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Are You Rejecting Christ?
Romans 10:19
Sermon Transcript by Rev. Ernest O’Neill
Do you know who Bismarck was? If you suffered reading a lot of European history, you would know
that Bismarck was an iron-willed military leader who dominated the policies of Germany virtually up
to the end of the 19th century. He had all kinds of flaws in his character, but he once made what I
think is an inspired statement. He was talking with the Kaiser about “politicians” — he meant
statesmen. He said, “Politicians listen for the footsteps of God.”
He really meant that great leaders, who govern the course of international affairs, realize that the
only moves worth making are those that lead directly to the purpose of the Creator — who works all
things according to the counsel of his will. Any other moves that you make in international affairs
finally lead nowhere.
That could be an interesting distinction between statesmen and politicians. Statesmen are great
public servants and listen for the footsteps of God. They watch to see where the Creator is moving
the history of the world. But politicians manipulate events and people for their own short-term
gains.
You see fine well the same distinction applies in our own personal lives. You can either live your
life listening for the footsteps of God — that is, living each day watching for the hints and the
promptings of his Holy Spirit about the way he wants you to go, and living your life against the
backdrop of God’s plan for the world. Or you can live your life as a miserable little political
animal that is bent on manipulating people and things and circumstances for his own short-term goals
and gains.
You can either live your life relaxed in the trust that your Creator is completely in control of
your life and is governing its course. Or you can live as if everything depends on what you can do
to manipulate others — to make them do what needs to be done for your life to prosper.
You can either live as a miserable scared little political animal who is playing it by ear all the
time, trying to turn this event or that event to your own profit. Or you can live as one who is
more concerned with the plan that God has for your life — and is listening for the footsteps of
God.
And that, of course, explains irritability. You know the number of times we all have spoken
irritably to each other — to our friends, employees, employers, or our loved ones at home. We feel
this is our little solar system, and we have to remain “god” in control of it. We have to govern
everything so that it works right for us. How dare anyone speak a word that we did not plan to be
spoken! How dare anyone do anything that we didn’t expect to be done! How dare anyone do something
that does not meet the high standards we have for them! So in irritability we speak to them.
It is so different from the love that flows from a dear heart that completely trusts God to take
care of the way his life goes — to be able to work every stray action and stray event into the
counsel of his will and purpose for us. That results in such a relaxed magnanimous life.
Yet, it is difficult, isn’t it? It is difficult to live your life listening for the footsteps of
God, especially when you hear the deafening noise of the bombs falling all around you. It is so
difficult to listen for the footsteps of God and to trust that he is in absolute control of
everything — when your dear friend has just blown all hope of a vacation by totaling your car.
You might say, “Difficult? It’s impossible!” And with the personality equipment that you and I
have, it IS impossible.
I’ll tell you why. Have you ever watched a little rabbit eating a lettuce leaf in your vegetable
garden? I watched one last week. You know the way it nibbles about like mad, and its eyes look up
and dart around to see if there is any danger, and then it goes nibbling again. Its little head is
always jerking around everywhere to see if there is anybody within attacking distance. So it
nibbles away, its little eyes look up, and then it nibbles away again.
That’s the way that dear little rabbit eats. It feels that if it doesn’t see what is planning to
attack it before that thing gets near to it, it is finished. It believes that it is on its own, and
has to protect and defend itself from any stray action that anybody might produce.
Now you can imagine calling that rabbit into your study and saying, “Look, this is a dumb way to
live. I’ll protect you. Have your meal in peace. I’ll watch out for any animal that dares to
attack you.” You know fine well, even if that dear little rabbit says, “Good deal” — the little
eyes, the little pricked-up ears, everything is so attached to the natural scene around it by
invisible chains of responses and reflexes — that it couldn’t stop eating the way it does even if
it wanted to.
It is as if the first swaying branch is immediately connected by an invisible electric wire to its
little eyes, and its little eyes dart out. It is as if every movement of a blade of grass is
connected directly to its little head so that it looks around as if it were a puppet on a string.
And even if that dear little rabbit wanted to trust you, it couldn’t. Its whole set of motor
responses is tied so inextricably to the nature around it — as we know — for a definite purpose.
You know that there is no way in which that rabbit could just lie down there on the grass, have a
little bit of lettuce and then have a little snooze. It couldn’t.
And isn’t it the same with us? It’s not just that our motor responses — our eyes and our ears —
are so attached to the natural world around us. It’s even more serious than that. It is our whole
mental and emotional makeup that is tied to the things, the people, and the circumstances around us
— so that they make us act like a puppet on a string.
We hear somebody praising us, and immediately the satisfaction in being praised and looked up to
just flows out from us. The very same power that connects us with the world around us in that
situation operates in us when somebody dents our car, or when somebody does something to us that we
didn’t expect. Immediately irritability flashes out from us.
The only way you could get the rabbit to trust you is if you could take its little eyes, its little
ears, its head, and its nervous system and replace them with eyes and ears and a head and a nervous
system that were designed to trust you and to depend upon you — rather than upon the natural world
around it. That would be a massive job! You couldn’t even do it with one rabbit, let alone all
the rabbits in the world!
Yet, that is what God has done for us. That is why he puts it like this: “Christ died for all,
therefore all died.” {Paraphrase of 2 Corinthians 5:14} When Jesus died in the great-eternal now
of infinity — where there is no present, no past, and no future, and where there is no time (since
time is simply an illusion for our benefit here on earth) — in that great eternal world of eternal
now, God put us into his Son. In his Son he destroyed all that mental and emotional equipment that
is so tied to people’s opinions, to things, and to circumstances for its happiness.
That’s what he means when he says, “Our old self was crucified with Christ.” (Romans 6:6) Our old
makeup was destroyed with him and has been replaced.
So there isn’t one of us here in this room this morning who hasn’t been renewed and changed
completely and resurrected. We have a personality that can trust God and depend on him — instead
of being at the mercy of trusting people and depending on things. Loved ones, every one of us here
has a personality that exists in eternity and is available to us at this moment — if we just want
it. We each have a personality that can, in fact, depend upon God and not on the world.
You remember we talked last Sunday about the question Paul raised in Romans 10:18 about the Jews:
“Have they not heard that this is the case?” You remember he says, “Of course they have heard! His
words have gone throughout all the earth and his voice has gone to the very ends of the world.”
{Paraphrase of Romans 10:18) You remember whose voice he was talking about. He was saying, “All of
you know that you can in fact depend utterly upon your Creator. You can live your life listening
for the footsteps of God if you want.”
You know that he is absolutely reliable. You know that he is absolutely faithful. You know that
every night that follows day and every day that follows night, the sun and the stars in the heaven,
prove that God is absolutely reliable.
The whole world of commerce and business and social activity progresses on the assumption that the
sun will rise tomorrow morning as it rose this morning, and that it will continue to rise for
thousands of years, as long as God deigns that the earth should remain. Anyone can see that it is
natural and sensible and logical to believe that God is absolutely faithful and consistent, that he
can be relied upon, and is worth looking to for protection for our own personal lives.
At the same time anybody can see that men and events and circumstances can not be depended upon. As
an example of this, many have seen a DC10 lose its engine. Many have seen thousands of Ford Pinto
cars recalled because of gas tank problems. Many have seen the present nuclear disasters that we
are facing. Many realize that one of our greatest technical achievements – Skylab — is about to
plummet to earth and that we are not sure of either the time or the place.
Loved ones, anyone who sees these things knows that the norm is to depend on the Creator who made
us, and not to depend on men, circumstances, and things. In other words, it is just downright
sensible to live your life listening for the footsteps of God — rather than playing the game of the
political animal who is trying to manipulate all the people and the circumstances together in the
right way.
The verse that we are studying today just goes one step further. In Romans 10:19, Paul says, “Again
I ask, did Israel not understand?” He is talking about the Jews, and he is saying, “Did Israel not
understand that they could live their lives dependent on God, and not on other things, other people,
or other idols?” His answer of course, is the answer that Moses gave: “I will make you jealous of
those who are not a nation; with a foolish nation I will make you angry.”
He is saying, “Of course they understood!” Because God through Moses said, “Listen, if you will not
trust me and depend upon me, but continue to depend on other things and other idols — then I will
reject you. A nation that is non-Jewish, the nation of the Gentiles, will enter into all that you
should have entered into, and they will receive what you have rejected.” In other words, Paul says
that if they rejected God and rejected dependence upon him, it had been made plain to the Jews what
would follow.
What about us? Could it be that you know that you should live your life listening for the footsteps
of God — instead of trying to manipulate people and events for yourself? Could it be that you know
that, but you don’t really understand what will happen if you don’t do it?
Loved ones, you can’t claim that. The implications are all around us of what happens in our lives
when we don’t live listening for the footsteps of God — when we live instead dependent on people,
things, and circumstances for our security, our significance, and our happiness.
If you doubt whether you understand or not, ask yourself the question: “Did Elvis die happy?” I
don’t think even the blindest person would claim that Elvis Presley died in anything but a great
sense of loneliness and misery, with a body that was pumped full of chemicals. Did he do it to try
to maintain within himself the thrill and happiness that he used to get from listening for the
footsteps of God and from the approval of God? NO! He did it to get the thrill he used to get from
the approval, adulation, and admiration of the crowds that came to watch him.
So he who is probably the foremost person in our century to live his life dependent upon our
approval, admiration, and respect – he died a miserable death in great loneliness with no one’s
approval. Even on your death bed, your nearest and dearest are not close enough to give you their
approval.
Of course we understand what happens when we don’t depend on God and depend on other people. Did
Howard Hughes die happy? Probably one of the richest men in our world, he died in a lonely, dark,
sparsely furnished room from malnutrition. He was a man who more than most depended on his things
and possessions for a sense of security — and he died crazy with fears, insecurity, and paranoia.
Do we understand what happens when we live our lives not listening for the footsteps of God? When
we live our lives not following God’s plan for them — but instead depend on what we can manipulate
from people, things, and circumstances for our own needs? Of course loved ones — we do. You know
we understand it. The implications and the consequences are all around us.
The truth is this: The most serious implications of not living that way are in your own
personality. Have you ever sat and looked back to some comment that you made to a friend or a loved
one and suddenly realized, “I didn’t speak to them like that! I couldn’t have! Why did that harsh
tone come into my voice? Where did that irritability come from? I couldn’t speak to them like
that!”
Suddenly you realized you were getting used to treating people as pawns who are to be manipulated in
your little solar system so that you can be happy and you can remain god. Those tones of voice that
you once thought were utterly repulsive were becoming normal for you.
Loved ones, if we are honest, we do understand. We do know that we are meant to live our lives
dependent on God and trusting in him, and not trying to manipulate other people and other things for
our own benefit. We do know that. Moreover, we understand the consequences that come from not
doing that.
Really, the truth is this: Either you and I live our lives listening for the footsteps of God,
knowing that he has a plan for us and watching for the hints of that plan as day follows day. Or
some other people will be forced to live their lives listening for our footsteps, because we have
taken the place of God. fsAll of us here in this room know that is truth.
I would ask you, loved ones, will you seriously look at your own life and see how you are living it?
See if you are listening for the footsteps of God in your life, or if you have subtly usurped the
place of God and have become god in your own life — so that others have to listen for your
footsteps.
There is a beautiful life that is so utterly different from that of a little scared rabbit watching
and trying to protect himself from all the people who are out to destroy him. There is such a
different life that Jesus described when he said, “Look at the lilies of the field; they toil not,
neither do they spin, and yet Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these. Not a
sparrow falls to the ground but that your heavenly Father knows about it. Are you not of much more
value than many sparrows?”
Of course you are! He wants you to start watching out for the plan he has for your life and
trusting him when things happen — instead of immediately trying to take over your life yourself.
Of course, that is the whole testimony of the world around us — and of our own experience.
Let us pray. Dear Father, we’re heartily ashamed when we look at some of the irritability in the
tone of our voice. We’re heartily ashamed when we look at some of the impatience and the unkindness
in our comments. Lord, we see that we’ve become gods of our own lives. We regard ourselves as
responsible for our own protection.
Lord, we see from the instances of failure in our technology in these past weeks, that we human
beings couldn’t protect ourselves from a little storm – let alone from all the things that come upon
us in this life. Lord, if you are not out for our good, we’re finished anyway.
So Father, we see that you have given us ample evidence in the natural laws and regularity of the
universe, to show us that you are trustworthy and reliable, and that you have not sent us into this
world as stray meteorites, but you have sent us here with a careful plan that is designed
specifically for us, and that you will reveal that to us day by day — if we will begin to listen to
your footsteps in our lives, and concentrate in living out your ideas for us — instead of trying to
improvise our own plan as we go along.
So Lord, we would give ourselves to you afresh this morning. We would trust you by your dear Holy
Spirit to show us this coming week different ways in which this will work itself out in our life.
We pray Lord, that fewer people this week than last week will have to listen in fear for our
footsteps. We pray they will instead meet the spirit of the one who said, “Into thy hands I commit
my spirit.”
And now the grace of our Lord Jesus, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit, be
with each one of us, now and throughout this coming week. Amen.
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