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would turn with me in your Bibles
to Jeremiah chapter 9, verses 23 and 24. We heard from
this passage this morning in our scripture reading, our Old
Testament scripture reading. We'll be going over it tonight together.
Jeremiah chapter 9, verses 23 and 24. Thus says the Lord, let
not the wise man boast in his wisdom, Let not the mighty man
boast in his might. Let not the rich man boast in
his riches. But let him who boasts boast
in this, that he understands and knows me, that I am the Lord
who practices steadfast love, justice, and righteousness in
the earth. For in these things I delight,
declares the Lord. Let's go to the Lord one more
time in prayer together. Father, we do thank you so much
for such a momentous text. And we as a body praise you and
worship you for disclosing yourself, opening yourself up to us, and
showing us who you are through truth. We do pray that we would
be changed by the truth tonight, cause us to be conformed to the
image of Jesus Christ as a result of your preached word. And we
pray that it would go forth clearly that your word would have its
effect, that lost sinners, those that are not trusting in Christ,
would trust in Him, and that Christians would be edified.
I pray this in Jesus' name. Amen. I wonder what you think is behind
God's commands, or rather what God's heart is behind commands
like do not and let not. You notice in our text tonight,
let not the wise man boast in his wisdom. Let not the mighty
man boast in his might. Let not the rich man boast in
his riches. What's behind or what's God's
heart in instructing us to let not or do not? Is this kind of
a schoolmaster's overseeing, trying to kill the joy of his
people? Friends, I would suggest tonight that God's let-nots and
do-nots throughout the scripture, but particularly in this passage
of scripture, is God's invitation to us to exchange the rags of
self-confident worldly boasting for the riches of intimate knowledge
of Him through Jesus Christ. I'll repeat that one more time.
God would have us in the let-nots and the do-nots, but particularly
in this verse, in these verses, to exchange the rags of self-confident
worldly boasting for the riches of intimate knowledge of Him
through Jesus Christ. Friends, two goals here, maybe
one goal with two audiences in mind, two kinds of people here
in mind. For the non-Christian here, I
don't know many of you very well. Some of you I know well. I don't
know your hearts. Some of you may have slipped
into church membership. Some of you are not church members.
You've never come face to face or in direct contact with the
Lord Jesus Christ. So my hope through this scripture
is that you yourself would abandon self-confident, self-assured,
self-worshipping, self-exalting idolatry for trust and knowledge
of God through Jesus Christ. And Christian, my hope for you
is we encounter regularly this pull for self-exaltation, self-glory
in the things that Jeremiah 9 is talking about, wisdom, might,
riches. My prayer is that through tonight's
talk, through tonight's devotional, you would shed those things aside
for greater knowledge of God through his word. So we look
at the text just immediately and I see it as divided in two
kinds of points. We have verse 23 and verse 24.
Verse 23, a prohibition from God, let not. And verse 24, an
invitation from God to boast. Verse 23, a prohibition from
boasting. And verse 24, an invitation from
God to boast. To boast in Him, namely. So we
begin with a prohibition, verse 23. God begins, again, by telling
the wise man, boasting in his wisdom, the mighty man boasting
in his might, and the rich man boasting in his wisdom, do not,
let not. And these two verses, if you
read the rest of Jeremiah 9, seem kind of out of context.
Some people think that these verses are an insertion from
a later author that has nothing to do with the context. If you
read the scripture within Jeremiah 9 and Jeremiah 8, you see that
it's in the middle of a passage talking about God's judgment,
God's fierce judgment, towards the people of Judah who have
broken God's covenant, broken God's law. And judgment, fierce
judgment, is on its way. God says things like, in verse
24, The dead bodies of men shall fall like dung upon the open
field, like sheaves after the reaper, and none shall gather
them. And it's in the midst of this context of judgment and
incoming death and the righteousness of God being displayed in sinners
that the verses 23 and 24 are placed. God's invitation and
God's prohibition. Now God names three types of
boasts to flee from. And these types of boasts aren't
supposed to be a comprehensive kind of, this is the only thing
that God kind of hates. But these are three kinds of
boasts that summarize self-glory, self-exaltation, sinful self-reliance
that's independent from God and submitting to God. We see the
three boasts here. It's wise men boasting in wisdom,
mighty men boasting in might, rich men boasting in riches.
I'm sure if you're aware of kind of culture and just life in general,
you'd say that these three kinds of sins or examples of self-boasting
are extremely relevant. You look at the latest podcast,
for instance, be it something that's emphasizing kind of manhood
or red pill kind of podcast or modern philosophers. There's
this sea of desiring to glory in wisdom apart from God, apart
from scripture, apart from tradition. We see through Instagram or even
through neighborhood cookouts this boasting in riches and in
personal might, a display of bodies or intellectual prowess
or even riches. Yet, friends, these kinds of
boastings are not unique to our age. It's not something that's
just arisen today in this century. These things, as we can see in
Jeremiah 23 to 24, are relevant throughout the ages. These kinds
of boastings, man's bent towards having self-confident, self-exalting,
self-glorifying boasts. has been present all throughout
humanity since the fall. This is who you are, friend.
This is who I am in the flesh apart from Christ. This is who
we were before God had redeemed us. If you are not in Christ,
this is who you are even now. So friends, why does God warn
Judah in the midst of a passage of judgment about these three
kinds of boastings. Why does he tell us in the midst
of judgment to flee from boasting and self-confident and self-exaltation? Think of two reasons why. Number
one, God in his nature, and you could do a study throughout the
scriptures of this, God in his nature is opposed to the seemingly
victorious boasting of sinners. God longs and loves to rescue
the needy, the poor, the empty. He loves to reach out His hand
of strength and save them from their neediness, save them from
their need. But God is so devoted to His
own exaltation. He's so devoted to His own glory. that he will have no competitors.
He will have no one kind of competing with him for exaltation. And
so you see throughout the scriptures with Lazarus and the rich man,
with the tax collector and the Pharisee, this idea of those
boasting of their rightness and their glory before God, being
passed over by God or even cut off by God, while the needy are
raised up by him. Number one, God opposes the boasting
of sinners because he's intensely devoted to his own glory. But
secondly, as we can see from the immediate context, judgment,
God's making dead bodies and commanding women to wail and
weep at the coming judgment. We see that these three things,
money, wisdom, might, will not deliver you from judgment and
death. Friends, God's judgment and the
inescapable reality of death are inescapable. Money, status,
might, wisdom cannot cause us to run from it. It will not deliver
us. It will not keep us from God's
judgment. It is inevitable. And so God,
in tenderness, and that's what I think the tone of this text
is, in tenderness, calls us to let not, do not trust in these
things. There's a better way. These are
the rags of self-satisfaction, self-trust. Abandon them for
a better thing. And that's where number two comes
in, our second point in verse 24, an invitation. And here we
see a marked contrast. God calls those, maybe even here,
who are drowning in self-glory and self-confidence and invites
them to true riches in Him. God says if you're going to boast,
boast in this. Boast in understanding and knowing
Me. We'll read verse 24 again, but
let him who boasts, boast in this, that he understands and
knows Me. that I am the Lord who practices
steadfast love, justice, and righteousness in the earth. For
in these things I delight, declares the Lord. Friends, we're honored
to experience and to read another instance of God opening himself
up to us and showing us what he's like, namely what he delights
in. So what we're about to read about
God and his delights aren't things he begrudgingly does. It's not
some things that he has to do and that someone above him forces
him to do. But it's the very bent of his
heart, what God delights in. And there's three things, according
to the text, that God delights in doing. He delights in doing
justice. He delights in working out righteousness
in the earth. And he delights in exercising
loving kindness. First, justice. God is the God
of perfect justice. God delights in taking the oppressed,
taking victims, taking the weak, what we were talking about before,
and by way of judicial decree, rescuing them from the pit, and
taking persecutors, taking the wicked, taking those oppressing
those in need, and judging them. God delights in that. His heart
is bent towards that. He enjoys doing that. And secondly,
he delights in exercising righteousness in the earth. And this is a reference
to God's desire to see moral purity, righteousness, rightness
manifested in the earth. It's just an outflowing and outpouring
of his moral purity and holiness himself. He wants to see it in
the earth. And third, God's His heart is bent towards loving
kindness, covenant love, mercy towards those in need. So friends,
seeing a God who delights in these three things is good news
for us. It's good news that God is someone
who delights in justice and mercy, loving kindness, and moral purity
on the earth. It's good news and it's bad news. Can you say with David in Psalm
143 verse 2, listen to what David says, and he includes two of
the three things, three words, three attributes in this text,
in his prayer and his crying out to God. Psalm 143 verse 2,
he cries out to God, enter not into judgment with your servant,
for no one living is righteous before you. You're seeing the
problem here, why it's good news in a sense for God's character
to care about the needy, to care about those who are weak, to
care about those who are crushed, to want righteousness and justice
manifested on the earth, and yet bad news because none of
us are righteous. None of us are good. And if God
were to be just in his judgment of those who dwell on the earth,
We'd be in serious, serious trouble. For God to institute righteousness
and justice on this earth would mean for him to rid the earth
of us, to cast us into hell, to take us away from his presence
and to rid of us completely. There's no one righteous. And
so friends, God's character revealed here, if you're not in Christ,
is a terror. It's not a joy. And yet, there
is good news. So it's like good news, bad news,
good news. The good news is that God himself,
this God of righteousness, loving kindness, and justice, came down
and took on flesh, lived the perfect life for sinners like
you and me. And he took on our sin debt,
the righteous judgment of God that we deserved. He took on
himself, and God the Son bore the brunt of God the Father's
justice for sinners like us. So friends, if you're here tonight
and you've not personally trusted in Jesus Christ, you've not turned
from your sins and believed on Christ, if you yourself are encumbered
and just drowning in these kinds of self-exalting things in Jeremiah
9. For instance, we heard Chase's
testimony today. He left certain sins. God opened
his eyes to sin and he left it. If that's not you, the good news
is God has sent his only son, for Him to bear our sins, bear
the judgment of God, be buried for us, raised, ascend, and be
at the right hand of God the Father for you. If you will turn
from your sin and trust in Him, you'll be saved. So the application
to you, if you're not a Christian, is to turn and believe in this
God of loving kindness, steadfast love, and justice. But Christian,
we ourselves are not exempt from this danger. Ask yourself this
question as we think of the dangers of glorying, self-glory, self-exaltation,
idolatry towards riches and might, all of these sorts of things
that God condemns. Ask yourself this question. What cools your
fire in your life? What cools your flame and fire?
for seeking after the very things God calls us to boast in, in
verse 24. What cools your fire from greater
pursuit, greater knowledge, greater attainment of familiarity and
intimacy with God? Friends, if you yourself are
feeling this coolness and coldness towards pursuing the things of
God, I think it's important to think of what would flame and
fan the fire. And friends, there's nothing
better I could think of and the Scriptures might tell us to do
than, of course, read our Bibles and pray, seek God for greater
fillings of the Holy Spirit and knowledge of God. But on top
of this, to gather for corporate prayer with the people of God,
to engage in prayer, calling out to God, to revive us as we
pray today. to hear the Word of God preached,
sung, prayed with the people of God, and to engage in deliberate
fellowship with God's people. how much of your conversation
with your brothers and sisters is consciously steering towards,
nothing wrong with our lives, even small talk, but consciously
steering towards knowing God more through fellowship with
your brothers and sisters in Christ. And talking about what
you've read in the scriptures or experiences you've had in
prayer or evangelism. Friends, if you're cooling and
bending towards this kind of self-exaltation, self-confidence,
take hold of the privileges of church membership and of church
attendance. But perhaps in the midst of all
this, the pull towards the things of the world and self-confidence
and idolatry is still strong. Those things in verse 23, the
wise man boasting in his wisdom, the mighty man boasting in his
might, the rich man boasting in his riches, Friends, we have
gospel resources for each one of these categories. Is the pull
of boasting in riches, particularly, grabbing you and pulling you
to itself? Well, the solution would be to look at one who has
made you an heir of God and a co-heir with Christ. One whose inheritance
for you is as incorruptible and unfading as his own being. When Puritan put it in a very
lovely, kind of concise, sharp way, riches may leave us when
we live, we must leave them when we die. That's what he said.
But this heavenly inheritance that God has given us in Christ
will only fade away if Jesus himself dies. The answer to that
is Jesus will never die. These inheritances are ours forever,
God himself inheriting the earth. inheriting and sitting and sharing
Christ's throne with him. What's a puny bank statement
or climbing the corporate ladder ambitiously? compared to eternal
inheritances in Christ. And friends, these joys I've
mentioned, these riches, the enjoyment of them begins now
in intimate communion and fellowship with the living God. John 17
3 makes clear that this is eternal life, that they might know you,
the only God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent. You're given
riches even today. You've given over to feasting
on the abundance of God's house and drinking from the river of
His pleasures even now. It's the pull of worldly wisdom
grabbing you and making you think that it's overthrown the wisdom
of scripture. Well, you have an anointing from
God that you might know the scriptures. Divine truth, brothers and sisters,
is finally open to you. Jesus tells His disciples in
Matthew 13, 11, to you it has been given to know the secrets
of the kingdom of God. Your shifting, changing wisdom,
either influenced by the world or dominated by its thought,
yields, gives way, and flies away for God-given, God-imparted
knowledge. And last, a strength, might,
pull you away. What better way to curb vain
ideas of confidence in your own fading strength than for you
to look to the one who shows himself strong, 2 Chronicles
tells us, shows himself strong on the behalf of those whose
hearts is fully given to him. Your strength is ever unreliable,
ever declining, but he is ever girded with might. And his strong
arm is not against, but for you. He is a strong fortress and a
tower, and this immutable God can never be shaken or moved.
He is fixed, immovable, and He is your strength. Friend, we
ought to look to every pull towards self-confidence, boasting as
utter lunacy compared to the great riches and treasures that
God has given us to boast in, in knowing Him. Friends, knowing
and understanding this God in Christ and pressing on to know
Him more and more, this is worthy of true boasting. Let's pray. Lord, we do pray that we would
hasten to know you more and more. Father, for those who do not
know you, we pray that they would come to know you savingly, that
they would trust in you, and that they would abandon self-confidence,
self-exaltation, self-worship. for falling at the feet of Jesus.
And Lord, we do pray for the Christians here that they would
continue to do warfare against every temptation to appropriate
the world's thought and that they would fall upon you and
improve their knowledge of you day by day. We pray this in Jesus'
name. Amen.
Boast Not. Boast.
Series Evening Service
| Sermon ID | 63024171032603 |
| Duration | 22:49 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | Jeremiah 9:23-24 |
| Language | English |
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