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Well, we want to ask you to turn
to the Gospel of John, Chapter 7. We're going to be talking today
about one of the greatest dangers that faces us. A great danger that you face,
that I face. A danger that really, in a lot
of ways, far exceeds any other danger that you're facing. A
lot of times in our life we think that we are at risk of financial
loss, or the loss of a job, or the loss of a relationship, or
the loss of something in our life that we believe or are convinced
is absolutely essential to life. And we fear the loss of those
things. We fear the danger that it represents
to our life. But there is a danger that is
far greater than any of those. And that danger is a closed mind
to Christ. And that's what we want to talk
about this morning, is a closed mind to Christ. It is perhaps
the greatest danger that anyone walking the planet today is facing,
is a mind that is unwilling to hear from God, unwilling to consider
the things that he would have to say to us, It's a closed mind
to Christ, and it is a terrible, terrible danger. And we see this
in this passage from the 40th verse to the 52nd verse of John
chapter 7, among other things. But this is the thought God has
given to us today from these scriptures. And so let us read
together, beginning in verse 40 of John chapter 7. We know
the context. It is the Feast of Booths. Jesus
is speaking and the people are confused as to who he is. It
says in verse 40, when they heard these words, some of the people
said, this really is the prophet. Others said, this is the Christ.
And that is, by the way, two different things in the mind
of a first century Jew. But some said, is the Christ
to come from Galilee? Has not the scripture said that
the Christ comes from the offspring of David and comes from Bethlehem,
the village where David was? So there was a division among
the people over him. Some of them wanted to arrest
him. And we remember that the Jews, the Pharisees, had sent
officers among them to go and arrest Jesus. And they'd done
that, by the way, some four days prior. So for four days, they
had been out attempting to find an opportunity to arrest him.
And it reminds us of this in verse 44. Some of them wanted
to arrest him, but no one laid hands on him. The officers then
came to the chief priests and Pharisees who said to them, why
did you not bring him? The officers answered, no one
ever spoke like this man. The Pharisees answered them,
have you also been deceived? have any of the authorities or
the Pharisees believed in him. But this crowd that does not
know the law is accursed. Nicodemus, who had gone to him
before, and we remember that in the third chapter, Nicodemus,
who had gone to him before and who was one of them, said to
them, does our law judge a man without first giving him a hearing
and learning what he does? They replied, Are you from Galilee
too? Search the Scriptures, or excuse
me, search and see that no prophet arises from Galilee. A closed mind to Christ is what
I could not help but see when I was studying this passage of
Scripture and praying and trying to come up with what God would
have us to hear today. A closed mind, and there are
many things that we see about a closed mind to Christ, and
I think the first thing that we see is that a closed mind
to Christ, how does one know what are the symptoms of a closed
mind to Christ? The first one is arrogance. There's
a great deal of arrogance on the part of the Pharisees in
this passage of scripture. Couldn't help but notice it.
Twice they ridicule and mock. They say here in verse 48, have
any of the authorities or Pharisees believed in him? great arrogance
of mind. One of the things that results
from being closed-minded to God, to His Word, to the Spirit of
God, to a preacher, to a friend who is trying to witness to you
about God, one of the signs that your mind has closed to Christ,
closed to the gospel, is that there is an arrogance that builds
up in your own heart. and arrogance, these people,
these Pharisees believed they were the standard. They believed
they were the rulers. They were the ones to determine
what right and wrong is. That they were the standard by
which people ought to judge right and wrong. They believed they
were the ones to say what was good and what was bad. And they
believed that all other people were at some disadvantage to
them because of their position as Pharisees after all. They
had worked and been disciplined for a long, long time to get
into the place that they were. And there was just this arrogance
about them. And we see arrogance in the world
today almost, I believe, perhaps on a scale that we've not seen
in some time against the Christian faith and the Christian message
and against Christ. An arrogance that I believe has
settled and set up in the minds and hearts of so many people
today, and it's identifiable because there's a great arrogance
against the Christian faith. And in these Pharisees, we see
an arrogance against Christ. And it demonstrates and it betrays.
There's a great lack and a closed mind to Christ. Just arrogant. You know, there's a sister characteristic
to arrogance that almost always comes along the ride. It's contempt
for other people. Arrogance always engenders contempt
for others. That is what these Pharisees
did when they look at Nicodemus, a man, by the way, who we might
say more about in a moment, simply asked them an honest, fair, and
right question. Instead of answering his question,
they say this to him, are you from Galilee too? Search and
see, no prophet comes from Galilee. This contempt for others, this
dismissal of others, this dismissal of what others might say, this
dismissal of this crowd. And they look at them and they
say, this crowd that does not know the law is a curse. This
crowd that is not as privileged or as intelligent or as educated
or as religious or as righteous as we are, how can we ever think
that they would know what's right? As they look at this Jesus, and
they hear Him preach, and they hear Him teach in a closed mind,
and it manifested itself in arrogance and a content. So I want to ask
you as we begin today, and we've all faced this danger at one
point in our life. If there's anyone who's young
enough and they have not been held accountable by God, perhaps
you've not yet, but one day you will. But all of us have confronted
this danger. And if we do not overcome this
danger by the grace and the mercy of God, this is the greatest
of dangers we'll ever face. A closed mind to Christ. And I ask you to examine your
heart. And one of the places that you
can see a closed mind to Christ is an arrogance and a contempt
that sets up in your heart. arrogance in how you see yourself
and a contempt for how you see others. But not only do we see
this arrogance and this ignorance, we also see great prejudice. A closed mind to Christ demonstrates
itself and manifests itself in prejudice. And prejudice is just
in its simplest form to pre-judge. It's what the word comes from,
it's what it is, to prejudice, to prejudge, to make an assumption,
to judge a thing before one knows all there is that needs to be
known about a thing. And that's what we see here when
these Pharisees talk to this man, Nicodemus, and they talk
among themselves. They did not listen to Jesus. In fact, it seems to me that
they didn't even go to hear him. Not at this moment. They sent
officers to go arrest Him. Instead of going for themselves,
they send other people to come and arrest Him and bring Christ,
the Son of God, before them in their presence. And this is another
manifestation of an arrogance or of a closed mind to Christ
is that often we place God in subjection to us rather than
placing ourselves in submission to Him. And it's a sign of a
closed mind to Christ, a mind that is unwilling to hear. And
that's what happens here with these Pharisees. They send them
off and they do not listen. They do not hear him. Nicodemus
asked the question, do we do this? Are we to judge a man before
we hear him? Sometimes people judge Christ
this way, and this is what I think the world has done to a great
degree. They've judged Christ before they've ever given him
an opportunity to speak to them. They've judged the scripture
before they've ever even read it. They've made a judgment before
they've ever even heard the case. And I think many people dismiss
God and they do not get saved because they have dismissed him
and prejudged. That is what if there's an analogy
to be drawn here in our day and in our time, because we don't
have Pharisees in their white robes today. We don't see them
on the streets or on the hillside or see them not walking more
than three quarters of a mile and doing all of these 613 or
even more commandments specifically and religiously. We don't see
them, but we see their arrogance. We see their minds that are closed
to the Gospel. But do you know what we see today?
Is the world in general is arrogant and dismissive and prejudicial
to the Word of God. And I find great irony in that
because today the world promotes and says we should be tolerant
and listen and be open to all sorts of things and yet they're
prejudicial to the message of Christ. Is that not what's being
done when the Bible and prayer and the Christian ethic and the
Christian ideal as demonstrated in scripture has been removed
from our public sphere? Is that not exactly what's happening?
There's a prejudice. There's a prejudice against what
God has said and it demonstrates and it betrays a great closed-mindedness
to Christ. It's one of the greatest obstacles
that a preacher has or that anyone has in sharing the gospel with
someone else is a closed-mindedness and an unwillingness to hear
what God would say to them. I wonder how many people today
are living their life today completely dismissive of the Bible and the
Scripture, not because they've read it for themselves and decided
that it's not for them, but because they've listened to the so-called
experts in our society who have said that it is nothing more
than fairy tale and a bunch of stories, and that God is a cruel,
mean God. How many people have truly, from
Genesis to Revelation, read it through and said, I decide I
am against this God. They're prejudiced. Are you? Have you decided before you yourself
open this book and read it? One of the greatest recommendations
that we can give to a lost world is read your Bible. Read it. honestly and sincerely. And when
you get to that part where Jesus, the Son of God, stretches out
His arms and dies for the whole world, I tell you and I ask you,
can you in that moment turn from Him? And I have wondered, with
the world so prejudiced against the Christian faith, I've wondered,
what specifically is it that people are so prejudiced against
in the Christian faith? Is it the part where God says
to love your enemy? Is that what's unworthy of our
time and effort to consider? Is it the part where the Bible
says that we're all sinners? Do any of us deny that reality?
Absolutely none of us do. Satan has almost made that a
joke today. We're all sinners and I'm a pretty good one. We're
all sinners and we're just all the same. The problem is now
what he's turned that into is we've forgotten what the consequences
of sin is. Consequence, according to the
scriptures, death, separation from God. That's what we read
about in the third chapter of Genesis, when Adam and Eve, all
from that one single command of God, don't eat of this one
tree. And I've just, I had another letter this week and it was asking,
why did God put that tree in there? Such a common question.
And it's a good question, a question that so many have, if God is
so good, Why did He put the tree there that could cause them to
fall from His presence? And the reason that He did, the
answer to the question, is without the tree of the knowledge of
good and evil to not eat from, there was no way for them to
demonstrate their love of God. When there is no ability to do
wrong, then there is also no ability to do right. God gave
us that command, and sometimes people look at the commands of
God and they say, what a strict God, what a, He just wants to
ruin my fun and life, He wants to take away my fun and life,
and what He's doing by those commands is giving you the ability
to love Him, and to show Him and to demonstrate to Him that
love. God gave us two eyes to see with,
two ears to hear with, two hands to feel with, and one mouth to
speak with. I wonder, If the point is that
we ought to at least be listening, feeling and thinking and touching
and examining twice as much as we're speaking. Too much of the
time we're already prejudiced against it. A closed mind is
a hard thing to break through, but I pray the spirit of God
will do that. in your heart and in your mind, if that's the case.
And when I use mind, I mean the inner man, the mind and the heart
that comes together, that forms the volition, the will that is
you, that is your choices and your desire. Both are involved. The signs of a closed mind to
God is an arrogance. I've often wondered when someone
is arrogant, it demonstrates, I believe, a weakness, not a
strength, even in what they believe. arrogance, ignorance, and prejudice. But what's the danger here? What's
at stake? You might say, what is the big
deal? I don't understand. What's really at the heart of
this? What is the danger of a closed
mind? The danger is that you can go
through your whole life believing a lie. You can go through your whole
life believing a lie. And I will tell you today that
that is undeniably true because I believe different things about
God perhaps than those who do not. One of us is believing a
lie. When a closed mind God takes
over the heart and the thoughts, we find that there is a great
inability often for them to even understand and to come to wisdom. Proverbs chapter 14, 12, there
is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way
to death, the danger. What's at stake here? Everything. Everything's at stake. What do
you have to risk to open your mind long enough just to consider
what God actually said? What the Bible actually presents
as truth? What the Spirit of God would
truly say to you? Because what's at stake is the
opportunity to live according to the truth rather than live
according to what you've made up or a lie in your own understanding.
What's at stake is this danger that we are living or that is
presented by a closed mindedness to God is a life that is lived
according to a lie. That's what's at stake. It's
this closed mind, as we've said, is this terrible obstacle. And
Jesus, I believe here, in this whole week of the Feast of Booths
that we've been reading about and in the midst of now for some
months in the seventh chapter of John, what he is saying again
and again and again, what he is communicating and the teaching
that he is bringing, I think he's trying to shake the very
foundations upon which the Pharisees had based their lives. He's trying
to shake them out of their closed mindedness. He's trying to present
to them things and be so abrupt maybe in his teaching and he
was. I am the bread of life. He who does not eat me and partake
and drink my blood cannot see the kingdom of God. All these
things that he was saying, he was trying to shake the very
foundation of their lives because the very foundation of their
lives was built on a closed mindedness to Christ. He was trying to break
down the gates of their closed minds. And I pray that the Spirit
of God would do the same for you and me if our minds are closed
to Him, that God would break down those gates of closed-mindedness
so that we might hear Him and understand Him and see Him, and
that our foundation, no matter how shaky it might get in our
life, that we would realize that we are in great need of Him and
that that foundation needs to be Him. In the seventh chapter
of Matthew, a very familiar passage of Scripture, the 24th verse,
Jesus speaking, everyone, no exceptions, everyone then who
hears these words of mine and does them will be like a wise
man who built his house on the rock, and the rain fell and the
floods came and the winds blew and beat on that house. But it
did not fall because it had been founded on the rock. Now we're
going to read about those who had their minds closed to Christ. And everyone, no exception, everyone
who hears these words of mine and does not do them will be
like a foolish man who built his house on the sand. And the
rain fell, and the floods came, and the winds blew and beat against
that house, and it fell, and great was the fall of it." When
God shakes the foundation of our life, it's not comfortable,
but it is necessary for Him to show us that our foundation is
faulty. The mountain climber tests his
ropes and his clips and his gear long before he's hanging on the
side of a mountain trusting it. There's no closed mindedness
to that man saying that I don't want to know if there's a problem
with my gear. I'm going to trust it. He tests
it before. I want to ask you what is the
foundation of your life? Have you opened your mind enough
to the gospel message to examine the foundation of your life apart
from Christ? I tell you today, if it's not
Christ, it's sand. It's all that it is. Is the foundation
of your life money? I tell you today, you won't ever
have enough. Is it a relationship? I tell you, that other person's
gonna disappoint you. If you marry him, you're married
to him now, they're gonna disappoint you a lot. I know that in my
case, I am a disappointment often, but there's love that overcomes
those things. Is your foundation your job, your profession? These
Pharisees, their very identity was wrapped up and full of this
idea that they somehow were righteous when they weren't. You think
Jesus' words weren't shaking the very foundations of their
life? And they had a choice to make, didn't they? Listen or
close their mind. What's the foundation of your
life? Whatever it is. If it's not Christ, it's sand. Because even if you were to gain
all the money that truly then you could say, I am content,
you're gonna let it go one day. Even if you found the friend
that was just the best friend you could ever have, you're gonna
say goodbye to them one day. All of these other foundations
are sand. Don't you see that? It's sand
that is just going to slip through your fingers. The only thing
that will not be separated from you and this life to the next
is a relationship with God through his son, Jesus Christ. That's
it. It's the only rock. Jesus was trying to break through
this closed-mindedness by shaking the very foundation of their
life, and sometimes people don't like that kind of preaching.
They don't like that kind of confrontation. They don't like
it because their mind is closed, and often they respond with these
symptoms of a closed mind, arrogance, ignorance, and prejudice. By
the way, isn't it interesting? that in these people who thought
that they knew everything, they were ignorant. I don't, these things that they
listed. No prophet comes from Galilee. Sure they do. Jonah
came from Galilee. Did you read the Old Testament?
This was an idea they had in their own minds. No prophet comes
from Galilee. Search and see. Well, we did,
and his name is Jonah, and he came from Galilee. Jesus is to
be born in Bethlehem. I don't read anybody here saying,
Jesus, where were you born? Because their minds were already
closed. They didn't want to know the
answer. They could see the very miracles that he performed. The
lineage of David was in his line. His, not his earthly father,
but his, or excuse me, his earthly father, Joseph, was a descendant
of David. All of the Old Testament prophecies
were coming true right in front of them. And what did they do?
They're arrogant and dismissive and ignorant and prejudiced because
their minds are closed to Christ. What's right in front of them?
The feeding of the multitudes, the healing of the lame, the
giving sight to the blind, the raising even of the very dead.
And they see him and they say, have any of the Pharisees and
the authorities that we believed? Are you from Galilee too, Nicodemus?
This belittling and this accusation and these insults that are just
frankly eighth grade in their maturity. They look at this instead
of opening their mind and considering and answering Nicodemus' question.
They keep their mind closed and they dismiss it. And what they
often do is they find other people whose minds are closed and they
find strength in their numbers. But I don't care how many people
are on the wrong side of the truth, it's still the wrong side
of the truth. It doesn't matter. And for a
great part of history, the majority has been wrong. And according
to Jesus himself, it is the broad way with many on it that leads
to destruction. And all of those people walking
down that path with a mind closed. Tunnel vision, isn't it? It's
just I find it so ironic what the world accuses Christianity
of. A closed mind is what they themselves
have. A closed mind to Christ. Jesus trying to shake that closed
mindedness off of them. by challenging what their foundation
was built upon in their life. And I want to do the same here
today. Challenge it if it's not Christ. I want to challenge the
foundation of your life if it's not Christ. If what you wake
up in the morning for and what you find comfort in and what
you strive for every day is not the glory of Jesus Christ, you're
building on sand. And that day, even if you're
a child of God, if you wake and you live your life trying to
build things that are not of Christ, you've built a sandcastle
on top of a rock, you're not gonna lose your salvation, but
you've sure wasted some time and effort. And he's trying, the Lord's trying
to shake this foundation, I'm trying to shake it in you as
well. And I make no apology for that. There are remedies. to this closed-mindedness. There are remedies to be found
in Proverbs 11, verse 2. We find the first remedy, and
it's if arrogance is a sign of a closed mind, then certainly
humility is a sign of an open one to Christ. Proverbs 11, verse
2, when pride comes, then comes disgrace. But with the humble
is wisdom. You want to grow in wisdom? You're
going to have to start with a humble heart and an open mind to God. You're going to have to set aside
your preconceived ideas. You're going to have to open
your mind so that God might communicate truth to you. Humility is a remedy. Humility of mind and heart to
understand that apart from God None of us would have the knowledge
of God. Do you realize that? These Pharisees
thought that they were righteous, and God noticed their righteousness,
and so He said, boy, those are fine, fine people. I'm going
to bring them home. They're of the lineage of the
house of Israel. They're just upstanding citizens.
They've religiously followed the observance of the law, and
I am going to bring them to heaven because of how good they are. That is not the message of Scripture. The message of Scripture is that
all are unclean. All have gone their own way.
All have sinned. That all includes you. Includes me. Humility of an understanding
that if God had not sought us, if God had not sought Adam and
Eve after they sinned in the garden, they'd still be lost
today. And I understand that had God
not sought me when I was 11 years old, and by His grace and mercy
my mind opened to the truth that I was not saved even though I
thought I was. Had He not sought me and by His
Holy Spirit convinced me, convicted me, and showed me His Son on
the cross, and showed me my separation from God, and my eternal destruction
in hell apart from Him, had God not sought me out and humbled
me My mind would remain closed to Him today and I'd be just
like the world, belittling, arrogant, dismissive, and ignorant. It's only because of God that
we can say that we are none of those things, not because of
us. Another remedy is the desire for the truth wherever we find
it and wherever it leads us. A remedy for an open mind is
a sincere desire for the truth wherever we find it and wherever
it leads us. Closed mindedness can lead not
only people individually to destruction, it can lead entire groups of
people to destruction. when it becomes more about who's
speaking the truth than it is about the truth. No matter where
we find it and no matter where it takes us, a sincere desire
to understand the truth of God's word. I remember when I was 19
years old and first visited Calvary Missionary Baptist Church, there
was a realization that what I was hearing was true. It was true. And quite frankly, it condemned
much of what I had heard for some 15 years. But it was true. And when we have a desire in
our mind and in our heart to discover and understand truth,
it doesn't matter where we find it or where it leads us. We follow
it. We do with it what we ought to
do with it. Again, also a willingness to
hear is a remedy. Just a willingness to hear what
God would say, and a willingness to obey. I have often thought, and I've
shared with you before, I truly believe that there are times,
at least, if not many, that our difficulty with Scripture is
not an intellectual difficulty. It's not an IQ thing. It's not
a, I can't puzzle out what this verse means. It's an unwillingness
to obey what is simply said. It is a view of scripture that
sounds like this. It's clear what it says, but
it can't mean what it says because that would be so difficult. That
seems so strange in our culture, in our lives. That seems so absurd
even, we might use the word if we were to dare. That seems so
ridiculous and silly that we are to forsake all and follow
Christ. It's not a difficult thing to
hear or to understand. It's a difficult thing to obey.
Our difficulty, your difficulty with repentance is not a difficulty
in understanding what it is, it's a difficulty in submitting
to do it. The same for us all. As we come towards a close today,
I want you to understand what you find. This is a beautiful,
beautiful picture to me, what you find when your mind is no
longer close to Christ. And whether these officers were
saved, I don't know. There's absolutely no way for
me to tell, or anyone, I believe, to tell Vestapon what's given
to us in the word. But they say something that's
very telling, do they not? They've been sent by these Pharisees
and these authorities, go arrest him. And that word arrest in
the Greek, it means seize, take him. Enough with what this man
is saying. He's a blasphemer, and he needs
to be put to death. Go, seize him, and bring him
to us. Four days go by. And they come
back to the officers, or they come back to the priests, and
the high priests, and the authorities, and they come to him, and they're
empty-handed. And the Pharisees look around,
and they say to the officers, where is he? Why is he not with
you? We sent you to go get him four
days ago. Where is he? What do they say? No one ever spoke like this man. For four days, they're looking
for an opportunity to seize him. And each time they hear him,
There's a fear, no doubt, of the crowd. They don't want to
cause a rebellion. They don't want to cause too
much of an uprising because Rome did not look favorably on such
things. And so they were trying to do
this tactfully, and yet they were given this job to go and
to seize him, to take Christ. and they never had opportunity.
It's the last day, the great day. Jesus is proclaiming the
message of the gospel. These officers come back to those
who'd sent them, and they're asked, why is he not with you?
And they say, no one ever spoke like this man. I couldn't help
but remember that moment when I was saved. No one. No one had ever spoke like God
spoke to my heart that day. Some people say, how will I know
when I hear from God? How do I know when it's God speaking
to me? Often times it's phrased this
way, how will I know when I'm saved? The answer is you'll know. When your mind is open to Christ,
And it's no longer closed. And the light of the truth can
start to shine into your heart and make you to understand by
the Spirit of God that you're a sinner, but that Jesus came
to save sinners just like you. And the door of your mind and
your heart is thrown open. And the gospel message then is
inserted in there. And your mind is no longer closed
to the truth that's been right in front of you for so long.
But your mind closed to it. All of a sudden it's open. And
it is like this. No one ever speaks to me like
God speaks to me. It's what makes A sermon remarkable
and wonderful, not that the man is speaking, but that the Spirit
of God is speaking through His Word to you. How will I know
when God is speaking to me? You'll know, there'll be a realization
come to your heart of your need of God. And all of a sudden,
when you start to look around in your life, and you start to
see the foundation of your life, be it a job, money, relationships,
this or that that's not Christ, all of a sudden, all of it begins
to look like the sand that it is, and that that you once thought
was sure and steadfast, all of a sudden becomes very uncertain
and unsteady, and nothing but sand that drifts away with the
tide. And you begin to see that and
you begin to understand that. And then you begin to realize
that apart from Christ, I have no hope. And you begin to cry
out to him in response to his conviction of your heart. And
you'll know when he hears you. Because you're going to hear
that voice in your heart that takes you from guilt to forgiveness. From darkness to light, from
death to life, that voice. that speaks to your heart. And
like Elijah, it'll be the still, small voice, I believe, most
of the time. There will be times when he speaks
through the thunder and the lightning and the tornadoes and all of
these things, no doubt, but I believe that it is that voice that is
softer, yet louder than them all, that identifies the voice
of God in the heart. consistent with what the Spirit
of God has said in His Word, He speaks to you in your heart
and He makes it real for you. And your mind becomes open to
Him, to hear Him, to understand what He is trying to say to you. No one ever spoke like this man. I've often, and I don't believe
this is a good thing, necessarily, but I have often wondered, Lord,
what must it have been like to sit on the mountainside and hear
you teach, to hear you preach? What must it have been like for
those apostles gathered around you on that ship when they thought
that they were sure to capsize and the storm was sure to overtake
them, to sit there and watch you simply say, peace, be still,
and have the storm calm. Lord, what must that have been
like? And I think that perhaps that's
not a good thing because He's already done the same thing for
me. I do know what that's like. I do know what that feels like. I do know what His voice sounds
like in my heart. I do know Him because one day
He opened my mind and caused me to understand that His voice
takes me from guilt to forgiveness, from arrogance to humility. from
hopelessness to hope. And I pray He does the same for
you. Because it is at the moment that God speaks, it is at the
moment that your mind opens enough and your heart is open enough
to when the Spirit of God communicates truth to you, even if you would
desire that that door be shut, something, the power of God,
your own true desire to finally find the truth, and to finally
be done with the emptiness of life apart from Christ. There's
something in you that keeps that door open just enough for the
Spirit of God to communicate to you, and I pray that He does
so long enough for you to shove that door wide open and say,
God, more of you and less of the world. More of you and less
of me. More wisdom from you and less
lies from the world. It is at that moment when He
communicates to you that all rests. Your eternity rests in
that moment. It's like a fulcrum, a lever,
a turning point, a place where you're either going to continue
to go to Him or you're going to shut the door. And I tell
you today, if you shut the door, there's going to be a day come
when you will be amazed at your own close-mindedness. You'll be in awe of it. How could
I have been so close minded? I pray that God would help you
to understand that he desires to save you, that he desires
to give you the peace that you're seeking, that you desire to fill
with all of these temporary things. He desires to give you a rock
where you have nothing but sand. But your mind must be open. You
must respond. It's coming together of God's
will and ours. This grace of God to even in
the first place, call us to himself. In that moment. Rest your eternity. That's why. It's so dangerous
to have a closed mind to Christ. I'm not talking about you losing
a life of blessing as a child of God, as horrible as that would
be. I'm talking about you losing
your life eternally because of a closed mind to the Spirit of
God and to Christ and to be like these Pharisees who show us by
way of being the opposite of what we ought to be, show us
how we can come to Christ and to find Him. I ask you in the beginning, and
I ask you again, to examine your heart and your mind. Is it open
to Christ? Clearly, our call is for those who don't know Him
to come to Him and find Him. That is the call. But I remind
you, even if you do know God, I remind you it's possible for
you to close your mind to His leadership as well. You'll never lose your salvation.
We believe that strongly. We believe Scripture proves that
and demonstrates it. I know many disagree. But you
can waste many days of your life not opening your mind to the
continued leadership of God in your life. Closing your mind, thinking you
already have the answers when you've not even heard the problem. Is your mind closed to Christ?
If it is, I pray that God would open it. That the Spirit of God
would which shine the light of truth into your life, into your
heart, that you would respond to Him through repentance and
submission to Him, obedience to His call to cry out for forgiveness
until you find peace with Him, until you're regenerated, made
new in the likeness of Christ. Old things pass away and all
things become new. All of these things that the
Bible tells us is so clearly defined in scripture about salvation.
And to Nicodemus, he's already said, you must be born again.
All of these things that he says until it becomes real and true
for you. And don't close your mind. But listen. And heed. We pray God will be with his
word and he will be with us through the remainder of the service.
Let's go and have some food.
A Closed Mind to Christ
Series The Gospel of John
| Sermon ID | 99981912700 |
| Duration | 45:23 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday Service |
| Bible Text | John 7:40-52 |
| Language | English |
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