. And then blessed
Him in the end with the ministry of angels for having passed the
test, as He blessed Job for having passed the test. Yes, God by
His own sovereign design may choose to put one of His very own,
even His own Son, into the hands of Satan to bring Himself
greater glory.
Second Corinthians chapter 12, 2 Corinthians chapter 12,
Paul says it's not expedient or fitting for me, doubtless to
glory, or to boast, it's not right for me to boast, he says. I
will come to visions and revelations of the Lord. And he had had
so many visions, you know, he had seen Jesus Christ risen from
the dead. He had revelations. He says
I...referring to himself...he says, I know a man...he speaks a
rather second-handed here because again he doesn't want to boast.
And this man, whether in the body, I can't tell, or out of the
body, he can't really define it, was caught up into the third
heaven, that is the dwelling place of God. He was caught up,
verse 4 says, into paradise, verse 3, he doesn't
know whether it was in the body or out, he doesn't know the
actual spiritual dynamics of what happened, he just knows he was
there. He heard unspeakable words which are not lawful for any
man to utter. But I won't glory on such a one, I myself will not
glory. The only think I'll boast about is my infirmity.
I mean, there was a great temptation in the life of Paul
because of his many successes and visions and revelations to be
very boastful. But I won't do that. I would desire to boast,
verse 6, but I'm not going to be a fool. So I'll say the truth,
but now I forebear, I hold back, lest any man should think of me
above that which he sees me to be or hears of me. I don't want
anybody having an unfair or exaggerated opinion of me so I don't
boast, even though I've had these things. But I have to confess,
he says in verse 7, it's not just me that's restraining, verse 7,
unless I should be exalted above measure through the abundance of
the revelations. In other words, what keeps me from doing this
is...watch this...there was given to me, and I believe the
implication there is God has brought that, God has allowed that,
this is a godly man, this is a holy man, this is an upright man
like Job was an upright man, this is a man who knows the
Christian experience like perhaps no man who ever lived, other
than the God-man Himself. So he is not a sinful man, he deals
with those areas of his life before God.
We don't really know what it was, but I want you to notice
that the Lord gave him this and yet it is called in verse 7 "a
thorn in the flesh, the messenger of Satan to buffet me lest I
should be exalted above measure." Listen to this, I believe that
this text tells us that the Lord turned Paul over to Satan at
least in this regard. He gave Satan the right to inflict him
with physical pain. I don't believe that's the work of God, I
believe that's the work of Satan. But I believe God intended
that Satan be allowed to do that to keep Paul weak so that he
would be dependent. Men with great gifts need that because they
tend not to be dependent. God sent Paul into Satan's arena to be
buffeted. The word "buffet" is used in Matthew 26:67 in
describing Jesus on trial when they punched Him. It has a root
word meaning "knuckles." And it has to do with blows of the fist
that crush the tissue and the bone. And he says I've got this
thorn in the flesh that drives its knuckles into my body. It is
a messenger from Satan.
You think God could have prevented it? Sure. But God gave
it to him so that he would not be proud but humble. Verse 8, "I
asked the Lord three times to take it away...I asked Him."
Somebody will say, well, some Charismatic will say to us, "Well,
he didn't have enough faith." Don't give me that. That's
foreign to the text. "Well, he didn't claim his deliverance." I
don't buy that either. Because it tells you exactly what the
Lord said. He said take it away, the Lord said no, My grace is
sufficient for you, My strength is made perfect in that weakness.
I'm not going to take it away because it is enough of a weakness
to allow My strength to be manifest. So Paul says gladly,
happily, I will boast in my infirmities. Why? Because the power
of Christ rests on me. I take pleasure in my infirmities,
reproaches, necessities, persecutions, distresses for Christ's
sake for when I am weak, then I'm...what?...strong.
Now, beloved, God gave to Job disaster, turned him over to
Satan. Why? That Job might be living proof of the character of
a godly man, that Job might learn that God was sovereign, that
Job might know God more intimately and better than he had ever
ever thought to know God because in his struggles he was drawn to
God in ways that his prosperity could never bring him. So God
turned Job over to Satan for wonderful reasons. And restrains
Satan from ultimately destroying Job.
God turned Christ over to Satan to prove His purity. God
turned Paul over to Satan, at least in this one area, so that
Satan could be the instrument of God to keep Paul humble so that
he would know where his strength was and therefore was a more
effective service...isn't that...servant. So the Lord turns Job
over to Satan to prove himself to be a godly man. The Lord turns
Paul over to Satan that Paul may be a greater more effective
servant that he may learn humility and that he may learn
dependence.
I want you to turn to Luke 22...Luke 22 and verse 31. In
Luke 22 verse 31, listen, the Lord said, "Simon, Simon," He's
talking to Peter, "Simon, Simon." He's calling him his old name
because he sees characteristics of his old self, sin. So He
chooses the old name to emphasize that...that oldness that He
sees in his behavior. And He says it twice because of His
compassion. "Simon, Simon," it's pathos, "Behold, Satan has
desired you." And I believe that is true, that is true of every
believer. Satan would love to go around as a roaring lion and
devour every believer and show God and show the angels. I think
Satan would like the other angels to rebel. I think Satan wants
to make his point. And if he could just capture the saved, if he
could just have them abandon their salvation, if he could just
swallow them up in his own evil kingdom, then he could win a
victory over God, then he could "Checkmate" God, at least at one
point.
So, Satan desires to have you, particularly did Satan desire
Peter because Peter was so crucial to the development of the
church, the great preacher God used in the founding years. Satan
wants you. And he wants to sift you like wheat. In other words,
he wants to blow you away. He wants your personality to
disintegrate like wheat does when it's thrown in the air and just
blows away the chaff. He wants to blow away your confidence, and
blow away your usefulness and blow away your trust in God, and
blow away your security, and blow away your effectiveness. He
wants you.
You think the Lord could have prevented it? Of course. The
same Lord who will bind Satan for a thousand years in a pit in
the book of Revelation could certainly have bound him here from
touching Peter, but He didn't. Look at verse 32, "I've prayed
for you that your faith not ultimately fail." I've prayed for
you that you're not going to ultimately lose your salvation.
Just like He said you can go so far with Job and no farther, you
can go so far with Paul and no farther, you can go so far with
Peter and no farther, you're not going to have ultimate failure
of your faith. Then He says, "But when you return," which is to
say I'm going to what? I'm going to let you...I'm going to let
you go, I'm going to let you go to Satan. And when you come
back, do what? Strengthen the brethren.
Now what was Peter being released to Satan to learn? To
learn how to what? Strengthen others, right? He being put
through this situation could then come back and strengthen
others. In the case of Job, God was making a point to Satan.
And God was making a point to the whole world of people who read
the Bible that a true lover of God will not abandon that love and
devotion though he lose everything. A great profound lesson. In
the case of Paul, He was teaching humility and dependence. In
the case of Peter, He wanted someone who could tell others how it
was to be in the clutches of Satan. When you've been through it
and you come back, then God use you to strengthen others. It may
be that the Lord in His sovereignty will take a believer who is
in some way disobedient, sinful, boastful like Peter was and say,
"All right, I'm going to let you go, you think you can handle it
on your own?" Peter says, "Though I'll forsake You, I'll never
forsake You, boy, I'll stand with You, I'll die with You, I'll go
with You to the end."
All right, if you think you're so great, I'll just test you.
And He let you go. A boasting Christian may find himself out
from under the protection of God, given over to Satan and what
he'll learn is that you can't do it on your own. And so, I
believe, the Lord literally delivered Peter to Satan so that when
he came back he would be a source of strength to everybody else.
And Peter comes back in verse 33, "Lord, I'm ready to go with You
to prison and to death." And, of course, when he had the chance
he denied Christ three times, right? And then in verse 62 he
went out and wept bitterly. And I believe he repented and I
believe he got his heart right with God.
The point is this, the Scripture indicates that people who
are within the framework of the community of believers, whether
you're talking about 1 Timothy 1, Hymenaeus and Alexander who
were pastors in the church, whether you're talking about Old
Testament characters like Job, whether you're talking about Jesus
Christ Himself, whether you're talking about Paul or talking
about Peter, these people who belong to the Lord's kingdom one
way or another who are under the protection of it can for God's
own purposes of remedial instruction and correction and training
and illustration of great truth be brought into the dominion of
Satan unprotected for God's holy purpose and glory. Some are
turned over to Satan for refining, some are... like Peter was.
Some are turned over to Satan for greater effectiveness like Paul
was. Some for proving the validity of their faith like Job was,
but in all of those, the greater glory goes to God in praising
Him for the kind of salvation that holds a Job, the kind of power
that humbles a Paul and that restores a Peter. And so, God
receives the glory in all those things.
Mark it, beloved, people within the fellowship of the
church, be they believers or unbelievers, and in the cases that
we've looked at today they're all believers, can be put out for
testing...for testing, to prove whatever it is that God would
desire be proven.
Now, next Lord's day we're going to see what happens to
unbelievers and to some believers, also, within the church who
are put out, mark this one, not for testing, strengthening and
proving but for chastening and judgment, for chastening and
judgment. And that's a whole different issue and that will take
us right back to 1 Timothy chapter 1 and verse 20. Let's bow
together in prayer.
Our Father, we think about Job and we are reminded that his
being turned over to Satan lasted for years and years, long
years, before he could know the recovery of all that he lost.
And we think of the Lord Jesus Christ, we think of one who was
turned over to Satan for a few weeks. For the Apostle Paul,
perhaps a few years. For Peter, just a day. And, Lord, we
realize that You have Your purposes and in these the purposes
were for proving and refining and strengthening to Your glory
that Job and Paul and Christ and Peter might be the most noble
servants that they were. And so, Lord, we acknowledge that
should it make us better servants, we are willing to suffer
whatever the enemy might bring knowing that he can bring nothing
to ultimately cause our faith to fail because we are kept in Your
grace and power. And if it can enhance and enrich that ministry
to which we are called, then let us suffer whatever might be and
commit our souls in faithful keeping to the one who loves us and
gave Himself for us, the one who says, "No man, not Satan, not
anyone, shall ever pluck My sheep out of My hand." And so, Lord,
if it can be for strengthening, for refining, for humbling, for
greater usefulness, for the proving of the genuineness of our
faith to the watching world, then do in our lives what is needful
that You might receive the glory and we'll count it a privilege.
While your heads are bowed in just this parting time, I know
that the Spirit of God has probed your mind and you're perhaps
viewing things in your own lives in ways you've never viewed them
before, even as I have. My prayer is that you'll understand the
Word of God in its application to your heart. I also pray that
if you're not right with the Lord, you might be right with Him
because there is also that chastening, there are those who come
under the power of Satan because the Lord is chastening them, to
purge them from sin. We're going to see that next Lord's day,
but even in what we've seen today, you can see that lingering in
the background. If you are to be placed under the hand of Satan
for a time, or an area of life, be sure that it's for a holy
purpose of greater usefulness to God and glory to His name rather
than chastening or judgment.
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