“SOME HINDRANCES TO CONVERSION”
Psalm 77.2
Turn in your Bible to Psalm 77. When
you have found the 77th Psalm, please stand for the reading of God’s
Word:
<<To the chief Musician, to
Jeduthun, A Psalm of Asaph.>>
1 I cried unto God with my voice, even unto God with
my voice; and he gave ear unto me.
2 In the day of my trouble I sought the Lord: my sore ran
in the night, and ceased not: my soul refused to be comforted.
3 I remembered God, and was troubled: I complained, and my
spirit was overwhelmed. Selah.
There are some portions of scripture which
are profound in their capacity to impart wisdom to the attentive reader. Such
would be the books of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes in the Hebrew scriptures, and
such books in the New Testament as First Corinthians, Second Corinthians, and
the letter written by James. Other books, however, seem to be more directed to
the heart of a man than his head, and chief among these books of the Bible can
only be the Psalms. If it is “with the heart that man believeth unto
righteousness,” as Paul wrote in Romans 10.10, then there is grist for every
man’s mill in the Psalms, that his heart might be inclined to believe if he is
unconverted, and that his heart might be strengthened in its belief if he is a
child of God.
In particular, I want to turn your
attention to a specific phrase in Psalm 77.2, a declaration that speaks to the
spiritual trouble of many of you here. Notice, please, the last phrase the
psalmist writes in verse 2, “my soul refused to be comforted.” It reminds me of
Genesis 37.35, when Jacob refused to be comforted by his sons and daughters
over the loss of Joseph, who he presumed to be dead. Are you familiar with the
Apostle Paul’s pronouncement in Second Corinthians 1.3-4, wherein he describes
God as “the God of all comfort; Who comforteth us in all our tribulation, that
we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble, by the comfort
wherewith we ourselves are comforted of God”? It is quite a statement, is it
not, that “my soul refused to be comforted,” in light of the fact that God is
“the God of all comfort, Who comforteth us in all our tribulation”? Consider,
also, those statements made by the Lord Jesus Christ in John chapters 14, 15
and 16, wherein He designates the Holy Spirit of God as “the Comforter,” and in
John 14.16 as “Another Comforter,” meaning another of the same kind of
Comforter that He was.[1]
So, what is to be said about that person whose “soul refused to be comforted”?
Does not such a person, for whatever
reason, using whatever justification, seem to you to be resisting the Holy
Ghost? This reminds me of Stephen’s statement to his fellow Jews who opposed
his preaching, in Acts 7.51, where he said, “Ye stiffnecked and uncircumcised
in heart and ears, ye do always resist the Holy Ghost.” Thus, someone whose
soul refuses to be comforted stands against the Father, the God of all comfort,
stands against the Lord Jesus Christ, Who is our Comforter, and also stands
against the Holy Spirit, that other Comforter. Recognize, the opposition may be
entirely passive opposition, yet it is still opposition to God, His plan and
His purpose for your life.
Some of you are here in an unconverted
state. Your sins are not forgiven. Your soul is not cleansed from the stain of
sin by the blood of Jesus Christ. You are dead and trespasses and sins. Yet, so
far, your soul has refused to be comforted by the thrice holy God. Others of
you are here in an apparently converted state, that is really only an apparent
state and not reality. Like Simon the sorcerer with Philip, and Demas for so
long with the Apostle Paul, Christians think you are a Christian. And it may be
that you, too, think you are a Christian. Or you hope you are, all the while
having serious doubts. But what the real case is with you, though perhaps God
has begun to work in your life, to poke and prod you by His precious Spirit, to
arouse your conscience by His Word, and to elevate your opinion of His Son
Jesus, your soul still refuses to be comforted. That is, you are not yet
savingly converted to Jesus Christ.
I am concerned for your welfare. I
have prayed for some of you by name this week, who I think do not know Christ. Others,
I have also prayed for, asking God to work in the lives of some who I may
erroneously think are genuine Christians, but who are not. Therefore, to help
you, I bring a message titled “Some Hindrances To Conversion.” It is not an
exhaustive sermon on the subject, but it may help some of you to more clearly
see what you are doing that results in your soul refusing to be comforted. There
are several impediments which hinder poor lost folks from coming to my
wonderful Savior, Jesus Christ. I wish to mention just a few of these
impediments today. As I deal with several of these impediments, several of the
things you do which interfere with your conversion, remember that it is your
soul that is the subject of discussion, therefore it is your responsibility
before God.
You must be the one whose interest is
aroused, whose concern is cultivated, whose conscience is stirred. After all,
it is your soul’s salvation that is in question, your eternal state that is at
issue. Jesus Christ, the eternal Son of the living God, became a man and
suffered, bled and died for the sins of mankind. He was buried and rose again
from the dead after three days and three nights. He now sits at the Father’s
right hand on high, victorious over sin, death, Hell and the grave, ready to
save sinners.[2]
This being true, what might explain from the human perspective why you are not
converted?
IT COULD BE THAT YOU HAVE NO INTEREST
IN BEING CONVERTED TO CHRIST
Perhaps you are a simple fool. Psalm
14.1 reads, “The fool hath said in his heart, There is no God.” Thus,
you discount any mention of sins you have committed against God, ignore any
responsibility you have to worship and serve God, Who is your Creator. You are
a fellow who uses unseen electricity to power your lights and stove and
computer, yet with regard to spiritual matters you insist that what cannot be
seen does not exist. So, you live the life of a practical atheist, saying there
is a God but living as though God does not exist.
Or perhaps you are committed to your
own pleasure. Hebrews 11.25, explaining the conduct of Moses, reads: “Choosing
rather to suffer affliction with the people of God, than to enjoy the pleasures
of sin for a season.” This verse in the Bible acknowledges that there is
pleasure associated with committing sins. Nowhere in the Bible is it ever
denied that in the short term committing sin results in pleasure. But when the
long term results of sin are focused on, as is most often the case in the
Bible, sin is seen to be catastrophic in its consequences. But you aren’t into
long term consequences. You discount everything but what is immediate and close
at hand. Therefore, you ignore what will happen, what must happen, as a direct
result of the sins you have committed against a holy God; eternal torment.
These two illustrations shed light on
the thinking (if you want to call such thinking) by a person who is blind,
careless, or possessed of a presumptuous security that persuades him or her
that everything will work out all right. It won’t work out all right.
Next, IT COULD BE THAT YOU MAKE THE
MISTAKE OF COMPARING YOURSELF
In Second Corinthians 10.12, the
Apostle Paul makes mention of a tendency many people have:
“. . . comparing themselves among
themselves, are not wise.”
Some of you compare yourselves to
fraudulent Christians. That is, you examine yourself, not in the light of God’s
Word, not according to the standard of God’s righteousness, but by comparing
yourself to some member of our church, concluding that you aren’t so bad after
all. But your logic is faulty. Your judgment is flawed. You have made a bad
choice.
Others of you compare yourselves to
godly Christians. You commit the same type of error the lost man who compares
himself to a fake Christian makes, but with a different result. Whereas the
lost man who judges himself by some pretend Christian concludes that he is
actually okay, “just as good as that Christian,” you compare yourself with a
wonderful Christian and bemoan the fact that you will never measure up to that
godly person. Your mistake, beyond comparing yourself with another person, is
forgetting that the godly Christian has access to the sanctifying grace of God,
enabling him to live somewhat differently than most lost people, though he is
still a sinner.
In either case, the standard that you
must meet is God’s standard and not one of your own design. Therefore, if you
do not rise up to God’s perfect standard of righteousness and holiness, as
described in His Law, you are doomed. What you need is something more than
another sinner to compare yourself to, whether that sinner is saved or lost. What
you need is a Savior, Who will perfectly satisfy God’s righteous demands on
your behalf.
Third, IT COULD BE THAT YOU CONCLUDE
THAT YOUR SINS ARE TOO GREAT
Have you ever considered the ancient
kingdom of Judah’s wicked king, Manasseh? He became king at the age of 12, when
his father good King Hezekiah died, some 2,700 years ago.[3] He
built altars to false gods in the house of the LORD,[4]
made his own son pass through the fire,[5] and
seduced his people “to do more evil than did the nations whom the LORD destroyed before the children of
Israel.”[6]
Manasseh did incalculable damage to his people, and was an astonishingly wicked
man. Yet, though Manasseh refused to listen when God spoke to him,[7]
God humbled him by greatly afflicting him, and then mercifully saved his
wretched soul.[8]
Then there was Nebuchadnezzar, the
arrogant Babylonian king who conquered the kingdom of Judah, starved the city
of Jerusalem into submission, and then enslaved the Jewish population in what
is called the Babylonian captivity. He was a cruel and wicked man, responsible
for the death of many Jewish people. He was arrogant and proud, claiming that
his vast empire was the result of his own greatness as a man, and the fruit of
his own labors. Surely, such a man as this, perverse and so very proud, was
undeserving of God’s grace and mercy. Yet the entire 4th chapter of
Daniel is Nebuchadnezzar’s personal testimony of how God first humbled him and
then graciously saved him. The chapter closes with these words of
Nebuchadnezzar:
“Now I Nebuchadnezzar praise and extol
and honour the King of heaven, all whose works are truth, and his ways
judgment: and those that walk in pride he is able to abase.”[9]
And what was Saul of Tarsus doing when
God intervened in his life to set in motion a series of events that resulted in
his conversion and calling into the apostolic ministry as the great Apostle
Paul? He was not searching for the truth. Quite the contrary. He was pursuing
his career as the persecutor of God’s people, making havoc of the church,
entering into every house, and tossing Christians into prison when he found
them.[10]
In short, he was a one man Gestapo, bent on stamping out Christianity. It was
while traveling to Damascus, not in search of truth, but in search of
Christians to persecute, that the glorified Savior appeared to him on the road
to Damascus and said, “Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou me?”[11]
The short version is that Saul was converted, came to be known as the Apostle
Paul, and burned brightly for the cause of Christ until his martyrdom three
decades later. How did this trophy of God’s grace describe himself? In First
Timothy 1.15 he wrote, “Christ Jesus came into the world to save sinners; of
whom I am chief.”
Then, there is the example of the
Philippian jailor. Paul and Silas had been unjustly arrested, illegally beaten,
and thrown into prison. They were hardly in any condition to pose a threat to
other prisoners, to pose a threat to their guards, or to pose any danger of
escape. They were in shock, for crying out loud, having been beaten half to
death. So, what does the jailor do? He “thrust them into the inner prison, and
made their feet fast in the stocks,” Acts 16.24. Why toss them into the inner
prison, dark and cold and foul? Why place their feet in excruciating stocks
when they were already too beaten up to move? Cruelty. Just plain meanness. Yet
what did God’s marvelous grace accomplish a few short hours later? That same
cruel jailor was saved, along with the rest of his family. And Paul baptized
them. The new Christian then fed Paul and Silas and they all had great
fellowship, rejoicing in God’s goodness and mercy.[12]
Can you sit there, reflecting on God’s
grace and mercy to such scoundrels as Manasseh and Nebuchadnezzar and Saul of
Tarsus and the Philippian jailor, and still think you are too great a sinner to
be saved? Do you really believe that the greatness of your sins offsets the
greatness of God’s mercy, and that your power to sin offsets the Lord Jesus
Christ’s power to save? Get over it.
Fourth, IT COULD BE YOU CONCLUDE THAT
JESUS CHRIST IS AT YOUR BECK AND CALL
It is true that the Lord Jesus said of
Himself, “. . . the Son of man is come to seek and to save that which was
lost,” Luke 19.10. But He did come, you see, and now He has gone to where He
came from. He now sends forth His laborers to “preach the gospel to every
creature,” Mark 16.15. So, what are you to do? It is now your responsibility to
come to Him. He said in Matthew 11.28, “Come unto me, all ye that labour
and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest.” And in John 7.37 He said, “If
any man thirst, let him come unto me, and drink.”
What many lost people do not seem to
understand is that it is not sufficient that you recognize your need to be
saved. It is simply not enough to realize Jesus Christ is the only Savior. If
you see your need to be saved and, as well, know that Jesus Christ is the only
Savior of sinful men’s souls, you are still lost, and you are still undone.
Therefore, if you think that at a time
of your choosing you can simply cry out to Christ and He will come a running to
save you . . . you are mistaken. The deal is, you come to Him, He does not come
to you. He summons you, you do not summon Him. He is the Lord to direct you to
respond, not you to direct Him to respond. In John 10.27 He said, “My sheep
hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me.” So, be careful, you who
think the Lord Jesus Christ is at your beck and call. You are mistaken. He is
“the blessed and only Potentate, the King of kings, and Lord of lords,” First
Timothy 6.15. If you think that at a time of your choosing you
can summon Him to save you from your sins . . . you are gravely mistaken.
Fifth, IT COULD BE THAT YOU DON’T
THINK YOU FEEL BAD ENOUGH ABOUT YOUR SINS
In John 16.8 the Lord Jesus Christ
told His disciples that the Holy Spirit “will reprove the world of sin.” That
is, the Holy Spirit’s ministry in the life of a lost man or woman is to
persuade that person, convince that person, convict that person if you will,
regarding personal sin. What kind of emotional reaction a sinner will have to
being persuaded that he is guilty, that he is lost, that he is undone, varies
from sinner to sinner, with no two individuals reacting in exactly the same
way. But the emotional reaction is not all that significant. What is
significant is the degree to which the sinner becomes convinced of his own
sinfulness and his desperate need of a savior.
So, you who bemoan the fact that you
do not think you feel bad enough about your sins. Do you feel bad that you do
not feel bad about your sins? Does it grieve you that you are not enough
grieved? Will you accept as evidence of your spiritual deadness that you do not
feel remorse as you think you should? All that is needed my sinful friend, all
that is really needed, is for you to feel bad enough to want relief. You may
not feel bad about your sinfulness, but do you feel bad enough to want a
Savior, bad enough to seek a Savior, bad enough to come to the Savior? If you
feel bad enough about your condition to actually flee to the Savior then you
feel bad enough, even if you don’t feel very bad at all.
You see, the only consideration of
Jesus Christ is the sinner actually coming to Him. Do you feel little remorse
as a lost man? You will feel sufficient remorse as a Christian should you be
converted, I promise you. Little repentance now? There will be sufficient
repentance later after your sins are forgiven. Little conviction now? There
will be more conviction later of how sinful you were as a lost man after your
sins have been washed clean in Christ’s blood.
So you see, what is an obstacle to you
is no obstacle to the Lord Jesus Christ. Reflect upon each of these blockades
that we have considered and you will see it clearly yourself. Have you no
interest in being converted? Do you pay little interest to God and instead
value the pleasure of your sins? Reality will overcome that impediment. Loss of
a loved one, ruination of a marriage, destruction of a career or of your
health, realization of how fragile life is? Then that impediment seems rather
small. Do you compare yourself with others? Compare yourself with what God
demands. Think yourself too sinful? Remember Manasseh, Nebuchadnezzar, Saul of
Tarsus, and the Philippian jailor. Do you think Jesus Christ is at your beck
and call? Consider Who He is and think again. Think you don’t feel bad enough
about your sins? No one has ever felt bad enough about his sins.
Each of these are impediments,
obstacles, blockades. None of them is really all that difficult to deal with
and overcome, but each of them seems sufficient enough to prevent sinners from
truly coming to Christ. And perhaps one of these impediments, or another I have
not made reference to, has been enough to keep you lost. It is your soul that
needs tending to. It is your eternity that is at stake. Therefore, your
interest in this matter should be guaranteed. Because of that I urge you to
sweep aside all considerations of whatever might cause you to hesitate and flee
to Christ now.
[1] See footnote for John 14.16 from John MacArthur, The MacArthur Study Bible, (Nashville: Word Publishing, 1997), page 1614.
[2] Psalm 16.11; 110.1; Matthew 26.64; Mark 12.36; 14.62; 16.19; Luke 20.42; 22.69; John 3.13; 13.1; 14.2-4; Acts 2.33, 34-35; 7.56; Romans 8.34; Ephesians 1.20; Colossians 3.1; Second Thessalonians 1.7; Hebrews 1.3, 13; 8.1; 9.24; 10.12-13; 12.2; 1 Peter 3.22; Revelation 19.11
[3] Second Kings 21.1
[4] Second Kings 21.4
[5] Second Kings 21.6
[6] Second Kings 21.9
[7] Second Chronicles 33.10
[8] Second Chronicles 33.11-13
[9] Daniel 4.37
[10] Acts 8.3
[11] Acts 9.4
[12] Acts 16.25-34
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