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Treasury of Sermons -
Christian Living
Living for Christ
By Rev Charles Seet
(Preached at Life BPC, 8am service, 9 Dec 2007)
Text: Galatians 2:20; Colossians 3:17-4:1
“I am crucified with
Christ: nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the
life which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of
God, who loved me, and gave himself for me.” This is one of the most
beautiful and meaningful verses in the Bible! It reveals many things
about the one who wrote it. Firstly, it is evident that he was fully
identified with Christ, since he said that he is crucified with
Christ. There is no greater degree of identification with Christ than
this. In addition to that the writer was fully surrendered to
Christ, because he claims that Christ lives in Him. His life belongs to
Christ, and is fully yielded to fulfill the will of Christ. And that’s
not all – The writer is also fully committed to live for Christ,
as he states that he lives by the faith of the Son of God. He has
complete trust in Christ to lead him, direct him and provide for him
each day.
We can also tell from
the way the verse is written that this life which was fully identified
with Christ, surrendered to Christ and committed to live for Christ had
not been the writer’s life at first. He says, “and the life which I
now live in the flesh.” This implies that at one time, he
used to live for less worthy goals than Christ, but somehow there was a
turning point that had changed his life. When did it come? The end of
the verse shows us that it came when he personally experienced the
matchless love of the Son of God who had given His own life for him.
From that point onwards the writer’s life was no longer the same as it
was before. His old life was dead and gone – crucified with Christ. He
now lived a new and better life, which was entirely for Christ alone!
I. The Life that
Was Lived for Christ – Paul, the Apostle
What we have just seen
is actually a very concise summary of the life of the apostle Paul, and
if we want to appreciate what he wrote here fully, we must first know
the full story of his life.
A. His Early
Life
B. His
Conversion and Training
C. His Ministry
D. His
Imprisonment and Promotion of Glory
After completing these
journeys, Paul was arrested at Jerusalem and imprisoned at Caesarea on
false charges brought against him by the unbelieving Jews. At a court
hearing there, he claimed his right as a Roman citizen to appeal to
Caesar and so he was transferred to Rome and kept there under house
arrest while awaiting trial (AD 59-61). By God’s grace he was released
and may have made other missionary journeys for 6 years, traveling as
far west as Spain. In AD 67 Paul, now in his sixties, was arrested
again, and this time he was sentenced to death as part of Nero’s intense
persecution of Christians.
Paul was ready to face
death. Listen to what he wrote in his last epistle (2 Timothy 4:6-8) –
“For I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at
hand. I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have
kept the faith: Henceforth there is laid up for me a crown of
righteousness, which the Lord, the righteous judge, shall give me at
that day.”
How wonderful it would
be if each of us is able to say the same thing at the end of our lives -
I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept
the faith. It speaks of a life that was well spent. But in order to
be able to end so well, we first have to emulate the well-spent life of
the apostle Paul. And we need to know what it was that really enabled
him to accomplish so much. The answer lies in the words that Paul wrote
in Galatians 2:20 – “I am crucified with Christ: nevertheless I live;
yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life which I now live in the
flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who loved me, and gave
himself for me.”
II. The Life We
Ought to Live – for Jesus Christ
Your conversion to
Chritianity may not have been as dramatic at Paul’s conversion on the
road to Damascus. But if you are saved, you have certainly received the
very same mercy and grace from the Lord that he received because your
sins are as much deserving of God’s judgment as his. You may not have
been endowed with the same abilities and talents as Paul which enabled
him to preach the Gospel of Christ and plant churches. But you have
certainly been endowed with a life that can be used by the Lord.
And so as the apostle
Paul lived his life for Christ, you also ought to be living your life
for Christ! Paul’s words in Galatians 2:20 should be yours as well. It
ought to speak of your full identification with Christ, your full
surrender to Christ, and your full commitment to live for Christ alone.
In the words that the hymnwriter Isaac Watts wrote, “Love so amazing,
so divine demands my soul, my life, my all!” In the light of this, I
would ask all of us here to examine our lives – are we truly living for
Christ? Have we really died to self? Are we seeking to do His will every
day rather than our own will?
Perhaps you may have
at some point in your life been moved to tears by what the Lord has done
for you, and you responded by giving yourself to Him. You had said to
Him, “Lord, I consecrate my life to Thee. Take it and use it for Thy
glory.” And then you thought that the matter has been settled and
you proceeded to live exactly as you had done before. There was little
or no follow up on your promise. Dear friends, please understand that
living for Christ is not merely a promise you make when you are deeply
moved by God’s love. Living for Christ is a daily commitment that
requires your conscious efforts to involve Christ in every aspect of
your life. In order for us to understand what it means to live for
Christ let us look at what Paul wrote in Colossians 4:17-5:1.
III. How to Live
for Christ
Verse 17 – “And
whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all in the name of the Lord Jesus,
giving thanks to God and the Father by Him.” This verse tells us to
do everything is to be done in the name of the Lord Jesus. This means
that we give glory and honour to His name, by acknowledging that it is
by His grace and strength alone that we can do all things. The
accompanying words – “giving thanks to God and the Father by Him”
show that this is the intended meaning. When we recognize that
all we have done is only possible by the Lord’s grace, then thanksgiving
for that grace becomes the most natural thing to do.
So in practical terms,
v.17 means that in whatever you do in word or deed, whether it is work,
or play, traveling or eating or even sleeping, you should always be
ready to acknowledge, either by prayer or by public testimony that you
do it all by the grace of God. With the apostle Paul you should say,
“by the grace of God I am what I am.” If Christ does not provide the
strength to work, how would you earn your living? If Christ does not
permit you to have a good night’s rest, how would you be able to sleep?
If Christ does not keep you safe in your journey, how would you reach
your destination? Since we can do all these things only by Him and
through Him, let us always be ready to give glory to His name in
everything we do.
Now we look at v.23
and we notice that it is also about ‘whatsoever we do” like v.17. It
says: “And whatsoever ye do, do it heartily as to the Lord, and not
unto men.” This time the emphasis is not on the ultimate cause of
all our deeds (as in v.17) but on the ultimate purpose or object of all
our deeds. What do we do them for? We do all things for the Lord, to
please Him rather than to please men. And since God alone sees our
hearts, we must be doing all things heartily or with all our heart, in
order to please Him. So all our work ought to be dedicated to honour and
please the Lord who is our real Master. This means that it must be of
the best possible quality.
This is the attitude
that you must have for everything you do – to put all your heart into
it, to do it well, because you do it for Christ, and not for men. Do all
things as if Christ is going to check the quality of your work, just as
He will one day assess the quality of all your labour on earth and will
reward you accordingly. In verse 23 we see that the prospect of being
rewarded by the Lord is found in the following verse: “Knowing that
of the Lord ye shall receive the reward of the inheritance: for ye serve
the Lord Christ.” Let this become your motivation to do all things
well in life, whether at work (since this verse is primarily given in
the context of servants working for human masters), or at home (for
housewives in doing various household chores like cooking, washing and
ironing), or at school (for students preparing for tests and exams) or
at church (for those who are serving in the various ministries) – do all
these things heartily, with the very best effort, as to the Lord,
knowing that He is going to assess the quality of your work.
And this is why Christ
should be the centre of our lives. There is not a thought we can think
without Him, or a word we can speak without Him, or a deed we can do
without Him. There is not a day, or an hour or even a second of our
lives that can go by without Him. His involvement in our lives must be
100 % it must be full and comprehensive. That is what v.17 of our text
means when it tells us: “And whatsoever ye do in word or deed, do all
in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God and the Father by
Him.”
Doing this can be quite
challenging because the world we live in is opposed to Christ. While we
are trying to make Christ the center of all the things we do, the world
is trying to displace, and even to remove Christ from every place where
He ought to be. For instance, Christ is removed from Christmas and
replaced with Santa Claus. Sometimes ironically, Christians are the ones
who are most ashamed to honour Christ! Some do not want to be perceived
as fanatics. They may say, “If everything in my life has to be
centred that much on Christ alone, will that not make life rather
monotonous and even boring? Will people not think that I am obsessed
with Christ, and that I have a one-track mind?”
But if you were to
look at what the apostles wrote in the Scriptures, you will realize that
they were really all out for Jesus Christ, even to the point of being
despised as fanatics by their contemporaries. The apostle Paul boldly
said in Philippians 3:13,14 – “this one thing I do, forgetting those
things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are
before, I press toward the mark for the prize of the high calling of God
in Christ Jesus.” If you are ever afraid that you might be overdoing
your commitment to Christ, learn from the Scriptures what normal
Christian living is all about – it is all about a completely Christ-centred
life!
Let us realize that we
can never have too much of Christ in our life. In fact all too often,
the problem with us is that we do not have enough of Him. We may involve
Him fully in our time in church, and in all our Christian activities.
But when we go home to our families we forget to involve Him in our home
life. And when we step into our workplace we forget to involve Him in
our work life.
This is perhaps the
reason why immediately after v.17, the apostle Paul gave a whole series
of instructions on these two large areas of our lives – our family life
and our work life. And here we can see how the Lord must be involved
each important relationship. First in v.18 Paul addresses the wives,
saying, “Wives, submit yourselves unto your own husbands, as it is
fit in the Lord.” (The last part, “as it is fit in the Lord”
means that it is right and good in the sight of the Lord Jesus Christ).
Then to the husbands
he says, “love your wives, and be not bitter against them.” You
may be wondering where Christ is involved in this injunction. The answer
is found by comparing this with the more detailed version of these same
instructions that Paul wrote in the book of Ephesians (Remember that
both epistles were written at about the same time). In Ephesians 5:25
Paul repeats the same command to husbands – “Husbands, love your
wives, even as Christ also loved the church, and gave Himself for it;”
Christ’s love for the church becomes the standard for the selfless love,
that all husbands must follow. As the apostle Paul speaks to the
children in verse 20, he brings Christ in again – “Children, obey
your parents in all things: for this is well pleasing unto the Lord.”
This means that the primary motivation for obedience to parents is not
to please one’s parents, but to please the Lord Jesus Christ! This has
one important implication for us: That the Christ-centred life is not
only for adult believers, but for children as well.
They too must be
taught to put Christ first before everything in their lives, even before
their own parents! During the time when Christians were tortured and
persecuted in communist Rumania, the communists were trying to make a
Christian deny Christ, so they took his 10-year old son and threatened
to slaughter him in front of the father unless he would deny Christ. But
the boy said to his father, “Father, if you deny Christ, you are no
longer my father.” And so the father stood firm and had to watch in
tears as his son was beaten to death in front of him, and as the son
died he continued to shout to his father not to deny Christ!
And so we have seen
that Christ must be involved in everything we do and in all our
relationships, at home and at work. We may broaden the scope further to
include our personal life, social life, and even our recreational life.
Christ must be the centre of every aspect of our lives. He should be
Lord or all, or else He is not lord at all.
You may want to spend
some time today going through each area of your life and think of how
Christ should be involved in it. For example, in your personal life you
should give priority to your daily Quiet time, Bible study, prayer and
fellowship. For your home life you should make your home as conducive as
possible for Christ to exercise His divine lordship within your family.
If you are a student, you should study well, not for the grades or
degrees, but to obtain all the skills and knowledge that will enable you
to serve the Lord better for the rest of your life. For your working
life you should do your very best with the help of Christ, so that you
may eventually bring glory to Him through the honest hard work, diligent
fulfillment of your responsibilities and a shining testimony to your
colleagues.
For your social life
is you should seek to build good friendships through which you can
communicate Christ to others by your word and life. For your
recreational life you should enjoy edifying music and art that will make
you appreciate Christ’s design of all things. For the management of your
time, your possessions and financial resources is you
should seek to be a good steward of all things that Christ has given to
you.
Now, setting all these goals is only the beginning. Make plans to
review them regularly, and perhaps even to share them with someone you
can be accountable to, who will help you to follow up on them. May this
help you to apply what you have learnt from God’s Word fully so that you
may be able to say with full conviction, “I am crucified with Christ:
nevertheless I live; yet not I, but Christ liveth in me: and the life
which I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of the Son of God, who
loved me, and gave himself for me.” |