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Maybe we'll get to sing that
with St. Patrick in the Eschaton. Before we get to the sermon scripture
while we're still working on it, I want to point out that
I think these are on the foyer table. I'm going to be talking
about reverencing parents today, and it's a strange word to use,
reverence, as we'll talk about in just a couple of minutes.
But the fear of God, the reverence of God, and other passages of
scripture are related to how we react to or respond to the
needs of the neediest in our society, the poor and vulnerable.
And so a proper reverence of God is reflected in what we do
with our parents, but it's also reflected in how we treat people
who are impoverished and have needs. And so we've done this
every year. We're one of the anchor churches
for the Compassion Oregon City Free Medical Dental Clinic. There's
a kickoff meeting, that means we're all going to get together,
people that are interested in volunteering, at First Nazarene
Church, not very far from here really, on March 31st, 7 p.m. Please, as many of you as can,
please come to that event, and as a reminder, pick this up on
the foyer on your way out. Well, if we can't solve the echo,
I will just proceed, which is what we'll do. All right. So
today's sermon text is Leviticus 19, 1-3. And this is kind of
an adjunct to what we talked about last week with the relationship
of children and parents. And we're going to be talking
in this text. First, we're going to try to,
again, do a little restoration of Leviticus, because I know
it's taken a lot of hits in evangelical culture the last few years. But
this is a text from Leviticus, an important one right at the
heart of it. So we'll talk about that a little bit. And then we'll
talk about holiness, which is the very context for what we'll
get to, which is then the reverence of parents, and also the reverence
of sanctuaries, which we'll turn to a few verses about that as
well. And then we'll talk about the keeping of the Lord's Day,
which is in verse 3 of today's text. And that will lead us to
our conclusion on rest. So, please stand for the reading
of God's Word, Leviticus 19, verses 1 to 3. And the Lord spoke to Moses saying,
speak to all the congregation of the children of Israel and
say to them, you shall be holy. For I, the Lord your God, am
holy. Every one of you shall revere
his mother and his father. And keep my Sabbaths. I am the
Lord your God. Let's pray. Father, we thank
You for this header to this text right at the heart of Leviticus
and for the very practical instructions about what it means to be holy.
Bless us, Lord God. May Your Holy Spirit give unto
us the basis of the death and resurrection of our Savior and
payment for our sins. May that Holy Spirit take this
Word, write it upon our hearts, transform us by it. In Jesus'
name we ask it. Amen. Please be seated. It's kind of funny, last night
I was listening to Sound Opinions on NPR, which I want to do Saturday
nights from 10 to 11, and they played the latest album, maybe
the last studio album, from Iggy Pop of Iggy Pop and the Stooges.
So it's an old reference, Iggy Pop, but it's current because
this is a brand new album, and his album is called Post Pop
Depression. And the little thing they played was a song called
Sunday. And so Sunday, I got to listen.
So I listened to it. Then I printed out the lyrics.
And it's all, you know, kind of a depressing things are really
going bad. I'm sinking. I'm a wreck. Iggy sings. And
then he says, like a wreck, I'm sinking fast. The key to everything. I crawl for Sunday when I don't
have to move. Caught up in dreams, untangled
one day where I don't have to prove. The days roll on and finally
Sunday, a Sunday afternoon, I've got it all. But what's it for? But getting some more. So even
Sunday provides a craving still in the song. Even there, we can't
find rest in our particular culture. Today's text includes, of course,
a reference to the Christian Sabbath, Sunday. Iggy goes on
to sing, in the second verse, he talks about a pride, a child
telling me to wipe my boots. I'm a wreck. Everything's going
bad, he says. And he references Sunday and
the attempt to find rest there, but no rest. And he references
the pride, a child telling him to wipe his boots. And today's
text is about reverencing parents and keeping the Lord's Day as
the key to holiness. Now, I'm turning to Leviticus.
And many people these days, Leviticus has come under a lot of bad rap,
particularly over the homosexual issue. And so I want to make
sure you understand that there's no distinction in what we read
in Leviticus and the results of the Gospel of Jesus. The text
that is the header, Leviticus 19 is the center, the beating
heart of the Pentateuch, the heart of Leviticus, the middle
book of the Pentateuch. And it's the middle section.
It's 70 commands that are a reflection, a sermon you could say, on the
Ten Commandments. And these little verses we read
at the beginning, they're a header to the whole thing. The whole
thing is going to contain there, and we'll see in a minute, it
kind of concludes in the same sort of way at the end of chapter
19. So it's a very significant and you know that the book of
this chapter 19 is sometimes been referred to as the Sermon
on the Mount of the Old Testament, because so much there is familiar.
For instance, we read there. Love your neighbor as yourself.
You know, that's right at the very heart. of chapter 19, which
is the heart of Leviticus, which is the heart of the Torah. So
the law of God has as its very center the law to love your neighbor
as yourself. Not so dissimilar, of course,
to what we're told to do. Now, this verse, Be holy for
I the Lord your God am holy, is of course cited in 1 Peter.
And we know that. We know that this is cited. Most
people that read their Bibles know it's there. But let me read
a little bit of the context of that verse. I'm going to read
verses 14-19 of 1 Peter 1. It says, "'Obedient children,
don't conform yourselves to the former lusts of your ignorance.
But as He who called you is holy, you also be holy in all your
conduct, because it is written, Be holy, for I am holy. And if
you call on the Father, who without partiality judges according to
each one's work, conduct yourselves throughout the time of your stay
here in fear." Be holy. Conduct your stay here, your
sojourn in this world, in fear. Now that sounds like law and
not gospel. But what does it go on to say?
Why? knowing that you were not redeemed with corruptible things
like silver or gold from your aimless conduct, received by
tradition from your fathers, but you've been redeemed with
the precious blood of Christ as of a lamb without blemish
and without spot. It's gospel. The gospel is Jesus
has paid the price for your sins and therefore, be holy. For I, the Lord your God, am
holy." Don't be holy to earn your salvation. That's accomplished.
But because of the precious blood of the Lord Jesus Christ shed
for us, God tells us then, be holy. Don't ignore chapter 19
of Leviticus. It will tell you some things
about the significance of holiness. Now, I mentioned the concluding
verse of chapter 19. It says the same thing. So, Leviticus
19. Beginning, right? The verses
we just read. Here's the ending verses. I am
the Lord your God who brought you out of the land of Egypt. Therefore, you shall observe
My statutes and all My judgments and perform them. I am the Lord.
So what's the motivation for being holy? The conclusion of
the chapter tells us the motivation is the salvation of God. I brought
you out of Egypt. And Peter has no problem telling
us, go back to Leviticus 19 and recognize the demands on your
life to be holy. There's no problem doing that
in light of the gospel. In fact, that's the very purpose
for which God has brought us out of Egypt. It's the very purpose
for which God has called us out of our sins, saved us from our
sin through the work, the substitutionary atonement of the Lord Jesus Christ.
It's the purpose, holiness. What does it mean, holiness?
Well, we're going to talk a little bit about that. Another thing
before we get into that, however, is that what happens in Leviticus
19 is a bunch of stuff about how to live together in community. In community. In fact, the very
first verse, the particular wording, speak this to all the children
of the congregation, that's only used a couple of times in the
Bible. So this is like a very inclusive statement at the beginning,
to a covenanted community and covenant with God. And he's telling
them, here's how you live in community. This is what community
looks like. If you want to know how holiness
works itself out, it works itself out in community and it works
itself out in these particular ways of community. The foundation
of community then, as it develops in chapter 19, is what? It's
holiness. Holiness is the foundation of
community. And when holiness disappears, any sense of Christian
community disappears as well. So this is a community text. Be ye holy. Community life begins
with communion with God then. Be holy because I'm holy. You
have this relationship with me. And community life begins with
that relationship. This is from, I think, R.J. Rushdoony.
All the modern political efforts to establish the great community
worldwide on humanistic and political foundations are thus doomed to
fail. The foundation of all true community
requires community with God, and it begins with our holiness. The foundations of social order
are theological. Attempts at social peace and
unity apart from the triune God are merely repetitions of the
fallacy of the Tower of Babel, and like it, are doomed to confusion. That's what's happening to our
world. An attempt to build community on something other than relationship
with God through Christ and other than with holiness. And we see
it playing out, letters writ large, in our election cycle. What's happening to our country?
That's happening to our country, folks. That's what's happening
to communities. This is what's happening to churches.
This is what's happening to families. It's falling apart. Why? Because Leviticus 19 says community. has to be formed. The only true
and lasting and blessed community has to be formed on the basis
of relationship with God through Christ and then in terms of holiness
as it's played out. So this is a very important text,
and it tells us that community is essentially a matter of relationship
with God and with holiness. Notice from the text, What does it say? Every one of
you shall revere his mother. That's odd too. This text has some odd things
going on in it. We'll talk in a minute about
revering your mother, but mother is put first. So, you know, that's
significant. Why is that? Well, I don't know.
We don't know why, but we do know it is very important for
children. Actually, this is not a text
for children in the growing up sense of the term. What we dealt
with with Colossians was this is not. This is for all of us. We all have parents, unless,
of course, they've died and this doesn't work out. But this is
for everybody. We're all supposed to reverence
Not our parents, I mean, yeah, but our mothers and our dads. This would have been a good Mother's
Day message, right? Mothers is front loaded. And so it's very
significant. And it's a correction, just like
our text from Colossians was a correction to Greek and Roman
culture. This text was a correction to the pagan cultures roundabout
that had low esteem for women. So this one front loads it again.
And this is a law then of holiness, and it starts with reverence
toward our mother. Holiness means that the conduct
of our parents, so this reverencing of our parents, is not governed
by personal considerations, but by God's law. R.J. Rushdoony, quoting a commentator
called Scott, said of this holiness, quoting now, holiness consists
in separation from sin. So the word holiness, we used
to cut, to separate from something. And you'll notice he says, you
should be holy, which is an ongoing thing. We mature in holiness.
Why? Because I am fully holy. So we move into holiness. God is holy. He is unlike us
in that sense. But holiness for us means separation
from sin, but also separation to God. So going back to Scott. Holiness consists of separation
from sin, devotedness to God, and conformity to His moral excellencies,
which are also transcribed in His holy law. I said this last
week. The character of God is what the law reflects. And so
to be holy, like God is holy, means to be in conformity to
the application of that truth to our particular time and culture,
God's law. Without holiness, we cannot walk
with God or have fellowship with him. And though an external or
ceremonial purity was called being holy to the Lord, yet it
was only an emblem of that purity of heart which was especially
intended. So, you know, holiness is not
a matter of ritual holiness. You can come here today, confess
your sins. If you don't reverence your parents, we'll get into
what that means. No holiness. So the emblem is supposed to
stand for the whole of our lives cut off from sin, devoted to
God and his purposes in terms of his law. Quoting the Word
Bible commentary, we read, this holiness is the quintessential
quality of Yahweh in the entire universe. He alone is intrinsically
holy. The nominal sentence, Yahweh
is holy, points in this direction. That God is holy means that He
is exalted, awesome in power, glorious in appearance, pure
in character. God's holiness is contagious. Wherever His presence is, that
place becomes holy or set apart. Since Israel's holiness is learned,
and is derived from Yahweh, the command for Israel to become
holy is expressed in a verbal sentence. The use of the verb
be or become captures the maturing dimensions of holiness on the
human plane. Being Yahweh's representatives
on earth, Israel is to evidence in her community Characteristics
that are similar to God's. Whereas God's holiness is dynamic,
outgoing, Israel makes herself holy by separating herself from
sin and all that defiles in order to experience the sanctifying
presence of God. Again, set apart from, set apart
to. We're not saved from, we're saved to as well as being saved
from. And so God has this intrinsic
holiness. And this command begins by telling us, everybody listen,
everybody, really important stuff going on here. And then the command
is, the very opening command, be holy for I am holy. You become
more and more holy. Each of us are supposed to be
maturing in holiness before God. And the first means of attaining
this holiness which is to make the Israelite reflect the holiness
of God is uniformly to reverence one's parents. Thus, the group
of precepts commanded in this chapter opens with this command
to reverence one's parents. Now, I said this is a weird thing.
It's weird because of Prentlow's mom. It's different because it
commands everybody to listen. It's got a very emphatic thing
at the beginning. And then the third strangeness about this
is this reverence word. This is the word that's translated
fear. So fear God, fear this, fear that. But of course, it
has this implication of reverence of the awesomeness of God, this
gloriousness, right? And so you could call it like
worship or to reverence something, right? And it's so strange that
God gives this command to reverence our parents. Now, so there's
kind of three things we do with our parents. When we're little
children, we obey our parents. When we grow up, in addition, children
obey their parents, but they also honor and reverence. When
we grow up, we honor our parents. That means to give them weight.
And we reverence mother and father. And that means to be properly
fearful in the same way as we're fearful of God. fearful, not
in a, you know, slavish sort of slinking off way, but in a
way that is filled with the awesomeness of God and his holiness. So we're
also to have that kind of reverence at our parents. And I didn't
write it. God did. You young men and women, you
teenagers particularly, This makes it really easy for you
on the one hand and really hard for you on the other hand. It's
really easy. You don't have to sit there scratching
your head, how am I supposed to be holy? Is it just a bunch
of don'ts? No, it's not. There's a do. So
it's really easy to see what God wants from you in terms of
holiness. But it's really hard, isn't it? I had a conversation
with a teenager this morning. I'm like, hey, reverence your
mom, okay? It's hard. And it's hard primarily
because you don't even hear it anywhere, right? There's no cultural,
you know, kind of building up of a sense of reverence for one's
parents. In fact, it's completely the
reverse. Everything is about how stupid they are. So it's
really hard. It's hard because of your sin.
And it's hard because of the culture. And it's hard because
the Christian church doesn't really teach it very much that
you're supposed to reverence your parents. And yet here it
is, the center of the Old Testament. How do we build, or the law rather,
the Pentateuch, how do we build community? Really simple. It begins by being holy. What
does it mean? You've got to reverence your
mom and your dad. That means what, by the way,
the other side of that is, that means reverencing your parents.
Having a proper attitude, proper speech, proper demeanor toward
them is really significant. It creates community. It's part
of the foundations of social order, how you treat your parents
and how I treat my mom and how each of us interacts with our
parents. All right, so. The Bible normally
kind of connects up parental authority and God's authority,
right? As we saw from Colossians, for instance. And here's a verse
that kind of relates this, these two things going together again,
reverencing God and reverencing our parents. Isaiah 45, verses
9-10. Woe unto him that striveth with
his maker. Let the potsherd strive with
the potsherd of the earth, shall the clay say to him that fashioned
it, What makest thou, or thy work, he hath no hands? Woe unto
him that saith..." Okay, so the point of that is, you're going
to answer back to the guy that takes you as clay and makes you
into something? You're not going to be grateful for what he's
made you into? Your giftings, your abilities, and your shortcomings?
Are you going to answer back to the potter? Of course not.
But look, he goes right on to parents. "...woe unto him that
saith unto his father, What begetteth thou? Or to the woman, what hast
thou brought forth? So you see, it connects up parents
and God. And maybe this is why mothers
put first, because she actually is the one you come from, right?
She gives birth the way God created the world. The idea of anyone,
this is quoting from Rashtuni again, the idea of anyone being
ungrateful to God or to one's parents is presented as the epitome
of what is revolting and disgusting. Parents may or may not be lovable. In any case, the duty of gratitude
remains. Nowadays, the lack of gratitude
by children who receive not only life, but very generous and even
wealthy provisions from their parents, and yet manifest ingratitude
to either one or both of parents, is especially repulsive. Such
children may be free of other moral blemishes, but if the passage
from Isaiah 45.9.10 has any meaning, they are moral monsters." Wow. Strong language, but I don't
see how you can avoid the implications of it. In fact, Jesus said this
very thing, our Savior. He said it to the Pharisees,
remember? You're not reverencing your parents. Well, it's for
God, you said. You don't take care of your parents.
He was doing the same thing. He was calling them essentially
moral monsters because they weren't reverencing their parents, which
was the beginning of holiness, right? The beginning of wisdom
is the fear of the Lord. The beginning of holiness is
the proper fear or reverence of your parents. And it's given
to us right here. Very important. So bearing one's
parents is the foundations of social morality, and then attached
to it is the Lord's day. So that's the second part of
this, right, is keeping of the Lord's Day. As I said, this word
reverence can mean various things. Let me read another quote here.
It includes inward reverence and esteem, outward expressions
of respect, obedience to the lawful commands of parents, care
and endeavor to please them and make them easy, and to avoid
everything that may offend and grieve them. and incur their
displeasure. Children are supposed to try
to make their parents happy. Now, not in a sinful way, of
course, but that's part of what this word reverence or fear means.
The Jewish rabbis asked this question. What is the fear that
is owing to a father? And they answered, it is not
to stand in his way, nor to sit in his place. So they're saying father, we
would say mother too, right? In fact, we would say mother
primarily. So that's how the Jews were sort of messed up on
this. But the text says mother. So
mom has a chair. Don't sit in her place. Give
way to her. Don't stand in her way. Not to
contradict what he says, nor to carp at it. What does it say
in the text in Philippians? Not answering back, right? You
want to be flaming lights in the world with glory and impact
for Jesus and God? Don't carp at your parents. Don't
answer back to them. Don't treat them disrespectfully.
If you've got a question, ask it respectfully. Right? Respectfully. not to call him
by his name, either living or dead, but my father or sir."
Now, I don't know about that. But it is certainly true that
in our day and age, the familiarity of children and parents has sort
of broken down this idea of respect and worship. So I don't know
how it works in your family. But your children should understand
how to reverence you properly in obedience to this verse. based
upon your standards and how you see things. In other words, kids,
you've got to ask your parents, right? And we have to ask our
older parents. So this is important to us to
treat our parents with reverence. That's the beginning of holiness
according to Leviticus 19. I wanted to go on from this. In addition to this word reverence
is used of parents and it's used of reverencing God, but it's
also used of reverencing God's sanctuary. And so the parent
thing moves to the Sabbath thing. And this is in the context of
reverence and holiness. And there are several verses
that talk about reverencing the sanctuary of God as well. For
instance, Leviticus 19, 30, you shall keep my Sabbaths and reverence
my sanctuary. I am the Lord. So again, what
do you got? You got two things hooked together,
reverence and Sabbath. But this time it's reverence
my sanctuary before it's reverence your mother and your father.
And I guess there's a sense in which Your mother and father
are a representation of God, the same way the sanctuary is.
So we can kind of relate it that way. Leviticus 26.2, you shall
keep my Sabbaths and reverence my sanctuary. I am the Lord.
It's repeated again. So double emphasis that this
is related to it as well. Now, what is the sanctuary of
God? Well, there was a physical structure,
of course, with the temple. And this is the place where God
abides. And so we it's a different application for us today. But
as an application, nonetheless, I think the sanctuary is the
place of God's presence, whereas people come around him. and reenact
the covenant, and he renews covenant with them, and he points to the
coming of Christ that would create this unity of community around
his presence in the temple then, and prior to that to the tabernacle,
but the presence of God in a particular time and place. And that was
to be reverenced as well. So in a way, I can say that the
mother, particularly, and the father along with her, represent
the presence of God in the family. And the sanctuary represents
the presence of God when community is convened together. Now, is
this church a sanctuary? Well, what's the church? The
Bible makes it quite clear that the church is the temple of God.
Corporately, when we come together, This is a convening of the temple
of God. And this is a sanctuary, then,
where God's presence is and where his people are combined together
as the temple is. And you're at a reverence, this
meeting together of God's people in this place. And I think by
way of kind of impact outward, Physical structures, while they're
not the sanctuary of God without the people being there, but throughout
the history of Christianity, physical structures, particularly
here in America, are seen as a representation of God to the
community. That there should be a sense
of respect for churches. There always was in the past,
right? And so the church building itself gets a little bit of emanation,
we could say, from the fact that people of God convened together
in the special presence of God during manifests himself here in corporate
worship, as he does in other places around the city, etc.
And so I think that when we think of churches and church buildings,
we shouldn't disregard some of these reverencing passages as
well. the Lord's Day. And so these
all kind of go together. One other aspect of this. A little bit of context from the
Leviticus 19.30 text I just read. You should keep my Sabbaths and
reverence my sanctuary. I am the Lord. Give no regard
to mediums and familiar spirits. Do not seek after them to be
defiled by them. I am the Lord your God. You shall
rise before the gray headed and honor the presence of an old
man and fear your God. I am the Lord. So attached to
this is a reverence or a proper honoring of old people as well.
I don't know if you ever noticed this or not, but when Paul writes
to Philemon, He says, Yet for love's sake I rather beseech
thee, being such in one as Paul the agent, and now also a prisoner
of Jesus Christ. So love for them, age, and his
imprisonment for Christ all gave Paul moral authority. Because of this required respect
for age, it is all the more important, writes, this is Rush Dooney again,
imperative, that with age we grow in wisdom. So, OK, kids,
you've got to reverence your parents and you've got to honor
your parents. And parents, that means we should
be honorable. And it means that we should make
it easy for our children to reverence us. The implication here of agedness
or being parents is particularly emphasized in terms of honor
and reverence. The implication is that we, who
are parents, are to act honorably and in a way that could be reverenced
properly. And this is what we find in the
New Testament. This is where, for instance,
Paul says this, Paul said, let the aged men be sober, grave,
temperate, sound in faith, in clarity, in patience. The aged
women likewise, that they be in behavior as becometh holiness,
not false accusers, not given to much wine. A lot of times
we hear that sort of stuff. We see these lists. We think,
well, this is talking about elders and their wives. No, it's talking about
old people. Talking about me. And so I have
particular verses here that if I want reverence from my kids,
or if my mom wants reverence from me, I owe it anyway because
of their position. They represent God. But that
means that I as well have these things that I'm supposed to do.
I'm supposed to be sober, brave, temperate, sound in faith, in
charity rather, in patience. And older women, their behavior
is supposed to be as becomes holiness. There it is again,
holiness. Not false accusers, not given to much wine. So, this
commandment relates to, as well, the commandment relates not just
to children, their need to respect and reverence parents, but it
also means the parents have an obligation, as we talked about
last week, right? Children obey their parents.
Don't exasperate your children. So act in a way that enhances
that. So this text is significant. It's important for understanding
relationships in the family, but it's also important in understanding
relationships in the context of building a culture and building
a community. So the text tells us this. And then finally, the last thing
to notice here, to keep my Sabbath, I am the Lord your God. Between
these two things, What do we have? We have the establishment
of the family, reverence your parents. And we've got the establishment
of the church as a worshiping community. Keep my Sabbaths. This side of the cross, the Christian
Sabbath, the Lord's Day. Those are the fundamental building
blocks of a culture. Marriage and family. on one hand,
and the Lord's Day on the other hand, which means the convening
of God's people in worship. Those are the fundamental issues.
If we want to know what holiness is, there's the beginning of
it. There's how it all starts. That's why I made this reference
to what I'll be preaching on with Jesse and Janelle and their
children. That's why we're here, is to come together as a community
to affirm the need to build up and strengthen families and to
build up and strengthen a sense of the Lord's Day in our culture.
You know, both those things have been regularly attacked throughout
human history. There was a branch of the Zoroastrianism, Mazdakites, And
this guy was a particular branch out of Zoroastrianism, sixth
century or so. And the Mozdokites tried to abolish
marriage. They were a communal culture.
They tried to say that upper 1% of people, they should give
their wealth to the rest of the people down below. We want a
leveling out of incomes and property. And by the way, we also want
free love. And if you've got a wife, we
want you to share her. In fact, we want to get rid of marriage
altogether. That's what they wanted. Ah,
the Anabaptist radicals of the Reformation, similar sorts of
things going on. Marriage has always been attacked
by pagan cultures and by false apostate Christian cultures.
It always has been. The Lord's Day, the French Revolution,
they tried to make a 10-day work week, right? They tried to get
rid of the Lord's Day. And the Russians did the same
thing, the Soviet Union, make it decimal. What is this lousy
seven-day thing? And they tried to change the
calendar. They couldn't do it, OK? What do we have today? What
the communists and the French revolutionaries couldn't do,
capitalism has accomplished. Consumerism has accomplished
it, at least for a short period of time here, because the Lord's
Day is shot. If we give people the church,
we think we're doing good. But the day, shot. The Russians
tried it, couldn't do it. The French couldn't do it. But
we American capitalists, consumers, we can do this stuff. We can
conquer all things. So it's been under attack for
a long time, and it's almost disappeared. And in fact, the
presence of churches, you don't even see churches anymore. You
have little one word descriptions of people. And what the church,
the sanctuary of God is to be reverenced, with the presence
in the community, it's going away, folks. It's just going
away. And marriage, is that a problem? Is marriage under attack? Oh,
yeah. Free love, which is what the
Mazdakites talked about in the sixth century, is exactly what
the people that I lived in the context of in the Bay Area of
California in the late 60s, early 70s, free love. And that was
the beginning of that. Well, it was probably the beginning,
but it was the rising forth of the destruction, the attack on
marriage. And now it's gone full bore,
of course, with so-called homosexual marriage. Marriage is being attacked
and demolished. The family is being attacked
and attempt to demolish it. The Lord's Day is being attacked
and trying to be demolished. Why? Because they're important. The satanic opposition understands
the significance of these things, even if we don't. The Lord's
Day is rest. You know, in Ruth chapter three,
verse one, Naomi, talking to Ruth, says she wants to give
her rest, by which she's referring to marriage. Marriage is rest. It's entering into the place
that you're to occupy in life, and there's a rest to marriage.
And the Lord's Day is rest, not in the sense of complete sensation
of activity, but in the sense of being in the place where God
wants you to be, worshiping Him, delighting in your creative labors
over the last six days, delighting in those things, rest. This world
is trying to destroy the very means of rest in the culture,
and Iggy can't get rest in any direction. The Rolling Stones
playing Cuba here in a few days will no doubt sing about how
they can't get satisfaction in any direction. Now, we live in
this, and times seem very troubled to us. And we're all flippy floppy,
too. We're all you know, we don't
we're not immune from this. But brothers and sisters, what
I'm trying to say today is. The beginning of holiness, which
is the foundation of social order, is the family and the church,
the worshiping community. Here it is. Reverence our parents,
not because they're such great people, but because they represent
the presence of God and your family represents the presence
of God. And that's why it's under attack as it is. We can fight
back. Not by getting mortars and this
and that and yelling and screaming. We can fight back by doing something
really simple and we can do it today. Sometime today, reverence
your mother. Say some nice, respectful thing
to her. Don't smart off. Don't carp.
Don't answer back. Go out of your way to tell your
mom how much you love her and you reverence her. And that's
what changes the future. That rebuilds the foundations
of social order. Augustine says that the soul
is restless until it finds its rest in God. And he knew about
that. He lived the same kind of life
as some of the things that I used to do in San Francisco. We find
our rest in God. And we find our rest, our delight,
our rejuvenating rest from God in proper relationship to parents
and in proper relationship to God in his worshiping community.
Let's pray. Father, we thank you for your
love for us. We thank you for the simplicity of the Christian
faith and yet its profundity. And we thank you, Lord God, for
the incredible ways you have us fight and you have us roll
back the attacks of the ungodly through simple things such as
building godly families where reverence for parents and respect
to children occur, and in worshiping communities that rest and delight
in you. Thank you, Father. In Jesus' name, amen.
Holiness and Parents
Series Colossians Series
| Sermon ID | 32416143362 |
| Duration | 39:28 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | Leviticus 19:1-3 |
| Language | English |
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