Tag Archives: Sin

Psalm 51-The Confession of Completion

Dancing with Broken Bones-A Series on Psalm 51-The Confession of Completion
February 06, 1994 Sermon by DRW Passage Psalm 51.3-5

OUTLINE

Introduction

We learned in verses 1 and 2 David’s confession of knowing God’s grace and his own sin. In these three verses, David confesses that he knows his sins. Both of these are necessary for true repentance: knowing I have sinned and that God will forgive them (1 John 1.9). It is in knowing the reality and “lethality” of our sin that brings us sorrow that leads to repentance. And, it is knowing that God does forgive through His loving kindness that leads us to repent. That should show you why there is not as much repentance today as in years before. Its not that God is less kind, it is that we have lost sight of the reality and “lethality” of our sin. If is like the snake pit at the San Diego Zoo. I trip out when I go to it. There are snakes in it that look stuffed. So you get real close to them, then they move and scare the stuffing out of you. The apparent reality, harmless; the true reality, lethal.

We do the same thing with sin, thinking we can handle it, thinking that it is mundane and harmless and then the Snake from the pit of Hell lurches out bites you and then, and only then, do you see how lethal it really is.

Let us look into David’s personal diary and watch as he shows his remorse and completes his confession of sin.

1.  Remorse

1.  The Ghost that Haunts Him (3)

This is an ever present tension which is the source of his shame, despair, fear and his ultimate hope. For it is like the ghosts in Scrooge: A Christmas Story that brought him through the shame of yesterday, the despair of today and the fear of the future into his ultimate hope. So did David’s and so do ours.

There was nowhere to run, nowhere to hide. Everywhere he went there was someone there to remind him of his sin. One year had passed from the adultery to the confrontation by Nathan of David’s sin. All during this time he lived with these reminders and the guilt that they brought.

1.  The people who remind him

1.  Uriah

1.  memory

2.  the general and husband of Bathsheba

2.  Bathsheba

1.  everything about her from her presence to her perfume, from her breath to her body

2.  if the blood of bulls and goats couldn’t cover his sin, a wedding ceremony couldn’t either

3.  His dead son

1.  Bathsheba was pregnant

2.  Six or seven months after their wedding she had a son, a few days later he died

1.  watching her grow full with child

2.  watching and hearing the birth

3.  watching and feeling the death

4.  Joab and the army

1.  these are the ones whom he commanded to make sure that Uriah died.

2.  Joab was his major military man

5.  His very soul

2.  The Holy Spirit reminds him

1.  John 16.5-11

The very Spirit whom he prayed not to leave him in Psalm 51.11 is the one who reminded him of his guilt, shame, and despair.

A side note to be developed in a later message: In the Old Testament the Holy Spirit came and went as He pleased; in the New Testament He abides forever in the believer because of Jesus Christ.

transition     1.  The truth of daily existence that reveals it

2.  He knows it and feels it as God does (Isaiah 59.12)

1.  no excuses, there are none, for God knows our sin

1.  why confess? to admit to ourselves that we have stepped over God’s line and to restore fellowship with Him

2.  David’s sin was always before him, oppressing him (Psalm 32.1-5). His request is that God will take it away from both his and God’s presence (Psalm 103.7-14).

2.  he had to make a choice

1.  repentance or

2.  judgment

He chose repentance but still received earthly judgment (seen in the death of his son) for he was God’s man doing Satan’s work.

We need to remember:     God is not mocked, whatever a man sows he shall also reap whether here or in eternity. Paul tells us if we sow corruption (adultery or whatever your particular sin may be) we shall sow corruption.

2.  The Guilt that Horrifies Him (4a)

1.  Known by God for it was against God only (emphatic) and it was before Him

All human relationships are established and upheld by God. Anyone who disrupts that relationship has sinned against the one who established it. As one author points out: “sin against man is not the infringement of rights which are man’s by nature, but the infringement of rights which are his because God willed that they should be his” (Rowley, 1945) (see Proverbs 17.5).

1.  Prodigal Son in Luke 15.21 tells us this truth when he returns home to the father (representing God the Father) and tells Him, “Against You I have sinned.”

2.  Psalm 139.7-10

1.  have you ever had to face someone whom you have offended?

2.   When we sin, the God whom we offend is present and sees our sin (omniscience and omnipresence).

1.  Illustration of the one who sinned in front of her husband but didn’t know he was there. Both knew the sin but no fellowship ensued until forgiveness was sought and given.

2.  tense

2.  Deep sorrow and repentance

1.  not remorse merely for the consequences

1.  Saul wept because

1.  he knew his kingdom was to be taken away from him

2.  not because

1.  he was sorrowful over attempted murder

2.  and idolatry

2.  Judas wept and committed suicide because

1.  he felt pity for himself and was ashamed that Christ was to die;

2.  not because he betrayed his Master and assisted in shedding innocent blood.

2.  remorse for the sin itself and the deep rooted passion that set it aflame

To the one who has seen his sin, it is not a casual thing to encounter or write-off, but is intense. This intensity leads to repentance. Remember, its His kindness that leads to repentance and sometimes kindness is found at the end of a whipping post (Hebrews 12.4-11). David’s sorrow came not from a heaven to lose or a hell to gain–for he knew his God would not forsake him–but the sorrow came because in his heart he knew he had grieved God.

*   Peter wept because

1.  he knew he betrayed his Master

2.  his was remorse for the sin and the passion that led to sin

3.  this is true repentance

TRANSITION/ILLUSTRATION:   My tree in Torrance, easy to cut but hard to remove because of the deep root system. Such is the root system of sin.

2.  Completion of the Confession (4-5)

His was a completion of the confession, not an excuse for his sin.

1.  He knew he was stained to the core

1.  Original sin

1.  nothing in man that can commend him to God

1.  Romans 3.23

2.  Ephesians 2.1

3.  Ephesians 2.8,9

2.  tainted to the core

*   dead and rotting meat

2.  Universality of sin

1.  we all have it and only Jesus can change it

2.  Only Jesus can take us out of this miry pit

*   septic tank illustration

1.  in rural areas a septic tank is used

2.  an area of the tank caved in creating a massive whole in it

3.  a dog fell into it

4.  the owner had three choices

1.  let the dog die there

2.  put a ladder down and see if the dog will climb out

3.  go in after him

5.  God had three choices

1.  let us die in our sin

2.  send an angel (wouldn’t do)

3.  go in after us (He did)

3.  while God desires faithfulness in man, man dwells in sinfulness [broken with Jesus]

1.  that is lies, deceit and murderer of victory and fellowship and intimacy

2.  sounds like John 8.44

2.  that God was just in disciplining him

1.  He knows us

1.  John 2.25

2.  1 Samuel 16.7

2.  He wants us to grow into His Son (Ephesians 4.12-13; 1 John 3.1-3)

1.  sin breaks the growth (no fellowship)

2.  sin destroys victory (Achan)

3.  He wants us to know Him

1.  John 17.3

2.  know intimately

*   no one knows Pastor Chen like his daughters do

CONCLUSION

David went through a lot, but no more than we have. How many here have never sinned? . . . I’ll make it easier, how many here have not sinned this year? . . . I’ll make it easier, how many here have not sinned this weekend? We all have sinned and fallen short of God’s glory (Romans 3.23). To say we haven’t is to call God a liar (1 John 1.5-10).

David confessed a lot, he didn’t offer excuses but confessed and repented of his sin; have we? If we don’t turn from our sins we destroy fellowship (read the thought for the week) and freedom in Christ and we destroy our souls.

Allow me to expand Psalm 32, David’s other confession for this sin, from personal experience.

You are free when your sins are forgiven,

Because your sins don’t separate you from God.

You’re dying when your sins are kept hidden,

Because your sins do separate you from God.

The most trying times of a man’s soul is when he attempts to live in fellowship with God and maintain his sin. His soul becomes downcast, his outlook becomes bleak, his desire to really live has left him, he becomes overwhelmed with guilt; he endlessly repeats the cycle of sin, repent, sin, repent, sin; his very reason for living is gone for he has denied his God; and he is without hope in this world. He feels in his heart that it would be better to forsake God and continue in his sin or commit suicide thinking this will relieve the pain and everything else. He tries to do what Saul and Judas did. He listens to the accuser and tempter, Satan. Every time he listens to that hissing sound he believes a little less truth and is less free. His soul is in bondage. When he believes and lives the lie he will walk a living death. The truth is what David says in Psalm 32.5: acknowledge your sin (admit what you have done) for God wants you to see as He sees the heinousness of your sin against Him; turn from it. God will forgive, restore fellowship, give hope, declare “not guilty,” and give victory in His time.

Will you today take hold of the cleansing flood? Will you today allow God to make you whole in His Son? Will you today allow God to search you and let you see the sin that is in you? Will you today be released from the ghosts and guilt that haunts and horrifies you? Will you be set free and complete the confession? If you will, come up here and pray with me.

Jesus says, “Come unto me all who are heavy burdened and I will give rest to your souls.” God bids you to come and confess (Romans 10.9). The Spirit seeks and finds and cleanses (John 16). Come.

Father, this is the first step You’ve given. Help us to seek forgiveness of those we have sinned before. Thank You for forgiving us, restoring us, and cleansing us. We thank You for the kindnesses You’ve bestowed on us in Jesus. We thank You for allowing us to come to You. Amen

Those of you who would like to be held accountable to your repentance to bear the fruit of repentance, please talk with me or a trusted brother or sister in Christ. Allow us to fulfill Galatians 6.1-4.

Doxology

Read Jude 24 and add: “May He lead you into the way everlasting. Amen.”

Please be seated.

[go sit down and pray]


©2012 Teach for God Ministries. Used by Permission.

Permissions: You are permitted and encouraged to reproduce and distribute this material in any format provided that you do not alter the wording in any way and do not charge a fee beyond the cost of reproduction. For web posting, a link to this document on our website is preferred. Any exceptions to the above must be approved by Teach for God Ministries.

Please include the following statement on any distributed copy: By David R Williamson. ©2012 Teach for God Ministries. Website: www.teach4god.com

Psalm 51-The Nature of Sin

Dancing with Broken Bones-A Series on Psalm 51-The Nature of Sin
January 30, 1994 Sermon by DRW Passage Psalm 51.1-2

OUTLINE:

Introduction:

There exists today an interesting tension. It isn’t really a new phenomena but is felt as though it was. It is the tension for immediate quality at minimal cost. This transcends the spiritual but we shall merely peer into the spiritual. We desire immediate godliness, revival, fulness, holiness and we want it at a minimal cost. We exist in this extreme tension. It is a tension for we know there must be more to the Christian life than we are now experiencing. It is an extreme tension for we know that the more, which we seek, will cost us our very lives, and we aren’t willing to give that. Allow me to read Hebrews 12.1 and explain a little bit here.

Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for us.

I would like to point out two things from this:

1)  We need to work at throwing off sin, transgression and iniquity (that which entangles and hinders us).

2)  There is hope in doing this. The verse begins with: “Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses . . .” This cloud of witnesses is the list from Hebrews 11. Those great saints are testimony for us that we too can live through rough times. These saints are not standing over watching us to see if we will make it, fall or fail; to applaud or hiss. I have a tough time preaching in front of other preachers because I feel they will judge, criticize, and tell me where I blew it with no encouragement. This is not what the witnesses of Hebrews do. I find it a great relief to preach to a group of pastors when they tell me beforehand that they are rooting for me and they too have gone through some tough times. That is what the witnesses are saying to us. We know we can throw off sin, transgression and iniquity because we have these witnesses who testify to its truth.

And so, relentlessly drawn to the riches in Christ but fearing the light of discovery on our soul, we grope for shortcuts and techniques. Examining the externals rather than our own heart is indeed less painful, but also less illuminating. In the end, too many of us stack our hopes on Band-Aid solutions to problems of the magnitude of spiritual cancer. To keep what we should throw away, although it is comfortably killing us, and to do so at the expense of all Christ wants us to be, is a blind man’s bargain. (p. 11) and the tool of Satan.

There are many Christians today who believe that as long as we are visible we are doing okay. If this is true, then why is it that with so many Christian radio stations, TV stations, album labels, musicians, writers, books, publishing houses we do not have a greater impact on the world? Could it be we are only talking to ourselves? Could it be that we have grown so comfortable with our Christianity, and haven’t dealt with the tension we exist in, that the world has decided that what we say is no longer of importance or valid because it doesn’t seem true for the Christian? Could it be that in becoming experts in techniques and methods we have become amateurs in practice? Could it be that we only speak the language and have forgotten the walk? Could it be that we have forgotten what God desires more than anything else? Have we forgotten holiness? Have we become like Adam and Eve who tried to hide their spiritual nakedness with fig leaves, only our fig leaves come as the “ten” or “twelve” steps to maturity or holiness or whatever, which can only hide our barren and superficial lives? To some extent I say yes.

Yes, we have not come as far as we should be. Yes, we have forgotten some of the basics in search of the greater (forgetting that God only blesses with the greater when faithfulness to the lesser is practiced). Over the next several weeks we will be discussing a lot of what the church has forgotten or neglected. Our text for these few weeks (six or seven) will be Psalm 51. I ran across an interesting title and decided this was to be the series title: Dancing with Broken Bones. We will cover many things from today’s message on sin to the final message on revival. We will touch bases with things like the nature of the heart, the confronting of sin before it steals our joy, evangelism and salvation, and life as worshiping God. I am excited about this series–please join in my excitement as we pray.

Father, direct our heart, soul, mind and strength to Your desires. Teach us today about You. Teach us today about how lost we are without You. Teach us today more of Your love. Show us today where we are in relationship to You. Open our eyes that we may see the great Truths Your Word has for us today. Amen

The background for Psalm 51 is David’s sin with Bathsheba, murdering of Uriah, confrontation by Nathan, and repentance by David. We all now the story, maybe it has become too familiar and we have forgotten the gist. Just in case this is so, allow me the time to explain what happened with David. He was king of Israel. A man who could have whatever he wanted, whenever he wanted. As God’s king, he knew he had to be obedient to his God first and foremost. The Scriptures call David a man after God’s own heart. He was no spiritual sissy. It came about one day that he was not doing what he was supposed to do–he was supposed to be in battle but he was at home. One thing led to another, and he should’ve known better (and did), but he glanced at Bathsheba in a bath and committed adultery with her. That is as tantamount to when we look squarely at the Cross and say, “I know all that You did for me, but I want to indulge my desires at this moment, just this once; no one else will know; I want to.” We do, he did. He got Bathsheba pregnant and then killed his most trusted general, her husband, to hide his shame.

Nathan comes in and calls him on the spiritual carpet. David was confronted with his sin. He recognized it, repented of it and begged for mercy to the very One whom he betrayed. This is the result of that case. Our text for today is Psalm 51.1-2:

Have mercy on me, O God, according to your unfailing love; according to your great compassion blot out my <transgressions>. Wash me thoroughly from my <iniquity>. And cleanse me from my <sin>.

1.  Three Steps Backward

One note: these three descriptions for sin are not necessarily a catalogue of what David did, rather they are the acknowledgment of how deeply moved David was over his sin. To him, his sin was so heinous in order to show its completeness he used these three descriptions. It also shows, as we shall see, that David knew only God could renew such a one.

1.  Transgressions

A deliberate step over the line challenging God’s right to be God. It is being a rebel and revolting against God. “Even though they knew God, they did not honor Him as God.” (Romans 1.21)

1.  A Wilful Sin (Psalm 19.13)

Keep your servant also from willful sins; may they not rule over me. Then will I be blameless, innocent of great <transgression>.

1.  It was a wilful sin that Satan took as he tried to usurp God’s throne.

2.  It was a wilful sin that Adam and Eve took as they tried to usurp God’s throne.

2.  Spiritual Death (Ephesians 2.1-5)

As for you, you were dead in your <transgressions> and sins, in which you used to live when you followed the ways of this world and of the ruler of the kingdom of the air, the spirit who is now at work in those who are disobedient. All of us also lived among them at one time, gratifying the cravings of our sinful nature and following its desires and thoughts. Like the rest, we were by nature objects of wrath. But because of his great love for us, God, who is rich in mercy, made us alive with Christ even when we were dead in <transgressions>–it is by grace you have been saved.

1.  When Adam and Eve transgressed the Word of God, the Bible tells us, sin entered the world and with sin came death

2.  that’s why Paul tells us that Jesus came to break the power of death which was sin.

2.  Iniquities

Being warped or twisted. “Iniquity is the warped, pulsating, driving hunger of desire that makes us go blind to what is right as we go grasping for what we want. [It is the exact opposite of what Jesus did and Paul calls us to imitate in Philippians 2.] Wrong seems not only right, but desirable. Real iniquity is when the rationalizations are delivered with a practiced agility. It’s when a man can gaze on the wife of another, lust for her, sleep with her, and then murder her husband in an attempt to conceal an out-of-wedlock pregnancy. Knowing what’s wrong doesn’t always stop us. In fact, sometimes it only makes our mouth water. That’s moral twistedness–iniquity. (18) This is not slipping into sin, but deliberately going in for a long slide.

1.  Evil Conceit (Psalm 73.7)

From their callous hearts comes <iniquity>; the evil conceits of their minds know no limits.

2.  Separation from God (Isaiah 59.2)

But your <iniquities> have separated you from your God; your sins have hidden his face from you, so that he will not hear.

*    as leprosy would do

3.  Blinds us to our Sin (Hosea 12.8)

Ephraim boasts, “I am very rich; I have become wealthy. With all my wealth they will not find in me any <iniquity> or sin.”

*    Revelation 3.15-18

3.  Sins

To fall short of God’s standard. To stumble from and fall short of God’s standard

1.  Tend to justify ourselves.

1.  David, from the eyes of man, never fell. Compared to all the men of Israel he was head and shoulders above them. If he desired to justify himself he easily could.

2.  Comparing ourselves with others is easy (especially when we don’t look at those who are better than us).

3.  This tears at the biblical norm of uplifting for in comparing to justify ourself we will naturally tear down that person.

4.  There is no justification of sins in the sight of God apart from Jesus.

1.  at the retreat we had one play that showed this. A person forsook God for arcade games. When he died God asked him why he should be allowed in Heaven. The guy answered: “I scored really high on Mortal Combat II.” Needless to say, God was not impressed.

2.  all our justifications outside of Jesus sound as ludicrous as the one from the retreat.

2.  Takes glory away from God (Romans 3.23)

TRANSITION:    We need to come to the reality that most mental patients come to. I have watched many movies on the subject, did some reading on it, and come to this conclusion: Many of the mental patients in places like Camarillo are some of the sanest people on earth. They have come to grips and said: “I can’t run anymore.” This is where David is in Psalm 51 and where we need to be. We need to realize that we can’t run anymore. We can’t run from the stain of sin.

David’s mouth is shut. This psalm is sung through clenched teeth and pursed lips. Some of us know well this kind of humble silence, while others need to make its acquaintance. Sin, iniquity, and transgression are not some other guy’s problem, nor are they something we left behind after we became Christians. Regardless of appearances, we eventually come to know the bitter, convicting, ego-shattering truth in our hearts. (20)

2.  Two Steps Forward

1.  Repentance

1.  blot out his transgressions

1.  a book whose words were only accusations, wrongs,

*    like the blackboard in Heaven joke I told at the Winter retreat

1.  Nehemiah 13.13

2.  Daniel 7.10

2.  he couldn’t change his past, what was done was done

1.  he was stained

2.  he was like the barn with the nail holes in it (illustration)

3.  he asked God to blot it out

1.  He would because of His covenant with Israel (hesed)

2.  Psalm 32.1

Blessed is he whose <transgressions> are forgiven, whose sins are covered.

3.  Psalm 103.12

as far as the east is from the west, so far has he removed our <transgressions> from us.

4.  Isaiah 43.25

“I, even I, am he who blots out your <transgressions>, for my own sake, and remembers your sins no more.

5.  Just in case we forgot Paul reminds us in Romans 4.7:

“Blessed are they whose <transgressions> are forgiven, whose sins are covered.

2.  wash me from iniquity

1.  an article of clothes that needed to be washed. So bad was its defiling that it needed to be “trampled under foot” to be thoroughly cleaned.

2.  he knew that a mild detergent (human effort) couldn’t cleanse his iniquity

1.  Jeremiah 2.22

2.  Isaiah 59.12

For our offenses are many in your sight, and our sins testify against us. Our offenses are ever with us, and we acknowledge our <iniquities>:

3.  he knew only God could cleanse him and make him spotless, we know it is something greater that takes care of iniquity–the death and life of Jesus!

1.  Psalm 51.9

Hide your face from my sins and blot out all my <iniquity>.

2.  Psalm 90.8

You have set our <iniquities> before you, our secret sins in the light of your presence.

3.  Isaiah 53.5-6

But he was pierced for our transgressions, he was crushed for our <iniquities>; the punishment that brought us peace was upon him, and by his wounds we are healed. We all, like sheep, have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way; and the Lord has laid on him the <iniquity> of us all.

4.  Micah 7.19

You will again have compassion on us; you will tread our sins underfoot and hurl all our <iniquities> into the depths of the sea.

3.  cleanse me from my sin

1.  like leprosy that defiled a man on the outside, his sin defiled him on the inside

2.  he knew that his sin had separated him from God much as the leper is considered unclean to man

3.  he knew that only God could heal him

2.  Acceptance

1.  erased

2.  cleansed

3.  healed

Conclusion:

Like the wicked queen in Snow White, we’ve grown to love the narcissistic mirrors in our hearts that tell us, “You’re the fairest of them all.” But truth is an iconoclast that delights in smashing those mirrors. [Just as the mirror eventually told the truth to the queen that there was another fairer, so go will send a Nathan to tell us that we fall short.] It is a persistent nag that refuses to go away just because its revealing message may be socially unpopular and morally inconvenient.

From David’s lips, the truth finds us defiantly rebellious, morally and spiritually twisted, falling short of both God’s standards and our own. That’s us–you and me. But there’s hope. The first step in the healing of a problem is admitting our need. A man or woman who confesses no curse certainly feels no need of a cure. A remedy, one older than time itself with its genesis in the mind of the Creator of the Universe, is ready at hand. But first we must sing a bitter song along with David. We must soberly admit that, left to ourselves, our souls are terminally ill.

We must not deceive ourselves. There aren’t a vast number of gods to choose from. Our options are narrowed down to one: a holy God who confronts our evasive patterns at every turn. We must face Him! There is nowhere to hide, nowhere to run away. For He pursues us, He finds us everywhere. But He chases us in order to save, not to judge; to help, not to destroy. The deep inner healing we all need can come from no other source. It must come form Him alone. (21-22)

Today we have seen that we are truly poor people without God. We are ravaged with sin. If it were not for the grace and mercy of God none of us would go to heaven. Take this time to ask God to show you where you are falling short of His glory. Repent of it and then come forward and stand with me as we show to the congregation that we accept the truth of His cleansing.


©2012 Teach for God Ministries. Used by Permission.

Permissions: You are permitted and encouraged to reproduce and distribute this material in any format provided that you do not alter the wording in any way and do not charge a fee beyond the cost of reproduction. For web posting, a link to this document on our website is preferred. Any exceptions to the above must be approved by Teach for God Ministries.

Please include the following statement on any distributed copy: By David R Williamson. ©2012 Teach for God Ministries. Website: www.teach4god.com