“Trust in the Lord is choosing not to trust in other things,” said
Columbus, Ohio preacher David Reid at a Bible conference last week in Concord,
N.C. “When Ephesians 2:9 ends with ‘lest any man should boast,’ what it’s
telling you is the gospel’s designed to take everything you could possibly
claim and just, as Paul’s going to say shortly, count it as ‘dung.’ You’re
saved when you trust in Christ alone and not anything else.
“Romans 3:27 tells us that boasting is excluded by ‘the law of
faith.’ Salvation is when one trusts in Christ alone, not Christ plus other
things. So I’ll say this, salvation is not based upon works, but it is giving
up reliance on anything other than Christ.
“Paul’s
talking in the present tense in Philippians 3:8 when he says, ‘Yea doubtless,
and I count all things but loss for the excellency of the knowledge of Christ
Jesus my Lord: for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and do count
them but dung, that I may win Christ.’
“Do you see how that’s different
from verse 7? In Philippians 3:7, he says, ‘But what things were gain to me,
those I counted loss for Christ.’ That’s in the past.
“So all those
things that were on Paul’s human resume and to his credit, he said, ‘You know
what that is? It’s worthless, it’s dung; it does me no good whatsoever.’ But Philippians
was written many, many years after he was saved. He continued to count all of
those things loss and then he tells you the reason why: ‘For the excellency of
the knowledge of Christ Jesus my Lord.’
“Here’s what he’s saying, and we should believe this but we don’t.
He’s saying that as a saved person, you should count EVERYTHING in your life as
loss, as dung, in comparison to the ‘excellency of the knowledge of Christ
Jesus.’
“You know what happens with us? There’s a lot of things we still
esteem. There’s a lot of things that occupy our time, that become obsessions
for us, and we don’t really believe that verse that the excellency of the
knowledge of Jesus Christ is so surpassing that it makes all the other things
in which we spend our time dung.
“Webster 1828 defines excellency as ‘being of great virtue or
worth.’ The second definition is ‘distinguished for superior attainments.’ The
core of what it means to be excellent is to be superior. It’s something that is
better.
*****
“I think Matthew 13 is an interesting picture of this. This is in
the kingdom program, so please don’t misunderstand, but this is a good picture.
Matthew 13:44 says, ‘Again, the kingdom of
heaven is like unto treasure hid in a field; the which when a man hath found,
he hideth, and for joy thereof goeth and selleth all that he hath, and buyeth
that field.’
“So you find a treasure in a field and it’s just surpassing; it’s
beyond anything you’ve ever experienced. It is then a rational decision to sell
everything you have; to give up every other possession you have just to get
that field because that treasure is so great. That is the same concept that Paul
is saying with regard to the ‘excellency of the knowledge of Christ Jesus.’
“Think of it this way. Do we spend a lot our time occupied in
worldly stuff that just fascinates us? The point in Philippians 1:10 is not
simply to approve things that are different (through right division); it’s to
approve things that are excellent; that are superior.
“In life you don’t look to simply be a dispensationalist because
being a dispensationalist means you recognize the right division chart and the differences
in things over time, but what you do is approve things that are excellent and invest
your LIFE in those things. When we make decisions in life, we need to make
decisions about what is the best thing. Oftentimes
the question we ask is, ‘Is it okay for me to do this?’
“Does scripture tell you to think about life that way?! I
Corinthians 6:12 says, ‘All things are lawful unto
me, but all things are not expedient: all things are lawful for me, but I will
not be brought under the power of any.’
“Romans 6:4 says, ‘Therefore we are
buried with him by baptism into death: that like as Christ was raised up from
the dead by the glory of the Father, even so we also should walk in newness of
life.’
“Today, we are not under the law, period. You should make ZERO
decisions in life on the basis of whether something is lawful. The fact is you
don’t need Scripture to do anything you want; you already DO anything you want.
“By the way, there are consequences for everything you do. When
you make bad decisions in life, there’s often physical consequences. You harm
your body. There’s legal consequences. There’s reputational consequences. There’s
consequences at the Judgment Seat of Christ.
“I Corinthians 6 says ‘all things are lawful to me but all things
are not expedient.’ That’s the test! I Corinthians 7:23 says, ‘Ye are bought with a price; be not ye the servants of men.’
“The idea there is, forget lawfulness as the test; the test is
expediency. The word ‘expedient’ means literally ‘hastening, urging forward.
Useful, profitable.’ In other words, does it move the ball forward?
"There’s a
lot of things we do in life that just don’t advance the cause of Christ. It’s
not expedient because it doesn’t contribute to our edification or the edification
of others in the Body of Christ. It doesn’t lead to someone getting the gospel.”
(to be continued)
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