A GODLY
HERITAGE: GOD
BILL EDGAR
INTERNATIONAL RP CONFERENCE
GRAND RAPIDS, MICHIGAN
JULY 29 - AUGUST, 2000
Call to Worship - Psalm 103:1-2
* Psalm 42A
* Prayer
Law - Exodus 20:1-21
Psalm 130B
Scripture - I Corinthians 10:12-17, 11:23-26
Sermon: Meeting With God on His Terms
Prayer
* Psalm 16
* Lord’s Prayer
* Benediction
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I swam across a lake once, about a mile. The hardest part wasn’t
the swimming, it was going in the right direction. In a pool you
can follow a line on the bottom or a lane marker. But in a lake
there’s nothing to follow. I had to stop every thirty or forty
strokes, lift my head, and correct my direction. Otherwise I’d
head off in the wrong direction. Life is like swimming a lake. Our
goal is God, but if we do not heed his call to stop every seven
days and look at him, we swim in circles. Then even living in the
land and raising children becomes pointless.
Every Lord’s Day God our King calls his saints to assemble
before him. “Remember the Sabbath Day to keep it holy.”
(Exodus 20:8) “Come before his presence.” (Psalm 100:2)
“Let us come before his presence with thanksgiving.”
(Psalm 95:2) “...not forsaking the assembling of ourselves
together.” (Hebrews 10:25) Our King summons his people to
appear at his court. God commands us to “go to church.”
We obey his call and assemble at the appointed day: to hear the
terms of the covenant, to confess our transgressions of the covenant
and ask for pardon, to bring tribute of tithes and thanksgivings
and praise, to claim the covenant privilege of petition, and to
renew the covenant in its sign of Communion.
In modern democracies we aren’t used to thinking about how
to relate correctly to royalty. But if we want to understand what
God tells us about coming before him, we will have to make the effort.
Otherwise, we will remain mired in arguments about “traditional”
worship vs. “contemporary” worship with their implicit
question, “What do you like best?” “If you prefer
contemporary, come for our 9:30 service; traditional is at 11:00.”
Remember, however, that at church you appear before God your King,
and you immediately see the pointlessness of the question, “What
do you like best?” The proper way to think about the church
meeting before God is etiquette, not style. Etiquette is behavior
that is required of us, not style, behavior that we choose because
we like it.
God’s call to appear before him is a friendly summons: in
the terms of Jesus’ parable, an invitation to a feast. (Matthew
22:1-14) Once, in Adam, God exiled the human race from his presence.
Now, in Jesus Christ, he calls the saints home, making us once more
his heirs. “O Lord, you are the portion of my inheritance
and my cup.” (Psalm 16:5) The guarantee of our inheritance
is Christ’s gift of the Holy Sprit to his church. Our weekly
meetings before God are the visible token that by an unbreakable
covenant God is ours and we are his. (II Corinthians 5:5)
Every inheritance besides God will eventually fulfill its purpose
and pass away. Children are a heritage of the Lord, but children
marry and leave home. Land outlasts families and by contrast seems
eternal. “One generation passes away, and another generation
comes; but the earth abides forever.” (Ecclesiastes 1:4) Nevertheless,
heaven and earth will pass away. (Mark 13:31) But nothing, not angels
or principalities, neither death nor life, can separate us from
Christ’s love. Therefore in Psalm 16 David sang not only of
his temporal blessings, but of Christ’s Resurrection. “My
flesh also will rest in hope. For you will not leave my soul in
Sheol, nor will you allow your holy one to see corruption.”
(Psalm 16:9-10) In those words David wasn’t speaking of himself,
but of Christ; yet because of Christ, therefore also about himself.
Because Christ has risen, so will David rise to behold his Lord.
So will all the saints. So will we. God is our inheritance.
In its weekly gatherings, the heirs of God meet before God our
King. He is our Father in heaven, he is our Royal Bridegroom, he
is our King. God was King in Israel. Christ is the only Head and
King of his Church. What is at the very center of living the Christian
life? The heart of the Christian life is to meet in God’s
presence in the church each Lord’s Day to review and renew
his covenant with us
Uncertainty abounds concerning the weekly meetings of God’s
People. What should we do? Does it matter? Who should decide what
the church does when it meets, the preacher or some other authority?
Who is the meeting for, God, the Church, or outsiders? Can a saint
gather together by himself? What exactly is worship? Until now,
I have avoided the word “worship.” Here’s why.
The more basic biblical concept seems to be “meeting with
God” rather than “worshiping God” -- hence the
common phrase, “Go to church,” or the Quaker, “Go
to meeting.” A boy asks his mother, “Why do we go to
church every week?” She answers correctly, “We go to
meet with God.” Of course, in our meeting with God we acknowledge
and praise his worthiness, we worship him. But our meetings with
him are for more than worship: they are first of all simply to appear
before him as commanded, then to ask for pardon, and then to listen
to God and make our requests of him. The whole meeting is a review
and a renewal of his covenant with us.
At Mount Sinai when he met with Israel, God commanded them to gather
regularly in his presence. “Three times in the year all your
males shall appear before the LORD God.” (Exodus 23:17) Eventually
that requirement meant traveling to Jerusalem. But every week an
Israelite had to rest where he was, he and his household, and remember
God the Creator -- “for in six days the LORD created the heavens
and the earth” -- and God our Redeemer -- “and you shall
remember that you were a slave in Egypt and God brought you out
by a mighty hand and by an outstretched arm.” (Exodus 20:14,
Deuteronomy 5:15) On the Sabbath Day the Levites who were scattered
throughout Israel taught the law, even while at the Temple the priests
represented Israel and served God on behalf of the people. Jerusalem’s
Temple with its sacrifices was an echo of Israel’s meeting
with God at Sinai. It was also an earthly shadow of the heavenly
Temple where God sits enthroned. Israel’s synagogues to teach
the Law and to pray depended for their spiritual reality on the
regular Temple sacrifices. No sacrifice on behalf of sinners, no
access to God! Meetings of the saints likewise depend for their
spiritual reality on the sacrifice of Christ presented once for
all in the heavenly Jerusalem, where Christ intercedes for us continually.
Indeed, our meetings unite men and angels, living and exalted saints,
the telephone solicitor and the painter in the same service of the
living God.
Meetings! Paul wrote to the Corinthians about their meetings, not
about “worship.” “When you come together in one
place,” he began, and then he taught them again them how to
observe the Lord’s Supper. (I Corinthians 11:20) “Therefore
if the whole church comes together in one place,” introduced
a warning that, if they all speak in tongues, outsiders will think
they’re crazy. (I Corinthians 14:23) “How is it then,
brethren? Whenever you come together...,” Paul continued and
then gave rules about their meetings ending with, “Let all
things be done decently and in order.” (I Corinthians 14:26,
40) The writer to the Hebrews does not tell his readers to be sure
to worship God each week; instead he exhorts, “not forsaking
the assembling of ourselves together.” (Hebrews 10:25) James
admonishes his readers to treat all men who come into their assemblies
the same. (James 2:2)
Can a person meet God by himself, walking for example in a beautiful
forest or on Manhattan’s East Side? Yes, of course, he can
pray to God anywhere and feel awe at God’s greatness. He can
praise God’s worthiness, his “worthship,” his
“worship.” But here’s what he can’t do alone;
he can’t assemble alone! Even families can’t assemble
by themselves; they are already together, all week long. When the
saints gather each week on the appointed day at the time set by
the elders, they are a visible church. Anyone can see them. Notice.
The world has no problem with private prayers or private religion.
It fears and often hates “organized” churches, “terrible
as an army with banners.” (Song of Songs 6:4) The world sneers
at “organized religion,” because God’s power is
in the church visible. No matter how small the church, God promises
to be present in its midst. (Matthew 18:20) Paul, in fact, encouraged
the Corinthian brothers that, if they behaved properly, an unbeliever
coming into their assemblies would “report that God is truly
among you.” (I Corinthians 14:25)
When the church meets before God, how does it know that God their
heritage is present with them? Christians want to feel the spiritual
reality of God’s presence. The pain of God’s felt absence
is the greatest pain that resulted from our expulsion from Eden.
Human experience reveals the most effective way of feeling the presence
of the divine: idols. When the devout see an idol, they see a visible
reminder of the invisible god. By meditating and praying toward
the idol, they can focus their attention on the unseen deity. Sometimes
the idol by its portrayal of the deity even becomes a means of teaching
about the god, perhaps portraying his greatness and majesty, maybe
portraying his gentle kindness. Idols moreover put the learned and
the unlearned on an equal footing in the worship of the deity. Millions
of Christians, in fact, like millions of Buddhists and Hindus, have
found visible portrayals of their god to be a great help to devotion.
Think how many, many Christians have taken comfort from their favorite
picture of Jesus. Idols, in short, promise to help us feel the truth:
that we meet in the presence of God.
Idols, however, deceive. They mislead the saints, they corrupt
the true knowledge of God, they eventually destroy saving faith,
they provoke our jealous God to anger. God forbids them, absolutely,
unconditionally, repeatedly. Forty years after he spoke to Israel
at Sinai, he said again through Moses. “Take heed to yourselves,
for you saw no form when the LORD spoke to you at Horeb out of the
midst of the fire, lest you act corruptly and make for yourselves
a carved image in the form of any figure.” (Deuteronomy 4:15-16)
Idols tempted Israel continually, until God exiled them from the
land of their inheritance. John finished his letter to Christians
with a short command: “Little children, keep yourselves from
idols.” (I John 5:21) God forbids idols, the all time most
popular means of devotion.
In forbidding idols, God warns men that they cannot trust themselves
to act as they would like to in his presence. They cannot adopt
a style. They must do as he commands and observe proper etiquette.
Actually, it makes sense that God does not summon us to meet with
him and then let us do as we like in his presence. No earthly king
ever did that, how much less the heavenly King. In the presence
of even a gracious and kind king, his subjects do not act with casual
informality. They don’t adopt a style, they observe etiquette.
When the world still had kings, people knew how to appear before
a King. They came wearing the right clothes; we wear the righteousness
of Christ. They came ready to listen. They came ready to make amends
for offenses. They came with gifts. They came with praise. They
came with requests. They came to pledge their allegiance anew. They
came expecting the king’s blessing because the king cared
for his people. The anything-goes-in-worship-unless-you-can-show-me-it’s-forbidden
spirit fatally overestimates finite and sinful man’s ability
to know how to behave properly in God’s presence. Left to
ourselves the very first thing we would choose, idols, is completely
off the mark. What makes anyone think that whatever other things
we dream up will be acceptable? Only by sticking to what God has
instructed us to do when we come before him will the church remain
free from the inventions of its leaders and the corruptions of popular
piety.
How does God choose to make his presence known among his people?
Not by idols but by his Word and Spirit! When Israel met with God
at Mount Sinai, they saw no form. Instead, they heard God’s
voice. They heard his Ten Words, what we call the Ten Commandments,
and they were terrified. However, when we gather before God each
week, we come to a place more daunting than Sinai. As the writer
to the Hebrews warns, we do not
“come to the mountain that may be touched and that burned
with fire, and to blackness and darkness and tempest, and the sound
of a trumpet and the voice of words, so that those who heard it
begged that the word should not be spoken to them anymore.”
(Hebrews 12:18-19) Where do we come? “But you have come to
Mount Zion and to the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem,
to an innumerable company of angels, to the general assembly and
church of the firstborn who are registered in heaven, to God the
Judge of all, to the spirits of just men made perfect, to Jesus
the Mediator of the new covenant, and to the blood of sprinkling
that speaks better things than that of Abel.” (Hebrews 12:22-24)
The meeting of the church in each city joins in the invisible communion
of all the saints before God. We believe in the communion of saints.
No matter how few we may be visibly, we are nonetheless part of
an innumerable company. How do we know that we meet in God’s
presence? We meet with the saints among whom he has promised to
be. God’s Word is read and heard just as it was heard at Sinai.
We have the gift of the Holy Spirit. And he has given us a sign
by which to remember our communion with him, the Lord’s Supper.
What happens when God’s people meet with him each week? By
Word and Spirit God is present on his throne in the person of his
Mediator, Jesus Christ. At the Protestant Reformation, the Reformers
placed the pulpit at the focal point of church architecture. Go
into any church that is heir of teachers such as John Calvin or
Samuel Rutherford and at the most visible point, usually at the
center of the front of the church, is the pulpit. Why? Because the
first thing to do when the saints meet before God is to hear his
Word. The first believers after Pentecost continued first of all
“steadfast in the apostles’ doctrine.” “Till
I come, give attention to reading,” Paul wrote to Timothy.
(I Timothy 4:13) Often before reading the Scriptures, a preacher
will say, “Listen to the Word of God.” The Church has
always listened to God’s Word. In Israel God commanded the
nation to gather periodically to hear again the terms of his covenant
with them. They did that in the days of Joshua and Hezekiah, Josiah
and Ezra. In other words, from their entering Canaan until their
return from Exile, they listened to God’s Word read. In one
of the earliest accounts of Christian assemblies outside of the
Bible, Justin Martyr about the year 150 A.D. writes:
On the day which is called Sunday, all who live in the cities or
in the countryside gather together in one place. And the memoirs
of the apostles or the writings of the prophets are read. Then,
when the reader has finished, the president, in a discourse, admonishes
and invites the people to practice these examples of virtue. Then
we all stand up together and offer prayers. And when we have finished
the prayer, bread is presented, and wine with water; the president
likewise offers up prayers and thanksgivings according to his ability,
and the people assent by saying, Amen. Those who are prosperous,
if they wish, contribute what each one deems appropriate.”
Justin Martyr, after mentioning reading of the Scriptures, goes
on to name the second aspect of hearing the Word besides reading,
preaching. “When the reader has finished, the president, in
a discourse, admonishes.” Paul told Timothy, "Preach
the word! Be ready in season and out of season. Convince, rebuke,
exhort, with all longsuffering and teaching. For the time will come
when they will not endure sound doctrine.” (II Timothy 4:2-3)
Sometimes I hear Christians wonder why so much of the weekly church
meeting is devoted to Bible reading and preaching. Here is the reason:
the very first thing that the subjects of a king should do is hear
what he has to say. God says repeatedly, “Listen!” In
order to encourage hearing, the Reformers invented something new
in church architecture: pews. The point of pews was for people to
sit still and listen to the Word of God rather than mill around
talking to each other. “Take heed how you hear,” Jesus
warns. (Luke 8:18)
What do we hear in the reading and preaching of the Word? We hear
two things: “what man is to believe concerning God and what
duty God requires of man.” (WSC, 3) To put it another way,
we hear first what great things God has done for us and we praise
God for his “worthship,” -- we worship him. God began
his word to Israel at Sinai by reminding them how he had saved them.
“I am the LORD thy God who brought you out of the land of
Egypt.” Each week, we hear something like the following: “I
am the LORD your God who so loved the world that I gave my only
begotten Son that whoever believes on him will not perish but have
everlasting life.” Jesus came to deliver us from Satan and
from the power of death and from the condemnation which sin brings.
The Bible is the history of our redemption. God’s people delight
in knowing the details of his dealings with us from Noah to Abraham
to David to the prophets to Jesus himself to the spread of his Kingdom
to all the world.
In the reading and preaching of the King’s Word, we hear,
second, how God expects us to live, walking “worthy of the
calling with which [we] were called.” (Ephesians 4:1) The
great summary of how we should live is found in the Ten Commandments,
but also in the Proverbs of Solomon, the teaching of Jesus, the
admonitions of Paul, and indeed throughout the Scriptures.
Besides hearing God’s Word when we meet, we speak to God
in prayer. What do we ask for? We ask first for pardon for our sins.
If you have challenged the king by disobeying him, it is wise to
act like Shimei when he met David returning to Jerusalem. Quick,
seek forgiveness. God is gracious. He promises that “if we
confess our sins he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins
and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” (I John 1:9)
And since he has been gracious to us, he commands us to be gracious
to others, forgiving our debtors. We ask for all of our large and
small daily needs, like bread and health. We ask our King to protect
us from our enemies, especially from the Evil One. We ask that our
Lord’s Kingdom would grow and expand until it fills the entire
earth. We ascribe glory to our King whose is the majesty and the
power. What does the Church do when it meets with its King each
week? Word and prayer, ask help and hear God.
How do sinners even dare come into God’s presence, when even
our righteousness is no better than filthy rags? (Isaiah 64:6) Only
with a sacrifice. No sacrifice, no access to God. Christ is our
sacrifice. God in Christ has taken away our sin and clothed us with
the righteousness of Christ. Anyone not trusting in Christ as his
Mediator will in the end be thrown out of God’s presence.
In a parable comparing the Kingdom of God to a king’s wedding
feast for his son the Prince, Jesus ended with this warning:
“But when the king came in to see the guests, he saw a man
there who did not have on a wedding garment. So he said to him,
‘Friend, how did you come in here without a wedding garment?’
And he was speechless. Then the king said to the servants, ‘Bind
him hand and foot, take him away, and cast him into outer darkness;
there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.’ For many are
called, but few are chosen.” (Matthew 22:11-14)
Christ gave the Church a ceremony to stand for the New Covenant
which he made in his blood. It is the Sacrament of the Lord’s
Supper. When the Church eats the bread and drinks the wine, it exhibits
the secret of its life: it lives by the righteousness of Christ
received by faith. We look backwards through time to his death,
forwards through time until his Coming, and in the communion of
the saints we receive nourishment and life from Christ. In the Lord’s
Supper the Church knows that God has brought us home into his kingdom
with a feast. We have part in God our heritage.
Meeting weekly with their King, the saints hear God in his Word
read and preached remind them of his covenant and exhort them to
faith and obedience, confess their sins and make requests, and observe
the sign of God’s covenant with us. It is a matter of proper
etiquette, not chosen style. These are obvious and proper things
to do when appearing at a king’s court. One more thing the
saints have always done when meeting with God. Sing! At the temple,
a special chorus of Levites sang. In the synagogue Jews chanted
the Psalms. Now all Christians are priests, and we all offer the
sacrifice of praise. (Hebrews 13:15) Paul wrote to the Colossians
about “teaching and admonishing one another in psalms and
hymns and spiritual songs,singing with grace in your hearts to the
Lord.” (Colossians 3:16) In “teaching and admonishing”
through the Psalms, we all teach one another “what man is
to believe concerning God and what duty God requires of man.”
In the year 112, the Roman governor Pliny the Younger examined two
deaconesses for being Christians. Expecting to find monstrous crimes,
he found only that the Christians met before daybreak on a certain
day, took an oath to abstain from crime, and sang a song to Christ
as a god. However, since they were stubborn and would not offer
incense to Caesar as god, he executed them.
What do we sing to Christ in the Psalms? At a recent Psalm Sing,
I was struck by the kaleidoscope of truth in the Psalms. The Psalter
is the Bible in miniature, God’s truth refracted through the
prism of human experience and emotion. We sang about God’s
creation, then turned the kaleidoscope to see Israel returned from
Exile, praised God -- “Hallelujah, praise Jehovah”--
rejoiced in God’s defeat of his enemies, praised the Messiah
-- the Psalms speak of Christ, you know. He said so. -- then we
looked forward to Judgment Day. In the next Psalm we confessed our
sins, asked God to save us from our enemies, and finished with a
lullaby about the Lord our Shepherd. Throughout our weekly meetings,
we sing God’s whole truth to him and to one another, truths
mixed together in song the same way our lives bounce from thanks
to God to prayerful pleas to reminders of how to live. In the Psalms
the priesthood of the saints together sing to our King his truth,
our needs, our thanks, and his praise.
In our weekly meetings we know God as our heritage, the One from
whom we will never be separated. We know one more thing: we are
Christ’s inheritance. Israel sang, “Blessed is the nation
whose God is the LORD, The people he has chosen as his own inheritance.”
(Psalm 33:12) God told Christ, “Ask of me, and I will give
you the nations for your inheritance, and the ends of the earth
for your possession.” (Psalm 2:8) Elders in every congregation
shepherd God’s “lot” or “heritage.”
(I Peter 5:3 AV kleros) God is our heritage; we are Christ’s
inheritance. As husband and wife belong to each other, so do Christ
and his church. The Beloved and the Church both exult, “My
beloved is mine, and I am his.” (Song of Songs 2:16) When
a husband and wife embrace, they know that they belong together.
Paul tells them not to separate for long, but to come together again
after prayer. (I Corinthians 7:4-5) When God and his church meet
each week, we know that we belong to him and he to us. The destiny
of the saints is to be with God, united forever in the Covenant
brought by Jesus, united forever in Jesus who is our covenant. (Isaiah
42:6-7 see 49:8) Christ is our King and the church meets with him
weekly according to his etiquette. Finally, our king through his
ambassador dismisses us with his blessing. (Number 6:22-27, II Corinthians
13:14) We gather at God’s call and we leave with his benediction.
The heart of the Christian life is meeting with God our King in
the visible assembly of the saints to review and renew his covenant
with us. God, through the elders he has given to the church, calls
us together on his appointed day. No one can assemble alone, and
God commands us not to forsake assembling together. Meeting at the
King’s court, the household of God where judgment begins,
implies the need for correct etiquette. The human love for idols
as the means to feel God’s presence demonstrates that we cannot
be trusted to behave as we like in his presence. What is proper
etiquette? To hear our King speak. To confess our violations of
his covenant and ask forgiveness. To sing his truth in his words
to his praise and our mutual edification. To bring offerings and
make requests in prayer. To renew our covenant commitment, especially
in the Sacrament of Communion. To receive in faith God’s blessing
pronounced and thus to be dismissed. And throughout our audience
with our King to remember that we appear acceptably only because
he has given us the proper clothes, the righteousness of Christ,
and he has expiated our sins by the death of Christ as our sacrifice.
No sacrifice, no access to God. The heart of the Christian life
is meeting with God our King in the visible assembly of the saints
to review and renew his covenant with us. To come to church before
God our heritage brings us to a place more awesome than Mount Sinai
itself.
How do you dare not appear at court when your King has summoned
you? Every Lord’s Day you belong at church, observing proper
etiquette. The heart of the Christian life is meeting with God our
King in the visible assembly of the saints to review and renew his
covenant with us.
We have come to the end of our conference. What will you remember
about our godly heritage a year from now? You will remember that
you have a three-part inheritance: land, children, and God himself,
lost in Adam, regained in Christ. Thank God for the land which feeds
you, praying that the day will come soon when your land -- the land
of Japan and the land of the United States, the land of Canada and
the land of Australia, the land of Cyprus and the land of Ireland
-- when all lands will serve the Lord, idols destroyed forever.
Earnestly desire children to fill the earth and even more to fill
the Church. Pray for the holy seed and raise your children to know
and obey the LORD. Jesus has all authority in heaven and on earth
and sends you to make disciples of all the nations and to teach
them to obey all that he has commanded. (Matthew 28:18-20) And love
your God with all your heart and soul and strength and mind, never
failing to assemble with the saints to review and renew his covenant
with you.
Land, children, God himself, our godly heritage, but the greatest
of these is God. His is the kingdom and the power and the glory
forever. “To him who is able to keep you from stumbling, and
to present you faultless before the presence of his glory with exceeding
joy, to God our Savior, who alone is wise, be glory and majesty,
dominion and power, both now and forever. Amen.” (Jude 24-25)
“The grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the love of God and
the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all. Amen.”
(II Corinthians 13:14) “Behold, the tabernacle of God is with
men, and he will dwell with them, and they shall be his people.
God himself will be with them and be their God. And God will wipe
away every tear from their eyes; there shall be no more death, nor
sorrow, nor crying. there shall be no more pain, for the former
things have passed away.” (Revelation 21:3-4) “When
I awake, I will see his face.” (Psalm 17:15) “I know
that my Redeemer lives and he shall stand at least on the earth.
And after my skin is destroyed, this I know, that in my flesh I
shall see God, whom I shall see for myself, and my eyes shall behold,
and not another. How my heart yearns within me.” (Job 19:25-27)
“Even so, come Lord Jesus!” our godly heritage. “The
grace of our Lord Jesus Christ be with you all. Amen.” (Revelation
22:20-21)
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