My son, keep your father’s commandment, and forsake not your mother’s teaching. Bind them on your heart always; tie them around your neck.
But if some of the branches were broken off, and you, although a
wild olive shoot, were grafted in among the others and now share in
the nourishing root of the olive tree, 18 do not be arrogant toward
the branches. If you are, remember it is not you who support the
root, but the root that supports you. 19 Then you will say,
"Branches were broken off so that I might be grafted in." 20 That
is true. They were broken off because of their unbelief, but you
stand fast through faith. So do not become proud, but stand in awe.
21 For if God did not spare the natural branches, neither will he
spare you. 22 Note then the kindness and the severity of God:
severity toward those who have fallen, but God's kindness to you,
provided you continue in his kindness. Otherwise you too will be
cut off. 23 And even they, if they do not continue in their
unbelief, will be grafted in, for God has the power to graft them
in again. 24 For if you were cut from what is by nature a wild
olive tree, and grafted, contrary to nature, into a cultivated
olive tree, how much more will these, the natural branches, be
grafted back into their own olive tree.
Three times in Romans 11 Paul warns us Gentiles not to become
proud, especially too proud in our relation to Jewish people.
Verses 18: “Do not be arrogant toward the branches”
(the Jewish people who are not believing in Jesus). Verse 20b:
“Do not become proud, but stand in awe.” Verse 25:
“Lest you be wise in your own conceits, I want you to
understand this mystery.”
Alongside these three warnings not to be proud God gives us
reasons why being a Christian rules out pride and boasting over
other people. The reason we focused on last time was that we stand
only by faith. And there is something about the origin of
faith—it's the gift of God—and the nature of faith that
rule out boasting in ourselves and shift all boasting over onto God
for his grace.
How Do We Maintain Faith and Endure to the End?
I promised last time that after dealing with the origin of faith
and the nature of faith we would this time deal with the way we
maintain faith. I don't choose to deal with this merely because it
is personally urgent for me—which it is, since no question is
more pressing than how to persevere in faith to the end. Jesus said
in Mark 13:13, “ The one who endures to the end will be
saved.” That would be reason enough to deal with this
question of how you maintain the faith and endure to the end. But
the reason for dealing with it here is that it is so forcefully
pressed on us by the flow of Paul's thought right here in this
text.
Stand in Faith and Fear (v. 20)
Follow with me how he is thinking from verse 20 through verse
22. Pick it up with me in the middle of verse 20: “You stand
fast through faith.” In other words, your life, your
salvation, your remaining in this tree of covenant and promise and
hope, depends on your persevering faith. Then he says, “So do
not become proud, but stand in awe [literally,
“fear”].” In other words, there is a very
important role for fear in the Christians life in relation to
maintaining faith to the end. You stand fast through faith. So
don't be proud, but fear.
There Is Reason to Fear (v. 21)
Then he continues in verse 21: “For if God did not spare
the natural branches, neither will he spare you.” In other
words, there is reason to fear. If you give way to unbelief and
stop trusting Christ for your life and hope, then you will be cut
off. So fear every rise of unbelief in your heart. Or as Paul says
in Philippians 2:12, “Work out your own salvation with fear
and trembling.” When unbelief starts to get the upper hand
fear and tremble and fly to Christ.
A Strategy for Having Faith with Fear (v.
22)
Then he continues in verse 22 and gives us a strategy for
maintaining faith with a proper use of fear: “Note then the
kindness and the severity of God: severity toward those who have
fallen, but God's kindness to you, provided you continue in his
kindness.” In other words, Paul says that since ongoing faith
is utterly indispensable in being saved in the end, and since fear
has a key role in helping us maintain faith, therefore,
note something. Literally, “look” at
something. Look at what? Look at two things: the kindness of God
and the severity of God. Or we could say: look at the mercy of God
and the wrath of God. Look at the tenderness of God and the
toughness of God. Look at the salvation of God and the judgment of
God. Look at the assistance of God and the opposition of God. Look
at the friendship of God and the fierceness of God. Don't look only
at his gentler side. It will be bad for your faith.
So that is the point of today's message:
“Look—really look!—at the kindness and
the severity of God.” Look at both . This is my
answer today to the question: How do we maintain our faith? How do
we fight the fight of faith? How do we keep on believing? Which
also then answers, in part, the question, How do we defeat pride
and anti-Semitism in our lives?
First, let's consider what looking means, and then second, how
God's kindness and severity work together to help us maintain our
faith in Christ.
1. What Does “Looking” Mean?
Paul says in verse 22, “Note [literally,
“Look!”] then [at] the kindness and the severity of
God: severity toward those who have fallen, but God's kindness to
you.” It is amazing how many times the Bible tells us to
“Look!” Consider the old word, “Behold!”
Take a guess how many times it occurs in the Bible. In the ESV the
world “behold” occurs 1061 times (1275 times in the
KJV). That's incredible! And of course that's not the only word
that encourages us to pay attention. To take note. To wake up and
look at something or consider something. The word here in verse 22
means literally, “Look.”
So where do you look to see the kindness and the severity of
God? Of course there are two answers, because God has written two
books. The book of nature and the book of Scripture. Psalm 19:1,
“The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above
proclaims his handiwork.” So you can see the glory of God's
severity and his kindness as you look at his created world.
But that book of nature is a very ambiguous book. Rarely do we
know what we are looking at exactly. One event can look very much
like severity and judgment (like the sudden violent death of
mother), but in fact be a great kindness (because, unknown to
anyone, she had a terrible disease that would have caused
excruciating pain for months and then death). Or an event can look
like a great kindness and blessing (like the windfall of winning
the lottery), but in fact is severity and judgment (as lives are
ruined by the love of money). Often one event is
both—severity for one and kindness for another, depending on
who is trusting God in it and who is angry at God in it. So the
book of the world is filled with illustrations of the severity and
kindness of God. But the illustrations are all ambiguous. They
don't come with authoritative interpretations over them. They don't
come with a tag: this is severity and judgment, this is kindness
and blessing.
This is why we must have the other book of God, the Bible. The
Bible too tells the story of God's acts in the world, only there's
a difference. The Bible gives God's own authoritative
interpretations of what he is doing. He tells us whether something
is severity and judgment or kindness and blessing. So the best
answer to the question: Where do we look to see the kindness and
severity of God? is: Look in the Bible. Read the Bible.
This is a good time to encourage you to press on with your New
Year resolution to read it. Don't give up. Your life hangs on this.
George Mueller's whole life was a witness to the essential power of
reading and meditating on the Bible. He wrote,
For the first four years after my conversion [at age 20] I made
no progress, because I neglected the Bible. But when I regularly
read on through the whole [i.e., not skipping the severe parts!]
with reference to my own heart and soul, I directly made progress.
Then my peace and joy continued more and more. Now I have been
doing this for 47 years. I have read through the whole Bible about
100 times and I always find it fresh when I begin again. Thus my
peace and joy have increased more and more.” (George Mueller,
Narrative, vol. 2, p. 834.)
He lived another 21 years after this and his biographer said
that by the end he had read the Bible from end to end 200 times.
[1] This was the
key to his persevering and powerful faith. He looked over and over
and over day after day at the kindness and severity of God in the
Bible.
Your faith is shaped by what you look at. If you look at the
kindness and severity of God
the way they are woven together in the
Bible, your faith will grow stronger and stronger. If you neglect
the Bible, you will not see the severity of God and the kindness of
God they way God means for them to be seen. You will not understand
them. You will misinterpret them. And probably you will fault God
and criticize God for his severity and take his kindness for
granted and even feel deserving of them. If our faith is to last
and be strong, we must look at the kindness and severity of God in
the Bible.
Again and again they are put beside each other lest we miss
them. You cannot read far in the Bible without seeing both. A few
examples.
In Exodus 34:6-7 the Lord reveals his name to Israel :
[First, the kindness] The Lord passed before him and
proclaimed, “The Lord, the Lord, a God merciful and gracious,
slow to anger, and abounding in steadfast love and faithfulness, 7
keeping steadfast love for thousands, forgiving iniquity and
transgression and sin, [then the severity] but who will by
no means clear the guilty, visiting the iniquity of the fathers on
the children and the children's children, to the third and the
fourth generation.”
In Matthew 10:28-31 Jesus warns and comforts his disciples:
[First, the severity] And do not fear those who kill
the body but cannot kill the soul. Rather fear him [God] who can
destroy both soul and body in hell. 29 [Then the kindness]
Are not two sparrows sold for a penny? And not one of them will
fall to the ground apart from your Father. 30 But even the hairs of
your head are all numbered. 31 Fear not, therefore; you are of more
value than many sparrows.
In Romans 2:4-5 Paul points to the kindness of God which will
become severity if it does not produce faith:
[First, the kindness] Do you presume on the riches of
his kindness and forbearance and patience, not knowing that God's
kindness is meant to lead you to repentance? [Then the
severity] 5 But because of your hard and impenitent heart you
are storing up wrath for yourself on the day of wrath when God's
righteous judgment will be revealed.
So Paul's answer to the question: How shall we maintain faith
through the ups and downs of life? is “look at the kindness
and severity of God.” Look at it. Read it. Put it before you
mind every day. Both. Not just one or the other.
2. How Do God's Severity and Kindness Serve Faith?
Now the final question I want to ask is, “How do God's
kindness and severity work together to help us maintain our faith
in Christ?” How do God's severity and kindness serve
faith?
First notice that severity and kindness don't serve faith in the
same way. In Romans 11:22 Paul says, “Note then the kindness
and the severity of God: severity toward those who have fallen, but
God's kindness to you, provided you continue in his
kindness.” It does not say, “provided you continue
in his severity.” The aim of looking at severity is to keep
you in kindness. Kindness is what we fly to. Severity is what we
flee from.
Severity is not a redemptive experience in this text. It is
judgment and destruction. Sometimes we speak of a “severe
mercy,” and there is indeed such a thing. Many of you have
read Sheldon Vanauken's book by that title, A Severe
Mercy. A wife's cancer and death is the salvation of a
husband. But that is not what Paul has in mind here. Here severity
means final judgment on unbelievers. That is what we are to look
at, and fear, and flee from. So God's severity serves faith by
sending us running into the arms of the kindness of God.
Three Purposes of Fear for Believers
Now does the fact that we are to continue in kindness not in
severity mean that we are to continue in faith not fear?
Verse 20 says, “They [the unbelieving Jewish people] were
broken off because of their unbelief, but you stand fast through
faith. So do not become proud, but stand in awe, [literally,
“fear”].” You remain in the kindness of God by
faith—by trusting in God's kindness. So what is the place of
fear?
I close with three answers to that question—three precious
purposes of fear in the life of the believer which help us maintain
faith and endure to the end.
1) The fear of God's severity should send us flying to God's
kindness . When it does that, kindness casts out anxious fear.
This is a rhythm in the Christian life. It's true that perfect love
casts out fear (1 John 4:18 ). But none of us is perfected in love
yet. Therefore, fear of God's judgment will continue to have a good
effect in our lives and waken us again and again to think clearly
about the preciousness of his kindness and drive us away from all
false and deceptive hopes into the arms of God.
2) Fear deepens and makes serious the joy of our faith in
God's kindness and helps to keep it from being trivial. It
keeps faith from turning into mere morals or mere human
relationships or mere doctrine or mere tradition or mere formalism.
One breaking wave of the fear of hell over your soul will do the
depth of your faith more good than many seminars on how to live for
Jesus. God is not to be trifled with. And his severity is a gift to
waken us from the slumbers of superficiality and triviality and
game-playing.
3) Fear is a kind of sweetness in faith itself. It
doesn't just send us flying to faith in God's kindness. And it
doesn't just deepen the joy of our faith in God's kindness. It is
in itself a kind of sweetness in our faith.
I say this first because it's what the Bible says. For example,
Nehemiah 1:11 : “O Lord, let your ear be attentive to the
prayer of . . . your servants who delight to fear your
name .” And Isaiah 11:3 says of the coming Servant of
the Lord, “His delight shall be in the fear of the
Lord .” I take this word “delight” to mean that
there is a kind of sweetness to the very experience of fearing God,
when the real prospect of hell and judgment and condemnation are
removed. When the condemnation of God is removed from the dread of
God, what's left is a humble, trembling, joyful awe and wonder.
There's a reason why people run away from scenes of terror in
real life, but still go to movies to see the same terror. There's a
reason why no one wants to fall out of an airplane, but they will
pay money at Valley Fair for the same sensation of falling. The
reason is that we were created to be safely afraid of God.
Everything else is an echo of this truth. We were made to be safely
afraid of God, because when we are safely afraid of God—when
there is no condemnation and we know that he is our Father and our
Friend—then what remains in fear of God is deeply
pleasant.
Otherwise the Jesus and the saints would not have said, “I
delight to fear your name.”
Therefore, LOOK!
Therefore, let us Look, Look! LOOK! At the kindness and
the severity of God. Immerse yourself in the Bible. And may the
severity of God send us flying into the arms of his kindness, may
his severity deepen our faith in his kindness, and when all
condemnation is gone by faith in Jesus, may his terrible severity
become for us a trembling sweetness.
