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1 Thessalonians 4:3
We return in our study this morning to Paul's letter to the church at
Thessalonica. And I would encourage you to look with me at this wonderful
passage in 1 Thessalonians chapter 4. This morning we will embark upon
an examination of verses 3 through 8. And the subject at hand is the
matter of sexual immorality...sexual sin.
Through the years I have preached many many times on
1 Thessalonians chapter 4 verses 3 through 8. In fact, years ago when
I preached frequently to high-school students, college students, it
seemed as though there was the continual need to speak on this subject.
That need has not lessened, it has increased. But as often as I have
preached on this passage elsewhere, I have never preached on this passage
here, that being because we've never before studied 1 Thessalonians
in the 20 plus years of ministry here. So I come to a familiar text
to me, if not a familiar text to you.
And wanting to make it as poignant and direct as possible,
I thought, "Well perhaps if I'm going to speak from the Word of
God on this matter of sexual sin, I ought to establish the problem of
sexual sin in our society and let the people know something of what
is going on and then show how contrary to that the Word of God is."
And so I began to rummage through my files looking up articles and newspaper
clippings, reviews and various and sundry things that I have collected
through the years regarding the sexual revolution. And it didn't take
me long, in fact it was a relatively brief exercise in going through,
to say to myself that having studied this great lofty glorious magnificent
majestic passage, having come to grips with what it means and what it
says and what level of purity God calls us to, to drag you all through
the garbage of what is going on in our society would in my judgment
be counterproductive. So I basically took most of that stuff and threw
it in the waste basket...not particularly wanting even to be exposed
to it again myself.
It should be patently obvious to all of us that we
live in a sex-mad culture, that we live in a culture that is indulging
itself in every conceivable and inconceivable sexual activity. In fact,
it probably would tax your imagination and mine beyond its ability to
conceive of a more sexually perverted or immoral society than the one
in which we live. Not only is sexual sin tolerated in any form by any
one with anyone else any time, any place in any way, but more than just
being tolerated it is advocated, it is promoted, it is marketed through
every media means possible. For me to take your valuable time and mine
and to clutter your mind and mine with a cataloging or a chronicling
of vices either by way of illustration or statistics would be to beg
the point. It would be like taking ice to Eskimos. You really don't
need that.
It is apparent that all of us have been living in a
sexual revolution of sorts where it is not uncommon today to find people
who call themselves Christians also engaging in every imaginable and
unimaginable sexual vice. From what I hear from our pastoral staff,
75 percent of the Christian young people who come to our staff for premarital
counseling have already engaged in sexual intercourse. That's in the
church, that's in this church. It is apparent that we are living in
a sexual revolution. I don't think any of us needs to be informed on
that any more than we already are. We live in a culture where there
are absolutely no standards or rules about that kind of behavior.
And the freedom of sexual expression is so demanded
that it has become the god that in some ways is ruling over all the
other gods in our culture. To put that into an illustrated form, we
want to allow people sexual freedom at any cost even if it means they
have to kill the product of that sexual union, right? Therefore the
sexual fulfillment itself is more important than life. We want our sexual
freedom even if it means murder of the victim of that freedom.
Looking over at the homosexual community, they want
their freedom even if it means the whole population dies of AIDS. You
see, we've come to the point where we so totally are consumed with sexual
behavior that we literally live with unspeakable, unthinkable consequences.
I suppose in some sense, Hugh Hefner has been the guru
from the start of this rampant pornographic life style. He's the one
who really philosophically articulated it. Very early in his career
as a panderer of vice, which he has done for all these years, he wrote
these words which I found quoted in a Christian magazine, by the way,
just so you don't think I read his magazine. This is what he said, quote:
"Sex is a function of the body, a drive which man shares with animals
like eating, drinking, and sleeping. It is a physical demand that must
be satisfied. If you don't satisfy it you will have all sorts of neuroses
and repression psychoses, sex is here to stay. Let's forget the prudery
that makes us hide from it. Throw away those inhibitions, find a girl
who is like-minded and let yourself go," end quote.
Now that is the philosophy of the sexual revolution.
There are several components to it. First of all, sex is simply an animal
function. It's no different than eating, drinking or sleeping. Secondly,
it is a physical demand that must be satisfied or you will wind up in
a psychiatric office cause if you don't satisfy it you're going to have
all kinds of repressed problems. Thirdly, there are some prudes who
would want you not to do that, you've got to ignore them, find a girl
who feels the same way and do it.
Now we live in that society today. Its reduced itself
to bumper stickers, "Do it in the dirt...Do it here," and
the innuendo of all of those kinds of things is sexual. The underlying
philosophy of our time is of absolute sexual freedom to express yourself
in any way you want, any time with any one under any circumstances.
The extent of this is absolutely unimaginable and unthinkable.
We might ask ourselves, "Has there ever been a
society worse than this?" May I be so bold as to answer the question
by saying yes...yes. Hugh Hefner could have sold his same philosophy
in Thessalonica. Hugh Hefner could have sold his same philosophy in
Corinth. He could have sold it to Greek culture in the Roman world.
And somebody with another name did or somebodies with a lot of other
names did because in the Roman world at the time that Paul wrote 1 Thessalonians
there was a sexual revolution which if anything surpasses the one we
are now living through. They had experienced a sexual revolution which
included homosexuality, which included pedophiliasex with little
boys, homosexual sex with little boyswhich included effeminate
transvestism, men dressing up like women, which included every form
of fornication and sexual perversion. It was true in the Roman world.
And unlike today there wasn't any preliminary Christian culture to act
as a sort of a small barrier along the way. And there apparently weren't
even any laws in any of the societies to stop any of that kind of behavior.
Consequently they had their venereal epidemics as we do and all the
rest of the things that are attendant upon a fornicating society.
Now the Greek language has an immense capacity to articulate
because of the vastness of its vocabulary and the specificity of its
words. So I pulled out a few of the Greek words that would help you
get a feeling for the kind of culture to which Paul writes here. The
Greek language is amply capable of cataloging all kinds of deviant sexual
sins and there are varying words that make that very clear.
For example, this quick survey will help. And I'm only
dealing with the heterosexual sins at this point. The first word to
look at is porne...porne literally means the purchasable one, the purchasable
one, the one you buy, the harlot, the whore, the prostitute. They had
that word because they had that. In the society in which Paul lived
and to which he penned this letter and in which he founded churches
under the power of the Holy Spirit, there was prostitution. It was apparently
legal, rampant.
I just had the experience of, a few weeks ago, being
in the city of Amsterdam. When we first arrived in Amsterdam we were
taken to a little village called Markum(?) outside of Amsterdam in Holland.
Holland is a fascinating country. Sixty percent of it reclaimed from
the sea and so you have all these dikes all over the place. And we were
driving along one of these dikes and we came to the little village of
Markum, quaint cute little fishing village built right on the Baltic
Sea, or the North Sea. All the buildings painted green and all of them
with red trim, this cute little village. And someone said to me, "This
is a Calvinistic village. Everybody here is a Calvinist." They
still dress in their ancient costume. A man came clonking along the
cobblestones with wooden shoes, black stockings and little puffy pants
and a funny little shirt and a hat on his head. And a lady came along
with a sort of an apron with all that Dutch trapping all over it, and
these are very serious people. In fact, we were told that they would
be very serious in demeanor, very serious in attitude because they're
all Calvinists and the guide said everybody knows that Calvinists are
very sad and miserable people.
And that had been a great part of the influence of
Dutch past. Very religious. We then went in to Amsterdam to find an
absolutely opposite culture. Went in to the city square of Amsterdam,
there are about three or four thousand teen agers and college kids milling
around the city square, drinking beer, consuming alcoholic beverages,
taking cocaine, smoking marijuana and all of that. Why were they gathered
there? Because adjacent to the city square in the beautiful city of
Amsterdam is the red- light district where prostitution is legalized
and subsidized by the government. The red-light district where literally
there are red lights all over the place and women hanging out the windows
plying their trade to people passing along the streets. It has become
the mecca of young people in Europe because free sex reigns there.
Well they had that same kind...and by the way, it was
an appalling experience, an experience that makes you want to do one
thing and that's leave and get out. They had that in Thessalonica. They
had a sort of a free sex mentality because prostitution was legal. Women
could be bought.
A second word to keep in mind in the Greek language
is a form of the first word, porneuan(?) and it sums up the filthy business
of making a living by prostitution. It encompasses the prostitution,
the pimping, the whole thing that goes on with that entire business.
So they not only had the individual woman who could be bought, who sold
herself, but they had the big business, the stable, if you will, of
prostitutes.
Then there's the Greek word puloke(?), puloke means
a concubine. A concubine was a slave whose primary function was to fulfill
sexual desire. Literally you purchased the concubine, you added her
to your fold of concubines and you used her for sexual pleasure. That
too was legal, that too was rampant in the Roman world. So there was
the one-time woman you purchased and the whole business of prostitution
and then there was the long- term purchased woman, the concubine, the
slave for sexual pleasure.
And then there was another word, eteri(?), a plural
form, which means mistresses. This was different than the concubine,
you didn't buy this woman, this was a friend. And the mistress was a
friend for intellectual stimulation and sexual fulfillment. Typically
men and women had these kinds of friends outside their marriage. By
the way, your wife was primarily to take care of the house, cook the
meals, keep the clothes clean and watch the children. The wife was not
primarily the sexual partner. Sexual fulfillment was found in the one-time
enterprise of a prostitute, the long-term responsibility of a concubine
or the now-and-then relationship to this friend who was both an intellectual
friend as well as a sexual partner.
And then there was moichos, another word. And moichos
refers to the adulterer or the adulteress. You could have a sexual relationship
with a prostitute on an occasional situation which you purchased, you
could own a concubine or more concubines for sexual pleasure, you could
have mistresses or reversing the situation, mistresses would have men
for every man who commits sexual sin there is a partner obviously. And
this was a friend you didn't buy, this was sort of a mutual agreement,
sort of casual sex with someone you knew very well. And then there was
moichos, that was adulterer or adulteress, that was having sex with
somebody else's spouse. And it was all going on...all of it, filling
up the Thessalonian as well as the Corinthian as well as the whole Roman
culture.
Unmarried young men were also allowed to have intercourse
with mistresses. They were encouraged to have intercourse with mistresses
but those mistresses could not be daughters of families that had full
citizenship in the Roman Empire, those were considered significant families
and these young men were not to touch those girls. But they could engage
themselves with prostitutes and they could engage themselves with mistresses
whose parents were not full citizens of the Roman Empire.
Now you could go one step beyond that and add temple
prostitutes. The Babylonian cultic mystery religions that filtered all
the way down into the time of the Apostle Paul and were the mythological
religions of that time advocated prostitution. Why? Because they taught
that if you have relationships with a priestess, prostitute, you are
communing with the deity she represents. The way to get in touch with
the deity is by a sexual liaison with a priestess. The temple in Corinth,
for example, had three thousand temple prostitutes to get people in
contact with the deity. By the way, a very popular and convenient form
of religion. But you can see by that that it was not only not illegal,
it was condoned. Today, at least in America, religious prostitution
is still a crime.
But they had it all. Now you add to that homosexuality,
pedophilia, whatever other kinds of deviant things were going on and
that was the culture in which Paul lived and to which he wrote. If you
think it's bad today, you probably would have found it worse then. The
difference would have been media. You wouldn't have to have been exposed
to it sort of involuntarily to the degree that you do today, to the
point now where young people think nothing wrong with it at all, even
going so far as some Christian couples who think that because they're
engaged they can engage in anything they choose. We have been so desensitized
to this sin but so had they in Paul's day.
Sexual sin then was common. Sexual sin was tolerated.
Sexual sin was customary just as today and even more so. Now why is
that important? It's important because of this, Paul went in to Thessalonica
with his two friends Timothy and Silas. They went there to preach the
gospel. They went there to found a church. In founding that church they
were rescuing people out of this pornographic culture. Obviously these
people had lived a pagan life style. They had a former religion in which
they engaged in sexual intercourse with temple prostitutes. They probably
were involved with concubinage, they no doubt had their eteri, their
mistresses. They perhaps had their harlots and their whores.
And now all of a sudden they come to the knowledge
of Jesus Christ. And there's this little island of salvation in a sea
of paganism. And Paul is very concerned about them because he knows
that old habits act as a very strong temptation to the new life. You
don't forget those habits easily if at all. And the Apostle knew that
this relatively new group of Christians only months old in the Lord,
he only preached three Sabbaths in the synagogue, a few weeks after
that to the Gentiles and then he's gone a few months and he writes back
1 Thessalonians. It's only a few months since they were saved. He knows
the pull of those old habits and he knows the push of that wicked culture
is going to make this a major problem.
And so, finally he comes to chapter 4 which is his
real purpose in writing. The first three chapters he's just been defending
his own integrity and the integrity of his ministry and affirming the
integrity of the church. It's all been a discussion about himself, his
ministry and the church. It's all foundation. Now here's what he really
wants to talk about. He wants to reiterate the commands of Christian
living. He wants them to walk as they ought to walk so to please God.
He wants them to excel still more and keep the commandments he gave
them by the authority of the Lord Jesus. And he starts off in verse
3 all the way to the end of chapter 5 with those commands. Now this
is review. He says, "You know what commandments we gave you."
Verse 1, "You already received the instruction. You know what we've
said." This is only a reminder. Verse 6 at the end, "We told
you before and solemnly warned you."
Now it's a good thing to note here, folks, Paul went
in, preached the gospel, led these people to Christ and then believe
me, he fulfilled the great commission which is not only to go and not
only to baptize, that is to get them saved, but to teach them to observe
all things whatsoever I have commanded you, Matthew 20:20 says. So he
gave them principles of holy living. But he's been gone a few months.
He knows the pull and the push, the pull of old habits, the push of
a godless sexually deviated culture. And he is concerned and he wants
to share this with them. If he had his choice he would go and tell them
face to face, right? Look back in chapter 2:17 and 18, he says he was
hindered, he couldn't get there, so he has to write. So starting in
chapter 2 he unfolds these exhortations. Number one on the list is a
call to sexual purity, that is THE first issue. Why? Because the pagan
society was so wretched, that was the compelling sin. Why do you think
when the Apostle Paul writes about the standards for leadership in the
church he starts with being above reproach, being a one-woman man? Because
that was the dominating cultural milieu, sexual deviation. It's just
like today...just like today.
END OF SIDE ONE
SIDE TWO
Paul then is building on what he already told them.
And he's going to clarify it and he's going to drive it home. The first
subject on the list, sexual sin. Why? Major problem, major issue. The
desire is so strong, the temptation is so compelling, the past was so
sinful, the society was so corrupt. Paul knows this is a major issue.
By the way, no shame was attached to premarital intercourse, no shame
was attached to extramarital intercourse. This had been their life style.
The Thessalonian culture was famous for sexual vice.
But Paul says, "In spite of cultural habits, in
spite of your old patterns, the Lord does not tolerate sexual sin."
The church can't live like the world. It doesn't matter how the world
lives. Just because the world sinks deeper and deeper and deeper into
the muck, doesn't mean we sink with it. Just because they lower their
standards lower and lower and lower and lower doesn't mean we lower
ours a little bit. This is not a relative morality, this is an absolute
standard. It doesn't change. It doesn't fluctuate. All forms of sexual
gratification may be indulged in by a society but not the church...not
Christians.
Now you might ask, "Well were there some specific
people or groups or specific sins that the Thessalonians were committing?"
Paul doesn't mention any, not like 1 Corinthians where he writes about
the same issue and mentions one guy who was having a sexual relationship
with his father's wife, or his step-mother. We don't know of any particulars
but we can be very sure that because this is at the top of his list
of exhortations as he begins the exhortative section that this was the
major problem. And I would believe that it is preventative rather than
some specific rebuke or he would have perhaps zeroed in on someone.
Now we come to the passage. As we come to it I'm going
to ask three questions and these three questions will give us a very
clear understanding of this issue...just three simple questions. Question
number one, what? Question number two, how? Question number three, why?
Question number one, what does God require? Question
number two, how can I fulfill it? Question number three, why should
I? Okay? That's verses 3 to 8. That will take us right through...those
questions will unfold the deep and direct powerful meaning of this text.
Question number one, for this morning, two and three for next week.
Question number one, what does God require in this
area of sexual behavior? Verse 3, "For this is the will of God,
your sanctification, that is that you abstain from sexual immorality."
Pretty clear, isn't it? Just to make sure nobody finds an escape hatch
here, let's look more closely at it. "For this is the will of God."
It always amazes me how many people are stumbling around trying to find
the will of God. You notice that? "For this is the will of God.
You want to walk and please God? You want to excel still more? You want
to do what God wants you to do? Well then this is it. The word "for"
simply introduces the explanation of how to excel more, how to walk
right, how to please God...do His commandments. And since all Christians
have holy longings, since all Christians have holy aspirations, since
all Christians to some degree want to do what's right, because that's
what the new nature does...then Paul assumes his readers are desirous
of doing God's will and all they need to know is what it is. He assumes
Romans 7 that you're going to desire to do what's right even though
we don't always do it. So he says this is the will of God.
This is not my opinion. This is not some human system.
This is God's will. And again I say, I am constantly amazed at how many
people struggle to know God's will. I really do believe that most of
the problems, well I could say it simply, all of the problems that people
have are strictly a result of not doing God's will. Would you agree
to that? Yeah, I mean if you're in the middle of God's will, that's
not a problem. You may have trouble in this world but you'll be riding
across the top of it. If people would just know God's will it would
be the elimination of all the difficulties in life, not by all positive
circumstances but by all positive attitudes under the grace of Christ.
Now what is God's will? I can give it to you very quickly.
God's will is that you be saved. And you've heard me say this before.
James 1:18, "By His will He begot you." By His will He begot
you. God wants you to be saved. Secondly, He wants you to sacrifice.
What do you mean by that? "To offer your body as a living...what?...sacrifice
which is holy and acceptable and is the will of God." God wants
you to yield up yourself to Him. He wants you to be saved and He wants
you to make the sacrifice of yourself.
He wants you to be Spirit-controlled. "Don't be
unwise but understanding what the will of the Lord is, be not drunk
with wine but be filled with the Spirit." God's will is that you
be Spirit-controlled. God's will is that you be saved. God's will is
that you make the sacrifice of your body continually to Christ. God's
will is that you be Spirit-controlled.
God's will also is that you be satisfied. First Thessalonians
5:18 says, "In everything give thanks for this is the will of God
concerning you." Be satisfied. God's will is that you be satisfied.
God's will is that you be submissive. First Peter says, "Submit
yourselves to all those in authority." That's the will of God.
God's will is that you suffer. First Peter 3:17, "It is the will
of God that you suffer a while for the cause of the gospel." God's
will is that you supplicate, or pray. First John 5:14 and 15, all of
that is God's will.
Now you show me a person who is saved, continually
yielding over their body as a living sacrifice, Spirit-controlled, satisfied,
submissive, suffering for the sake of the gospel, supplicating or taking
their needs to the Lord according to His will knowing He hears and will
answer and I'll show you a person who is victorious, right? That's not
the kind of person who needs to go to the Christian therapist.
But there's one other thing God's will...is God's will
and it sort of gobbles up all the rest, it's right here. This is the
will of God, your sanctification. What do you mean by that? What do
you mean sanctification? The word hagiosmos means separate, apart, set
apart, holy. It simply means this, to be set apart from sin to God.
God's will is that you be set apart from sin to God. Very simple concept.
Here he says this is God's will, your being set apart unto God. Now
that's a process, the process of becoming holy. That's God's will. He
wants you to become holy, this is His will.
By the way, that little phrase "this is the will
of God your sanctification" could really be the sort of umbrella
to cover the rest of the book cause every other principle that he gives
and every other exhortation is an element of sanctification. So there's
a sense in which the first part of verse 3 sort of just covers it all.
God's will is that you be set apart unto Him in a process of becoming
holy from sin toward God and here's how...and all the rest of the whole
book will tell you how. But principle number one, look at it, verse
3, that you abstain from sexual immorality. That's the first principle
of a sanctified life. If you're not covering this principle in your
life, the rest in some ways is a moot point. This is where we start.
We start with a holy life.
Back in chapter 3 verse 13, what was Paul's great prayer?
That your hearts would be unblamable in holiness before God. God wants
you holy. God wants you separated. God wants you set apart from sin
to Him. Separation from all that is wicked, all that is filthy, all
that is evil, all that is impure, all that is fleshly, all that is sinful.
That's the general concept. That's the general introduction to the whole
section.
You see, when you were saved you were saved unto sanctification.
Paul says in Romans 6:19 and Romans 6:22, "You used to be the slaves
of sin," then he says, "you're now the slaves of righteousness
which results in sanctification." The process of becoming holy
is a direct result of salvation. You were saved and the process of becoming
holy began and step one, abstain from immorality. Simple.
What does that mean? Stay away from sex sin. Stay away
from sexual sin. Now young people always want to say, "How far
away? How far away do I have to stay?" Which means, "How far
can I go and still be okay. Is it okay, you know, to hold hands and
hug each other? Is it okay to kiss? Is it okay to touch each other?
Is it okay to go beyond that as long you don't do the very act? What
can I do? Is it okay if we're engaged? Is it okay if we've decided that
we're really the ones and somewhere down the road we are going to get
married? How far can I go?"
That isn't even the right question. That question betrays
a sinful heart. The question isn't how far can I go and get away with
it, the question is how can I be sanctified, separated from sin and
holy unto God, that's the question...that's the question. How can I
conduct my physical relationships so that I am holy which means separated
from sin? And as you begin to play with the emotions that God has designed
to lead to consummation and intercourse, you begin to allow your mind
to move in to the area of thinking about that, you are in sin because
if a man in his mind commits adultery, God's side, he's committed it,
right? If woman commits it in the mind, it's been committed before God
because He sees the mind.
You have to stop short of the impure thought, the impure
motive, the lustful passion. And we'll say more about that next week,
show you how passion works. The question isn't how far can I go and
still be okay, the question is how can I be holy, how can I be utterly
separated from sin, how can I be totally pure, completely holy unto
God, pleasing Him, excelling still more? How can I excel still more?
How can I be more excellent? Not how can I drift a little bit the other
way and just get on the edge?
As I said, every imaginable and every unimaginable
form of sexual vice was running loose in the society in Thessalonica
as it is in ours and there were Christians who were weak just as there
are Christians today who are weak. There were Christians who were sort
of witless and ignorance about things and a bit naive, maybe willfully.
There were Christians who were shallow. There were some who because
of former life style or because of exposure to pornographic experiences
had had their lusts pandered and pandered and pandered like people who
go to the movies all the time or read dirty magazines or listen to that
kind of music who literally fuel the fire of their own lusts. They had
them then just like there are people today like that. And they would
be strongly pulled toward sexual sin. It would have been easy for them
to fall into it and that was Paul's concern.
Sometimes some of us think, "Well I don't have
those pulls, I didn't have an adulterous life before I was converted.
I didn't fornicate before I was converted, or I got married as a virgin
and I don't go to those kind of movies." But I'll tell you right
now, you live in a society that is lowering and lowering and lowering
and lowering the resistance continuously by overexposing us to all of
this and laughing at it and treating it as triviality so that we no
longer think anything of it. We can see a television show where a prostitute
is a comedic character and we can laugh about that because our senses
have been so totally dulled to that and as that gets lowered and lowered
and lowered and lowered even though we haven't had a wide exposure to
that kind of behavior, we can become more susceptible to that kind of
a temptation because of our resistance being broken down.
Paul knew that reality. And so he makes a very simple
direct command. It is not complicated at all. He says, "Abstain
from immorality." What's the word abstain mean? I've got to tell
you what it means. Apechomai, complete abstinence, stay away from it
all together. You say, "What is sexual immorality?" Any act
that violates the principles of God's Word, any thought that violates
the principle of God's Word leading to that act. Whatever relationship
you have with someone in the opposite sex other than your spouse, it
had better not include any act or thought designed to culminate in sexual
intercourse. I don't care whether you're engaged to them, or whether
you're committed, or whatever that might mean, God says total abstinence.
What is immorality? Immorality is the word porneia.
It simply means illicit sexual behavior. It's a broad word. It covers
all form of sexual sin. Anything other than a monogamous relationship
in a marriage, anything other than husband and wife, any other sexual
relationship to any degree is pornographic by God's standard. Now God
isn't down on sex. Hebrews 13...by the way, God invented it to start
with for man's pleasure...it even says in the Old Testament...some people
say, "Well it's just for procreation, it's just for having children."
No, because even the Old Testament talks about one of the patriarchs
sporting with his wife. Now I'm not going to go in to a Hebrew definition
of sporting, you can use your imagination. But the idea was it was for
pure pleasure.
Now you come to Hebrews 13, in Hebrews 13:4 it says,
"Marriage is honorable in all and the bed is undefiled." A
marriage bed is undefiled, you can't defile a marriage bed. Two people
who are married in bed, that is undefiled...the full expression of sexual
pleasure there is by God's design. But fornicators and adulterers, God
will judge, Hebrews 13:4. God draws the line at that point. The marriage
bed, that's where the line is drawn. Any bed other than a marriage bed,
God will judge.
Now some of you will remember when we first started
talking about 1 Thessalonians, I told you that there were very likely
critics who were accusing Paul of being like the rest of the false teachers,
charlatans, frauds and people who came in seeking sexual favors from
women followers. It was pretty typical of ancient times that these phony
philosophers and religious leaders and they would seek women around
them and their goal was to get prestige, to get some power, to make
some money and to get sexual favors from women followers. That was pretty
typical. By the way, if you think that's old, you better think again.
That's going on even today. There are all kinds of religious charlatans
who are in it for the sexual favors today as much of the scandals of
our own time have revealed. They were accusing Paul of seeking sexual
favors from women, so when he says this, that God's standard is total
abstinence, he not only gives them a command but he puts his own life
on the line as subscribing to that very thing as well.
His attitude, very simple, total abstinence. God has
designed it for the marriage bed alone. In Ephesians 5:3 it says, Paul
wrote, "Do not let immorality or any impurity even be named among
you as is proper among saints. No kind of immorality, porneia again,
sexual sin, no kind of impurity should ever be named among you because
you are saints," hagios, same word, you are set apart, you're holy,
you're in process of becoming like God. No kind of sexual sin should
ever be so much as named among you, it is utterly inconsistent with
sanctification.
In Colossians he says very much the same thing. "Your
life is hid with Christ in God, you belong to God, you're in a process
of sanctification, consider then the members of your earthly body as
dead, or desensitized, insensitive, unresponsive to immorality, impurity,
passion and evil desire." Words with sexual significance. You're
a Christian, your life is hid with Christ in God. You're headed for
glory. You can't be responding to that.
Now the command is very very clear...very clear. Total
abstinence from any sexual relationship outside the marriage bed. And
I'll promise you that's God's design not to make your life unhappy but
to make your marriage all the bliss that God could possibly intend it
to be. Violate it and you will throw into your marriage a component
that may result in a disastrous or divorced union. God has given His
Word, that's the basic command.
Now you say, "Well that's easy for Him to say."
That's easy for you to say. We're not supposed to do any of that. The
next question obviously comes, how am I supposed to fulfill that? Right?
How do I control myself? Come back next week and I will tell you and
in the meantime do your best without the information coming. Let's bow
in prayer.
Father, we come to You this morning with this serious
subject which has so devastated and violated Your church. It is not
proper for saints, holy ones, it is not Your will who longs that we
be sanctified. God, help us to hear very loudly and clearly and straight
forwardly Your command, stay away from it, not to do it, not to feed
on it in our minds, not to watch it on a screen or read it. Help us,
Lord, help us to be totally separate from this sin and like the Thessalonians,
it's all around us and some of these dear folks have been saved out
of these very habits. This is not easy, this is Your Word to us. Thank
You that the design of this is to make our life joyous, blessed and
utterly fulfilled in Christ's name we pray. Amen.
- John
MacArthur, Jr.
Taken from http://www.gty.org/Shop/Audio+Lessons/52-14
Abstaining
from Sexual Sin II
© 2000 Grace to You
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