Our Prayer

Our Prayer

Heavenly Father, I know that I have sinned against You and that my sins separate me from You. I am truly sorry. I now want to turn away from my sinful past and turn to You for forgiveness. Please forgive me, and help me avoid sinning again. I believe that Your Son, Jesus Christ, died for my sins, that He was raised from the dead, is alive, and hears my prayer. I invite Jesus to become my Savior and the Lord of my life, to rule and reign in my heart from this day forward. Please send Your Holy Spirit to help me obey You and to convict me when I sin. I pledge to grow in grace and knowledge of You. My greatest purpose in life is to follow Your example and do Your will for the rest of my life. In Jesus' name I pray, Amen.

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

Class Lesson April 14, 2013

Hey Gang,



We began a new series last week entitled: HOLY GOD, HOLY PEOPLE. This study will help us understand what holiness is, why God expects holiness from us, and how we can become holy.


“If Christianity is ever to be returned to a place of power in America - then the truth of God’s Holiness must once again be lifted up to its rightful place. The average age of the world’s great civilizations has been two hundred years. These nations have progressed through the following sequence: from bondage to spiritual faith, from spiritual faith to great courage, from courage to liberty, from liberty to abundance, from abundance to selfishness, from selfishness to complacency, from complacency to apathy, from apathy to dependency, from dependency back to bondage.” - Professor Alexander Tyler (written over 200 years ago).

With the rapid spread of impurity in our culture rising by the day, we are close to losing our nation! With homosexuality being encouraged from the schoolroom to the courtroom, and with the rise of promiscuity in all ages, we stand at a dangerous crossroads.

According to Barna Research, 60% of Americans believe that living together without marriage is acceptable behavior; 59% believe that it’s ok to enjoy sexual thoughts or fantasies about someone; 45% believe that abortion is acceptable; 42% condone adultery; 38% believe that viewing pornography is morally acceptable; 30% believe that homosexuality is morally acceptable.

At the same time, we have churches on just about every street corner throughout the nation! So what’s the problem? As a whole, those who say they are Christians have forsaken the Holiness of their God! We as the church are responsible for the ills of our nation! And its time for us to accept the responsibility for changing it!
 


These lessons will help us develop a biblical view of what it means to be called to be a holy people, ways we can honor the holiness of God, some practical effects of holy living, and the benefits that come to those who live holy unto the Lord. 




Here are the 4 lessons in this series:



1. April 7 Called to Holiness - Exodus 19:1-6, 10-14, 16-19

2. April 14 Honoring God’s Holiness – Leviticus 5:1, 4-5, 14-16; 6:1-7

3. April 21 Living in Holiness – Leviticus 18:1-5, 20-26; 20:6-8

4. April 28 Blessings of Holiness – Leviticus 26:3-13, 40-42, 45



BIG DEAL                 NO BIG DEAL


  So, where would these fall in your opinion?

Fudging on your taxes:

Accidentally speeding:

Calling in sick to get a day off:

Excusing yourself from an obligation:

Bringing own candy into theater:

Padding your resume:

Saying harsh words without meaning to:
Lying to keep co-worker out of trouble:


The question is not whether these issues are right or wrong - God knows that! The question is do you think it's possible to keep something secret and never get busted for it?

Galatians 6:7 "Do not be deceived: God cannot be mocked. People reap what they sow."
 
How?

Psychiatry often takes the blame-shifting approach to guilt feelings. 
The comedian Anna Russell wrote a poem that pokes fun at this.

I went to my psychiatrist to be psychoanalyzed
To find out why I killed the cat and blacked my husband’s eyes.
He laid me on a downy couch to see what he could find
And here’s what he dredged up from my subconscious mind.

When I was one my mommy hid my dolly in a trunk
And so it follows naturally that I am always drunk.
And when I was two I saw my father kiss the maid one day
And that is why I suffer now from kleptomaniae. 
At three I had the feeling of ambivalence toward my brothers
And so it follows naturally I poison all my lovers.
But I am happy now I’ve learned a lesson this has taught
That everything I do that’s wrong is someone else’s fault.





 

Life Goal
Recognize holiness as the path to relationship and delight, not as a set of arbitrary rules. Embrace it. 



God has provided a way for people to deal with sin and to live in right relationship with Him. This happens through Jesus Christ. In the Book of Leviticus, God outlined specific sacrifices to be brought by the people and offered by the priests, the Levites, depending on the sin, intentional or unintentional. Leviticus also contains laws to guide the people in how to avoid sin and live in holiness on a daily basis. Although Christ fulfilled the sacrifice requirement, the principles of holiness found in Leviticus still apply. The reality is that God is still holy and our daily lives must meet His standard. This study should heighten our understanding of how serious sin is. We can choose holy living with God and with others. Join the adventure!
Our lesson this morning says to admit your guilt, repent, and make restitution.

 



I. ADMIT YOUR GUILT – LEVITICUS 5:1, 4

5 “When someone sins in any of these ways: If he has seen, heard, or known about something he has witnessed, and did not respond to a public call to testify, he is responsible for his sin.



4 Or if someone swears rashly to do what is good or evil—concerning anything a person may speak rashly in an oath—without being aware of it, but later recognizes it, he incurs guilt in such an instance.


When I hurt my wife’s feelings, I know I’m in the wrong. It doesn’t matter that I didn’t really mean it when I blurted a harsh comment, made a snide remark, or rolled my eyes impatiently. It doesn’t matter if my sarcasm was meant as a joke or if my tone communicated something different that what I intended. Why? Because I’ve hurt her. There may be truth in what I’m saying or wanting to communicate, but when I am rude or impatient that truth loses the power it is meant to have. She’s hurting and I am responsible.

EXCUSES, EXCUSES: Why is it easier to make excuses when we do something wrong rather than own up to it? Whom do you tend to blame besides yourself? What does it cost our relationships when we fail to admit we are guilty? How does one make amends after a wrong? Which of these actions is hardest for you to do? Why choose to do it anyway?



God’s relationship with us is even more critical than a human relationship. In addition, when we hurt a person we also hurt God. We are wrong when we offend Him, whether we mean to or not. As God outlined the way His relationship with Israel would work, H taught how to behave and why. Notice that verse 1 begins with “when” and not “if.” Even God’s people would fall short of His perfect standard. So, He described how the process would work when they sinned. Verse 6 says that admitting guilt is only one step. Making God-guided restitution heals both you and ones you’ve hurt.



When someone wrongs you, what do you want from that person, besides an apology? How well do your expectations match what the Bible demands? How do these heal both the offender and the offended: Recognize you’ve wronged someone? Admit responsibility? Make restitution? Change your ways? What else?



When someone wrongs us, we don’t want to hear them rationalize their actions. We need to hear them say their actions were hurtful and wrong. It’s a big deal to God that we recognize we are guilty. It’s the first step to healing. In this passage, God listed examples to clarify that sin can occur in seemingly insignificant ways. For example, there is no escape clause for a person not to own up to what he saw.



Think of something you did this week (on purpose or on accident) that you realize was wrong. What excuses (aloud or in your heart) did you make for your actions? Stop and pray silently. Admit to God that you weren’t the victim. Take the first step to honor God by agreeing with Him that you are guilty.



Points:

  1. The words and promises a person speaks are serious matters and need to be spoken with forethought.
  2. We are responsible before the Lord not only for our actions but also for what we say or don’t say.
  3. Our sin makes us guilty before God, even if the action is taken toward another person.






II. DEMONSTRATE REPENTANCE – LEVITICUS 5:5, 14-16

5 If someone incurs guilt in one of these cases, he is to confess he has committed that sin.


14 Then the Lord spoke to Moses: 15 “If someone offends by sinning unintentionally in regard to any of the Lord’s holy things, he must bring his restitution offering to the Lord: an unblemished ram from the flock (based on your assessment of its value in silver shekels, according to the sanctuary shekel) as a restitution offering. 16 He must make restitution for his sin regarding any holy thing, adding a fifth of its value to it, and give it to the priest. Then the priest will make atonement on his behalf with the ram of the restitution offering, and he will be forgiven.



As I’m writing this, I am tucked away in a corner writing while my wife and daughters play in the living room. Maybe it was the silence that interrupted the typical background noise. Maybe it was the change in my wife’s voice. Either way, someone was in trouble. The crime: our five-year-old had written on the wall. It was in pencil and we have high-gloss paint on the trim, so “No Big Deal” – right? Well, not really. Our daughter had just asked if she could measure herself by writing on the wall. My wife said, “No, not on that wall” and then suggested that we find a spot that isn’t in the living room where we can measure her. Unsatisfied, our five-year-old angel promptly turned and wrote on the wall anyway. She was sent to her room while my wife and I deliberated on what to do next. At our house, writing on the wall doesn’t bother us nearly as much as willfully disobeying a parent.



What pushes you to say, “Yes I will!” when God says, “Don’t!”



According to verses 14-16, true confession was also accompanied by what? Why was this important?

  • “I’m sorry” alone can’t make things better. You need to demonstrate you’ll walk a different path and not hurt others in that way again. That’s repentance. It’s a good process from our good God. After confession, what demonstrates repentance? What does God want YOU to do to repair a relationship you’ve damaged? 


RESTORED TO MINT CONDITION: If there was any classic car you would want to restore, what would it be? ‘57 Chevy? ’65 Mustang? ’71 Beetle? What costs in time and money would be involved in restoring it completely? How would these costs be worth investing in this car? Apply that to restoring a person: What are the cost to the person? To those who love that person? Why do you think there are costs in the restoration process? What are the costs to refusing to restore a person, or to be restored? 




Points:

  1. Sin results in the heavy weight of guilt that ought to lead us to confess our sins before the Lord, for only then can we find relief.
  2. True confession must include repentance and restitution.
  3. The sacrifices described in Leviticus foreshadow Jesus Christ as the perfect sacrifice for our sin through whom there is restitution and restoration. 







III. REPAY WHAT YOU’VE TAKEN FROM OTHERS – LEVITICUS 6:1-7

6 The Lord spoke to Moses: 2 “When someone sins and offends the Lord by deceiving his neighbor in regard to a deposit, a security, or a robbery; or defrauds his neighbor; 3 or finds something lost and lies about it; or swears falsely about any of the sinful things a person may do— 4 once he has sinned and acknowledged his guilt—he must return what he stole or defrauded, or the deposit entrusted to him, or the lost item he found, 5 or anything else about which he swore falsely. He must make full restitution for it and add a fifth of its value to it. He is to pay it to its owner on the day he acknowledges his guilt. 6 Then he must bring his restitution offering to the Lord: an unblemished ram from the flock according to your assessment of its value as a restitution offering to the priest. 7 In this way the priest will make atonement on his behalf before the Lord, and he will be forgiven for anything he may have done to incur guilt.” 


Jesus said all the Law is summed up in two commands: Love the Lord thoroughly and love others as you love yourself (Matt. 22:38-40). Some actions that do these are in Leviticus 5 and 6. In Leviticus 5:14-16, God made it clear that it was a big deal to damage one of the furnishings in the tabernacle. It’s an even bigger deal to damage a person. In Leviticus 6:1-7, the process for making things right when an Israelite wronged his neighbor was very similar to what had to be done when the sin had been against God alone.


What does your treatment (or mistreatment) of others reveal about your relationship with God? When do you assume the two can be separated? How would you summarize what to do to make amends with God and a neighbor from the verses we just read? How can you pay plus a fifth if you’re wrong had nothing to do with money?



The similarities between consequences leave little question that sinning against a neighbor sins against God, too. Notice that the first step a person took to make things right is the same as at the beginning of Leviticus 5: the offender must first acknowledge guilt (6:4). Then as a means of confession, the offending party must pay back the value of the item. If a neighbor somehow stole $100 from me, but later apologized and gave me $120 back, I’d be happy.



Think back to Jesus’ words in Matthew 5:23-26. God isn’t interested in reconciling accounts with us until we have made things right with others we have offended. The instructions in this passage are the minimum requirement. Compare with Zacchaeus’ actions in Luke 19:8.
 


GUESS WHO? Imagine yourself standing before God, seeking His forgiveness for something you’ve done. He stops you mid-confession and says, “Wait. Before we can discuss this, there is a matter you need to settle with someone else. Go and settle it, then come back.” Who do you think you’d need to go talk to?



What would you need to say or do to make things right? 




Whether you mean to do it or not, sin makes you guilty. It doesn’t matter if it’s a big deal in your book or not; sin is always a big deal to Holy God. Follow the pattern set in these verses (admit your guilt, demonstrate repentance, repay what’s been lost by others). Follow Jesus’ instructions in Matthew 5 and settle the matter quickly. Delaying won’t make it go away. From the beginning, God has stressed that He sees our sins against others as sins against Him. Therefore you, the other person, and God all benefit.



Avoid sin like the plague. It messes up you, messes up relationships, and messes up work.





How can we use these verses as a pattern for restoration when we do sin? How does seeking restoration honor God’s holiness? How does it love people?

  1. We recognize our sin and admit we’re guilty.
  2. We then seek to repay what we owe. God will show us how to heal things: what words to say, what actions to take, what lies to heal, what items to fix, what trust to cultivate.
  3. We live in peace that when God offers forgiveness, we do not have to stay in guilt.

Points:

  1. We offend God by mistreating others.
  2. When we become aware of sin in our lives, we need to move immediately to make amends with those we have offended and with God.
  3. We cannot expect God’s forgiveness if we are unwilling to make things right with those we have offended.

This lesson is a reminder that we can dishonor the Lord’s holiness by the way we act toward Him and others. By our sin we suffer loss of fellowship with Him. That does not mean we lose our salvation. However, a truly saved person cannot be content to be out of fellowship with the Lord. When we sin as God’s people, we should seek forgiveness and restoration of fellowship. God has made both possible through Jesus Christ. We honor God and His call to holiness through faith in Him and by deciding to live for Him.



Based on this lesson, what sin comes to mind that you will acknowledge and repent of to God?



What broken relationship do you have with someone that needs to be addressed for you to bring honor to the holiness of God?







Prayer of Commitment

Dear Lord, so help me to live my life before You and toward others that I honor Your holiness and give testimony to Jesus through whom all may be cleansed from all their unrighteousness. Amen.



God revealed Himself to Isaiah in a vision in Isaiah 6:1-8. Isaiah saw God in all His glory, and heard the angels cry out, HOLY, HOLY, HOLY, as they bowed before His throne (vs. 3)!

Isaiah’s first response to the holiness of God was that of conviction of sin. “Woe is me, for I am undone! Because I am a man of unclean lips; And I dwell in the midst of a people of unclean lips.” (Isaiah 6: 5). And God’s response to his confession of sinfulness was to cleanse him from the sin. “Your iniquity is taken away, and your sin is purged” (Isaiah 6:8). When the presence of God manifests, it brings with it a holiness that produces a deep conviction of sin! And the end result of this conviction is so that we can be cleansed and made HOLY!


We will continue this week in our series: Holy God Holy People. I pray that we all seek to be obedient to God's command.

See you this Sunday!

In His Love,

David & Susan












































 



















No comments:

Post a Comment