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Would you now please stand for
the reading of Scripture? We'll be reading in our Old Testament
Scripture readings in Isaiah 43. Isaiah 43, beginning in verse
1. This is the Word of the Lord. But now, thus says the Lord,
who created you, O Jacob, and He who formed you, O Israel,
fear not. For I have redeemed you. I have
called you by your name. You are mine. When you pass through
the waters, I will be with you. And through the rivers, they
shall not overflow you. When you walk through the fire,
you shall not be burned, nor shall the flame scorch you. For
I am the Lord your God, the Holy One of Israel, your Savior. I
gave Egypt for your ransom, Ethiopia and Seba in your place. Since
you are precious in my sight, you have been honored and I have
loved you. Therefore, I will give men for
you and people for your life. Fear not. For I am with you. I will bring your descendants
from the east and gather you from the west. I will say to
the north, give them up. And to the south, do not keep
them back. Bring My sons from afar, My daughters from the ends
of the earth, everyone who is called by My name, whom I have
created for My glory. I have formed him. Yes, I have
made him." Now turning to our New Testament reading to 1 Corinthians
6. 1 Corinthians 6, and we'll begin
reading in verse 12. Our text this evening will be
the last two verses of this chapter. We'll begin in verse 12 to catch
the context. This is, once again, the Word
of the Lord. All things are lawful for me,
but all things are not helpful. All things are lawful for me.
but I will not be brought under the power of any. Foods for the
stomach, and the stomach for foods, but God will destroy both
it and them. Now the body is not for sexual
immorality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for the body. And
God both raised up the Lord and will also raise us up by His
power. Do you not know that your bodies
are members of Christ? Shall I then take the members
of Christ and make them members of a harlot? Certainly not. Or do you not know that he who
is joined to a harlot is one body with her? For the two, he
says, shall become one flesh. but he who is joined to the Lord
is one spirit with him. Flee sexual immorality. Every
sin that a man does is outside the body, but he who commits
sexual immorality sins against his own body. Or do you not know
that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in
you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own? For
you were bought at a price. Therefore, glorify God in your
body and in your spirit, which are God's. The grass withers. The flower fades. The word of our God shall stand
forever. As we approach the ministry of
the Word preached, let us briefly ask our Lord for help and for
illuminating grace. Let us pray. Father, we pray
the prayer of Your servant Moses when he pled with You asking,
show me Your glory. And we echo that prayer from
of all. We pray, O Lord, that You would show us Your glory
in the face of Your Son, the Lord Jesus, who paid it all for
us. Help us to see that glory and
be changed by it. We pray this in Jesus' name.
Amen. I want to speak briefly to the
children who are in attendance. Children, have you ever had a
toy that you particularly liked? And you looked across the room,
and you saw maybe your brother, or a sister, or a friend, and
they were holding your toy. And you ran over, and you seized
the toy, you grabbed it to yourself, and you said, that's mine. It belongs to me. I have three
sons, and so that scene has some relevance in my home life. That's
mine. That belongs to me. A sense of
ownership, possession. On the one hand, there's something
natural about that. There's something natural about
that impulse to own land, to own a home, to be protective
of your wife, of your children. something about life, liberty,
and property that is right and good. But is it not true that
so quickly and so easily that impulse to own, to possess, is
twisted, is distorted by sin, is turned in on itself to become
what Jonathan Edwards called the essence of sin, selfishness,
self-love, self-centeredness? Think of our culture, the pro-choice
movement, where what's the bumper sticker slogan? It's my body. Belongs to me to do with whatever
I please. Or the homosexual agenda, which
says it's my orientation, it's my body. I can do whatever I
want. It belongs to me. Maybe bring it a little bit closer
to home. How do you view your time, your money, your energy,
your children? When one of your children comes
into a room where you're working hard on a project, and they interrupt
you, and you lash out in anger, and you send the message to them,
that was my time, it belonged to me, and you messed it up.
Or maybe at tax season, you're screaming at your computer, you're
on H&R Block or TurboTax, and you see your money evaporating
into the hands of the federal government, and you say, that's
my money, it belongs to me. Can't take it away. Well, however
right and good this impulse to own might be, it does quickly
become distorted, fragmented into sin, where you clench your
fists, You stand up for your rights and you say, it's my body,
it's my life, I belong to myself. Well, the Corinthians, to whom
Paul was writing, were not immune from this sinful tendency. They were living in a very worldly
culture, not that much different from the culture we live in today.
It was a culture that had at least a subconscious belief that
they belonged to themselves. Self-assertion, self-expression,
and at least in this culture, particularly in the area of sexual
immorality. If you look at the flow of 1
Corinthians in chapter 5, Paul puts the spotlight on the sin
of incest, where a man has his father's wife, something that
was shameful even among the pagans. And so he calls for church discipline,
he calls for ultimately excommunication, And that picks up in chapter
six, where in verses one through 11, he talks about lawsuits between
believers, and then in 12 through 20, he deals with the broader
sin of sexual sin in general, what C.K. Barrett calls the root
of the trouble in this letter. But at the very end of the chapter,
in verses 19 and 20, which we'll take as our text, Paul, in that
discussion, lays down a broader principle. a bigger principle
that governs not simply bodily ethics, but really cuts to the
heart what it means to be a Christian at all. Congregation of the Lord Jesus
Christ, brothers and sisters, is it your time? Is it your money? Is it your
energy? Are they fundamentally and ultimately
your children? Is it your body? Is it your life? Do you belong to yourself? Well, here, the booming message
of the Apostle Paul, which is simply this. You belong unto
Jesus. Therefore, live unto Jesus. You belong, body and soul, unto
Jesus. Therefore, live unto Jesus. You belong to Him, so live for
Him. At the end of the day, this is
your only comfort and chief end. Your privilege and your responsibility,
your promise and your obligation. Well, by God's grace, this evening,
we're gonna look at this text under two simple heads. First, we'll see that you belong
unto Jesus. And second, we'll see that you
must live unto Jesus. Let's look at the first part.
You belong unto Jesus. You belong to him. The Apostle Paul puts this truth
negatively in verse 19 where it says, or do you not know that
your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom
you have from God, and catch this phrase, and you are not
your own. In other words, you don't belong
to yourself. Then he puts it positively in
verse 20. For you were bought at a price,
therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit, which
are God's. In other words, you belong unto
Jesus. This is a theme that runs throughout
the passage. You look at verse 13. It says, now the body is
not for sexual immorality, but for the Lord, and the Lord for
the body. Verse 15, do you not know that
your bodies are members of Christ? Verse 17, but he who is joined
to the Lord is one spirit with him. Over and over again, you
don't belong to yourself, you belong to Christ. Now why is
this true? Why do you belong to Jesus? What
are the grounds of his ownership, his claims upon your life? We're
gonna see on the one hand that this is true simply by virtue
of creation. Simply by virtue of creation,
you belong to the Lord. Children, what's the very first
question of the child's catechism? Who made you? Who made you? Did you make yourself? God did. I heard a few people say it.
God did. And if God made you, what's that mean? He owns you.
If he made you, he owns you. So I have three young children,
two of whom are a little bit older enough to do this, and
they have a little art table. And often they go to that table,
and they pull out sheets of paper, and they have pens and markers
and colored pencils, and they make these masterpieces of art,
and they put them up on the fridge. And when I get home, they say,
Daddy, look. Look at my painting. Your painting,
why does it belong to them? Well, they made it, and so they
presuppose that they own it. It's their drawing. Well, God
made you, he owns you. And here's the amazing thing,
this is true of every single person on the face of the earth,
Christian or non-Christian. If you're sitting here today
and you don't know the Lord Jesus Christ, he still has a claim
upon your life simply by virtue of creation. He made you, you
bear his image, he owns you. But for the believer, this is
even a deeper reality. Not simply by virtue of creation,
but by virtue of redemption, he has a claim on your life. And we'll see this is true in
a couple of ways. First, it's true by the blood
of Jesus. And second, it's true by the indwelling of his spirit. First of all, this is true by
the blood of Christ. Redemption purchased. Look at
verse 20. For you were bought at a price. Note that word for. It's like
a foundation stone. It provides a ground, a reason
for. You are not your own. Why? For
you were bought at a price. And what is that price? We know
from 1 Peter 1, 18 and 19 that you were not redeemed with corruptible
things, like silver or gold, but you were redeemed by the
precious blood of Jesus. At the cross, at the cross, Jesus
went to that tree and He purchased your salvation at the high cost
of His own life. A ransom price. of blood. Jesus paid it all. And He paid it all for you. Paid in full. It is finished. He bought you at the price of
His own blood. That's why we think about the
covenant of God. O. Palmer Robertson defines it this way, it's a bond
in blood, sovereignly administered. Where by the blood of the covenant,
God binds you to himself and binds himself to you. To be bought
by Jesus is to be bound to Jesus. You belong to him. And that's
why the Apostle Paul is obsessed. He's fanatic about the cross. What's he say in chapter one?
But we preach Christ and Him crucified. Chapter two, but we
determined to know nothing among you save Jesus Christ and Him
crucified as Christians. We live a cross-shaped life. We look at life as Dr. Dyer likes
to put it, through blood-colored glasses, purchased at the ransom
price of the Son of God. You don't belong to yourself. You belong to Jesus. You are
not your own, for you were bought at a price. There's a second
way in which you belong to the Redeemer, not simply by the blood
of Jesus, but second by the indwelling of the Spirit. by the indwelling
of the Spirit. Look at verse 19. Or do you not
know that your body is the temple of the Holy Spirit who is in
you, whom you have from God, and you are not your own? It's not only the blood of Christ,
it's the indwelling of His Spirit. Not only redemption purchased,
but redemption applied. We are made partakers of the
redemption purchased by Christ by the effectual application
of it to us by His Holy Spirit. And what does this mean? It means
that your body doesn't belong to you. Why? No, it's a temple
of the Holy Ghost, a temple of the Holy Spirit. Now in this
verse, the word for temple is often used of a shrine or a sanctuary. In the Greek translation of the
Old Testament, it's used of the holy place, the most holy place,
that inner compartment of the tabernacle. And in this way,
we learn something absolutely amazing. That God not only is
everywhere, that he fills heaven and earth, but in a very special
way, he lives inside the believer in the person of the Holy Spirit.
And in a special way, God the Father and God the Son, by the
Spirit, make their home in you. Your body is the temple of the
Holy Spirit. And we know from the book of
1 Corinthians that this is true on the one hand corporately.
Look at chapter 3. Paul talks about this image of
him being a wise master builder. You have the foundation of Christ
and the building of God's people and inside is the Holy Spirit
so that corporately we are the temple of the Holy Spirit. This
is also true individually. If you look at this passage in
particular, this appears to be what's going on. Look at verse
15. Do you not know that your bodies, plural, are members of
Christ? And the whole context, he's talking
about individual Christians who are joining themselves to harlots,
to prostitutes. So when you get down to verse
19, do you not know that your body is the temple of the Holy
Spirit? What is in view is the individual
Christian. Individually, your bodies are
temples of the Spirit. I heard one preacher describe
it this way, that corporately, as a people, we are a grand cathedral
for the third person of the Godhead. But then individually, we are
like little chapel alcoves within that broader cathedral space. We are mini temples within the
broader temple space. Your body is the temple of the
Holy Ghost. But what spirit is in view here? Note the descriptors Paul uses.
This is the Holy Spirit, and that means that you in Christ
are definitively holy, and you're called to grow progressively
in holiness. The temple of the Holy Spirit. And not simply the Holy Spirit,
but the Spirit who is in you, literally. The in you Holy Spirits. This is the intimate language
of union and communion. The Holy Spirit, who is in you,
whom you have from God. And note the subtle Trinitarian
theology here, that the Spirit comes from the Father, through
the Son, to you. The Spirit whom you have from
God. You put it all together. You're the temple of what? Of
whom? It's the holy, internal, divine
love gift of the Spirit. This is truly the revealed mystery
of Christ by His Spirit in you, the hope of glory. I like how
Leon Morris describes the significance of this reality. He says, this
gives a dignity to the whole of life such as nothing else
could do. Wherever we go, we are the bearers
of the Holy Ghost, the temples in which God is pleased to dwell. And what is the necessary implication
that Paul draws from this? Your body is the temple of the
Holy Ghost. Who is in you? You have from God, and you are
not your own. God has laid claim to your life
by the seal of the Spirit as a down payment until he fully
purchases and claims the purchase redemption at the day of the
resurrection. He's laid claim to your life by the indwelling
of the Spirit. By the blood, by the Spirit,
you belong to Jesus. Did we not see a beautiful illustration
of this fact even this morning in the baptism of one of our
covenant children? Because if you think about it,
what happens in baptism? Let me use an illustration. What's
the first thing you do when you buy a book? I happen to own a
lot of books. I own more books than I realize,
because recently I'm getting ready to move, and I'm boxing
up as many of them as I can, and I have a lot of them. And
the first thing I do when I buy a book is I open it up to the
first page and I write my name in it. Simple thing, you write
your name in your book because it's an act of ownership, an
act of possession, where if you lose your book, which I'm also
prone to do, someone else can pick it up and say, oh, it belongs
to Ethan Bolliard, I'll get it back to him someday. Well, what
does God do? What does Jesus do in baptism? Let's look at our chapter in
the broader context at verse 11. Paul's been describing the
wicked lifestyle that believers came out of, and in verse 11
he says this of them. And such were some of you, but
you were washed, but you were sanctified, but you were justified
in the name of the Lord Jesus and by the Spirit of our God. Washed in the name. Brother,
sister, do you realize that in baptism, as it were, Jesus writes
His name on you? That He claims you as His own. That He binds you to Himself. That this sign, this seal, this
sacrament is, in a way, a stamp of ownership. It's a title deed
to your life. It's a proof of purchase. It
declares with unmistakable terms that you belong to Christ. How do we apply this? We have
to start with knowledge. That's what the apostle goes
to in verse 19. Or do you not know that your
body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, that you've been bought
at a price? Do you not know? It's an interesting
phrase. If you go through the book of 1 Corinthians, six times
in this chapter and 10 times in the book as a whole, he uses
this phrase. It's almost like a sledgehammer
that Paul brings back again and again. He says, do you not know?
Do you not know? Do you not know? Do you not know?
Do you not know? Do you not know? Do you not know?
Do you not know? Do you not know? Do you not know?
10 times in the book, six times in this chapter, he presupposes
that his audience knows something. Not just simple rote knowledge
of a fact, but that deep down, deep down, You know who you are. Deep down, you know that your
body is the temple of the Holy Spirit, that you've been bought
at a price, that you don't belong to yourself, that you belong
to Jesus. You know this. This is what we
could call a covenant consciousness, an awareness of who actually
has possession of your life. And so, remember, Your baptism. Remember who you are in Christ
Jesus. Cultivate this covenant consciousness
that you don't belong to yourself, but you belong to Him. For me,
for a while, something very simple, I took a 3x5 card and I wrote
down on it just two things. You don't belong to yourself.
You belong to Jesus. I put it in my office and every
once in a while, just look at it, remind myself of this reality. of who I am and who God is. And this really has implications
for all of life. You begin to think of yourself
not simply as an owner, as a possessor, but as a steward, as a caretaker,
as a trustee of everything that God has given you. Your time,
your money, your energy. You're a steward, you're a caretaker,
you're a trustee. God's given these things to you
to use well. Think about the context of this
passage. Perhaps you find yourself at a computer screen, on a smartphone,
you open a new tab, and you're realizing that you're going down
a direction that's going to lead you into serious sin. Would you pray that in that moment,
the Holy Spirit might bring to your conscious awareness, no,
I belong to Jesus. I don't belong to myself. It's
not my body. It's not my life. I belong to
Christ. No, I can't commit this sin. Remind yourself, bring this
to your conscious awareness. Think of it this way too, even
as parents, sometimes we fall into the trap of thinking that
we somehow own our children. Do you realize that fundamentally,
they don't belong to you? The book of Ezekiel has an interesting
phrase. God is castigating the Israelites.
for their terrible wickedness. And in Ezekiel 16, he says this,
moreover, you took your sons and your daughters whom you bore
to me, and these you sacrificed to them to be devoured. Were
your acts of harlotry a small matter? Your children, your sons
and your daughters. Then in verse 21, he says this,
and catch these words, that you have slain my children. You've slain my children. Do
you realize that before your children ever belonged to you,
they belonged to God? And when you present your children
for baptism, what a great reminder that he's given them to you to
train up in the nurture and admonition of the Lord, that as Paul Tripp
puts it, you're not an owner of your children, you're an ambassador
of Jesus to them. This is your only comfort, privilege
and promise that you don't belong to yourself, that you belong
to Jesus. That's the first part. But if
we know anything from scripture, we remember that God's covenant
always has two parts. And that takes us to the second
part, the chief end, the obligation, the responsibility. Note the
word therefore in verse 20. For you were bought at a price,
Therefore, it's a hinge that brings together the indicative
and the imperative. Simpler terms, what is true,
and then what you must do. God's promise, God's command,
that hinge word. You were bought at a price, therefore,
what's the implication? This is what Sinclair Ferguson
calls biblical logic. You belong to Jesus, therefore,
live unto Jesus. Live unto Jesus. You belong to
Him, so live for Him. Note that primary imperative
in verse 20. For you are bought at a price,
therefore glorify God in your body and in your spirit which
are God's. Quite simply. What's the application? Glorify God's. Children, once again, what is
the chief end of man? Man's chief end is to glorify
God and to enjoy Him forever. That's why Joel Pekey, when he
summarizes Calvinism, says it's this. It's simply living for
God's glory. This grand theme is pervasive
in the book of 1 Corinthians. Think of 1 Corinthians 1 verse
31 where he's quoting Isaiah and he says this, he who glories,
let him glory in the Lord. Literally let him boast in God. With that wonderful phrase in
1 Corinthians 10 31, whether you eat or you drink or whatever
you do, do all to the glory of God, that we as redeemed image
bearers might reflect back the glory of the Lord, even as the
moon reflects the glory of the sun, that we might reflect back
to Him the radiance, the glory of His worth. Glorify God. But you might think, what does
that actually look like? How do we make this concrete?
What does it mean to glorify God? Well, what's the Child's
Catechism say so helpfully? How do you glorify God? By loving
Him and doing what He commands. Loving Him and doing what He
commands. Love and faithfulness. And of course, this means we
should trust in Jesus. And if there's anyone here today who
does not know the Lord Jesus Christ, I would plead with you.
Receive and rest upon Jesus Christ alone as He's offered to you
in the Gospel. Flee to Christ. Flee to Him. We also know that faith works
by love. That part of what it means to
glorify God is not simply to trust in Jesus, but to walk with
Jesus by faith. Love Him. Do what He commands. Now, where do we do this? Where
does this happen? Well, note, again, the language
of our text. Therefore, glorify God in your body, in your spirit,
which belong to him, which are God's. Glorify God in your body. Reminds us of Romans 12, to present
our bodies a living sacrifice to God, which is our reasonable
service. Present our bodies. To glorify
God in our spirit. What does this mean to glorify
God in these two areas? Really, what Paul is saying is,
with your whole being, body and soul, in every aspect of life,
glorify God. Reflect His glory back to Him.
Love Him. Do what He commands. That means that when you're washing
dishes, when you're changing a diaper, when you're cleaning
a room, when you're preparing a meal, glorify God in your body
and in your spirit. Live unto Jesus. This means that
when you're changing attire, when you're sending an email,
when you're writing a paper, when you're building a wall,
when you're repairing a fence, glorify God in your body and
in your spirit. Live unto Jesus. And this means
that when you're playing with your children and you're engaged
with them and taking them on a trip, when you're drinking
a cup of coffee, when you're spending time with your spouse,
when you're watching the sunset, when you're watching the sunrise,
when you're just basking in God's creation, glorify God in your
body, in your spirit. Live unto Jesus. Live unto him. Of course, negatively,
in terms of this passage, In the immediate context, Paul draws
the application, flee sexual immorality. Flee it. And you
should. But remember the broader principle.
Not only this negative application, but the broader, the bigger idea. Glorify God in your body, in
your spirit. Live unto Christ. Your baptism declares that you
belong to Jesus. So improve your baptism. Live
unto Jesus. with diligence, with zeal, and
all by grace through faith. Brother, sister, like Abraham,
like Abraham, be willing to offer the Isaac of your hopes and your
dreams upon the altar as a burnt offering. And remember that if
you do that, God has promised he will give you the world. Like
David, take that cup of your own life in your hands and pour
it out, every last drop upon the ground, with the realization
that God will fill it back up again until it's overflowing. Find freedom. in submission to
Jesus. Sing the great hymn of a recent
songwriter, I cling to Christ and marvel at the cost. Jesus
forsaken, God estranged from gods. Bought by such love, my
life is not my own. My praise, my all shall be for
Christ alone. Congregation, It's not your body. It's not
your time. It's not your money. It's not
your energy. They're not fundamentally your
children. God gave them to you as a caretaker. It's not your
life. You don't belong to yourself. No. You belong unto Jesus. You belong to him by virtue of
creation, by virtue of redemption, by his blood, by the indwelling
of his spirit, but you belong to Jesus. Therefore, live unto
Jesus. This is your only comfort and
chief end. Your promise and your obligation,
your privilege and your responsibility. This is at the heart of what
it means to be a Christian. Belonging unto Jesus. Living
unto Jesus. And it's captured so perfectly,
I think, in the words of Lord's Day One of the Heidelberg Catechism.
That first Lord's Day, in that great statement of faith, which
one of my professors likes to say, if you memorize Heidelberg
Lord's Day One, it'll put iron in your blood, it'll put steel
in your spine. What is thy only comfort in life
and death? That I, with body and soul, both
in life and death, am not my own. I'm not my own, but belong
unto my faithful Savior, Jesus Christ, who with His precious
blood, fully satisfied for all my sins, and delivered me from
all the power of the devil, and so preserves me. Without the
hair, without the will of my Heavenly Father, not a hair can
fall from my head. It makes all things subservient
to my salvation and therefore by His Holy Spirit, He also assures
me of eternal life and makes me sincerely willing and ready
henceforth to live unto Him. You belong to Jesus, so live
for Jesus. Let's pray. Lord God, we come to you as our
great creator and as our redeemer. And we pray you would cultivate
in us this consciousness that we don't belong to ourselves, that we belong to Christ. And
we pray, oh Lord, that out of that consciousness you would
make us men, women, and children who live for Christ's advantage
and for His glory all of our days until we see Him face to
face. We pray this in His name, amen. We now have the opportunity to
respond to the truth of what we've read and heard by standing
to sing Trinity Hymnal number 644, May the Mind of Christ my
Savior. Let us stand and sing. From day to day, By His law and
boundless glory, All I do and say. May the Word of God grow richly
in my heart from hour to hour, so that all may see I triumph
holy through His power. May the peace of God ♪ That I may be calm to conqu'ring
sin and sorrowing ♪ ♪ May the love of Jesus fill me as the
waters fill the sea ♪ ♪ With exulting self-aggracing bliss
in my soul ♪ Amen.
Belonging and Living Unto Jesus
Series 1 Corinthians
| Sermon ID | 52019252414492 |
| Duration | 39:02 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | 1 Corinthians 6:19-20 |
| Language | English |
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