Knowing God's Love
This article was published in Issue No. 33, January-March 2004.
WHEN THE Shorter Catechism lists the benefits which the
believer
enjoys in his soul in this present life in conjunction with
justification, adoption and sanctification it places at the head of the
list "assurance of God's love." Strangely, what is first here may be
the last to appear in the experience of some Christians. It is a
phenomenon which we may have experienced ourselves or perhaps met in
others: there are genuine believers who struggle with a personal
assurance of grace and salvation.
That we are to seek to be assured of our salvation is perfectly
clear from the Holy Scriptures. The apostle Peter writes to those who
have obtained "like precious faith with us" and exhorts them, "give
diligence to make your calling and election sure" (2Pet.1:1,10). Every
Christian therefore should earnestly seek after this precious spiritual
benefit until he or she finds it and then be very careful to keep it.
Asaph is representative of believers in their doubts and
difficulties when he laments, "Will the Lord cast off for ever? and
will he be favourable no more?" (Psa.77:7). It is the more familiar
psalmist who shows us something of the way whereby we may attain to a
full assurance of faith. David says to the Lord: "By this I know that
thou favourest me, because mine enemy doth not triumph over me"
(Psa.41:11).
An assurance of salvation has surely been obtained when the soul is
able to say to God, "I know that thou favourest me." Literally
David was saying that God was inclined towards him. It is an
expression which speaks of kindness, intimacy and a loving disposition.
If we know that we have grace, that we have repented of our sins and
believed the gospel, that we are united to Jesus Christ, then (and only
then) are we truly able to say with Paul, "the Son of God who loved
me, and gave himself for me" (Gal.2:10).
The Word of God assures a believer that he is saved, but the same
Word warns him that there is such a thing as a false faith. Therefore
the believer desires to know that the faith he has is genuine. Full
assurance is produced in our hearts when God's Word to us and
the Spirit's work in us concur. Then we are sure that Christ's
work was for us. This is what David had. He knew that God loved
him because, as he testifies, "mine enemy doth not triumph over me." In
fact David had many enemies, both within and without, as every believer
does. But God delivered him from them all. This He does for all His
people in every generation.
There are four principal enemies which threaten to triumph over
every believer in Jesus Christ, but from which God delivers us in a
gracious way, enabling us to know that we are loved with that
everlasting love which He bears towards His own. Let us consider these
four enemies in turn.
The World
When we say that the world is our enemy we should be clear as to
what we are speaking about. We do not of course mean the physical
creation. Rather we have in mind what Paul referred to as "this present
evil world" (Gal.1:4). We mean that world which James warned us of when
he wrote, "whosoever therefore will be a friend of the world is the
enemy of God" (Jam.4:4). We mean that world which John referred to when
he said, "If any man love the world, the love of the Father is not in
him" (1 John 2:15). This is the world of humanity fallen in sin and in
rebellion against God, the world which "lieth in wickedness" (1 John
5:19).
The world is our constant enemy. This is because as believers we
are "in" the world but not "of" it. Spiritually, morally and ethically
we have taken our stand on the side of Jesus Christ whom the world
crucified. If the truth be known that same world today, which has not
improved one whit since it performed that awful deed, would also
crucify the followers of Christ if it could. No wonder then that Jesus
said to His disciples, "In the world ye shall have tribulation" (John
16:33)!
Noah was a godly man who was delivered by God from an ungodly
world. His deliverance was accomplished because the fear of God was
present in his soul. "By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not
seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his
house" (Heb.11:7). Would we not be better witnesses for the Lord
ourselves if we trembled more at His Word?
The Devil
Satan is the one
who is behind this evil world, stirring up its malignant hatred of the
Most High. The devil is our great enemy and a most cunning one too. He
rarely appears in his naked evil but rather cloaks himself with a
variety of subtle disguises.
The Lord delivered Job from the
temptations of Satan which came to him through his grievous trials.
After the loss, firstly of his livelihood, then of his children and
finally of his health, his wife urged him, "curse God, and die" (Job
2:9). But God gave Job the grace of longsuffering to an extraordinary
degree, so that he retained his integrity and honoured the Lord. "Ye
have heard of the patience of Job, and have seen the end of the Lord"
(Jam.5:11). Do we freely confess that God's way with us is perfect and
from our hearts submit to His dealings with us? To live as a citizen of
heaven and to look for the riches of the world to come is the duty and
privilege of God's children while they are in this world.
The Flesh
By 'the flesh' we understand our fallen nature - that aspect of our
nature which is still affected by sin. The flesh is our secret enemy -
the 'fifth column' that lurks within our hearts. It is because of our
flesh that the devil still has an influence upon us and we come short
of the glory of God in everything we do, even as believers.
Such a man
as the apostle Paul struggled with indwelling sin. How grateful we are
that he has recorded his experience as a Christian for us, particularly
in his Epistle to the Romans! What was his personal testimony? "For
what I would, that do I not; but what I hate, that do I" (7:15). In his
wrestlings and strivings he overcame this secret enemy through humbling
himself before God. We see this (and do we not share his great burden?)
when he cries, "O wretched man that I am! who shall deliver me from the
body of this death? (v.24). But quickly our sorrow, just as his, is
transformed into joy; "I thank God through Jesus Christ our Lord"
(v.25).
Death
Death we understand as the departure of the soul from
its home in the body. Paul refers to death in this sense as our final
enemy (1Cor.15:26). We know the consequences of sin in our bodies
already - illness, ageing, decay - and one day soon these will finally
issue in our physical death. How can we look this dread enemy in the
face with a calm and steady eye?
We may turn helpfully to a saint named
Stephen, the first New Testament martyr for Christ. Faced with a cruel
death he was delivered safe into glory through prayer. "And they stoned
Stephen, calling upon God, and saying, Lord Jesus, receive my spirit"
(Acts 7:59). For the believer the sting of death, which is sin, has
been removed in the atoning sufferings of Christ. Death does not come
to the Christian as a curse but is sent by God in His love to bring His
child into His near presence. At death we are finally freed from sin
and misery to enjoy a more perfect communion with Christ. So Stephen
was comforted in his death, as every believer may be.
We should note
that David's words in Psalm 41 refer firstly to our Lord Jesus Christ.
He faced a hidden enemy, Judas Iscariot, one of the twelve He had
chosen to be with Him and who ate with Him. Christ was delivered up to
the authorities by Judas, but His enemy did not ultimately triumph over
Him. It was Christ who was soon shouting for joy! His name is
"above
every name" (Phil.2:9)!
Now what is true of Christ is true in a measure
of all who belong to Him. Our enemies never truly triumph over us:
rather we shout for joy because God progressively gives us the victory
over them. The providence of our God extends to all His creatures and
all their actions, so that even sin and death are not powers above and
beyond Him but are governed by Him for His own glory and for our good.
Christ our King rules and defends us. He restrains and conquers all our
enemies. As we witness these Scripture truths and promises being worked
out in our own lives, we develop by the grace of Christ's Spirit the
sure confidence that we are loved by the Lord and shall overcome at the
last. May we grow more and more in this blessed assurance. |