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Tuesday, August 21, 2012

8/19/12 - Pentecost 11 - Hebrews 5:11-6:1

IT'S TIME TO GROW UP

An Encouragement from Scripture

            It’s time to grow up.  And I’m not just saying that to catch your attention this morning.  I’m serious.  It’s time to grow up.  And I’m not directing that towards somebody else either.  I’m saying it to you.  It’s time to grow up.  But not because I have observed all kinds of immature behavior from you; on the contrary, I think this body of believers is very spiritually mature for the most part.  And so I’m not specifically talking about outward actions per se; I’m referring to the depth of understanding and knowledge of God’s Word.  To know more.  To better understand.  To be able to apply God’s Word to your everyday life more consistently, more effectively, and more often.  That’s what I mean when I say that it’s time to grow up.  And it’s not just me saying it.  It’s not some sort of personal agenda that’s driving this.  I don’t stand up here on a soap box on Sunday mornings.  I stand behind a pulpit from which you are supposed to hear the very words of God himself.   It is the Lord who gives us this strong encouragement in the pages of Scripture: It’s time to grow up.

            “We have much to say about this, but it is hard to explain because you are slow to learn. In fact, though by this time you ought to be teachers, you need someone to teach you the elementary truths of God’s word all over again. You need milk, not solid food!  Anyone who lives on milk, being still an infant, is not acquainted with the teaching about righteousness.  But solid food is for the mature, who by constant use have trained themselves to distinguish good from evil.  Therefore let us leave the elementary teachings about Christ and go on to maturity.”
       
Milk to Solids

            During the first few months of a baby’s life after birth, that child will only be able to drink milk or special baby formula from a bottle.  They do not have the teeth to chew, a throat large enough to swallow chunks of food, or the digestive system to manage more than that.  But as that child grows the milk and the baby formula will not be enough.  That child will have to start eating “real” food, solid food, food with some substance to it.  Because that is how the Lord has designed the human body: milk first, solid food soon after.

            He has designed your faith in the same way.  After the Lord grants a person the gift of faith through the power of the Holy Spirit in God’s Word, that person is able to handle the basic elementary truths of Scripture: those teachings about sin and a Savior, Jesus’ life and death, his resurrection and the beautiful home of heaven.  But after a while that faith needs more.  That faith grows to such a degree that it needs more than milk, it needs solid food.  It needs the heavier starches and the chewier pieces of meat. 

            Now, theoretically, could a grown person live on bottles of baby formula and nothing else?  Sure, that person could survive.  But that person would not be very healthy, he would not be very strong, and he would not be very capable of fending off diseases and viruses with such a depleted immune system.  Could the faith of a Christian survive on the basic truths of Scripture and nothing else?  Sure, the faith of that person could survive.  But that faith would not be very healthy, it would not be very strong, and it would not be very capable of fending off attacks from the devil and temptations from this world with such a depleted immune system.  A body needs solid food.  Faith needs solid food.  And if that solid food is not consumed, things could go seriously wrong in a hurry.  There’s a reason the Lord encourages all of us that it’s time to grow up.

Immaturity

            Every evening around 9pm or so I try to mature a little bit.  And I do that by sitting down to read my Bible.  I do it at that hour because I usually don’t have any classes by that time and the kids are in bed so it is relatively quiet.  After I read the section of Scripture assigned for that day (taking it slow, jotting down notes), I read through a section of Hebrew Old Testament and then a section of Greek New Testament that is set for that day in a book that I have.  And about every other day I also read from another one of the books that I have on the shelf.  Now depending on what part of Scripture I’m reading from and how hard the Greek or Hebrew is and how long I read, sometimes that takes me a good hour to get through, sometimes 45 minutes, sometimes 30, sometimes 20.  But every day I try to feed myself with the solid food of Scripture so that the Holy Spirit can work in my heart as he sees fit. 

            Of course, there are times (even entire weeks) when I read the Bible just to get it done.  I’ve got four chapters in the middle of Ezekiel to get through on a given day so I just get through them because I’m tired and my mind is exhausted and I have to get up early the next morning and I’m just not in the mood to read right now.  And so although I’m technically attempting to eat “solid food” I’m more or less swallowing it whole: I’m not chewing it, I’m not savoring it, I’m not even really tasting it.  I just shovel it down as quickly as possible so that I can get on to more important things.  How juvenile of me.  How immature.  It’s time for me to grow up.

            I hope that every one of you here reads your Bible on a regular basis.  But if you do, or if you are in the middle of a Bible study, or if you are following along with one of the Scripture readings in a church service, or if you are listening to the sermon, do you ever find your mind wandering off?  Do you ever catch yourself just going through the motions?  Do you ever notice yourself shrugging off the tougher concepts, ignoring the deeper issues, disregarding anything that might actually make you think?  And I do that too.  There are certain things I come across in the Bible that I don’t get right away, but instead of taking some time to figure it out, I just pass them off.  Because far be it from me to actually look something up, to dig a little deeper, to put in the effort of comparing similar passages of Scripture so that I can fully understand the wonders of God’s Word!  Sometimes we are just a little bit too lazy.  Sometimes we just like to spend more time on ourselves than we do on our Lord.  Sometimes we would rather spend more effort on our lives in this world than on our lives in his Word.  How juvenile of us.  How immature.  It’s time for us to grow up.

Jesus Feeds You with What You Need

            What does a good parent do when a child refuses to eat any fruit, any vegetable, or any food that is healthy?  There might be a meal or two when that parent will let it slide, but it will come to a point where a faithful parent will make that child eat what is healthy.  “You are not getting anything else until you eat this!  You are not getting up from this table until you eat this!  You are not going to be allowed to do this fun thing until you eat this!”  And why does the parent make such a demand?  To be mean to the child?  To show the child who’s boss?  No!  The parent does this out love - because the child is too immature to realize that this kind of food must be eaten and it’s the parent’s responsibility to make sure it happens.  Our God does the same thing.

            Our God is oftentimes called our “Father.”  And we are his children - his immature children who do not always eat what he has given us.  And so sometimes he has to make us eat that solid food for our souls.  And he does that by putting us into situations and positions where we can do nothing else than feed ourselves with his Word.  He does that by making us go through difficulties and struggles that present only one way out: to eat what we should have been eating all along.  He doesn’t force it down our mouths, he simply makes us aware that we have been neglecting our spiritual health and have been harming our souls in the process.  Our Father is good at that.  He is good at revealing our self-imposed malnutrition.  But he is also good at holding out to us exactly what we need for nourishment once again.

            And so our Father holds out to us something like the book of Romans - a letter that is the focus of our women’s Bible study right now.  A 16 chapter book of the Bible that not only clarifies our sinfulness but also illuminates our salvation as well.  It delves deep into what our Lord had to do for our forgiveness, the sacrifice that he had to pay, and the peace, the joy, and the freedom we receive because of it.  The book of Romans expounds on who we once were but who we now are because of Christ.  It provides us with one of the most complete pictures of God’s grace towards sinners and one of the most vivid explanations of what faith in Jesus actually means.  These precious pages in the middle of the New Testament carefully lay out how God chose us from the very beginning and what will become of us in the end.  It is a letter by the apostle Paul that is filled with solid food.  And our good Father makes it available for us at every meal.

            But there is more food as well!  The Father holds out the story of David for us - something we are studying on Sunday morning together.  David was the great king of God’s Old Testament people who not only modeled his faith, but someone who carried on the line of the Savior himself.  The Father holds out for us a thorough explanation of his 10 Commandments that we will get to in the middle of the God’s Word Only course starting this Thursday.  An explanation that is not just a cursory overview of the surface meaning of each commandment, but an in depth discussion of the opportunities they provide for Christians to praise our Lord.  Our Father holds out for us the many passages of Scripture that give us the charge to carry this gospel to the world.  A topic we will visit once again in our Monday morning Bible study.  But these are only a few of the main courses offered on the Lord’s menu.  There are 66 books of the Bible after all.  Each one of them containing multiple precious truths of God’s will; each one providing an insight or a path that leads to the Savior who loves you and has saved you and has promised you heaven.    This is the solid food that the Lord makes available for you every day.  And he is thrilled when you are mature enough to be able to enjoy it.

Exciting Possibilities to Mature

            It’s exciting how much there is for us to learn.  It’s thrilling to think about all of the insights the Lord has stored up for us in his Word and how many applications to our lives we will be able to make.  And it’s all right here in front of us: in a worship service, in a Bible study, in a devotional book, in the pages of Scripture itself.  Solid food.  Food that will sustain you when times are hard.  Food that will provide you with the energy and the direction to keep going.  Food that is rich with flavor.  Food that is filled with power.  And so it’s time to grow up.  “Let us leave the elementary teachings about Christ and go on to maturity.”  Not leaving Christ behind but getting to know him better.  Spending more time on what he has to say.  Putting more effort into what he has to teach.  Leaving more room in our spiritual stomachs for what he has already done. 

            An old prayer that we had in our old hymnal years ago had a beautiful phrase in it.  After thanking our Lord for the words of the Bible he had recorded for us, we would ask him that we might “read, mark, learn and inwardly digest them.”  What a great phrase!  My good friends, I love inwardly digesting this spiritual feast with you.  I love the worship services and the Bible studies and the personal conversations when we get at least a sample of God’s wonderful Word.  There is nothing better.  And so let’s continue to mature together.  Let’s push each other and encourage each other to eat more, to savor longer, to inwardly digest just a little bit better.  Because there’s so much of it.  And it’s all good.  It’s time to grow up.  Not because we have to, but because we get to.  And how exciting it is to think of all the foods the Lord has in store for us that we have yet to taste.  Amen.

“Grow in the grace and knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ. To him be glory both now and forever! Amen.” - 2 Peter 3:18