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Devotion to Jesus can Thaw Out Ice Cold Hearts

Jesus’ words in Matthew 24 begin with a question from His disciples, “When shall these things be? And what shall be the sign of Your coming, and of the end of the age?” (Matthew 24:3) With all the things that have happened in the last year, many people think that we are living in those last days which Jesus made mention of in this chapter of Matthew’s gospel. Tucked away in almost the middle of the Lord’s words on the subject is a statement which identifies the biggest issue of our day. I don’t believe that Covid, Antifa, or who will be the next president is the biggest problem facing people and especially Christians today; Jesus identifies it right here in (Matthew 24:12):

Because lawlessness shall abound, the love of many will grow cold.”

We live in a day of woe. A day made mention of by the prophet Isaiah through whom God said, “Woe unto them that call evil good and good evil...” (Isaiah 5:20). I have heard this verse many times and have seen times when people reversed the polarity between good and evil but in our day it has become commonplace. God’s will, word and way have been turned upside down by men who would throw off all authority be it God’s or mans. Thus, because of hate, because of wickedness in the streets, because of violence, because of evil in all its various forms and because everything has been turned upside down the love of many not only will grow cold but is doing so even now.

Are the words of Christ in (v.12) directed towards the hater, the wicked or the violent? Who’s love was Jesus referring to when He said that it would grow cold? He was referring to the love of the one professing faith in Jesus Christ and there are many people today professing to know Jesus who do not possess a relationship with Him. You see, I believe that the Christian man or woman will bear witness to their faith and that there will be evidence in their life that he or she is in fact a true believer, and of these evidences, love stands out. Jesus associated love for Him with obedience to His commands (John 14:15) and one of those commands is “Love one another. As I have loved you so you love one another.” (John 13:34) Jesus was not talking about sentimental, emotional or erotic love as the kinds of love which would grow cold in the days leading up to His return; He was speaking of something much less common – He was speaking of condition-less love. He was not speaking of the love expressed to someone who loves you or does good to you; He was not talking about the kind of love expressed to people who treat you right – He was talking about the kind of love that just loves. The reality is that we are known not so much by what we say as what we do; Jesus makes that clear in (John 13:35) where He says:

By this all will know that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another.”

Is it possible for a Christians love to grow cold? What I can say is that with the increase in lawlessness in all its forms today, a great tension has grown up in me. I am constantly needing to yield to the push back of the Holy Spirit when in my flesh I want to lash out against the evil I see with my eyes. Circumstances beyond our control can, if we let them, turn us from loving like Jesus.

What can we do?

The answer comes in remembering Who is in control and turning our eyes back onto Him. Jesus said in (John 16:33): “These things I have spoken to you, that in Me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation; but be of good cheer, I have overcome the world.” To keep Christian love from growing cold we need to turn our eyes away from one thing and onto something else. Jesus did not say that the world around us MIGHT give us trouble – He said that it WOULD and in the same breath He said, “but I have overcome the world.” What was He telling us? Was He bragging? No, He was telling every believer to focus on Him in order to overcome the troubles around them. He was telling us how we can have peace in days like these – peace within our hearts rather than around our lives. The only way a Christians love will not grow cold is if the Christian’s heart is constantly focused on Jesus.

We focus on Him when we pray. We focus on Him when we study His word. We focus on Him when we see the needs of others before we see our own needs and when we focus on Him, we trust that because He is in control and we are His, come what may to our world or to us, everything is going to be alright.

Let me circle back to something I said a little while ago; I said that the are many professing Christians who are not possessing Christians. There are may people who sentimentally and emotionally refer to themselves as Christians but who do not know Jesus, worse still, Jesus does not know them either. You cannot love like Jesus if you do not know the love of Jesus towards you. Jesus said that a day is coming when such people (those who base eternity on the wrong things), people who falsely call Him Lord will say, “We ate and drank in Your presence, and You taught in our streets.’” To which He will respond, “I tell you I do not know you, where you are from. Depart from Me, all you workers of iniquity.’” (Luke 13:26-27) Did Jesus mean that He was not aware of these people? No. He knows everything and is aware of everyone; when He tells those who falsely call Him their Lord that He does not know them He is saying that He has nothing to do with them and that He has no relationship with them.

The fact is that there is a day coming when all wrongs will be made right and when hate, evil, lawlessness and violence will be done away with, of that day, the Bible says:

that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth, and that every tongue should confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father.” (Philippians 2:9–11)

Are you ready for that day?

God so loved the world that He sent His son (John 3:16) and Jesus so loved His Father and us that He gave His life willingly (John 10:18) – He was killed in our place for our sin, our crimes, our iniquity and our lawless deeds so that we may believe in Him and through Him gain eternal life. Do you believe? In that day which is to come, will you bow from love and loyalty to the Lamb of God which takes away the sin of the world or will you bow by force?

Believe on the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ and you shall be saved.” (Romans 10:13)

Dangerous Doctrines to Avoid

Is it ever a bad idea to make sure that you know where you stand with the Lord? Yes and no. While on the one hand it IS good to be sure of your salvation it is never good to doubt it once you have appropriated the finished work of the Lord Jesus Christ to redeem you to your life. Our salvation after all, though it is processed in our minds is NOT solely academic; we hear the word, receive the word and believe the word but believing is not merely intellectual assent, in other words, we are not saved simply because we agree with the word of God concerning the gospel of Jesus Christ – we are saved when we not only agree but apply the word to our own life specifically.

Jesus did not die for us in general – He died for you specifically (see John 3:16).

This is why the question He asked Martha in (John 11:25-26) is not only important for her to answer but for us as well. Consider it as we read it:

Jesus said to her, “I am the resurrection and the life. He who believes in Me, though he may die, he shall live. And whoever lives and believes in Me shall never die. Do you believe this?‘”

Do you believe that Jesus is enough?

The message series begun at church today was titled “GreaterThan” and today our youth pastor, Russel spoke to Jesus being greater “not equal to or less than” but greater than anything we have faced, are facing or ever will face; to that I would add that the works which He performed to make our redemption and eternal life possible are greater than any effort you could ever make on your own behalf. When we doubt our salvation or fear we have lost it, it is because we have forgotten that it was “not by works of righteousness which we have done,(Titus 3:5) but according to His mercy He saved us, through the washing of regeneration and renewing of the Holy Spirit.”

Can you lose what you did not labor to gain? Can you lose what you could not obtain by your own effort? No and no but can you lose a gift? You can lose a gift but you cannot lose the gift the Jesus Christ gave you because – “eternal life IS eternal.” He said in (John 6:37) “All that the Father gives Me will come to Me, and the one who comes to Me I will by no means cast out.” His work of redemption on your behalf never becomes less than enough to save and KEEP YOU SAVED!

Still we struggle – we sin, we fail to live up to our high calling in Christ Jesus and in those moments when what is closer to us seems more apparent we forget the fact that we are saved (Hebrews 7:25) “to the utter most.”

In my years of Christian life, being one myself who more than a few times has failed to live up to my calling, I have found myself in terror as I gazed into the warnings we find in Hebrews to those who (Hebrews 10:29) “treated the blood of the covenant by which (we) are sanctified” (the covenant made between us and God through the blood of Jesus) “as a common thing” and in their backsliding put the Lord (Hebrews 6:6) “to an open shame.” I thought either I had lost my salvation or that I never had it because of my sinfulness. I lived in doubt, confusion and fear – is THAT what the Lord has called us to? Didn’t John write all that he wrote so that we could “KNOW that we” (1 John 5:13) “have eternal life“?!

Words like those found in the thirteenth chapter of Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians where he wrote in (v.5): “Examine yourselves as to whether you are in the faith. Test yourselves. Do you not know yourselves, that Jesus Christ is in you?—unless indeed you are disqualified;” had me in a constant state of self-examination to the point of self-condemnation. Word’s pulled out of context can do that…

Let me give you the gist of his rhetoric in that section – Paul was being harassed by some who called his calling and apostleship into question; his second letter addressed that issue in some detail and there was perhaps a concern that some of the weaker brethren might be overtaken by the false teachers pushing that narrative about him. As it happens to men of great passion and zeal, Paul’s exasperation and irritation may have found a vent with words like those found in (v.5) where he seems to turn the table on those who would question his relationship with the Lord saying – “take a look at your own life” or “are you hearing yourselves?” But whether it was a rebuke or a sincere call on Paul’s part for the Corinthians to see if there was either evidence of conversion or ongoing relationship with the Lord, the believers at Corinth were the PROOF – they were (2 Cor. 3:3) “an epistle of Christ, ministered by us” (by Paul and team)…”written by the Spirit of God“…”on tablets“…”of the heart.

Paul was NOT calling their salvation into question – He was trying to get them to do likewise concerning him.

In a round-about way, my hope for this post is simply this: that each of us would come to fully know WHO we are in Christ, understanding that we are who we are based not on anything we have done but on everything which Jesus has done for us. Today you are either a non-believer who has yet to come to trust in Jesus for salvation or you are a believer who has trusted in the Lord’s finished work on your behalf but you can NEVER lose what the Lord has granted you eternally.

(Next week we will consider the danger of making the above truth a license to sin…)

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