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The Lordship of Christ
Selected Scriptures
by
John MacArthur
All Rights Reserved
(A copy of this message on cassette tape may be
obtained by calling 1-800-55-GRACE)
There's a sense in which I wish I didn't even have to discuss it from the
vantage point that I have to discuss it tonight. I want to approach the subject
from a sort of polemic viewpoint, that is I'd like to defend the Lordship of
Christ against what I believe to be a current attack.
I think this attack on the Lordship of Christ has been coming for a long
time. I remember as a young boy hearing people say often to Christians...I
heard preachers say it, speakers, teachers...they would say you need to make
Christ Lord of of your life. How many have heard somebody say that? You need
to make Christ Lord of your life...very, in fact almost everyone raised their
hand. "Christ has been my Savior," you hear people give testimony and say, "and
now I want to make Him Lord of my life."
Very often we would go to a conference or a retreat or there would be some
kind of a special emphasis meeting and people would say, "Yes, I've been a
Christian and Christ has been my Savior, but He's never been Lord of my life."
And usually people like that are trying to explain how it can happen that at
some time in their life they accepted Christ as Savior and nothing ever changed,
basically. In fact, that might be an experience that many of you can identify
with. You go back to some point in your life as a child or a young person when
you quote/unquote "accepted Christ," made a decision for Christ, and you look at
that as the moment of your salvation, though basically nothing really changed in
your life. You came to another point in your life, a crisis point, and maybe
someone told you you needed to make Christ Lord of your life and you did that
thinking that was some second step and things changed.
There are those people who claim that you can be saved and not make Christ
Lord, not acknowledge that Christ is Lord accepting Him only as Savior. There
are people, many of them, myriads of them, thousands upon thousands of them, who
claim they were saved at some point when they made a decision to believe, at
that point they took total forgiveness, at that point they anticipated they
received eternal life and they gave back absolutely nothing to God...absolutely
nothing. They were told they were Christians because they made a quote/unquote
"decision." They were eager, believe me, to adopt the popular notion that you
could have Jesus as Savior and not necessarily acknowledge His Lordship. Some
time later in their life they would get serious about living and at that time
they could go from just being Christians to being Lordship Christians.
This view is so popular that recently when I was doing a Bible conference
at one of the major Christian institutions in America, a man spoke to the
student body every day for the week, as I did as well, he said to them, "The
point at which you really become a disciple, the point at which you really make
Christ Lord of your life usually comes some time in your thirties." And I was
shocked, to put it mildly, that he had just basically told a group of young
people to put their spiritual commitment on hold until they reached their
thirties. He was holding to a view that it's enough to accept Jesus as Savior,
take your forgiveness, take your guarantee of heaven and then live any way you
want until you come to some crisis point, hopefully sooner than later, when you
make Christ Lord.
Now let me tell you how pervasive this kind of concept is, and I'll explain
it in further depth as we go. It is frankly behind almost all contemporary evangelism.
Almost all contemporary evangelism reflects this mentality, whether it's
television evangelism, crusade evangelism, stadiums, tents, churches, whatever
it is, most evangelistic tracts and books and things like that are based upon
this kind of thinking...get people to make a decision, get people in a moment of
time to admit their need and to accept Christ, to receive Christ, to make a
decision. And that will seal their eternal life and then tell them they can be
sure they're saved and pray that some time in the future they'll make Christ
Lord. But until that time, you could expect that there would not necessarily be
any change in their life.
In fact, in the process of getting these people to make a decision, you can
use any technique you want, really. You do want to speak of the gospel,
admittedly they do want to speak of the gospel. You want to use a lot of
emotion. There is often subtle pressure and very often manipulation, singing
multiplied verses of lilting songs endeavoring to get people moving. There is
even the strategy in many, many evangelistic crusades where people are
instructed that when the invitation is begun, and this is pretty common in
churches, too, there are certain people selected to start coming down the aisles
to get the flow going. And that what people are doing is really priming the
pump to get people in the flow to make it happen. There are parents who cling
to the fact that at some point in their child's life they made a decision for
Christ and even though they are presently living in gross sin and defiance of
God's law and do not even acknowledge Jesus as Lord, they are still saved
because of that decision, they've just never made Him Lord.
I've had parents say to me, "I know my...my son is a homosexual. He has
chosen that life style. I know my daughter has absolutely no regard for the
things of Christ. But I know they were saved. I remember the time they made
their decision." Parents cling to this. Spouses may cling to this for their
partner. Friends may cling to this for someone they love deeply.
It conveys the idea that salvation is some momentary transaction that
secures forever but doesn't necessarily transform your life and does not involve
acknowledging Jesus as Lord of your life and submitting your life to Him. That
kind of thing is behind most contemporary evangelism. You listen, when do you
hear someone say, "Are you willing to commit your life to following Jesus?"
When do you hear someone say, "Are you willing to repent of your sin and bow
your knee in submission to the Lordship of Christ?" "Are you willing to allow
Jesus Christ to take over as King and ruler of your life?" What you hear is,
"Accept Christ...receive Christ...make a decision for Christ."
Now I want you to understand that this is a major issue because I believe,
in many cases, what it creates is a whole mass of people who think they're saved, but
they're not.
Now let me give you a little more insight into the issue. A popular
Christian magazine recently published an article arguing that Jesus' Lordship is
an inappropriate topic to bring up in the course of witnessing to the lost. It
is inappropriate to talk of the Lordship of Christ...said the magazine. This is
a magazine very, very well known. It said, and I'm quoting from the magazine,
"Since the decision to make Christ Lord is possible only for those who have
already trusted Him as Savior, the gospel presentation should not contain
anything about yielding in submission to Christ as Lord to be obeyed," end
quote. "The gospel presentation should not contain anything about yielding in
submission to Christ as Lord," said the magazine. You don't even want to talk
about that.
I watched a film this afternoon for the second time, I watched it a day ago
because the first time I watched it I couldn't believe what I was seeing. It
was sent out to our church. It
was a film designed to instruct people how to lead someone to Christ.
The film used some graphics, posed some questions and then asked if they
were true or false. Let me tell you what some of the questions were and what
the answer was.
In presenting the gospel, the narrator of the film said, should you ever
ask these questions? Here are the questions. Question number one: Should you
say to someone, will you give your heart to Christ? Answer: False, you never
want to say that to anyone. You never want to ask anyone to give anything to
Christ. You don't want to ask them to give their life to Christ, you just ask
them to believe.
Second question: Will you surrender your life to Christ? False, don't ever
ask anyone to surrender anything.
Question number three: will you commit your life to Christ? False, don't
ever ask anyone to do that.
Question number four: will you make Christ Lord of your life? Don't ever
ask anyone to acknowledge that He has to be Lord of their life.
Question number five: will you repent of your sins? False, don't ever ask
anyone to repent of their sins.
Question number six: are you willing to forsake your sins? False, don't
ask anyone to do that.
It is enough then, said the narrator, to ask them: do you believe that
Jesus died for your sins? That is enough.
That is enough? The devils believe and...what?...and tremble.
Another Christian magazine recently carried an article entitled, "This
So-Called Lordship Salvation." The article began with a question. Here's the
question. "Must a person make Christ Lord or acknowledge Christ as Lord as a
condition for salvation?" No less than ten times in the two-page article, the
author spoke of making Christ Lord of one's life. And, of course, in the view
of the author it wasn't necessary to make Christ Lord to be saved, that's
something you did later. You made Christ Lord. You took Him as Savior, and
later you made Him Lord. Ten times it said that in a two-page article.
Nowhere in Scripture
does it ever say a Christian is to make Christ Lord. If you're a Christian, He
is Lord. And it does say, very explicitly in Scripture, that unless you
acknowledge that fact that He is Lord, you could never be saved in the first
place. That is obvious. Withholding the Lordship of Christ from someone,
withholding from them the fact that they need to surrender their life to His
leading, withholding from them that they need to confess and repent of their sin
is to damn the person to a delusion that they're are saved when they're not.
Withholding the Lordship of Christ from someone while giving them the gospel is
a complete contradiction. The Bible says that salvation is granted only to
those who acknowledge Jesus as Lord and are willing to submit their life to Him.
To say that you should never talk about that, that all a person has to do is
believe that Jesus died for them doesn't say at all enough.
One writer, a writer who is leading the parade against the Lordship of
Christ, who has probably written, I'm sure has written, more than anyone else on
the subject and who is quoted quite frequently in my book, says against the
Lordship of Christ this: Quote: "It is precisely this impressive fact that the
Lord asks for no spiritual commitment that distinguishes the true gospel from
all its counterfeits."
Did you get that? He says, "It is precisely the fact that the Lord asks
for no spiritual commitment that distinguishes the true gospel from all its
counterfeits." In other words, if you ask anybody to commit their life to
Christ, to turn from their sin and follow Christ, be obedient to Him, you have a
counterfeit gospel. Now this is pervasive, my friends, this is pervasive.
Another seminary professor wrote: "The essential message of good news that
must be believed for salvation: one, a man is a sinner...two, Christ is
Savior...three, Christ died as man's substitute...four, Christ rose from the
dead." That's what you have to believe to be saved. The facts: man is a
sinner, Christ is a Savior, Christ died, Christ rose. Simply believing, they
say, those facts is all that is needed.
Now these men say that if you inform an unbeliever that Christ has any
sovereign right to rule their life, you have...get this...corrupted the gospel.
Did you get that?
It's frightening. If you say that to an unbeliever--that Christ has a
sovereign right to rule their life and they need to bow the knee to Him to be
saved, you have corrupted the gospel.
Another writer says, and I'm quoting, "It is possible, even probable, that
when a believer out of fellowship falls for certain types of philosophy, if he
is a logical thinker he will become an unbelieving believer. Believers who are
agnostics are still saved. They are still born again." Listen to this one.
"You can even become an atheist. But if you once accept Christ as Savior, you
cannot lose your salvation even though you deny God," end quote.
I don't believe you can lose your salvation, but I believe with all my
heart that if you've got it, you'll never be an unbelieving believer. And
you'll never deny God. Jesus said in Matthew 10, "You deny Me before men and
I'll...what?...I'll deny you before My Father." Paul writing to Timothy in 2
Timothy 2:12, we studied it recently, says, "If you deny Him...same idea...He'll
deny you." Salvation is forever, but only if it's real.
But what this advocates is, you see, you can take Him as Savior, have no
change in your life, even become an unbeliever, an agnostic, an atheist because
it's not necessarily going to change you.
I was absolutely shocked to discover that the writer who is most prolific
in this is saying that if you believe at the moment of salvation, you never need
to believe again the rest of your life because it's only that moment that
counts. Frightening...let alone submit to the Lordship of Christ. You could
even become an unbeliever, agnostic, atheist. He said, "Persevering in faith,"
that is continuing in belief, "is not a factor of true salvation." It isn't?
My Bible says in Colossians 1 that you're saved if you continue in...what?...in
the faith.
Every...every call to discipleship, they say, every time Jesus says leave
father and mother, forsake all, follow Me, He says that over and over again,
take up your cross, deny yourself, be willing to die, you know, if you put your
hand to the plow and look back you're not worthy to be My disciple, if you have
to go home, bury your father and you're not willing to follow Me at all cost,
you can't be My disciple. You know, all those calls to discipleship, calls to
death, calls to sacrifice, calls to laying your life down, calls to obedience,
calls to submission, they say all of those are Jesus calling already redeemed
people to the second step. So they take the whole ministry of Jesus and instead
of it being evangelism, it becomes calls to people who are already saved to come
to the second level.
Well, the problem with that is, Jesus said: "I have not come to call the
righteous but...what?...sinners to repentance. The Son of Man has come to seek
and to save the lost." You have just taken the Lord Jesus out of His
evangelistic ministry, if you have that view.
But I'll tell you what, you can't hold to the non-lordship view unless you
do that to all those invitations of Christ. Because every call to discipleship
He ever gave was so strong. So Jesus isn't really evangelizing, He's calling
Christians to come to the second level and make Him Lord. So it discards the
evangelistic intent of our Lord's ministry and ignores the fact that He came to
seek and to save the lost.
Another writer comes to the astonishing conclusion that it is a perversion
of the gospel to invite an unsaved person to receive Jesus Christ as Savior and
Lord. Now this has been around a long time. I'm quoting from sources that are
somewhat old. But it never reached the...the pervasive widespread place that it
has reached today. And I think partly it's being crystallized maybe because I'm
agitating the issue a little bit, but it needs to be brought out.
I'll tell you one that hit me the other day. I went back to my...to the
book that was already finished and put it in there. First Peter 2:7 says, "To
those who believe, He is precious." Have you ever thought about that verse?
I'll tell you whether a person's a Christian, is Christ precious? To those who
believe, He's what? He's precious...He's precious. What does that mean?
Valuable, costly, highly prized, that's His Lordship. He's precious to the true
believer.
Now the fallout of all of this, and I could go on and on, there's so many
other things to be said about it and there's so many other illustrations, but
the fallout of all of this is defective doctrine. The fallout of all of this is
a salvation that is less than what the Word of God teaches. The modern gospel
is vague. The modern gospel holds out false hope to sinners who have a moment
when they want to cash in on forgiveness, when they want to tie up heaven in the
future while continuing to live anyway they like. Maybe later they'll worry
about Christ as Lord, if they even know about that, and they shouldn't know
about it cause nobody's supposed to tell them.
You want to know the effect of this? One-point-two billion people say
they're Christians. Do you believe that? Believe 1.2 billion people in the
world are Christian? A Gallop poll, one third of all Americans are Christians.
You know what that tells me? Millions of people are deceived...millions of
people are deceived. One of these writers said, "If we accept the fact that you
must take Jesus as Lord to be saved, then only a few people will really be
saved!" and an exclamation point. Well, isn't that exactly what Jesus said?
"The gate is narrow and...what?...few thereby that find it."
One of the writers says, for example, that Paul's list of gross sinners and
their vices in 1 Corinthians 6:19 and 20, and you remember the list where Paul
describes those gross...6:9 and 10 rather, "Do you not know the unrighteous
shall not inherit the Kingdom of God, do not be deceived, neither fornicators,
idolaters, adulterers, effeminate, homosexuals, thieves, covetous, drunkards,
revilers, swindles shall inherit the Kingdom of God." He says all of those are
believers...those are all Christians who don't inherit the Kingdom. They get in
the Kingdom but they don't inherit it. What does that mean? I don't know.
First level people go there, second level people inherit. So I guess there's a
poverty pocket in the Kingdom for the first level group.
He further says that the description of those people in Galatians 5, it
says, "The deeds of the flesh are immorality, impurity, sensuality, idolatry,
sorcery, enmity, strife, jealousy, outbursts of anger, disputes, dissensions,
factions, envying, drunkenness, carousing, things like this, the people who do
those things, practicing them, will not inherit the Kingdom of God." He says
those are Christians, too, but they just don't inherit.
In other words, the whole idea is to make room for people who made a
decision who at one moment in time did something, accepted, believed, whatever,
and nothing ever changed in their life and we want them all to be saved.
You say, "Where does it come from? Why are people doing this?" I think
there are two reasons for it. It really was born out of a major concern
for grace. They wanted grace to be so gracious that as one writer said, if you
dare God to save you, He'll have to save you, that's how gracious He is. They
wanted grace to be so gracious that in one moment of time if any sinner said "I
believe" that God would instantly save him and save him forever, no matter what.
And the second thing is, I think the modern movement has been spawned
because people are trying to develop a theology to save some people who died in
unbelief who once made a decision. More people reject the doctrine of hell in
order to get their relatives out of hell than any theological constraint.
You say, "What do you mean by that?" I mean, the people who tend to deny
eternal hell are the people who don't want to admit that somebody they love went
there. So they want to deny the doctrine so they can get the people out in
their own mind. The same thing is true of this theology. It think it's born out
of a confusion about people who once made a decision and then lived a life of
denial of everything that supposedly they once decided to acknowledge and they
want to make sure they're saved for eternity so they develop a theology that
will embrace them into the Kingdom. They're in it, they just don't inherit it,
whatever distinction that is. That's why one of the books is titled The Hungry
Inherit." And the Beatitudes then refer to the second- level Christians, the
rest of the Christians don't inherit, the second-level ones, they inherit, they
possess some things the first-level people don't.
This has also been described as the "carnal Christian." That the carnal
Christian is the one who made the decision to save, took forgiveness, got the
guarantee of heaven and then lives a life of total disarray with himself still
on the throne. There used to be a little booklet that Campus Crusade put out,
had one circle with all kinds of chaos and self on the throne, that was the
natural man unregenerate. The second circle had all kinds of chaos with self on
the throne of the life and then the Holy Spirit stuck in the circle, that's a
saved person. The Holy Spirit's there, He's just not in charge. The third
circle had perfect order in the life, a little throne, and the Holy Spirit was
on the throne and self was in the corner, that's the spiritual Christian. That
was reflecting a category of people who are saved, but still rule their own
life. And their life's in total chaos, nothing's really transformed. It's the
same chaos as in circle number one, the unregenerate, except the Holy Spirit's
in there somewhere. But He doesn't have any control of anything. It's the same
idea. Those are the people who don't inherit the Kingdom. Those are the people
who haven't made Christ Lord in this particular view.
So, the typical call to salvation comes like this: accept Jesus, ask Jesus
into your heart, make a decision, believe and that seems to be it. Now all of
those are biblical thoughts and concepts. It's not that in and of themselves
they're lies, it's just that they're so incomplete.
We hear people say, "Well, you need to pray to receive Christ." And then
they say to someone who prays a little prayer, "Now you can be sure you're
saved," and they give them a little assurance thing without talking about what
kind of invitation Jesus would have used, such as "Follow Me...forsake all...lay
down your life...submit to My authority...turn from your sin...repent...obey."
Over the next three weeks we're going to discuss the three major areas the
Bible speaks on this issue. What is the essence of saving faith? We're going
to talk about that. What is the nature of true repentance and what does it mean
to be a disciple? And we'll cover that in detail. Tonight I just want to
introduce things to you. These are really what we have called "easy believism"
viewpoints. They want to make sure that salvation is simply and easily a matter
of acknowledging Jesus as Savior.
Another advocate writing in a journal, theological journal, says this: "It
is heresy to hold the view that for salvation, a person must trust Jesus as
Savior from sin and must also commit himself to Christ as Lord of his life,
submitting to His sovereign authority." It is heresy to believe that, he says.
They don't want the word "commitment." They don't want the word
"surrender." They just want the word "appropriate, believe, receive." One
local pastor in our area, well known and has really an effective ministry, says,
"Saving faith is not the commitment of one's life to the Lord," end quote. They
teach that genuine believers can succumb to apostasy. They can totally depart
from the faith.
Now when they go to Scripture...let's go to Matthew 13, I'll give you a few
more insights in just a few closing moments, I think you understand the problem,
I don't want to belabor it...but typically in Matthew 13 where you have the
parable of the soils, the first few verses of 13 give the parable. And then if
you jump down to verse 20...verse...let's see, where is it? Yeah, verse 18
of...we'll pick it up there, here the parable, He explains it. He explains soil
number one which was the hard soil and the seed went on the ground and it was
snatched away. The soil, the second soil was the rocky soil, verse 20, they
heard the Word, received it, no root, temporary, affliction, persecution came,
immediately he falls away. The one on whom seed was sown among the thorns, the
weedy soil and hears the word, worry of the world, deceitfulness of riches,
chokes the Word, becomes unfruitful. And then the good soil.
Look at Mark chapter 8. Verse
34, "He summoned the multitude with His disciples, said to them, If anyone
wishes to come after Me, let him deny himself and take up his cross and follow
Me, for whoso...whoever wishes to save his life shall lose it, whoever loses his
life for My sake and the gospel shall save it. What does it profit a man to
gain to the whole world and forfeit his soul?"
Listen, this is an invitation to an unbeliever, not a Christian to the
second level. This is talking to a guy who if he doesn't act is going to
lose...what?...his soul. What's a man going to give in exchange for his soul?
"Whoever is ashamed of Me and My words in this adulterous and sinful generation,
the Son of Man will also be ashamed of him." If you have shame toward Christ,
He'll have shame toward you. But they say this is talking to carnal
Christians...trying to pull them to the next level of commitment to the Lordship
of Christ. Not so, He's talking about people who if they don't do this are
going to lose their eternal soul.
Well, there are so many other illustrations. One of the writers writing on
the offer of the gospel in John says, you remember when in speaking to Nicodemus
and then that third chapter, Jesus talks about the serpent being lifted up and
everyone who looked at the serpent was healed. And if the Son of Man looks up
and people look at Him, they'll be forgiven, and so forth. And
God...that's...in John's gospel later on...and then in that chapter he talks
about the fact that Jesus offers to Nicodemus the truth of the new birth, verse
14, "As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of
Man be lifted up and whoever believes may in Him have eternal life." And they
say, "You see, all you have to do is look and believe, just look and believe,
just look and believe." Quoting from one of them, says, "There is no idea of
committal of life, no question concerning the life of the looker, no possibility
of surrender to the object of the vision." Just look, believe, that's it.
They go to John 4, the woman at the well and say, "All Jesus said was
drink...drink." But what they forget is when the woman said, "Give me the water
that I may drink," He didn't give it to her. He started to tell her about
her...what?...her sin. There was something yet to be covered.
In Matthew, chapter 13, verse 44, the parable is very simple. The kingdom of
heaven is like a treasure hidden in a field. A man found and hid...from joy
over he goes and sells all he has and buy the field. Another parable, the
Kingdom of heaven is like a merchant seeking find pearls. On finding the one
pearl of great value, he went and sold all he had and bought it. Very simple
parable. A man found something of value....sold everything he had, took
it. Talking about salvation. One man stumbled across it in a field, another
man was searching for it all his life. Both found it. When they found it, they
sold all they had to have the treasure. It's a picture of the exchange, I give
up all I am for all He is.
What are you going to do with that parable? Well, if you're going to hold
to a non-Lordship salvation, and if you're going to believe that you don't have
to give up anything, you can't have this parable be a Christian...be a pagan or
an unsaved man, giving up everything he is to receive everything Christ offers.
So you interpret it this way, the thing buried in the field is the church. The
purchase...the person buying it is Christ. So the parable typically by
dispensationalists has been that Jesus finding the church gives everything on
the cross to buy the church. The problem with that is that the treasure was in
the field and the pearl was of great price and I defy anyone to ascertain that
the unregenerate people in this world for whom Christ died were worth anything.
Besides, to me it seems a rather obscure treatment.
One very familiar writer to us who has even put together a very popular and
wonderful study Bible says, "Christians can leave God out of their lives and
live according to the old nature." It's the same kind of thing.
All of this opposes the clear
teaching of Scripture. They misunderstand grace. They're trying to
accommodate, I believe, loved ones who have defected. They want to get more
people into heaven so they want to stretch the gospel. But it just doesn't
square with Scripture. It just doesn't square. It...it's just not what the
Bible teaches.
Underneath all the calls to salvation in Scripture is the underlying
sovereign authoritative Lordship of Christ. And it has to be acknowledged.I mean, how would I feel as a pastor if I had to say to you,
"Now I know some of you are only at level one, you haven't made Christ Lord, so
I don't have anything to say to you because you're just out there doing whatever
you want. But for those of you who have come to second level, you need to
strengthen that commitment. You need to live out that commitment." That
doesn't make sense.
When you gave your heart and soul to Christ and submitted and bowed the
knee before Him in submissive salvation and yielded your life to Him all under
the power of the Spirit of God, you began a life in which He is Lord and
progressively your life should be evidencing that obedience to His Lordship. He
is called Lord no less than seven hundred and forty-seven times in the New
Testament. In the book of Acts you have the apostolic preaching of the cross.
In the book of Acts you have the preaching pattern for the rest of the centuries
of the church's life, 92 times in the book of Acts Jesus is called Lord, two
times called Savior. Dominantly He is Lord...He is Lord. Lordship was at the
very heart of gospel preaching in the early church. The very heart of it was
affirming His Lordship. Peter says in Acts 2, "It shall be that salvation comes
to everyone who calls on the name of the...what?...the Lord...the Lord."
There's no question about it. It's absolutely every place in the
Scripture. Believe on the Lord Jesus, Acts 16:31 to the Philippian jailer, and
you shall be saved...you shall be saved. In John, I want you to notice chapter
3 verse 36, listen to this, "He who...follow this thought...he who believes in
the Son has eternal life...listen to this...but he who does not obey the Son,
shall not see life." Therefore, believing is tied to...what?...obedience.
They're inseparable...absolutely inseparable.
In Romans chapter 10, verse 9, "If you confess with your mouth Jesus
as...what?...Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead,
you shall be saved." Verse 12, "For there is no distinction between Jew and
Greek for the same Lord is Lord of all. For whosoever shall call upon the name
of the Lord," verse 13, "shall be saved." He is Lord. And Lordship implies
that He is sovereign. It implies that He is in charge. You go back through the
gospels and the whole New Testament and you have affirmation after affirmation
of the Lordship. I was just thinking of chapter 14 of Romans, verse 9, "For to
this end Christ died and lived again that He might be...what?...Lord." He is
Lord.
That first evangelism outside of Israel, chapter 10 of Acts, verse 36, "The
word which he sent to the sons of Israel--Peter-- said preaching peace through
Jesus Christ, He is Lord of all." There's a couple of the 747 times.
Now some have said, "Well, yes, yes, but Lord means deity, it just means
deity...it just means God. It does not mean sovereign master, it does not imply
obedience, it does not imply surrender, it does not imply submission, it only
means deity. You just have to believe that Jesus is God. You don't have to
submit to Him. In fact, one writer says that if you make kurios, Lord, mean
sovereign master, you divest the call to faith from His deity. Well, that's
ridiculous. You can say Lord and mean both deity and sovereign master. That's
a straw man.(?) Not so. It's not necessary to eliminate the concept of deity
from the word Lord just because it implies the idea of sovereign master. Lord
does refer to deity. Lord does mean Jesus is God. But God means He's in
charge.
Having lunch one day with one who holds this view. He said, "I believe
kurios simply means Jesus is God."
I said, "Okay, let's just accept that. I'll buy that. Kurios means He's
God. Let me ask you a question. What does being God mean? Does it mean you're
in charge? If it doesn't mean you're in charge, then it doesn't mean God. You
don't gain anything saying that. If He's God, He's in charge. If He's deity,
He's sovereign. Can't mean anything less."
Thomas acknowledged it. What did Thomas say when he saw Jesus Christ after
the resurrection? "My Lord and my..." what do you think he meant? How do you
think he used the word "Lord?" To refer to deity? Did he say, "My God and my
God?" No. "God" acknowledged deity, "Lord" acknowledged...what?...sovereignty.
Inherent in the term is authority, dominion, the right to rule, the right to
command, the obligation to be believed and obeyed.
In 1 Timothy 1:16 it says, "And yet for this reason I found mercy in order
that in me as the foremost, Jesus Christ might demonstrate His perfect patience
as an example for those who would believe in Him for eternal life. Now to the
King eternal, immortal, invisible, the only God." I mean, who is the only God?
He is the...the King. He is the King. And a person living in rebellion
against that, not acknowledging Him as Lord, not affirming Him as Lord, not
submitting his life to Him can't be saved. And then they say this, "Yeah," they
say, "But, MacArthur, what you're teaching is human works salvation." They're
saying, "You see, you're saying that before a person can receive the grace of
salvation, they have to on their own acknowledge Jesus as Lord and no dead human
being, dead in sin, could ever do that. And so you're postulating a works
salvation. You have to repent. You have to acknowledge Jesus as Lord, then you
can be saved."
No, I'm not saying that. I'm not saying that at all. I'll tell you what
I'm saying. I'm saying what the Bible says and what the Bible says in 1
Corinthians 12:3 is pretty clear. "Therefore I make known to you that no one
speaking by the Spirit of God says Jesus is accursed...now watch this one...and
no one can say Jesus is Lord except by...what?...the Holy Spirit." Repentance is not a human work. It's a work that God does.
Now what we're saying is that when God saves someone, He grants them
repentance. He grants them the affirmation by His Spirit that Jesus is Lord.
Now we're going to talk about this in detail. But I want you to understand
the issue. John Flavil(?) the seventeenth century English puritan wrote, "The
gospel offer of Christ includes all His offices. A gospel faith just so
receives Him. To submit to Him as well as to be received by Him, to imitate Him
in the holiness of His life, as well as to reap the purchases of fruit of His
death, it must be an entire receiving of the Lord Jesus Christ," end quote.
A.W. Tozer, to whom so many of us are indebted for wonderful writings
wrote, and I quote him, "To urge men and women to believe in a divided Christ,
that is Savior but not Lord, is bad teaching, for no one can receive half of
Christ or a third of Christ or a quarter of Christ, we are not saved by
believing in an office or a work," end quote. What did he mean? We're saved by
believing in a person, the fullness of all that He is as well as what He did.
To see the issue in bold relief, very bold relief, we need to just look at
one illustration in Matthew 19, and I'll close with this. And you know it well,
we've gone over it. In Matthew 19:16, here's the single best illustration of
the evangelism of Jesus. Verse 16, "One came to Him and said, Teacher, what
good thing shall I do that I may have eternal life, how do I get eternal life?"
That's the question. How do I get eternal life? Jesus said, "Why are you
asking Me about what's good? There's only one who's good. If you want to enter
life, do..what?..keep the commandments," is that the right answer? Is that the
right answer? If somebody came to you and said, "What do I do to get eternal
life?" Would you say, "Keep the commandments?" You say, "That's works...that's
works...that's works." Why did Jesus say that? Why didn't He say, "O believe,
accept, make a decision, in a moment of time believe?" No, He said, "Keep the
commandments."
He said, "Which ones?" verse 18. Jesus said, "O, you shall not commit
murder, you shall not commit adultery, you shall not steal, you shall not bear
false witness, honor your father and mother, you shall love your neighbor as
yourself." He picked out the second half of the Decalogue, the Ten
Commandments. And He meant not only outwardly but inwardly because of Jesus'
words in the Sermon on the Mount that whatever the law said, it said not only to
the action of a man but to the thought life of a man.
So, He said keep those commandments. "The young man said to him, All these
things I have kept. What am I lacking?" See, what he says, I look at my life,
Oh, I'm perfect, I not only don't murder, I don't hate anybody...I've never
committed adultery, I've never had an evil thought about doing it, I've never
stolen, I've never even coveted, I've never lied, I've never even thought about
lying. I've perfectly honored my father and mother all my life and I've loved
everybody as much as I love myself."
Jesus then said to him, "All right," verse 21, "if you want to be complete,
perfect, want to get into God's heaven, go sell your possessions, give to the
poor, you'll have treasure in heaven and come and do...what?...follow Me."
First test, will you admit your sin? Second test, will you submit to My
Lordship? And the first command I'm giving you is sell everything you have,
give to the poor. You say, "Do you get saved by doing that?" No. But you
demonstrate whether you're willing to follow the commands of Christ. He said,
"I don't want eternal life that bad, went away grieved. He owned much
property." Took property, possessed his property and gained hell tragically.
Jesus wanted the two things to come clear to that young man. When you want
into the Kingdom, when you want eternal life, it is not as simple as just a
decision, believing some facts. There must be an acknowledgement and turning
from sin and there must be a willingness to submit to My authority even if I ask
you to do the most difficult thing in your life...to give up that which you love
the most. Let's establish, number one, the depth of your sinfulness and, number
two, the height of My sovereignty, that's the issue. The man left.
That's a very, very lucid illustration. When you come to Christ and are
truly saved, the Spirit of God will move on your spirit and you will call
Jesus...what?...Lord. Next time we're going to look at the essence of saving
faith. What is it? How does it operate? Let's pray together.
Thank You, Father, for our time tonight in Your Word. Confirm these truths
to our heart and help us, Lord, to be able to properly preach Your saving truth
that folks might not be deceived but that they might be saved, for Jesus' sake.
Amen.
© 1997 Grace to You Added
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