Burnt offering for burning conscience – Leviticus 1

Great church father Augustine said, “Our hearts are restless until they find rest in you.” The reason our hearts are restless is that each of us has great soul needs. We need to be loved, to have peace, joy, freedom, and to belong. The most basic and deep need you and I have is to be loved. This is a fundamental urge in our lives. We yearn to live every minute knowing I am being loved, someone loves me, and someone is pleased with me. We were created to live with that pleasure of love. We try to fulfill that need in several ways. That is why we want to have a family; it gives some level of satisfaction. We will be very restless if we don’t have a family. But that never fully satisfies us.

One guy said, “My wife said before marrying, ‘I love you so much, I want to spend the rest of my life just making you happy!'” “Wow,” he thought, “this is a beautiful woman dedicating herself for the rest of her life to making me happy!” So he married her. The first week of their marriage, he said to his wife, “You know, on Thursday nights I’ve been accustomed to going out with the fellows. So tonight I’m going to go out with them. I’ll probably be very late so don’t wait up for me.” His wife reacted very strangely. She said, “But, you can’t leave me all alone! How can you do that? Did you marry me for this?” And he remembered saying to himself, “What happened to her promise? Here is her first chance to make me happy and she has blown it completely!” Slowly as weeks went by, he realized how foolish it was for him to think his yearning to be loved would be fulfilled by marriage. His heart was still crying. Then He thought he would find his need met in parenthood. And as he held that first little child in his arms, he anticipated with joy that now he would find his sense of being loved by the new life he had given. As years went by, he realized sinners born to us only take from us and don’t respond in gratitude and love until God changes their hearts. Though family meets that need to a level, the cry of your heart is, “I want more.” This deep cry to be loved is the reason why many young people take wrong paths and some even destroy their lives. Some try to satisfy this need in 101 wrong ways: fame, money, wealth, and sex.

This deep need was created by the Creator, and it cannot be fulfilled by any creature. We are like a child separated from his mother as soon as he is born. I heard a child was so restless, kept crying, crying, crying, and finally died. If the bond between a mother and child is so much, and so many children actually survive, our bond between God, who created us in his image, is 100 times stronger. Until we find acceptance with God, and love with God, our hearts will be restless. We will keep crying all our lives, and one day, we will die. Our deep need to be loved can only be fully met by God, but the problem is we are guilty, depraved sinners. How can we ever be reconciled and accepted to live in loving fellowship with a holy God in such a way that he regularly satisfies our need to be loved? I believe that is what Leviticus teaches us.

It teaches us in the earliest primitive way; remember it is the third book in the Bible. Like a bird that is hurt, scared, and bleeding, it is so scared to come near us. But we want to help stop the bleeding, put medicine, and heal it. So we use all kinds of sign languages to tell it, “You are hurt, losing blood. Come, come. I will heal you. Come, come to me.” God, through this book, is doing that with various divine types. He says, “See, your heart is crying for my love, for my acceptance. Come to me.” It is a book rich with divinely ordained typology. God uses persons, events, rituals, and things here to point to the true spiritual reality revealed in the New Testament. For example, leprosy is a type of our depravity and defilement by sin. The atonement sacrifice and the priest are all types of Christ. Incense is a type of prayer. It’s like the ABC visual aids of nursery children.

A simple overview of the book: Chapters 1-16, he shows us our spiritual disease and how to deal with it and come to him and be reconciled. Chapters 17-27, the end of the book, show how to maintain a state of fellowship and wholeness where we continually enjoy the fellowship and love of God. That is a wonderful overview of the whole of Leviticus. It may seem like the same sacrifices are repeated, but we should understand they are shown from different perspectives. One set will describe from the guilty sinner’s offering, another set will show the perspective of the mediator priest. As we study these types, we will realize the grandeur of the gospel and the New Testament as never before. It will deeply impact our relationship with God and help in bringing us closer to God.

As we open this mysterious Leviticus, the first verse is verse 1. The very first word of the book of Leviticus is “and.” Now, it’s appropriately added as this connects it directly to the book of Exodus. The God of heaven was now not only talking to people from Mount Sinai, but he had come in their midst, in their camp, into the tabernacle. In Exodus 40, he was filling the tabernacle with the Shekinah glory, the manifest glory of the presence of God dwelling in the midst of Israel—right smack-dab in the middle of his people. Leviticus is a continuing instruction of how sinful people can come to the living God dwelling in the tabernacle. It is a ritual for access to God to enjoy the presence of God. The first five chapters and five major offerings show us how our defilement of sin can be dealt with in a way to enjoy God’s presence. The first of those offerings is the burnt offering. If we grasp this offering, this chapter will become so precious. I was enjoying and calling it, “Oh, my burnt offering.” If we understand the burnt offering and how it is fulfilled in Christ, we will realize the unchanging, constant love of God in our hearts. So let us start our first chapter.

See, I need your help to help you understand these wonderful chapters. If you can take about 10 minutes before Sunday or sometime in the week to read the chapter and come, it will be very easy for me to go to the explanation, and you will grasp it very easily. So I will test you with a quiz to see whether you read it or not.

This chapter is about the burnt offering. What do we know about it? The only burnt offering we know is when our wives forget to switch off the stove. The burnt offering did not start in Leviticus or even in Exodus, but we see it in the first book of Genesis itself. God would have told Adam to offer a burnt offering, that is why we see Abel also offered a sacrifice. But the first time the Bible directly mentions a burnt offering is in Genesis 8:20, after the flood, Noah offered a burnt offering. Abraham went to offer his son as a burnt offering. So it was a practice before Leviticus, but here God regulated the burnt offering as worship with certain rules.

Method of Burnt Offering and Purpose of Burnt Offering

Method of Burnt Offering

So let us understand five rules of the burnt offering.

  1. It was a personal, voluntary sacrifice. The burnt offering regulated in Leviticus chapter 1 was viewed primarily as a personal offering, done voluntarily by the individual Israelite. Elsewhere, the burnt offering is often a corporate offering, but as it is regulated in Leviticus 1, it is viewed as a personal, private offering. Thus, verse 2 reads, “Speak to the sons of Israel and say to them, ‘When any man of you brings an offering to the LORD, you shall bring your offering of animals from the herd or the flock.'” From here on, the personal pronoun “he” is employed, referring to this individual Israelite. During general festivals and national worship, God allowed them to come as a whole congregation into contact with him. But here, this is given in a way where a man, in the ordinary course of life, recognizes his defilement and wants cleansing and wants to experience the presence of God. The burnt offering was the way given to the individual believer in Israel to have an opportunity to draw near and come into contact with the living God, and God’s presence was experienced.
  2. The burnt offering was suited to every man’s economic status. Just reading on the face of the chapter, a financial theme can be seen. You can see an outline in verses 3 through 9. It speaks of the offering of a bull from the herd. Then all verses until 9 describe how to sacrifice a bull. This is all for rich guys. Okay, I am middle class, I don’t have a herd or maybe two or three bulls. As a burnt offering, then in verse 10, we see the offering up of a sheep or a goat. Okay, I am not even middle class, very, very poor, on the poverty line border. You can also offer a burnt offering, and then in verses 14 through 17, we see the offering up of a dove or a pigeon as a burnt offering, while these differences.
  3. Though it was according to each man’s economical status, it was a painful and expensive sacrifice. Nevertheless, for everyone, it was a heavy financial sacrifice. To offer up a burnt offering means an expensive sacrifice. It was expensive in four ways. Firstly, it is a valuable resource. A man cannot bring a sacrifice of an animal that he somehow hunted in the forest, a wild ox, or a deer, but from his own herd. We may not realize this today, but in those days, how was the wealth of people measured? Not by land, house, or gold, but by how many bulls or sheep a man had. Verses 3 and 10 say a man has to reduce his wealth by taking from his herd, something that was part of your property. It was very difficult and painful. We ourselves don’t feel like cutting the hens we raise and eating them. Typically, they don’t eat meat as we do, and even the rich were very reluctant to give from their herds. Remember the story of Nathan to David: a rich man who had a visitor went to his poor neighbor and took his young suckling lamb to give for the meal of the visitor, because the rich man wasn’t willing to take it from his own flock. People considered their own flock a great resource, with a lot of affection.

But a man has to feel the pain and bring from his own herd. Next, you have to take a male, the strongest. Thirdly, “without defect,” meaning the choicest, the best. Even a poor person cannot bring any old pigeon. Verse 14: You would bring the young pigeon. Because the young pigeons were the best pigeons. Fourthly, bring and do what? From your herd, young, without defect, and burn it. Most of the sacrifices benefited the offerer and the priests. The offerer would eat some of the meat of the sacrificial animal, and most often, the priest received a portion of it. Thus, when one offered a sacrifice to God, one’s mouth would water, knowing that he would be able to partake of the sacrifice. Not so in the case of the burnt offering, however. Neither the offerer nor the priest partook of any of the meat, for it was all burned in the fire. You see in all of these things that the essential ingredient for a burnt offering was that it was painful and expensive.

  1. There was whole and complete participation in the burnt offering. Consider here with me two elements. First of all, it’s personal engagement. If you offered up a burnt offering, you were personally engaged. You could never remain detached or distracted when you were offering up a burnt offering. Imagine you are a Jew, wearing a Jewish robe and sandals, coming to the ancient tabernacle. You have to select and bring the bull or goat from wherever you are coming. Then you bring the animal to the outer court of the Tabernacle. Verse 4: “Notice what it says. He shall lay his hand on the head of the burnt offering.” It is a poor translation; he would press the full weight of his body on the head as much as possible, like fully laid on it. Probably there was an explanation that was given, and the person explained to the priest why he was giving this sacrifice. We find them in verse 5 having laid their hands on, “he shall slay the young bull,” or verse 11, “It says he shall slay the lamb.” See the engagement is so intimate. You put your hand on the beast and you take a knife and you cut the throat of the beast and the blood itself pours out. Then the priest will come and collects the blood as it pours out of the dying animal now. Then verse 6, “And he shall skin the burnt offering and cut it into its pieces.” Wow. We find that in verses 9 and 13, the entrails and the legs are to be washed. Intestines of the animal. I know this is not pleasant stuff. But the intestines and the legs are to be washed, and the reason why is because excrements may be present during this process of sacrifice, so you would then wash things off, so the sacrifice is clean. Do you see a distracted detachment act? No, you are very engaged there. There was great personal engagement and complete participation.

You know, it is said that Gandhi was reading happily through Genesis and Exodus. And he got to Leviticus, and when he read these verses, he closed his Bible. Now maybe it’s because we were talking about slaughtering bulls, and maybe his Hindu sensibilities were offended by slaughtering sacred animals, at least in the eyes of his own homeland.

  1. Fifthly, it’s not only personal engagement, but also notice it’s priestly assistance. It’s priestly assistance. Both the worshiper and priest are fully engaged in this process, but all this is happening outside. Only killing an animal will not bring God’s presence. The worshiper’s personal effort is totally inadequate. Someone has to go to God’s holy place and present the blood and sprinkle it and offer the animal as a burnt offering. A defiled sinner cannot do that, walk into the Tabernacle, and offer the sacrifice. You needed the God-appointed priest. You needed one of the sons of Aaron so that he could catch the blood and sprinkle it on the altar and offer a burnt offering. Verse 7: “The sons of Aaron the priest shall put fire on the altar, and lay the wood in order on the fire.” He will take the meat that had been cut up by you and will be placed in pieces on top of the fire, for no one ever dared to approach the House of God without a sanctioned mediator, one of the sons of Aaron. So you need the help of the priest.

So we see five methods of offering a burnt offering: 1) it was personal, voluntary; 2) suited to every man’s economic status; 3) it was a painful and expensive sacrifice; 4) complete personal involvement; 5) priestly assistance. The next time you read Leviticus 1 with this outline, the whole chapter will be clear.

Now if you understand why all this is done, the chapter will become very precious. The regulations for the burnt offering are very important, and violations are taken very seriously. Follow God’s regulations precisely. One need only read of the death of Nadab and Abihu in chapter 10 to have this point vividly underscored (cf. also Lev. 17:8-9).

Now, what is the purpose of the burnt offering?

The burnt offering is one of the most common offerings. It was offered regularly every day, in the morning and the evening (Exod. 29:38-42; Num. 28:3, 6, cf. 2 Chron. 2:4, etc.). An additional burnt offering was to be offered up each Sabbath day (Num. 28:9-10). Also, at the beginning of each month (Num. 28:11), at the celebration of Passover on the 14th day of the 1st month (Num. 28:16), and all other festivals. Personally, for many defilements, like a leper’s cleansing, a woman who gave birth to a child, touching a dead body, or a discharge from the body. Then obviously when a man commits any sins. Job early on would offer a burnt offering thinking his children may have sinned in any way in their heart.

What is the purpose of the burnt offering? It is clearly stated in verse 3 and 4. “Then he shall put his hand on the head of the burnt offering, and it will be accepted on his behalf to make atonement for him.” The purpose is that the worshiper may be accepted. Wow. This is a marvelous means God divinely ordained for sinful man to be accepted.

The animal that was sacrificed not only identified with the sins of the man, but with the depravity of the man. When the offerer laid his hands upon the animal, he was fully identifying with it. The animal was killed and burned not only for the specific sins of the man, but rather for the offerer’s general state of sinfulness. The burnt offering was required by, and served to remind the offerer of his total depravity. For his defilement, he had to be not only killed but completely turned to ashes. As a depraved, defiled, unclean sinner, there is no way he can come before God. If he approaches before God, he will anger and provoke the holy wrath of God. You and I as sinners are always in danger of angering God. How many times we see Israelites did that and they were destroyed by plagues in God’s wrath. Fierce judgments and sudden deaths. Israelites understood their depravity and danger in the presence of God.

It was not just certain sins which separated man from God, but the whole depravity and sinful state of man. The burnt offering was thus not so much to gain forgiveness for a particular sin, but to make atonement for the offerer’s sinfulness. The burnt offering seems to provide a divine solution for man’s fallen condition. It is a holocaust, a complete sacrifice, turning to ashes.

How do we know this? The first mention of the burnt offering itself teaches the purpose of the burnt offering is not just for specific sins, but our condition. Genesis chapter 6:5, before the flood: “Then the Lord saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every intent of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.” The verse talks about not any outside sin, but the depravity of man inside his heart. Verse 6: “And the Lord was sorry that He had made man on the earth, and He was grieved in His heart.” Verse 7: “So the Lord said, ‘I will destroy man whom I have created from…'” Man was a stench in God’s nostril. And then after he destroyed the whole world, chapter 8:21, Noah gives a burnt offering. Verse 1: “And the Lord smelled a soothing aroma.” It was a soothing aroma in God’s nostril. The same phrase as in Leviticus 1. And then he makes a covenant with Noah, that pleasure of the burnt offering makes him do a covenant.

He tells us what the burnt offering has done to him. It brought about the covenantal promise of God that he would never again destroy every living thing by a flood again (Gen. 8:21). Why? Amazing, he mentions the depravity of man, “for the intent of man’s heart is evil from his youth; nor will I again destroy every living thing as I have done.” This promise was not due to the fact that all sin had been destroyed from the face of the earth. The fact of man’s depravity (as will soon be manifested in Noah and his family) is still present, for God can still say, “the intent of man’s heart is evil from his youth” (Gen. 8:21), man’s depravity is specifically stated. The basis for God’s covenant promise is the result of the burnt offering offered up by Noah. This is glorious truth. The burnt offering atoned not only for man’s sin but man’s depravity and turned away his wrath.

Thus, the Israelites saw that the burnt offering was a means of avoiding God’s wrath and of obtaining God’s favor. God’s blessing was the result of a burnt offering, not of man’s good deeds. The only way a defiled sinner like you and me can live and experience the presence of a thrice-holy God is through the burnt offering, the love of a holy God even in a depraved state.

Now what happens when a burnt offering is given in Leviticus also? In verses 9, 13, and 17, what does it say? In verse 9, “and the priest shall offer up in smoke all of it on the altar for a burnt offering and all offering by fire. Listen now of a soothing aroma to the Lord.” And that phrase is repeated in verse 13 for the lamb, “of a soothing aroma to the Lord.” Look at the end of verse 17, for the pigeon. What does it bring, that soothing aroma to the Lord? This offering brings a pleasant scent into the nostrils of God, as it will sedate his fury.

It is this burnt offering that is the appointed means whereby peaceful coexistence between a holy God and sinful man becomes possible. See, something strange is happening in that Tabernacle. God of heaven, an infinitely Holy God, has come and dwells among sinful man into close proximity and their intimate fellowship in the midst, and the fierce anger of God against sin. How can he? What happened to his justice, holiness, and wrath? All that is appeased by a burnt offering. Yes, there is a constant friction between sinful man and his holy maker. We don’t know when the bomb will burst and destroy the sinner, but it is the burnt offering that prevents God’s displeasure from rushing out on that sinful man.

Now the question is what is there in the burnt offering that can make God dwell and fellowship with the sinner? What does the burnt offering do to the justice of God?

Verse 4 tells the answer. “When the sinner who has been burnt in hell, lays his hand on the head of the offering, putting all his weight on the offering, he is symbolically transferring his identity of guilt and sins to that beast.” The innocent animal takes the place of the sinner and it will be accepted on his behalf to make atonement for him. It provides glorious atonement. The sacrifice turns God’s wrath on me by carrying my defilement and sins and thereby making God pleased with me.

This is the atonement provision by God’s infinite grace given to sinners. “Atonement on his behalf.” To make atonement, or to make ransom. Paying a ransom meant to satisfy justice. Exodus 21: if a man’s ox gores someone and kills, the man must die, or he may ransom, a substitute, an equal atonement. In the burnt offering, an innocent animal is cut and burned in the fire, a merciful depiction of the dreadful punishment deserved on the part of the worshiper. And that ransom he pays through that animal is temporarily sufficient to turn away the wrath of the living God against his sin. As the smoke goes to God, it will be a soothing aroma to the Lord and God’s fury against him will be at peace.

So this is the explanation portion of Leviticus 1. Oh my burnt offering, the burnt offering became very precious to me.

Application

Yes, we don’t have to offer physical animal sacrifices now as Christ offered his once for all, but there are principles taught in this offering. We have to offer a New Testament spiritual burnt offering. In three ways.

First, we have to offer a burnt offering if you have to be saved and reconciled with God. How can man find atonement for sin? First, when a man has a true sense of sin, when a man recognizes his depravity, not only what I do is sinful, I myself am a totally depraved sinner. “Oh what a sinful, defiled heart I have. Like a leper, I am unclean, unclean,” with a true sense of sin. His conscience is burning with guilt and accusations, “You should be burnt by God’s hell for all eternity for your depravity.”

Second, with a true sense of sin, the man sees God’s great provision through the burnt offering on your behalf. The Israelite at that time may have had a vague idea. Though the blood of bulls and goats cannot cleanse his conscience, when his conscience looked in faith, “I am laying my hand on this innocent victim, and I have sinned, but I am cutting this animal, the whole animal is burnt and reduced to ashes.” Would he not see that here was a manifest substitution of an innocent creature in the place of the guilty, and that that very substitution was the means of reconciling the sinner to his God?

But now this side of the cross, what a striking monument to the grace of God. God didn’t just provide the animals to atone for our sins, to reconcile such a depraved man as we are to be reconciled and be loved before a three-times holy God. He had to give his own son. Christ was the ultimate fulfillment, the antitype of the burnt offering. John the Baptist indicated this at the very outset of our Lord’s ministry, when he greeted Him with the words, “Behold the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world” (John 1:29). Christ has come as the Lamb of God and died “once for all.” There is no longer any need for the burnt offering, the type of which our Lord is the ultimate and final antitype.

How do you offer a burnt offering to be saved? So you realize your depravity, realize God’s mercy in Christ, God’s provision. Follow the five steps taught to old Israelites. Firstly, it has to be voluntary and personal. Nobody can force you to come to God through Christ. A man has to realize his conscience is burning, his life is all wrong, and he can no longer live without God’s presence and love. You have to come on your own.

Secondly, God makes it available to everyone. So everyone needs this. Whether you are rich, middle class, or poor, everyone can offer a burnt offering. Whatever state you may be in life, age, situation, if you desire, you can go to the tabernacle of God’s presence to offer this burnt offering.

Thirdly, realize it was a very painful and expensive sacrifice. See the marvelous grace of God revealed in the New Testament. You don’t have to bring anything from your own herd or wealth. But to atone for your sins, God gave his greatest wealth, his only son, to be offered as a burnt offering. Peter says not by gold or silver, but by the blameless blood of the lamb of God, you are redeemed.

Fourthly, complete, complete participation. You have to identify yourself with the sacrifice. The one who was to benefit from the death of the sacrificial victim had to identify with that animal. The offerer placed his hand upon the victim, put his full weight symbolically identifying himself with the victim, which he killed in his place. Apart from identifying with the sacrificial animal in this way, the sacrifice had no benefit for the individual Israelite.

How do we offer a burnt offering now? By resting the full weight of our souls on Christ for our peace with God. Hebrews tells us that the blood of bulls and goats cannot forgive sins. “Could not give the guilty conscience peace, or wash away the stain.” No, these sacrifices clearly pointed to the lamb of God. When we hear the Sinai thunders in our conscience of the accusations of the law, the only hiding place is Christ. When you and I recognize our conscience is burning with the guilt of sin, the guilt of how depraved we are, and because of that, we don’t feel like coming to God, feel so unclean, undeserving, the only way to quench that burning conscience is to offer the burnt offering of Christ by putting the full weight of our souls on Christ for our peace with God.

This is the way to be saved and find acceptance with God. This is what your deep heart is seeking: to be loved by God. Like a child that lost its mother, madly doing 101 things. All of you sitting here, have you offered your burnt offering to God by putting the full weight on Christ? Have you seen yourself as a defiled, depraved sinner with a sense of guilt? “Oh, I am unclean. A rebel lawbreaker.” You’ve broken the laws of the living God. Maybe not outwardly killed someone, but I have a murderous, hateful heart. I have committed adultery in my heart so many times. A great crime of stealing all those attitudes of covetousness? You see, you must see yourself as a rebel against the living God. Oh my depravity. When you see that…

Fifthly, see when you come to God, identify yourself with Christ. Remember the priest takes the blood and goes to the temple. Just like that, Christ, our great high priest, takes his blood and, showing his one offering, brings us to God and makes us acceptable before God.

Behold, in this burnt offering, behold a lamb that God has provided for a burnt offering. He has provided an unblemished, male, painful, very, very expensive male, in fact, an only son. Oh my guilty, burning consciences, show them one who hangs between heaven and earth on Mount Golgotha. God’s wrath for sins is poured on him. He alone can absorb that eternal wrath. Oh, he was roasted by the fire of God’s wrath. Totally consumed, offered as a burnt offering on the altar of Golgotha for sins. It was this offering that brought a soothing aroma to God, and he shook the earth and raised him from the dead, announcing to all that anyone who offers him as his burnt offering, my wrath against all his sins will be turned away. I will forgive all his sins. I will be reconciled with him. In spite of his depravity, I will accept him. His burning conscience will be quenched. I will pour my peace and love into his heart.

Maybe this is the first time you’ve heard this, or the 10,000th time that you’ve heard this, but I plead with you. Run and grab, put the full weight of your soul upon him, grabbing him with the hands of faith. My question is not whether you have heard this before, but have you offered your burnt offering by putting your weight on Jesus? That is the only way. The only way to find peace with God.

I cannot do this for you. The priest cannot do it. The offerer must be deeply engaged in this burnt offering, or he cannot be saved. Identify yourself with the cross of Christ. “Lord, I trust in Christ, and I offer him as my burnt offering for my sins.” Make sure you are deeply interested in this burnt offering. Press your hands with full weight on the lamb, on his work on the cross, and there you will find peace. There your conscience will rest. You will go home praising God, experiencing peace and love of God as never before.

Amazing third book in the Bible. So in olden times, this whole chapter was an invitation from God: “Come to Me, and come to Me by these sacrifices.” You will find the echo of Jesus’ words in Matthew 11:29-30: “Come to Me, all you who are weary and heavy laden, and I will give you rest.”

If you don’t, all that stored wrath of God will come on you one day, you will cry to rocks and mountains to hide you from that wrath, and it will burn you for all eternity. Ask your burning conscience, it will give witness to this truth.

Think of how much wrath will fall on you now that you are hearing this and rejecting it. If God, in those primitive years, thousands of years ago, taught the Jews to be reconciled through those symbols, he found peace through that ritual. Now we are living under the meridian light of the Gospel, still you reject God’s sacrifice. Those Jews will rise up in judgment against you, “Oh, stupid fellow, what an eternal fool. If you would have asked us, we just had a little revelation, we would have taught you how to find peace with God.”

So firstly, we offer a burnt offering by resting the full weight of our souls on Christ for our peace with God.

We offer a burnt offering for regular communion and fellowship with God. The principle applies equally to Christians today. While it is true that Christ died for our sins, once for all, it is also still true that we will not be freed from sin’s presence until we are in the presence of God, with transformed bodies. There is still remaining sin and depravity. It is still our depravity that takes us away from God’s fellowship. We lose our standing with God’s presence. We lose God’s fellowship by sin, and our consciences start burning. How do we deal with that?

Though we are justified Christians, this does not nullify the necessity of a continual burnt offering. We have to offer a burnt offering not for justification, but for sanctification. This is a continual and ongoing process. When we miss God’s presence and peace, we offer a burnt offering by confession of sins to quench our burning consciences and keep our conscience clean before the living God.

Last week I was very troubled. I was praying, saying this and that, but still wasn’t happy. I read the Bible, but nothing happened. But when I grasped this, my standing with God isn’t about who I am or how godly I have become, but it’s about my sweet burnt offering. I fully pressed my mind on Christ on the cross. I asked the Lord for your presence, love, and peace because of Christ. What can I say? Peace like a river flowed into my heart. The burnt offering became so precious.

Remember, he is the offering and he is also the priest. We can regularly come to this priest who is so sympathetic to us. We need the present intercession and mediation of Christ every hour, every moment.

Yes, he has accomplished the burnt offering. The burnt offering also symbolized the Old Testament saint’s continual acceptance before God. That is why there was a morning and evening burnt offering; it was always burning. As long as the burnt offering of Christ is burning in our hearts, we will continue to enjoy God’s peace and love. Even as believers, we have to lay full weight on Christ’s offering for our peace with God. It is the burnt offering of Christ on the cross, roasted by the wrath of God. Our identity with him gives us access to God. For constant communion and a walk with God, we need to maintain the morning and evening burnt offering in the temple every day of our lives.

Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors. How often is that to be prayed? The previous verse says, “give us this day our daily bread.” But if we confess our sins, he is faithful and righteous to forgive us our sins and cleanse us from all unrighteousness. This is a continual and ongoing confession of sins.

We have to offer a burnt offering for our families. We must ask for forgiveness for our children, offering Christ’s sacrifice as Job did.

A third way we offer a burnt offering is also an expression of worship and service to God.

Do you remember Paul’s words in Romans 12:1-2: “Offer yourselves as a living sacrifice, acceptable to God…” Paul is drawing on this very language, out of the book of Leviticus and the Old Covenant sacrificial system. Remember again: voluntary, personal, economical (so all can give), painful and expensive, with complete participation and priestly assistance.

Do we voluntarily worship God who has given such gracious access to us dirty sinners to come to him through a burnt offering? Not on Sunday, as compulsory worship, but is there voluntary worship in your life? We all can do this, not using the means to satisfy self-righteous pride, but as a means to worship God and have fellowship with God.

“Through him let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God…” (Heb. 13:15-16; cf. Phil. 4:18; 1 Pet. 2:5). What about complete participation? If the shadow of worship involved so much engagement, how much more do we have to be engaged every minute? We have to go beyond attending church. We have to join prayer in spirit and loudly say amen, sing songs from the deepest heart, hear scriptures and sermons as the very word of God by not just listening to the words, but considering the principles of prayer when the word is read, so you carefully ponder it. Don’t expect the pastor to say everything in small, easy pieces with jokes, making it simple and easy to digest. If he gives you a big piece of food, you close your mouth. No, you should be willing to work and to labor along with the preacher. This is mental isometrics, the mind of the congregation pushing up against the mind of the preacher. There should be responsiveness in your eyes. The bright eye, maybe a smile when a point is made. Maybe a nod, maybe an Amen. It indicates that you are participating in this. It’s not just me spraying you with truth, while you are yawning, sleeping, and looking here and there. Is that your offering?

I have repeatedly said, you cannot complain that preaching is boring. A preacher becomes very energetic based on the audience. When people listen with vigor, God sees that and the sacrifice is accepted. God’s spirit comes on the preacher, and he blesses the ministry.

Be very carefully involved. Don’t go back to what we did on Saturday and what we will do on Monday. What basic lesson do we learn here? Be totally engaged in the sacrifice when worship takes place at this Tabernacle and ask God to forgive any distractions. Avoid every distraction. In 1 Peter 2:5, you, as living stones, are a holy priesthood to offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.

How about service to God? Our service is described by the New Testament writers by the use of the same sacrificial terminology. We saw in Philippians how Paul used his service as sacrificial service. He was offering himself as a drink offering. The services we do for God are offerings that are pleasing to God.

And those are the new Covenant ways in which we can offer up a burnt offering. First, we have to offer a burnt offering if you have to be saved and reconciled with God, by resting the full weight of our souls on Christ for our peace with God. For regular fellowship with God, by offering frequent and timely confession for specific sins and by engaging our souls wholeheartedly in worship and service to God.

Again, the regulative principle of worship. If the Israelite learned anything from the meticulous rules and regulations which God laid down for the burnt offering and all of the rest, it was that He is very particular about the way men approach Him. This speaks of a personal voluntary religion, of heart religion, of a heart motivation to worship the living God. He went into minute detail. Why? Because He cares how we worship Him. The rebellious nature of fallen man inclines him to want to approach God his own way. The song, “I did it my way,” illustrates this tendency. God did not allow men to approach Him their own way, but rather only in accordance with the means He Himself established. Men could only approach God by means of the tabernacle, the priesthood, and the sacrifices. Today, men can only come to God God’s way, through the person and work of Jesus Christ, who, as the sacrificial lamb, died for our sins, making a way of approach to God. Our Lord conveyed the exclusiveness of His death as the way to God when He said, “I am the way, and the truth, and the life; no one comes to the Father but through Me” (John 14:6).

If you wish to approach God, to be assured of the forgiveness of your sins, and to dwell in His presence forever, my friend, you can do so only through faith in the person of Jesus Christ, who came to earth and died in your place. No other way is acceptable with God. In no other way can you be found acceptable in Him.

The principle of acceptance with God. There is a great deal of emphasis these days on self-acceptance, or self-satisfaction in worship. If I feel good, it must be right. Today we are told, even from the pulpit, that we must first feel good about ourselves, we must first love ourselves, and then we will be able to love God. The Bible tells us that the ultimate acceptance we must seek in all religious acts is God’s. People today want to “feel good about themselves” in worship. We must look for God’s favor and presence and acceptance in worship by worshiping him according to his word. The Bible portrays God’s acceptance as the highest good of all.

Grain offering for sad hearts – Leviticus 2

We looked at the burnt offering in the first chapter. I am finding just the first chapter extremely useful in my personal relationship with God. Our soul’s deepest desire to be loved and accepted by God can only be found when we come to God through the burnt offering. Every morning, whatever situation and confusion I am in, it is as if I get up and give my burnt offering in my mind, thinking of Christ’s work for me. I come to God only through Christ’s work for me, identified with his life and death. Oh, what love and joy we experience from God. You know what, there is a spontaneous expression of gratitude and love to God that wells up in my heart for the gracious way he has made for sinners like us to come to him and experience his presence.

Now, there is a great need to express that thanksgiving. How do I express my overwhelming gratitude? I believe that is what today’s second chapter of Leviticus teaches us through the grain offering. Again, this meets another basic need of our souls. I have always believed one primary reason we are not as happy as we should be is because we are not grateful. Our blind, selfish, proud heart tends to think we are more deserving and takes things for granted, never allowing us to be grateful. Romans 1 accuses people who, though they knew God, did not thank or glorify him and so fell into all kinds of sinful miseries. This is the cause for all our sadness. Our greatest joy is to learn how to gratefully respond to all God gives us. May God help us learn that from this old lesson of the grain offering. You will realize as we end that you are not happy in life because you are not offering the grain offering.

There are three headings: Elements of the grain offering, the method of offering the grain offering, and the purpose of the grain offering.

Elements of the Grain Offering

There are four kinds of grain offerings.

Verses 1-3 introduce the grain offering and focus on the offering of the grain in an uncooked form—flour. It must be fine flour, maybe wheat or barley. The person would pour oil on it, which is mostly olive oil, and put frankincense on it. Olive oil was mixed with the dough or smeared on it, and a spice was added to enhance the aroma when it was burned on the altar.

Verses 4-10 provide the regulations pertaining to the grain offering in several cooked forms. In verse 4, there is the grain offering of bread baked in an oven. In verse 5, there is another type of grain offering that is bread prepared on a griddle, in a flat or grill frying way. In verse 7, there is bread cooked in a pan.

So, there are four grain offerings: flour, oven-baked, grill/griddle cooked, and fry pan cooked. These are the four basic kinds of grain offerings. Though there are different ways of cooking, all are made from barley or wheat flour.

I think this may all seem very strange. Last week, I was in our village and even did some agricultural work, and I saw some of their rituals. They may be able to very clearly relate to all this from an agricultural lifestyle. You have to remember that in those days, Israelites were primarily agricultural people, with no office, business, or city work. Agriculture was their livelihood.

This offering is different from the burnt offering. The burnt offering was a very bloody offering. Here, there is no blood, no laying on of hands on the part of the worshipper on the sacrifice, and no atonement for sins is being symbolized. But you will notice the grain offering was always given after the burnt offering, just as it comes here in the chapter following the burnt offering. So, we’re looking at the basic elements of the grain offering and we’ve seen first of all its kinds.

In the element of the grain offering, we see that it is closely identified with the worshiper. There has to be close engagement on the part of the worshiper. In the grain offering, the worshiper may not go to his flocks to bring a sacrifice, but he goes to his field. It cannot just be any plants of spontaneous growth. It has to be grain from either barley or wheat; it has to be the result of the labor of their hands. Oh, there is so much labor. I was just trying to do some work with two cows. In a few minutes, I got into the clay and tried to walk the two cows. I could not even walk properly, sliding, with the hot sun, and back pain. Imagine the preparation of the land, loosening and digging the soil by plowing and leveling, and adding manure. Sowing: planting seeds, adding nutrients: adding manure and fertilizers, irrigation: regular care with water for months, protecting from cows, birds, worms. Oh, when the harvest comes, it is like pearls. I have seen them kissing the crop. The work is not over. They have to cut, gather the mature crop, make it into grain, and store it. This isn’t something that grew wild. This is something that grew by the sweat of the brow. This is the product of my labor.

Notice you cannot just bring wheat and offer it. The grain to be offered had to be “fine.” Verse 1: “fine quality,” finely ground flour, which is to be offered. We do not understand how difficult it was in the days of no electricity or motor machines. You cannot just go to a shop and buy fine flour. To obtain fine flour entailed a great deal of extra effort on the part of the person who ground it. The flour would have had to have been ground on a primitive grinding millstone, a process which, at best, usually produces only a coarse flour. Then, for hours, they ground it to make it fine. Usually, ordinary people would not have it so fine. Such “fine” flour was that which was fit for a king (cf. 1 Ki. 4:22) because it was so much labor; it was expensive.

Then it had to be cooked. So, you see in all this, he doesn’t bring to God something detached from himself. You see it involved close engagement; it is the labor of his hands. He spends months to grow this, and then a lot of effort to fine-grind it and cook it. For an agricultural people, this grain offering represents their being. It is a part of me; this is the work of my hands; it is my soul. The original says, “When any soul offers a grain offering,” I am bringing before the Lord my very soul and person to the presence of God with that grain symbolically.

Verse 11: Ingredients: no leaven or honey. “No grain offering which you bring to the Lord shall be made with leaven, for you shall burn no leaven nor any honey in any offering to the Lord made by fire.”

Verse 13: Required (salt). Fully salt added. “And every offering of your grain offering you shall season with salt; you shall not allow the salt of the covenant of your God to be lacking from your grain offering. With all your offerings you shall offer salt.”

Verse 14-16: Early grain offerings. Then it says you should do it compulsorily during your harvest time. “If you offer a grain offering of first fruits to the Lord, you shall offer for the grain offering of your first fruits green heads of grain roasted in fire, crushed new grain.”

So those are the elements of the grain offering.

Method of Offering the Grain Offering

Put yourself in the place of a Jew going to the tabernacle to offer a grain offering. You have prepared the harvest for months. Take that grain and, in your own tent, make it into fine flour. And then you would pour costly olive oil into it and add frankincense. You can decide whether to give flour, oven bake, grill, or fry. Now you wouldn’t put leaven in, nor would you put any honey on it, but you would heavily salt it. Verse 13 emphasizes salt three times. Then you have to add frankincense. It was an expensive and highly valued perfume and so made the offering a more precious gift. It also enhanced the pleasing smell of the offering burning on the altar.

You would take that portion now, how much would be brought before the Tabernacle? It’s not specified here, but in Numbers 15 and Deuteronomy 26, we find it says you can bring 1/10 or 3/10 or 2/10 of an ephah/ether before the Lord. It is not clear to us. Some estimates say to bring maybe 10 kg of this grain offering.

You see yourself now in your mind’s eye. You’ve got your sandals on. You’re heading towards the Tabernacle with your basket of grain that represents you and your labor. Then you come to the Tabernacle through the front door, into the outer court, and there at the Tabernacle. You present that basket of grain to the priests, Aaron’s sons. “He shall bring it to Aaron’s sons, the priests, one of whom dipped his hand into the basket. He shall take from it his handful of fine flour and oil with all the frankincense.” Only a handful of that mixture. “And the priest shall burn it as a memorial on the altar.” The little handful of the big basket is a memorial portion that is consumed entirely in the smoke. The smoke, which goes skyward, and with the frankincense it brings, it says in verse 2, “a sweet aroma to the Lord.” It is an offering by fire, a soothing aroma to the Lord, that is spoken of the burnt offering, the grain offering, and also the peace offering. So the little handful gets offered up, but what about the rest of the basketful? What about the major portion? Verse 3: “The rest of the grain offering shall be Aaron’s and his sons’. It is most holy of the offerings to the Lord made by fire.” It is the priests’ property. Notice what it says, “A thing most holy of the offerings to the Lord by fire.” So that is the basic element of the grain offering.

So that is the method of giving a grain offering. The same way for all cooked grain offerings. Yes, this was just an outward ritual God made the Israelites do thousands of times, but God, through this ritual, was reinforcing a truth and the faith in the minds and hearts of God’s people.

Times and Purpose of the Grain Offering for the Jew

Generally, every time a burnt offering was given, it was always followed by a grain offering. Every morning and evening, there would be a burnt offering, and right next to that, a grain offering. See even in this book, just after the burnt offering in chapter 1, the very next chapter is the grain offering. They are specifically inseparable companions. You should never miss a grain offering after a burnt offering, and you should not give a grain offering before a burnt offering.

There is great significance in seeing the connection and order between the burnt and the grain offering. First a burnt offering, and then a grain offering. As a Jew comes with the guilt of sin, offering a burnt offering provides atonement for his sin. He experiences God’s reconciled presence and forgiveness. His heart overflows with gratitude for this gracious way to come to God, and as an expression of his gratitude for the unspeakable gift that he, being a vile, wicked, defiled sinner, having been reconciled to the living God by the blood of this substitute, this goat or bull, he offers a grain offering as an expression of his gratitude. The grain offering was an overwhelming response of gratitude and worship for the atonement and way of reconciliation provided by God. All godly Jews understood this, and that is why you will notice whenever there was a burnt offering given, there would always be a grain offering as an expression of gratitude.

Secondly, the grain offering was always offered at harvest. This is intimated to us in the 14th verse, “If you offer a grain offering of first fruits to the Lord.” First fruits. In Deuteronomy 26, they actually had a festival of First Fruits, where they offered lots of big grain offerings. Turn and see something very interesting. We find in verse 5 the issue begins as the man has brought the basket. He set it at the foot of the altar and in verse 5, he is made to think back where he was and how much mercy God has shown to him now, lest he forget that and become ungrateful and fail to offer this grain offering. He’s told that he is to rehearse the history of God’s merciful dealings with the people of Israel, beginning with, “my father was a wandering, nomad, and he went down to Egypt and sojourned there, few in number, but there he became a great and mighty and a populous nation. But the Egyptians treated him harshly. So, we cried out to the Lord,” verse 8, “with a mighty hand and outstretched arm. God delivered us,” verse 10. In verse 9, “he brought us into a land of milk and honey, and it is from the pastures and the fields of this land of milk and honey that I have brought this grain offering to the Lord.” Notice the climax in verse 9: “and he has brought us to this place and he has given us this land, the land flowing with milk and honey. And now, behold, I have brought the first of the produce of the ground which you, Lord, have given me, and you shall set it before the Lord your God and worship before the Lord your God.”

You see, at this harvest celebration, this first fruit ceremony, the worshiper is returning to God some of the agricultural produce to the Lord. It’s an act of Thanksgiving. It’s acknowledging God’s goodness. This offering kept them from becoming ungrateful and hardened in sin, like he warns in Deuteronomy 8:12: “Beware that you do not forget the Lord your God lest—when you have eaten and are full, and have built beautiful houses and dwell in them; and when your herds and your flocks multiply, and your silver and your gold are multiplied, when your heart is lifted up, and you forget the Lord your God who brought you out of the land of Egypt, from the house of bondage. … then you say in your heart, ‘My power and the might of my hand have gained me this wealth.’ And you shall remember the Lord your God, for it is He who gives you power to get wealth.” The grain offering was a wonderful way that made them realize where they were and what God had done for them, keeping them always grateful. So God continued to bless them.

So, for a Jew, the grain offering is an expression of God’s mercy in providence by providing him a harvest and in redemption, by providing him an atonement.

Let’s see some aspects of how rich this is. Just like the burnt offering, verse 1: “When anyone offers a grain offering to the Lord.” This was a personal, voluntary, spontaneous expression of gratitude. Nobody can force people to be grateful; then that is not gratitude. Yes, there are compulsory offerings morning, evening, Sabbath, at the beginning of a church, but personally, if a worshiper had any sense of gratitude to God, it was the worshipper himself or herself who decided to bring an offering. They were not compelled to; they came with their offering when they felt constrained to do so, when they wanted to do so.

There was plenty of freedom of expression of gratitude. They could prepare the bread in a variety of ways, pretty much any way they liked. Why do you suppose a worshiper did it in one way or another? No doubt because he liked his bread served that way, because he liked to cook it that way; they thought it tasted better. It shows the depth of his gratitude.

Verse 2 says it has to be a memorial. The offering itself was a form of remembrance of God’s goodness and grace.

Verse 2 says after the handful is burned, the remaining part, verse 3, “The rest of the grain offering shall be Aaron’s and his sons’.” That it was most holy meant, in practice, that it became the exclusive property of the priests. Only they can eat it and could not be eaten by anyone else or anywhere else but the sanctuary. Holy offerings, not most holy, such as the fellowship offering, could be eaten by the priests, their families, and by the worshiper and his or her family.

Also, the grain offering provided for the needs of the priests. Remember, every tribe got land to farm and to till except one tribe who didn’t get any land. That was the Levites. Their job and vocation was not agricultural. It was spiritual. They were to be serving the Temple of God. How was that tribe provided for their needs, their salary, and support? It was through offerings like the grain offering, the goodwill offering of the tithes.

The grain offering has to be an expression of unhypocritical gratitude and devotion. It is symbolized in not adding any leaven. No honey could mean many Canaanites offered honey in worship to Molech, Ashtoreth, and Baal. They loved honey; it was a symbol and identity of their gods. In a way, God says, you have to be sincere and have no competing allegiances to any other gods, so you don’t add that honey. It is an expression of continual covenant faithfulness. That is why salt is added. “And every offering of your grain offering you shall season with salt; you shall not allow the salt of the covenant of your God to be lacking from your grain offering. With all your offerings you shall offer salt.” Salt in all cultures was always a sign of faithfulness. We say we should betray the house where we ate salt. Remember you have eaten the salt of God; never be a traitor to his covenant. God is loyal in the covenant, so we should be. Don’t be a hypocrite in gratitude or unfaithful in the covenant.

Great Goal of all this offering: These grain offerings promote and secure favor because, as it says in verse 12 of Leviticus Chapter 2, they bring a soothing aroma before the Lord. When we do that, oh, we receive God’s favor. The favor of the Lord. It is such a blessing. The favor of the Lord is better than life. His favor surrounds us. Read the concordance; when we have the favor of the Lord resting on us, we see his favor in all we do: in our family, at work. Such joy in life to live with a sense of God’s smile and presence on us, his favorable presence, the light of God’s countenance on us. Nothing is more joyful than this.

If this is all for the Old Testament Jew, oh, how rich it must be for us today. The literal details of the grain offering were temporary and are now obsolete. I will not ask you to bring wheat flour next week for Sunday service. But even though those literal details are now obsolete, the spiritual principles of the grain offering are perpetual. New Covenant religion is built upon the elementary principles of old covenant religion. Can I tell you there is a grain offering God expects from us in the New Testament? When we fail to offer that, we don’t experience the favor of God.

So what was the deep meaning of the minhah, the grain offering, to us? Well, how about this for a summary: “Those who have grasped the mercy of God in providence and redemption will offer voluntarily themselves and the best they have to the Lord.”

Like the Israelites, we can offer our grain offering in two ways for redemption and providential mercies.

Redemption: Like I said, the grain offering was always offered after the burnt offering. You become reconciled to God first, and then you offer a grain offering. The purpose of the grain offering is not atonement, but worship, acknowledgment of God’s divine provision of the needs of the Israelite for life itself.

The grain, as it indicated to the Israelites, with an overwhelming sense of gratitude, means all that I am and all that I accomplish by the labor of my hands, I offer to you. First you must be reconciled to God to offer a grain offering. In New Testament words, justification precedes sanctification. All who have grasped the burnt offering will offer a grain offering. We can say the evidence or sign of your reconciliation to God is the expression of the grain offering. In New Testament words, sanctification always follows after justification. In fact, the New Testament says sanctification is evidence of justification. What we see in Leviticus 1 of reconciliation through the burnt offering, Paul elaborates in the New Testament fulfillment in the first 11 chapters of Romans, talking about justification, explaining the way of God’s grace in the salvation of sinners. Then, as an inevitable consequence, as a reasonable, right response to that redemption, in Romans 12, he says, “I appeal to you, therefore, brothers, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living sacrifice holy and acceptable to God, which is your spiritual worship.”

You can’t give yourself as a sacrifice to God unless and until he has provided a sacrifice for you. The Christian life flows from the atonement that Christ made on the cross and is the only true and fit response to it that a person can make. Since Christ is your burnt offering and made atonement for you, Paul wrote in effect, now give your grain offering to him!

So the grain offering in the New Testament is grasping the great work of God through Christ for our atonement, and we offer ourselves to him. In the words of a hymn writer: “Love so amazing, so divine, demands my soul, my life, my all.”

We see God making it a regular worship, as a routine they always do as a routine in the New Testament as part of worship. Now at this fundamental method of ritual of New Testament daily and Sunday worship, Sunday by Sunday, our ritual or order of worship is designed to drive the same truth deep into our understanding. We come to God through the burnt offering first. We confess our sins and receive forgiveness through the blood, the death, and the resurrection of the Lord Jesus Christ every Sunday, and then we offer ourselves again and anew to him. The order of the gospel is essential to its meaning. You can’t work first and believe second. You believe and practice. Christians don’t serve the Lord in order to be saved, but because they have been saved. That is the basic order of our relationship with God. God made it an Old Testament ritual to be settled deep in our hearts.

But, as the grain offering reminds us, we must dedicate ourselves to the Lord; we must respond to his love and salvation with gratitude and service. It is the only proper response to the Lord’s making a covenant with us, providing forgiveness for our sins, and continuing to do so in spite of our constant failure to live worthy of the grace we have received. There must be the burnt offering and the grain offering, just as there must be faith and obedience.

The Israelites may remember his redemption from Egypt, but we should remember ours. Oh, we were under the whip of our taskmaster. Far worse than Pharaoh. His name is the devil. The Lord Jesus has delivered us from his scourge by himself taking the scourge on our behalf. Well, thank you, Lord Jesus. Thank you. There ought to be great offering principles here of frankincense and oil and joy.

Providential Mercies

Just like the Israelites showed their gratitude by a grain offering of providential blessing during the harvest, do you know there is a principle in the New Testament? Do you know the grain offering we give to God in the church is a tithe from our harvest of salary? “Pastor, how can you say this?” I want to talk about money. You may think I should be ashamed to talk about this because false teachers only talk about this. But see, we don’t often talk about tithing. We don’t ask for money. An offering is very silently done. A quiet little box is over in the corner that most visitors never even notice. But when we come to something in the word of God, and God speaks about that, we should, so we don’t miss out on God’s favor. Why is it that we are never happy with our income? We may say we don’t earn that much. Can I tell you, contentment and happiness do not come with more salary, but with the favor of God on our income? We get that only when we express, like the Israelites, a grain offering of our harvest as tithes to the work of the temple.

We see Paul uses the same principle in 1 Corinthians 9. Paul is referring quite clearly to the grain offering. Verse 13: Here is Paul speaking about his right to receive remuneration for his gospel labors. Notice what he says. “Do you not know that those who perform sacred services eat the food of the Temple? And those who attend regularly to the altar have their share of the altar, so also the Lord directed those who proclaim the gospel to get their living from the gospel.” Do you see here how an Old Covenant practice, the grain offering, is the justification for a New Covenant provision? He says in verse 14, “Even so the Lord has commanded that those who preach the gospel should live from the gospel.” Where did the Lord command? In Luke 10:7, Jesus sent out the 70 to the lost sheep of Israel, and he said, “Don’t take with you any purse. No money because as you are out, the laborer is worthy of his wages.” You are to be able to live comfortably off the gospel. People will provide for you in your gospel labors, just like the old covenant priests in the Tabernacle.

I want to highlight this because someone told me, “Pastor, it will be very difficult for you to get another good full-time pastor because you have been doing all these years without taking any pay, and you plan to live like that till the end. You are proud about that, but the ministry and church may suffer and not grow because of that. Why? No one would want to come and take pay and do the ministry here in church. They will not only feel unnecessary guilt, but the church people will look at them with lower respect.” While Scripture clearly has commanded people should provide for the pastor, you may become like the Brethren who would oftentimes say there should be no paid ministry; all should work. There was a subtle and unspoken conviction that somehow it is unspiritual for a man to earn a living by church work. Even if you decide to pay, you will not pay a comfortable salary, so no one will come. You will be like many churches who wrongly think, “Let us keep pastors poor and godly.” That made me think a lot.

I am not saying I am going to take the money from now on, but we have to seriously think about this. Sometimes our wrong, unbiblical thinking can hinder the growth of the church, dangerous seeds we may be sowing that will hinder the growth. For the church to grow, we need more pastors. We need full-time pastors. Otherwise, we will continue to struggle and not progress. That is wrong. We may lose God’s favor because of this. The principle of the grain offering teaches us as God’s people that it is our duty and an expression of gratitude for his providential mercies that we need to support God’s ministers so they can do God’s work without any hindrance. Yes, there is a lot of abuse of money in Christianity, but we shouldn’t go to the other extreme. I’m cautioning against the opposite problem. If we get into an attitude, “Oh, we should not pay anyone full time,” we as a church may not be able to grow and do much for the gospel. That is wrong.

The principle of the grain offering teaches we ought to offer a grain offering during our harvest. It is not once every six months, but at the beginning of every month when we get our salary, we have to offer as cheerful givers. God loves a cheerful giver with oil and with the frankincense of joy. We will see in Philippians 4:18 how Paul sees the gift the Philippians sent to him: “Indeed I have all and abound. I am full, having received from Epaphroditus the things sent from you, a sweet-smelling aroma, an acceptable sacrifice, well pleasing to God.”

Here’s another clear reference to the grain offering. They had sent much provision for the apostle Paul. And Paul says thank you. “You’ve given a grain offering to the Lord. It is a soothing aroma.” Leviticus 2. It is part of our spiritual worship and our new covenant sacrifice.

Attitude with Which We Should Offer Grain Offering for Redemption and Providential Mercies

We have to do it with thankful hearts. I thank you for all your redemption atonement mercies through Christ, and also providential mercies in the harvest you have given. It was Thanksgiving. Ascending heavenward. And this is underscored even by the ingredients of oil and frankincense. This is an indication of doing it cheerfully with thankful hearts.

Yes, there was voluntary, but the grain offering was always a regular part of their worship. At harvest time, every Sabbath, every morning and every meeting, at Passover time, a grain offering at the first of the month. It is a reminder to keep them with thankful hearts.

Remembering God’s mercies will enable us to do it with thankfulness. That was a peculiar disease of the people of God in ancient times: to forget. We find in Deuteronomy 8 he warns them: “Make sure you don’t forget when you come into the land and you inherit orchards that you didn’t plant, and homes that you didn’t build in walled cities that you didn’t construct, remember and do not forget that it is the Lord who has given these things to you and given you the ability to make wealth.” Make sure that you don’t get into an atheistic enterprising apart from the Lord. We can become like the nine lepers, who, in the full flush of health, having been cleansed and made whole by the Lord Jesus Christ, neglected to return with the grain offering principle of Thanksgiving to the Lord Jesus. How many times have we been doing that? How often do we sense health and sense blessings from God, and we run about doing many things, but we do not bring the grain offering to the living God? We must resolve to deliberately and premeditatedly as well as spontaneously schedule it into our lives.

When we get our salary, why doesn’t it fill us with joy? “Oh, only this much.” I will tell you, with 10 times more, we will feel the same. This attitude we consider in our mind, that this is the salary that God owes me? How many times have you thanked God for the salary? As a family devotion, have you thanked God for the salary as a family? Have we taught our children to thank God for the harvest? We sit in front of a table that is overflowing with bounty: mutton biriyani, so many chicken items, fish. Do we consider that this is the deserved ratio that God owes to us? Or is this not rather an undeserving feast, that as the Holy God looks down on us, his undeserving servants, who have defiled his table, as it were, and have treasonously rebelled against him even this day? But instead, look what the living God comes with, his arms filled with grocery bags, and he pulls it down upon our unworthy table. And he says, “Look what I have brought for you.” We offer from our heart gratitude of a grain offering.

Can I tell you, we are not happy in life because we are not regularly offering a grain offering. You see, sometimes our prayers are so monotone, with no feelings of choking thanksgiving and tears. Why? All pride, no gratitude. If we are, there’s a great offering Thanksgiving. “I am thrilled and exhilarated with what you have done. I bring the joy of oil and frankincense and not merely a bland, monotone sacrifice of prayer or the gift that God has given us.”

We have to do it to honor God’s authority over us. The actual Hebrew word for the grain is called Minha. The word means tribute. It is an acknowledgment of God’s sovereign authority over us, and we pay tribute. We respect and love his authority by offering a grain offering. In the Old Testament, when people hated the authority, they refused to pay tribute. Like we see in Judges, when people loved the king, they paid tribute, like in the days of David and Solomon. Jehovah is our king. By offering a grain offering for redemption, we say, “Lord, we love you. I will be faithful to you. I will submit to you and I have great affection for you as I bring this grain. All of the labors of my hand, I will enlist to serve your name. Oh, great King of mine.”

Do it with sincerity, as shown with no leaven. No hypocrisy, cheerfully, joyfully.

We have to do it with covenant loyalty, as shown in the salt. Grain offerings had to be heavily seasoned. Salt also indicates a perseverance. Salt was something that couldn’t be destroyed by fire. It couldn’t be destroyed by time, and therefore to add salt to the offering was a reminder that the worshiper was in an eternal, not temporary, covenant.

We see when worship was proper in Israel, with these two things, there was God’s blessings in the whole nation. The nation prospered, priests were provided, God blessed them, and the people.

A book that heals and makes you whole!

Introduction to Leviticus

Today we begin a book that has stopped more people from reading the entire Bible than any other. People start with Genesis, with its nice stories, and the first part of Exodus with its very dramatic 10 plagues. Then you come to Leviticus, and you read about different offerings, rituals, diet, and skin diseases. The verses seem so strange to our times. We’ve never met a person with leprosy and aren’t overly interested in the exact way of examining a head scalp sore or the color of a hair—white or black. If you are reading in the morning, you might try with two or three cups of coffee, but your mind is still not working. After reading a few chapters, your interest in reading the Bible evaporates, and that’s the end of your resolution to read through the Bible. Isn’t that right?

I think that is the experience of many. Yes, it is a difficult book. In fact, in our over 15 years of ministry, our mornings focused on the New Testament and our evenings on the Old Testament. We went through Genesis, Exodus 20, skipped Leviticus, and started Joshua, Judges, Ruth, 1 Samuel, and 2 Samuel. All of the sermons on the Old Testament that go verse by verse, chapter by chapter, are stored on our website. When I was going through Exodus, I was frankly a little scared to start Leviticus, so I skipped it at that time.

By the providence of God, I plan to start a study on Leviticus in the evenings. I am aware that some of you may not share my present enthusiasm for this series through the Book of Leviticus. I’m trying to get you interested, much like my wife trying to get me interested in a shopping trip—19 years, and she still hasn’t accomplished that yet. People may even make fun of me, asking if this is really needed. “Pastor, okay, you want to study. You finished 2 Samuel, so let us continue on with 1 Kings. Why go back to Leviticus?” I want to give you not just one reason, but seven reasons for this. I not only want to answer all of your objections but also wet your appetite and make you as eager to study as I am. If anyone asks me next year why I am studying Leviticus, I will tell them to listen to my first sermon. Okay.

Seven Reasons to Study Leviticus

I want to wet your appetite and make you eager to study.

1. When you see big statues like the Statue of Liberty or the Statue of Unity, do you know that those statues stand on a large pedestal that is stronger than the statue itself? This foundational pedestal holds the statue in a strong grip, making it stand tall and strong. Otherwise, it would bend and slowly fall. Most of us think about the Bible, and we think about the great towering texts of the Bible. We think about the gospels, the cross of Christ, and the great books that explain the work of Christ, such as Romans, Ephesians, and Hebrews. But do you know that all of those texts stand tall on a foundational pedestal? The truths of these texts will be strongly grasped and implanted in your heart in an unshakable way only when you grasp the foundational pedestal passages. Without these pedestal books, our grip on those truths will be very superficial. Just as without a pedestal, those tall statues can’t withstand strong winds and storms, you will not be able to hold the glory of those texts high and believe in them strongly during storms of trials, doubts, and winds of life if you don’t have a grasp of the solid foundation passages. Many of the great New Testament truths are based on the pedestal of this lowly book of Leviticus. Many of the New Testament books and passages will become so clear and confirming once you understand Leviticus.

2. The second reason is that as we become Bible readers and finish one year, you can read all other books by yourself and get some message. But before it comes, you feel scared and tired of the Book of Leviticus. But after this study, with God’s help, you will eagerly want to come to Leviticus, and every chapter will be so clear when you read it. It is just like now people tell me, “Pastor, you taught Genesis to 2 Samuel, and now reading it, how several lessons God brings to our mind when we read it.” The reason Leviticus seems so confusing is that it is like going into a car manufacturing factory without a guide. We go and all we see is different activities. We are very disturbed by the noise of grinding, hammering, and machines running, and we see different people doing different things. We are very confused about why they are doing that and what they are doing. But when a guide comes and takes us step by step through each department and activity and tells us what each department is doing and how it is all related to one another, and then step by step brings us to the showroom, we will be in awe. “Wow, now it is so clear!” In the same way, after this study, I will help you understand Leviticus like a guide, and it will become an awesome and very interesting book to you.

3. There are rich treasures in this book that you will find nowhere else. Just as the spies saw the land flowing with milk and honey, when I spied this, I can see that this is a land flowing with rich theological milk and honey. If you don’t read this, you will miss it. Remember, in all Scripture, 2 Timothy 3 says that it is profitable for teaching, for reproof, for correction, and for training in righteousness so that the man of God may be adequate for every good work. All Scripture has a work that will have an effect in our lives. I believe that this book will have a peculiar effect that no other book could.

4. I don’t know about you, but as soon as you finish reading this book with difficulty, what is your feeling? Even though you didn’t understand most of it, my feeling has always been, “How holy we should be as God’s people, right?” Just a superficial reading, and I always have that feeling. This book, more than any other, will help you grow in holiness.

5. Did you know that the Book of Leviticus has more direct words of God than any other book? You know how in your New Testament, some of you have red-letter editions where the words of the Lord Jesus are all in red. If there were a red-letter edition of the Old Testament where the words of Jehovah himself would be all in red, the book of Leviticus would be the reddest of all the books in the Bible. The book repeatedly says that these are the very words God gave and spoke to Moses from the tent of meeting. The phrase “Then the Lord spoke to Moses” is repeated again and again 56 times in the 27 chapters of Leviticus. The contents are not just inspired by the Holy Spirit, but they are a direct revelation from the mind of the living God. And therefore, when we take this Book of Leviticus and hold it in our hands, what do we have? We have the very word of God spoken directly to Moses.

6. The New Testament itself directly cites or refers to the Book of Leviticus over 100 times, and there are countless other indirect allusions. So much of the New Testament truth will become clear, especially the Book of Hebrews.

7. We studied the mark of Christian rejoicing in Jesus Christ. You will see as we read the glory of Christ and his work so marvelously shown in this book in those early times. Think of it, this is the third book of the Bible—a very early revelation, in the crawling stages, written over 3,500 years ago, that so richly shows the coming Messiah and his work. These are primitive sketches of our Lord Jesus Christ that are drawn in this book. They are sketches that are very, very profound, so that this book may be fittingly entitled not merely “Leviticus” but “The Gospel According to Leviticus.”

In the providence of God, today is the day we will break ground on an extended series with the help of God. I am sure your souls will drink in this milk and honey and become spiritually nourished and strong.

An Introduction to the Book: Historical Context and Central Theme

As an entrance to the book, let’s look at a few background details, starting with the historical context. Leviticus is found connected with history. As we open the first book of Genesis, God created the world, man fell, sin multiplied, and God brought a flood. After the flood, sin grew strong again as there was a wholesale defiance of the sovereign name of the living God that climaxed at Babel. Man, thinking they were civilized, resolved that they would build a city and make a name for themselves. God, in his mercy, confounded their language and multiplied tongues. It was an act of mercy because if God had just allowed it, mankind’s sin would have increased and become more heinous than before the flood, and God may have had to bring a greater judgment. Separated and distinct, men could not be as heinous and as wicked as they would be as a unit. So, God scattered mankind all over the face of the earth as men went to the four corners of the earth.

After the flood and after Babel, the world was full of darkness. Yet, God in his mercy, shined a torch light on a man called Abram. He chose Abram and revealed himself. In the whole dark world, there was a tiny flame of true religion. God promised to bring a nation through him that would be as numerous as the stars in the sky and the sands on the seashore. We know the rest of the Genesis story: Abraham, Isaac born in old age, Jacob, Joseph going to Egypt, and the whole family going to Egypt at the end of Genesis.

As we come to Exodus, there was a vast nation of Hebrew slaves in Goshen. God delivered the crying nation from their bondage through a colossal display of 10 plagues that broke the jaw of Egypt’s pride and made Pharaoh bow down. God made them cross the Red Sea and brought them to Mount Sinai, where God gave his blessed law to the people of God through thunder and lightning. God cut a covenant with the nation and vowed to personally dwell among his people as he made provision. God came into a covenant relationship.

But you know, these people sinned with the golden calf, and God’s holy anger was upon them. This covenant relationship was damaged by their sin. The question is, how can sinful, guilty Israel be reconciled to a holy God? Leviticus shows us how God graciously provides a way for sinful, corrupt people to live in his holy presence.

In chapters 25 through 40 of the Book of Exodus, we read about the building of the tabernacle. It says in Exodus 30, verse 34, that “When the cloud covered the tent and the glory of the Lord filled the Tabernacle, and Moses was not able to enter the tent of meeting because the cloud had settled on it and the glory of the Lord filled the Tabernacle, the God of creation, the God of redemption, was now dwelling among his people.”

And thus, the Book of Leviticus opens. Leviticus is really just an extension of the Book of Exodus. Verse 1 says, “Then the Lord called to Moses and spoke to him from that same tent of meeting.” God had drawn near to his people, and his dwelling was among them. Now, to ensure that Jehovah would be sanctified among them, God taught the people how they could live in the presence of a holy God. For approximately 40 days, God gave instructions to Moses as to all of the activities and the motions that would take place around the Tabernacle, determining how men ought to dwell in his presence and how men ought to draw near to him in worship. There are specific details given for 40 days on how men were to move, live, and approach God while he was in their camp. That is the historical context of the Book of Leviticus.


Having seen the historical context of Leviticus, let’s go to the central theme of Leviticus. The book itself states the goal and central theme of this book in chapter 20, verse 26: “And you shall be holy to Me, for I the Lord am holy, and have separated you from the peoples, that you should be Mine.” The central theme of Leviticus is one word: holiness. God is among us. How should we live? How should we approach him? The Hebrew word is kodas.

The central theme of holiness has a two-pronged meaning. First of all, and most strikingly, holiness means separation. God is presented as holy, which means that God is set apart, or there is a wide gulf between him and sinful men and all of his creation and creatures. He is unique, independent, and in a different class. He is different from sinners. Man is dying every day, but God is full of life. Man is weak; he is almighty. Man is sad, and God is full of joy. Man is defiled; God is pure. There is a wide, infinite gulf, as God is set apart from all of us. When God is holy, the place surrounding him is holy, separate from all creation and sins.

When you consider the Tabernacle itself, that theme of God’s holiness is profoundly depicted. In Numbers 2 and 3, there is a map drawn out concerning the configuration of how the Tabernacle was to be set up. The Tabernacle is set in the center and is surrounded by a large space and a wall. Outside the compound, we find that in the North, South, East, and West, there are the 12 tribes—Dan, Asher, Issachar, Judah, all the way around—and in the middle of them is the Tabernacle of the Living God.

But there is a profound sense of separation between God and all the tribes because there is to be a band of one tribe that insulates God from the rest of the tribes. What tribe is that? The tribe of Levi. But then there is more separation. We find at the east side of the Tabernacle, which is where the door is, the entrance, there is a peculiar brand of Levites who are to be here, and who are they? The priests and the line of Aaron. So, God is set apart from the nation as a whole. Really, God is set apart from all the nations, then set apart from the nation of Israel, and then, with the Levites, the priestly tribe, he is set apart even from them.

Set apartness does not end there. Once you come to the Tabernacle, there is the outer court, but God was not yet there. There was to be cleansing. Then one would come into the court, but God was not yet there. Then one would come into the Holy Place, but God was not yet there. Ah, then one would come into the Holy of Holies, and in the Ark of the Covenant was the manifestation of the living God. The 10 words, 10 commands, the Decalogue. Do these circles and all this insulation from the outside not indicate that God is a holy God? God is set apart from sinful man, profoundly so. So, we see that the concept of holiness is the concept of separation. God is separated.

Now the question is, how can sinful Israel live among God and enjoy God’s blessings? They also need to become holy, and sin has to be dealt with. The amazing Book of Leviticus shows how God graciously deals with all of our defects of our depravity and our sin problem and makes a way for us to live in the presence of the living God as holy people.

Now, God’s people are to be holy, as God is holy, in that they too are to be separated from the nations around them, and this is a striking theme in Leviticus. It graphically teaches holiness: “You are therefore to make a distinction between the clean animal and unclean animals, birds, in the way you eat and live. You have to be holy, separated from the unclean. Thus you shall be holy to me, for I the Lord am Holy; I have set you apart from other peoples.” “I know that all peoples can touch certain kinds of animals, but not you. You want to be different. You want to be distinct. You want to be set apart because I have set you apart from the nations.” So, one distinct thing about holiness is the theme of separation. God’s people ought to be different than the people around them.

“26 And you shall be holy to Me, for I the Lord am holy, and have separated you from the peoples, that you should be Mine.”

But the second prong of holiness, having seen separation, is the theme of imitation. We find that the people of God, when they ask, “What are we to do? What are we to be like?” are told one thing: to be separate from the people around, as God is separate, but also we are to be like God in that we are to imitate God. Notice what it says in Leviticus chapter 19, beginning at verse 2, as the Lord again spoke to Moses saying, “Speak to all the congregation of the Sons of Israel and say to them, ‘You shall be holy, for I the Lord your God am holy.'” “Lord, you want us to be separate and distinct from the nations around, not to live their lifestyles?” “Yes, that’s right. Have separation as a principle, but also have imitation as a principle.” Notice the list then of principles that come. In verse 3, how are we to be holy? “Everyone of you shall reverence his father and his mother.” Well, that’s the fifth commandment. “And you shall keep my sabbaths.” That’s the fourth commandment. Verse 4: “Do not turn to items or make for yourself more than gods.” Well, that’s the second commandment. Notice verse 11: “You shall not steal, nor deal falsely, nor lie to one another.” There are the eighth and ninth commandments. And in verse 12: “You shall not swear falsely by my name. And do not profane the name of your God.” That’s the third commandment.

So how are we to be holy? First, turn from the nations around; don’t live like the world. Separate from the nations; turn your back. Then, in the front, follow and imitate the character of God. What is the character of God? Come with me into the Holy of Holies; open the Ark of the Covenant. The 10 words. That’s the character of God. The 10 commandments are the character of God.

“Be holy by imitating me. And by separating yourself from the nations round about.” So that is the central theme of holiness. God’s people are not only to live separate lives from the evil nations, but they’re also to imitate their God, taking as the paradigm of all of their life the moral excellence of God’s character found in his law, which, by the way, is permanent and perpetual. Does God’s character change? No, the God of Israel changes not. All ten are perpetual principles of God’s character. So that then is the central theme of Leviticus: holiness.

Explanation of Holiness

Some of us have such a wrong understanding of holiness that we turn off when we hear this. What picture comes into your mind when you hear holiness? Maybe seriousness, grimness, no joy, no fun, as though holy people are weird, peculiar individuals. This is the wrong idea of that. Holiness was not attractive to me at all; it repelled me. Scripture uses the phrase “the beauty of holiness” (1 Chronicles 16:29, 2 Chronicles 20:21, Psalms 29:2, 96:2). I asked myself, “What in the world is beautiful about holiness?” Until I understood biblically with context what it means, it became a beautiful word. When I found out, I agreed that holiness is indeed a beautiful thing.

One preacher, beautifully explains this. The original word for holiness is from a very attractive English word: wholeness. So that holiness means “wholeness,” being complete. We all know what wholeness is. It is to have all the parts that were intended to be there together and to have them functioning as they were intended to function.

When God talks about holiness, that is what God is talking about. He says to his people, “You shall be whole, because I am whole.” God is complete; he is perfect. There is no blemish in God; he lives in harmony with himself. He is a beautiful person. He is absolutely what a person ought to be. He is filled with joy and love and peace. He lives in wholeness. And he looks at us in our brokenness and says to us, “You, too, shall be whole.”

That word wholeness has the power to awaken desire within us. We long to be whole people, don’t you? Don’t you want to be what God made you to be, with all the ingredients of your personality able to be expressed in balance? That is to be a beautiful person, and that is what God is after. That is what the book of Leviticus is all about. It is a book that will make you whole.

To realize our great need, we need to realize that we are not whole. We are damaged. Our soul and body faculties are terribly damaged, like a crashed car. In Eden, man lost his way. He was made in the image and likeness of God. When man first came from the hand of God, he was whole. Adam functioned as God intended man to function. He was functioning in the image and the likeness of God.

After the great fall, we have lost that likeness. We still have the image, but the likeness is gone. Every man feels this lack. All of Adam’s children cry, “Oh, where is the life I have lost?”

Isn’t that the question so many millions are asking today: “Where is the life I have lost in trying to live? Why don’t I know the way out? How come I am so uptight, so hurting, so broken?”

We are so aware of our own brokenness, of our lack of wholeness. We know how much we hurt ourselves and each other. We are aware of our inability to cope with life. We sometimes put up a big facade and try to bluff our way through as though we are able to handle anything. But inside, half the time, we are running scared. That is a mark of our lack of wholeness.

We also know our diabolical power to irritate, to enrage, and to inflame others—and ourselves. But this great statement in Leviticus 20:26 declares that God knows all about human brokenness and hurt. He knows that we are out of that way. He sees this in sharp contrast to his own wholeness. And his love reaches out and says to us, “You shall be whole; for I am whole.” “That is my purpose,” he declares to his people. God determines to heal man’s brokenness and to make man whole again. And he knows how to do it—he says so: “You shall be whole; for I am whole.”

This is a process that takes infinite patience and love, because God never makes us holy forcefully. It has to be an act of free will. It is voluntary—God never forces us into it. It can occur only to those who trust God enough to respond to his love.

We are like fearful birds. Imagine a hurt animal or bird. When we want to apply medicine and feed them, they don’t come near us. They are so scared that we will catch them and hurt them. They come and stand, think, hesitate, and one sound, they suddenly run away. That strikes me as such an apt picture of what God contends with in reaching out toward man. Man is scared. “Oh, if I come, will he catch and hurt me? More so, will he make me holy?” It takes infinite patience and love to impart the necessary understanding to fearful, hurting men and women like us.

That is why God gave us this book. He starts in kindergarten with us. He starts with pictures and shadows, with visual aids, in order to show us what he is going to do someday. All the ceremonies and offerings of the Old Testament are shadows and pictures of Jesus Christ. So Christ is here in the book of Leviticus. God shows us, through his people Israel, his way of healing human hurt. This is God’s way to wholeness.

To those early days—infant revelation—the way they saw him was through these pictures. Thus, as they understood what these pictures depict and laid hold of that, they came to the same joy and peace that we have.

If you do not believe that, then read the Psalms and see how much David understood of the presence and the grace of God in his life. He was a man who was healed by God. He came to understand that God was his strength and his very life, and that God could meet every need of his heart and work out all the tangled relationships in his family and in his personal life. He reflects all this in the Psalms he wrote.

So, the first two steps for the process are: First step to make you whole is separation. “I have separated you from the peoples.” It is a process of separation. The reason we are so broken is that we are involved in a broken race. Our attitudes are wrong. Our vision of life is twisted and distorted. We believe illusions and lies, take them to be facts, and act upon them. We are following phantoms and fantasies and delusions. So, God must separate us. He has to break us loose from conformity to the thought patterns and the attitudes and reactions of those around us. He has to deliver us from all that, straighten out our thinking, set our minds and hearts aright, and correct our tangled, fouled relationships.

The second step is to follow him, learn his thoughts, see what he teaches, and follow him. Do not conform to world, but be transformed in your mind by its renewal.

Leviticus, then, is full of Christ. All the sacrifices, the rituals, the ceremonies, and all the rest pictorially describe Jesus Christ and his work, and how he was available to men and women then. And as we read this book from our vantage point on this side of the cross, we will learn a great deal about how Jesus Christ can meet our needs now. Therefore, this is not just a historical book. It isn’t just for Jews. It is a tremendously practical manual on how to live as a Christian. We will see this as we go along.

But there is even more. When you read the book of Leviticus and understand what it is saying, it will help you to understand yourself. All the work of Jesus Christ was to meet our greatest needs as depraved sinners. So, as you read this book, you will understand more about yourself and about what your great, crying needs are, and about how you operate.

We are a mystery to ourselves. We don’t even understand how we think. We are baffled by our own experience. Don’t you feel that way? Remember the way Paul expresses this in Romans 7: “The good things that I want to do I cannot do; and the evil things that I don’t want to do are what I do,” (Romans 7:19 RSV). This is a picture of life. It is a very penetrating, probing analysis of what is going on in your life and mine. This is what the book of Leviticus will show us—the reasons why, the understanding of ourselves. It is designed to meet the hurt of man, just where we are. And as we learn how to accept the healing of God, it will show us what we can be.

So let us start the Leviticus journey!

Beyond Mere Belief: The Transformative Power of Knowing God

We often talk about “knowing God” as if it’s a simple idea, a mere mental assent or a fleeting feeling. But true, biblical knowledge of God is far more profound. It’s an all-encompassing transformation that reshapes your very being, engaging your mind, heart, and will in an unbreakable chain leading to divine transformation.

Knowing God involves our Mind, Heart, and Will


The Mind: Exposure and Reception

Knowing God doesn’t begin with emotion (this is where millions go astray), it begins with exposure and reception of your mind to scriptures.  

  1. Exposure:   Your mind should be exposed to the objective truths of God in scripture.  This happens by actively reading, listening, and studying God’s Word.
  2. Reception:   Moving beyond surface-level understanding into a prayerful, meditative absorption of these truths of scriptures through meditation – As Jesus prayed, “For I have given them the words which You have given Me; and they have received them…” (John 17:8). This isn’t just about information; it’s about internalizing objective truths of Bible.

The Heart: Two inevitable responses

As you consistently and prayerfully immerse yourself in God’s Word, a miraculous shift occurs. The Holy Spirit breaks through, granting you a spiritual revelation—a penetrating insight into divine realities that transcends mere intellect. Paul prays for this spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of God in Eph 1:17.  When this divine wisdom dawns, your heart cannot help but respond in 2 specific ways.

  • Faith: Not just a belief about God, but a vibrant, active faith in God, expressing itself in tangible, courageous actions (Heb 11).   If living faith can move mountains, it can definitely move you to express itself in few actions!
  • Love: As you are given revelation of glory, beauty, and desirableness of God, a spontaneous overflow of love for God and His people follows.   1 John 4:7 highlights it impossible to know God like this and not love God and his people as a consequences. This is the reason Eph 1:15 highlights faith and love as undeniable marks of every Christian who knows God.

The Will: The Outflow of Obedient Life

With a mind illuminated by truth and a heart overflowing with faith and love, your will inevitably aligns. True knowledge of God doesn’t stop at intellectual understanding or emotional warmth; it produces obedience to His commands.  As 1 John 2:3 declares, “Now by this we know that we know Him, if we keep His commandments.” 

This holistic knowledge of God isn’t just about renewing your mind or stirring your emotions. It fundamentally reshapes your will, leading to Ethical, practical, and moral transformation that permeates every facet of your existence.    You can see a husband as result of knowing God loving his wife as Christ loved the church.  A wife knowing God submitting to her husband in reverence for Christ.  Children obeying parents, not grudgingly, but joyfully.   Colleagues and employees seeing Christ-likeness lived out in the workplace.


The Unmistakable Mark of True Knowing

When this profound, transformative knowledge takes root, the world sees it.  They will look at such a person and declare, with an undeniable certainty: “That man knows God. That woman knows God.”

Any other “knowing”—whether it stops at intellectual theory, superficial head knowledge, or fleeting emotional highs, without leading to practical and ethical transformation—is a counterfeit.  The Bible is unequivocal: “He who says, ‘I know Him,’ and does not keep His commandments, is a liar, and the truth is not in him” (1 John 2:4).

True knowledge of God isn’t just something you have; it’s something you become.  

May we all Know God like this!

Pastor Murali

How can I protect myself from false teaching?

Basic Bible Truths Are Your Best Defense against error!

One primary reason people are misled and deceived by false teaching today is a lack of understanding of basic, foundational Bible truths.  If you don’t know the basics, you become vulnerable to deception in any field. Think of buying a second-hand car: without basic knowledge of features, brands, and costs, you’re vulnerable to being sold a defective product. If you equip yourself with standard basic tips, you’ll have something to reference and compare to validate whether what you’re being told is right or wrong. Tragically, this is exactly what’s playing out in Christianity, where millions are being misled due to lack of grasp of most fundamental truths.

The only way to avoid being deceived is to spend time acquiring the knowledge about the foundational and standard truths of the Bible. This understanding will empower you to critically evaluate everything you hear against the standard of God’s Word, protecting you from error.

To address this crucial need and equip believers with this essential foundation, I started the ‘Know the Truth’ study series in the Tamil language. This series uses the 1689 Confession of Faith – a very important historical Christian document that summarizes the core beliefs of Christians for the last 2,000 years. It takes the most important truths of the Bible and summarizes them in a systematic way into 32 chapters. All you need to know about the foundations of Christian faith in 32 chapters!

If your desire is avoid being deceived about the most important aspect of your life and faith, I strongly encourage you to spend time listening to the ‘Know the Truth’ series in our GRBC YouTube Playlist.  This will provide the crucial bedrock for an unshakable authentic faith.

Our Lord said, “Know the truth, and truth will set you free” (John 8:32). May the Lord help you to know His truth and experience the freedom that comes from knowing the truth.

God bless,

Pastor Murali

Sharing Gospel with Traditional Christians

Sharing the Gospel with someone from a traditional church background, like CSI or Roman Catholic, who hasn’t had a personal “salvation experience” requires a sensitive and understanding approach. While they are familiar with Christian vocabulary and stories, they may not have experienced the reality of those truths.

In my experience, when I share the Gospel, people often nod and seem to agree, and I sometimes wonder if the message truly makes an impact. Below is an approach from my personal experience that can provoke thought and encourage them to seriously consider our message.


Start with Thought-Provoking Questions

Begin by asking open-ended questions based on the situation to encourage reflection. Here are some examples:

  • “What does faith mean to you?”
  • “What do you think is the purpose of going to church?”
  • “How does someone get saved?
  • “Have you had a salvation experience?”
  • “How do you think a person gets to heaven?”

I recall a conversation with my CSI aunt at a funeral. I asked her, “Since we will all pass away one day, do you believe that as soon as you die, you will go to heaven and enjoy eternal life? John 3:16 says God loved the world so much that anyone who believes in Christ will not perish but have eternal life. Do you have that assurance?” She responded, “I don’t know.”

I used that opportunity to discuss the work of Christ and the importance of exercising faith. I clarified that some can hear about Christ their entire lives and never truly exercise faith in His work. When you exercise faith, you gain the assurance of going to heaven. Many traditional Christians live with this uncertainty because their churches often don’t teach salvation by grace through faith in Christ alone, but instead add works. When works are added to salvation, it removes any possibility of having assurance because our works can never be perfect or complete enough. Only when we are enabled to trust in the complete, finished, and perfect work of Christ can we have the assurance of eternal life. I believe God will use this seed that was sown in her heart. I could see there was an impact on her face and voice.

Unlike my aunt, some people might confidently state they will go to heaven. However, when you probe further about the basis for their belief, they often point to their life and good deeds. I remember speaking with a young Roman Catholic man at a KFC who told me he believed he’d go to heaven because he was a good man, went to church, had no bad habits, and did good works. I asked him, “How good do you need to be to get to heaven? How many good works do you think will ‘buy’ you heaven?”

While he pondered, I clarified that the Bible states you must be perfect in everything to enter heaven. I explained God’s holiness and His standard of the law: lust is like adultery, anger is like murder, envy is like robbery. “Can you truly be that good?” I asked.

As he listened and thought, I made him little curious by saying, using our KFC surroundings, “The Bible states the only way to heaven is by GFC, not eating at KFC.” He chuckled and wondered what GFC meant. I explained, “It’s by free Grace through Faith through Christ alone. The only way you get to heaven is by trusting in God’s grace and believing in Jesus’ perfect work.”


Understanding “Grace Through Faith in Christ Alone” (GFC)

Salvation is purely God’s grace, with none of our works involved. To be saved means believing God’s gracious promise in the Gospel, which is based on Christ’s life and His work on the cross. God not only punished Christ for our sins but also imputed Christ’s perfect righteousness to us. Only when we fully believe by faith in the perfect work of Christ, without adding any of our imperfect works to salvation, can we have the assurance of eternal life. We don’t have to do anything to earn it. That’s what GFC means: by grace through faith in Christ alone.

The young man told me he had been going to church for 20 years and had never heard this in his life. This highlights a sad reality in most traditional churches: they often do not teach the true Gospel, preventing people from experiencing the joy and assurance of eternal life. Once a person has that assurance, they cannot be controlled by religious fear, the bondage of works, ritual prayers, tithes, or church attendance. Most churches in our country teach “Christ plus this and that,” rather than GFC.

We have a great responsibility and privilege to preach this glorious Gospel of grace, which unfortunately, very few do. Remember, the goal is to faithfully present the person and work of Jesus Christ in a clear, loving way, leaving the results to God.


Key Points for Sharing the Gospel

  1. Start with a Probing Question: Make them think deeply.
  2. Gently Clarify the Gospel: Remember the five essential parts of the Gospel: God, Man, Christ, Promises, and Conditions of Gospel
  3. Leverage Common Beliefs and Emphasize Experience:
    • The Problem of Sin: They believe in sin, so emphasize personal sin and the horror of even small “heart sins.” Help understand they need to experience a sense of sorrow and hatred for sin before a holy God.
    • The Inadequacy of Works: Emphasize that our good works, rituals, sacraments, or being a “good person” cannot bridge the gap of God’s standard and earn salvation. (Refer to Ephesians 2:8-9: “For it is by grace you have been saved, through faith—and this is not from yourselves, it is the gift of God—not by works, so that no one can boast,” and Titus 3:5).
    • The Only Solution: Jesus Christ: They know about Jesus. Explain why Jesus came and what His death and resurrection accomplished.
    • The Crucial Role of Faith and Repentance: They might think faith is merely intellectual assent or a general belief in God. Repentance might be seen as just feeling sorry for sin. Explain “saving faith” as personally trusting in Jesus Christ alone for salvation, not in ourselves or our works. It’s a surrender of self-reliance to completely rely on Him. Repentance is a change of mind that leads to a change of direction—turning from sin to God.
    • The Joy of the Salvation Experience: Encourage them with blessing of gospel. It’s not just a religious drill but a joyful life of enjoying a relationship with God. When they repent and believe, they will experience the joy of forgiveness, peace of justification, a new heart, become a child of God, and enter into a personal relationship with God, guided by the Holy Spirit.

Conclude by offering to pray with them and encourage them to prayerfully think about these things and read the Bible.


Attitudes to Maintain

Key Attitudes to Remember:

  • Patience: This may take multiple conversations.
  • Prayer: Pray for them and for wisdom in sharing.
  • Holy Spirit’s Role: It’s the Holy Spirit who convicts, illuminates, and draws people to Christ. You are merely a vessel.
  • Love and Humility: Share the truth in love and gentleness, without condemnation or arrogance.
  • Clarity: Ensure they understand the distinct meaning of grace, faith, and Christ’s finished work, contrasted with earning salvation.

What are your thoughts on this approach, and do you have any specific examples from your own sharing experiences that you’d like to share. Please contact me.

Pastor Murali, GRBC

Gospel in 5 Questions

The world is full of questions, but what if just five of them held the key to everything? What if the most important answers in life could be found by asking just five questions? Five crucial questions that unlocks the heart of the Biblical Gospel—a message that has power to change your life. Let’s find out what they are.

  1. Who is God? 
  2. Who is man? 
  3. Who is Jesus Christ? 
  4. What is in it for me? 
  5. What should I do?  

Question One: Who is God?    

Despite the existence of many religions, every man’s conscience knows that there is one God who is the Creator of everything. Bible reveals this one living God in 4 acts: He is God of Creation, God of Providence, God of Justice and God of Redemption.

God of Creation: This one God is the Creator of the vast universe, bringing it into existence out of nothing through the power of His spoken word over a period of six days. He could have just casually made a bland world, everything white and black, and asked us to eat mud and survive! But the intricate planning and intentional design in every structure, symmetry, colors of this world, all reflect the beauty, wisdom, power, and goodness of the great Creator. Furthermore, Bible states this Creator God is inherently righteous and holy. As a reflection of His moral character, He has inscribed His law within the conscience of every human, outlining our duties both to Him and to fellowmen. This law generally called 10 commandments specifically forbids actions such as covetousness, lying, stealing, adultery, murder, dishonoring parents, breaking the Sabbath, taking His name in vain, and the creation or worship of idols or any other objects besides true God. Breaking any of these laws is called sin.

God of Providence: This Creator God is also known as the  LORD–a title that underscores His absolute sovereignty and control over all that He has made. In work of providence, God actively sustains and governs every aspect of His creation. It is He who gives life, breath, and all things to humanity, determining the times, places, and circumstances of each individual’s existence.

God of Justice: This God being omniscient is fully aware of every action and thought of every person. He sees beyond our outward lives and into our hearts. He considers lustful thoughts as adultery, and anger as murder. As a just God, He has to ultimately punish all sin. He has fixed a day to do that. So He meticulously records each instance in which we transgress His law, recognizing them as sins committed against Him. The magnitude of sin is measured not as to who committed it, but against whom it is committed. Humans sin against an eternal God, hence their sins deserve an eternal punishment in hell. As God’s creatures, we are ultimately accountable to our Creator, and we will one day be judged for our thoughts, words, and actions. This is the God presented in the Bible.

Many question God’s existence, pointing to the much suffering and pain in the world. To respond to this, it’s essential next to understand: Who is man?

Question Two:  Who is man? 

Crown of God’s creation. Man was created wonderfully and fearfully in the image of God to glorify and enjoy God forever. The bond between the Creator God and His creature man, is the most profound, intricate, and powerful relationship conceivable.   The image of God with its inherent likeness forms an unbreakable connection between man and his Creator, a connection no fallenness can fully erase.   Bible states God “breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and man became a living being” and then on every breath of man yearns for bonding with his Creator.  We do not just exist because God created us; we continue to exist because He sustains us every second. In him we live, move, have our being.  Our life force, our very animation, comes directly from Him.  This indescribable bond was designed for eternal communion between God and man.  Dim sample of that is reflected in bond between mother and her child. No mother is involved in forming of child in the womb, but this God forms every nerve, artery, bones of every infant in womb.   This bond between man and his God is woven into the very fabric of his existence, foundational to his being, and ultimately for his purpose.   All restlessness of mankind is a yearning for this profound bond.  We all feel it—a deep, aching void that nothing seems to fill. “Our hearts are restless until they find Thee” is a famous quote from Saint Augustine of Hippo. Though created as a glorious creature to glorify and enjoy God forever, man fell !

Fallen Creature: The Bible narrates first humans, Adam and Eve, though created perfectly in God’s image, exercising their freewill, they both disobeyed God, leading to a departure from their perfect state, which is referred to as the “Fall of mankind.”  As Adam and Eve represented the human race, all subsequent humans descending from those first parents inherited not only the consequences of their wrong, but also their sinful flawed nature. Like a chain of dominoes, all of us who come after them have been toppled by their fall. You know that parents pass on certain traits to their children. Your eye, skin, and hair colour, for instance, comes from your parents. Even some diseases can be inherited. The tendency to do wrong instead of right is just like that. It is passed down the generations. We are born with that bias for what’s bad, and every day we see, read about, or suffer the symptoms of our human disease. We violate and break God’s holy law by envy, lying, hating, stealing, resentment, divorcing, breaking the Sabbath, taking God’s name in vain, and prioritizing idols over Him.   So man is fallen sinful creature.

Why Do Man and Woman Suffer? The book of Genesis attributes the origin of all human suffering to the disobedience of Adam and Eve and the subsequent curses God placed upon them.

The Curses on Woman


Every woman suffers in two key areas: her children and her husband. The curse related to children began when Eve disobeyed God and ate the forbidden fruit. Consequently, every woman not only gives birth in pain, but just as Eve broke God’s heart through her disobedience, her children will regularly break her heart by disobeying her. The curse in marriage stems from Eve causing her husband to eat the fruit. She will always desire to control her husband, while he will try to dominate her, leading to constant marital conflicts.

The Curses on Man


Every man suffers in two key areas: his work and the inevitability of death. Since the first man, Adam, disobeyed God by eating the fruit, he was driven out of Eden and condemned to toil for his food and that of his family. His life is now characterized by the pressures and challenges of providing through hard labor. So every man wakes up, goes to work, and faces daily labor and job pressures. When he returns home, his children often don’t obey him, and he finds himself in a constant marital struggle with wife. This is the life man is allotted to live, separated from his Creator. Where does all this lead? To an ideal, bright future? No. Instead, it leads to physical decline, sickness, and eventual death. God cursed man, saying, “From dust you came and to dust you shall return.” The Bible states, “the wages of sin is death”

I hope now you can see small word ‘Sin’ explains the human predicament. The news gets worse: Humanity is depicted as inherently powerless to escape this fallen condition, unable to avert the inevitable decline towards death, followed by divine judgment and eternal punishment in hell for all their sins against this holy God. Man is fallen sinful creature, so cannot approach his holy Creator.

But do you see the human dilemma?    On one hand, every breath and atom of man unconsciously yearns for deep bond with his Creator, and on other hand, as sinful being it is impossible for him to acceptably come to this holy God on his own. An infinitely holy God one side, and an utterly sinful creature on the other. Who can bridge this impossible gap?

 This drives us to ask the great question of ages: How can a sinner be reconciled to a holy God and find peace that can fill every aching void in his life.   This leads us to third question.

Question Three: Good news comes to us in the third Question: Who is Jesus Christ. 

God of Redemption: Bible reveals this God of Creation, God of Providence, is also God of redemption. In order to redeem mankind from this deplorable state, he designed an infinitely wise and marvelous plan. This plan is all centered in His Son, Jesus Christ, the second person of the Trinity and God’s uniquely begotten Son, who possessed absolute equality with God. Yet, in profound humility, He took on human nature, entering the world through a humble birth in a manger. During His thirty-three years on earth, He authenticated His divine identity through unparalleled miracles, authoritative teachings, and a life of flawless purity.

To save us from our predicament, He fulfilled the two greatest needs you and I have. Firstly, He lived a perfect life on our behalf as our second Adam (representative) and purchased a perfect righteousness for us. Secondly, He endured unspeakable shame, suffering, and agony on the cross, offering Himself as the atoning sacrifice for our sins.

Did God accept His work on behalf of sinners? Yes, God demonstrated His acceptance by raising Him from the dead on the third day. This is indeed good news. In 1 Corinthians 15, Paul states, “I declare to you the gospel which I preached to you, which also you received  by which also you are saved, … that Christ died for our sins according to the Scriptures, that he was buried, that he was raised on the third day according to the Scriptures.”

Question Four: What is in it for me? 

Beyond mundane ordinary needs of money, convenience, and health – though God certainly attends to our needs – there exist blessings of an immeasurably greater magnitude. The Bible beautifully illustrates this by portraying God as a Father who can meet all our deepest needs, but we have strayed from him and now struggle with an unsatisfying life. Upon our return, He doesn’t just welcome us; He throws a lavish feast. The profound joy awaiting you transcends comprehension until you personally experience it! Consider just a few of these transformative gifts:

Forgiveness: Imagine the complete erasure of every sin – past, present, and future. Not a single transgression holds the power to condemn or punish you. Experiencing this profound forgiveness ushers in unparalleled freedom and joy within your conscience.

Justification: Beyond forgiveness, God imputes Christ’s own righteousness to you, declaring you perfectly righteous in His sight.

Adoption: You are welcomed into God’s family as His cherished child, inheriting inestimable blessings as a result of this divine adoption.

Provision: As a loving Father, God promises to provide for all your needs throughout this earthly life (Philippians 4:19).

Correction: When you stray, He lovingly guides you back onto the right path through correction (Hebrews 12).

Providence: Know that every event in your life, without exception, is orchestrated for your ultimate good (Romans 8:28).

Peace of God: You will experience a deep and abiding peace with God and a tranquility within your heart that permeates every moment of your life. This peace will flow like a river, bringing a calmness you’ve likely searched for in vain throughout your life. You’ll realize this is the very thing your soul has been yearning for.

New Heart: The desire for genuine and lasting change in your habits and character, often met with the frustration of failed New Year’s resolutions, finds its answer here. God promises a new heart, a complete regeneration that transforms you from the inside out. Every destructive habit – addiction, substance abuse, alcohol, pornography, short temper, covetousness, among others – can be overcome. The destructive things you once desired will become repulsive, and the good you once overlooked will become your delight. You’ll discover a new inclination to think, speak, and act in ways that honor God.

Eternal Life: God bestows the gift of eternal life. This gift wonderfully takes away all the fear of death replacing it with the knowledge that death is not an end but a glorious new beginning. Just as Jesus rose, you gain an unwavering hope beyond the grave, knowing an eternal inheritance awaits you in heaven.

Glorification: Ultimately, He crowns you as His heir, granting you access to everything He possesses!

Indeed, these blessings are utterly transformative! They elevate you to a summit of pure bliss, filling your heart with overflowing joy! Doesn’t it make you realize how truly impoverished our lives are without these extraordinary gifts?

Consider this: Without forgiveness, we remain shackled with guilty consciences by the weight of our past sins, the power of present sins, and more sins in the future. Without justification, we stand condemned and never truly accepted. Without adoption, we are orphans in a vast and often cruel world. Without God’s provision, we are left to our own limited resources and anxieties. Without His correction, we stumble blindly down the wrong paths. Without His providential hand, our lives are subject to the chaos of chance, and all things will work for our ultimate ruin. Without His peace, our hearts remain restless and unfulfilled. Without a new heart, we are trapped in cycles of destructive behavior and habits. Without eternal life, we face the ultimate fear and loss without hope. Finally, without glorification, we not only miss out eternal inheritance, but we inherit eternal wrath in hell!

My dear sinner friend! Embrace these incredible blessings! Do not for another moment live a diminished existence when such profound and life-altering gifts are within your reach!

Question Five: What should I do?  

To truly experience these extraordinary blessings, the Gospel presents two fundamental conditions: Repentance and Faith.

Repentance: This begins with a profound realization – acknowledging that you are a sinner and understanding that the seemingly small word “sin” carries immense weight. This is the root cause manifesting in all struggles and sufferings of your life. True repentance involves turning away from your sin and turning wholeheartedly towards God, your loving Father. It’s a change of mind and heart, a conscious decision to abandon your own way and embrace His.

Faith: This involves believing, with unwavering conviction, in who Jesus Christ is – the Son of God, fully divine and fully human  and what He has accomplished through His life, death, and resurrection. It’s trusting that His sacrifice was the ultimate payment for your sins and that through Him, you can be reconciled to God.

Embrace these two conditions, and all the immeasurable blessings previously described become yours. Repent of your sin, turn to God with an open heart, and place your complete faith in Jesus Christ. The summit of bliss and the fullness of life await you!

God bless you. If you want to know more about the Gospel, contact the Grace Reformed Baptist Church (GRBC).

Every Spiritual Blessing – Eph 1:3b

Eph 1:3-14 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ, just as He chose us in Him before the foundation of the world, that we should be holy and without blame before Him in love, having predestined us to adoption as sons by Jesus Christ to Himself, according to the good pleasure of His will, to the praise of the glory of His grace, by which He [a]made us accepted in the Beloved. In Him we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace which He made to abound toward us in all wisdom and [b]prudence, having made known to us the mystery of His will, according to His good pleasure which He purposed in Himself, 10 that in the dispensation of the fullness of the times He might gather together in one all things in Christ, [c]both which are in heaven and which are on earth—in Him. 11 In Him also we have obtained an inheritance, being predestined according to the purpose of Him who works all things according to the counsel of His will, 12 that we who first trusted in Christ should be to the praise of His glory. 13 In Him you also trusted, after you heard the word of truth, the gospel of your salvation; in whom also, having believed, you were sealed with the Holy Spirit of promise, 14 who[d] is the [e]guarantee of our inheritance until the redemption of the purchased possession, to the praise of His glory.

Let me start with a parable: There was once a boy who was cruelly hypnotised so that he forgot everything about his parents; he could not even see or hear them. He lived in the house with them, and they cared for him–cooking his meals, washing his clothes, and loving him constantly–but he simply looked through them. To him, Mom and Dad were invisible, and he never spoke to them nor heard them speak. That was the realm in which he lived… Then one day the hypnotic spell was broken, this blind spot ended, and he could see and hear his parents. He realized all the blessings he enjoyed from birth, day by day, were given by his parents. All the good gifts he received had come to him from them, and now he could see and understand. That is what happens to us in salvation. We are hypnotized by the god of this world, the devil, so much that though God is the source of all our blessings, we live as though being born blind to Him. But when God saves us, we come out of that spell. He opens our eyes and blesses us with the realization that He is the source of all our blessings, which makes our hearts overflow with gratitude and praise. In salvation we enter the real heavenly realm and start seeing how much God has blessed us. 

The passage we read is one of the longest, most gigantic sentences. One author says it is the most monstrous sentence conglomeration that he’s ever encountered in the Greek language. It is like an avalanche; starting at the snowy mountain top with “Blessed be..” it rolls down like a big snowball tumbling down, picking up volumes as it descends; sweeping, stirring, and gathering the whole mountain snow, pouring forth with impetuous speed. We stand stunned by the sight. This is the effect of these fourteen verses. 

You know, this is not Paul’s style. Most of the times, his doxology comes in the end; like in Romans, after eleven chapters of deep theological discourse of God’s salvation, Paul bursts forth, saying, ”Oh, the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! How unsearchable are His judgments and His ways past finding out!” (Rom 11:33) continuing, “For of Him and through Him and to Him are all things, to whom be glory forever. Amen.” (Rom 11:36).

That’s Paul’s common pattern: theology and then doxology. But here, from the very beginning, we witness Paul’s doxology. High tone – this is Handel’s ‘Messiah’ crescendo at the beginning! In light of what he is about to say, he can’t restrain himself from praising right from the beginning; he soars in praise, and in entrance gate, he comes welcomes us with praise. This is a proper test of all theological study. True theology should lead to doxology. If we have learned theology properly, it should lead to praise and worship. The reverse is true too; it is theology that makes us render God-centered worship. Worship is nothing but the response to the truth. Without theology, it will all be cursed, man-centered worship that ruins the soul, as we will see this evening. 

We looked at the first phrase of verse 3, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,” If you think I was slow, let me tell you I preached only half the sermon last week. I can continue to preach the same phrase today again. Fear not, I will not do it. Let me give you a hint of how much more depth this phrase has. You trace the word for “blessed be God” in all of the Bible–Hebrew word ‘Baruk.’ Whenever God performed a great deliverance, people blessed God; Genesis 14, Melchizedek, king of Salem visits Abraham after his victory and says, “Blessed be God Most High,” “bāraḵ ‘ēl ʿelyôn.” We see Moses, David, Solomon, all Old Testament people blessing God. All the saints saw that the purpose of God blessing us is not that we just enjoy, but that we also acknowledge inherent goodness in God’s character and respond by blessing Him. We saw we don’t add anything to God, but it is a declarative praise. We acknowledge, praise, and celebrate God’s attributes. 

Paul is going to show how much this God blesses us. If God has truly blessed us so much like this, then the greatest sin you and I commit in life is not to bless this God because of our self-obsession. Romans 1: 28 shows the chief sin of mankind: Even though they knew God, they did not thank or glorify Him. Because of this God’s wrath was revealed on them now – How? He gives them up to a depraved mind; their hearts are darkened; they are filled with all kinds of selfish lusts; they fall in all kinds of self-obsessed misery. 

We also saw all our happiness and joy is not in ourselves; focussing on us; praising us; but in Him. We will never know the fullness of blessing, all the joy, all the satisfaction, the wholeness that we are made for, until we learn to reorient our focus on Him and His glory. 

What kind of God do we bless? “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,” First, “God of Jesus Christ” not only talks about Jesus’ humanity, but it is the very language of a covenant. This is an enormously important truth. Whenever God makes a covenant, He says, “I will be their God.” God became the God of Jesus Christ through an eternal covenant of redemption–a covenant between the Father and the Son to save His elect. Jesus Christ entered into the human race in covenant with God. In that covenant, God is the God of Lord Jesus Christ. Then, “the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ” talks about Christ’s Godhead and His eternal relationship as the second person of the Trinity. So, the word “God” talks about the humanity of Lord Jesus Christ through the eternal covenant, then the word “Father” talks about His deity.

We have to bless that God; Paul is teaching that our Christian worship should be God focussed because the Father is the source of every blessing in our life. Every blessing that you’ve received comes openly, lavishly, freely, graciously from His hand. Even the redemption blessing–the work of our Lord Jesus Christ–is not the work of trying to get the Father to love you. Contrarily, the work of our Lord Jesus Christ is the expression of the Father who already loves you! Christ went to that cross not to get the Father to love you, but because the Father loves you. Until you realize that, you cannot reorient yourself to bless God. 

This passage teaches us the great doctrine of the Trinity and each of their work in redemption. If the first phrase talks about the Father and the Son in the redemptive covenant–the Father plans, becomes God to, and upholds the Son in all redemption work, and the Son accomplishes that redemption by coming to earth, living, suffering, dying, rising, ascending, and sitting in session–the next phrase shows us the work of the Holy Spirit: Eph 1:3.b, “who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ,”

Let us understand its meaning in three headings: 

  • The blessed God who blesses us
  • The nature of these blessings 
  • How to experience these blessings 

Blessed God who blesses us

Verse 3 says God has blessed us. When we bless God, we bring to Him no substance. We acknowledge, praise, and celebrate His attributes (declarative glory), but there’s nothing we can bring to Him that He needs. But when God blesses us, the case is just the opposite. He doesn’t come with empty hands to just say something about us, but comes with hands full with great gifts to confer upon us. The word ‘blessings’ could rightly be rendered as ‘benefits.’ He has blessed us with much needed, and greatest, beneficial blessings.

Why does He bless us? Because we are so lovable, beautiful, good, and deserving? As sinners, we deserve to be eternally cursed by this God. God blessing us is rooted again in His character. He is a blessed God. Why? Because He loves to bless. When the whole of mankind should be cursed–we don’t deserve any blessing from Him–He made a covenant to graciously bless us through His Son in eternity. That covenant was revealed in steps – first to Adam’s seed and then specifically to Abraham, Genesis 12:2,3, “I will bless you,” “in you shall all the families of the earth shall be blessed.” It is God’s design and purpose to bless His creatures. In the Old Testament, though there was some spirituality, most of their promised blessings related to this world. Deuteronomy 28 talks about blessed in the city, field, fruit of thy body, thy cattle. Blessed when you come in and go out. That’s the old covenant with Israel. They had land, nation, and the blessing was mostly temporal, worldly, physical blessings–abundant harvests, large flocks, physical health, and victory over enemies. The focus was mostly the earthly realm which was actually a shadow of the coming great blessings. But in the New Testament, God goes beyond these worldly blessings and blesses with special, rich, boundless blessings. 

So God is a God who blesses. When we recognize the sinfulness of this world, who on this earth is not blessed by God in some way? Every side on this earth is an expression of God’s blessing. Even unbelievers are blessed by nature: rain, sun, fruits, food, good health, good family, children, job, wealth – so many blessings. Every smile, every joy, every meal, every breath, every good thing you have experienced comes from the hand of this God. We have to bless Him for all that by itself. 

But now Paul goes beyond those and talks about very special blessings. Not everyone gets these rare blessings. As soon as you hear of ‘blessing,’ if all you can think of is a bigger house, big car, bigger this and more of that, and you think that will make you happy, you are not only immature, but in a blind and very pitiable state. May God open your eyes to see He has so much more greater blessings than these things. 

Martin Luther once told a story of a lion who invited all the beasts of the jungle to a wonderful meal – mountains of tender fruits, nuts, peas; slices of the most savoury meat, jugs of hot gravy, honey; delicious trifles; varieties and sweet desserts, meringues – a grand feast. But the swine who came around turned their snouts up: “That is all? What is all this? Where is the barley seed, insects, and grubs?” 

To a vulture he gave a sandwich with ten layers of fresh meat that smelled wonderful. The vulture asked, “Don’t you have any rotting carcass that I can tear and eat?” That is how people behave with God. 

When God talks about big, higher blessings, our tastes are low. So let us throw aside all those low thoughts, come out of the dark, self-obsessed realm, narrow, worldly-mindedness, and open our minds and understand what these glorious blessings of the blessed God are. The Holy Spirit talks about higher blessings – not the ones that temporarily make you happy and then leave you empty, but things that can keep you always rejoicing, peaceful, and gentle. Regarding worldly needs, our blessed God says, ‘Don’t worry about that. I will take care of all your needs in this world; but your deepest need is higher; look above.’

The nature of these blessings

What makes Paul burst into this exuberant praise? What blessings, even though he is in a jail, not knowing if he may live till even the next hour, makes him rise like an archangel and bless God? What are those blessings? He says, “every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ,”

The verse itself is a blessing verse. We bless God, for He blesses us (how?) with every spiritual blessing. There’s a play on words. It’s absolutely marvelous in the Greek text. There’s a sound to it that’s supposed to catch your attention. Blessed us with every spiritual blessing. The blessings we’re talking about are not just blessings–the average temporary, ordinary, run-of-the-mill, stomach-filling, roof-over-your-head, few-days-exciting–kind of blessing. We’re talking about special, special, rare spiritual blessings. We’re talking about blessings that are of a different category than the mere physical blessings that we’re thankful to God for every day. Paul is going to list those glorious blessings in the coming verses for three chapters, but here he gives us a summary of the nature of these blessings. We will see four traits of these blessings. 

I was watching a video of a man filled with some spirit screaming, “Raba shema [some gibberish.]” He prays for blessings like “All debt should be paid, all should be blessed with prosperity, those who do not have a child should get twins, those who are single married…” So “filled with the Holy Spirit,” see the blessings he can think of. We will talk about special secret blessings only God’s children know the value of. Let us remember the traits with the acronym HUSH! Holy Spirit, Unchangeable, Sufficient, Heart satisfying. 

HUSH:

  1. Holy Spirit – These blessings are given to us through the Holy Spirit.

    Most Greek scholars and commentators tells us when Paul says, “spiritual blessings,” it’s not necessarily in contrast to material blessing, but it is blessing coming to us through the Holy Spirit. Spiritual, “pneumatikos,” refers to that which is communicated or imparted by the Holy Spirit of God. When Paul says they are spiritual blessings, we are to think of blessings given to us by the person and ministry of the Holy Spirit. ‘Spiritual’ points to the medium by which they are conferred, which shows the wonderful excellence of these blessings, since they are beyond any other blessings God gives. Scripture shows the great goal of all that God has done in the work of redemption–electing us in eternity, sending His Son, Him living, suffering, dying, rising, ascending, and His session–all that for what? That He may bring upon believers the blessings of the ministry of the Holy Spirit. Gal 3 says this and points out that this is beyond all the blessings of the Old Testament. Acts 2:33 states, ”Therefore being exalted to the right hand of God, and having received from the Father the promise of the Holy Spirit, He poured out this which you now see and hear.” So when it talks about ‘spiritual’ first, it is not contrasting with ‘physical,’ but that the blessings are given through the Holy Spirit.

    Meaning the highest, most excellent, greatest, precious blessings of the Triune God is communicated to men through the Holy Spirit. In the great work of redemption, it is the Father who is the Giver, the Son who is the Reservoir, and the Spirit who is the Communicator of these spiritual gifts. All that Father planned, all Christ purchased for us, is brought into experiential reality in our lives by the Holy Spirit. That is why Paul will teach us not to grieve Him (Eph 4:30). It is the Divine Spirit who communicates to men all the most precious things of the Triune God. Charles Hodge says these blessings are spiritual because they are derived from the Holy Spirit, whose presence and influence are the great blessings purchased by Christ.

    Though he is going to list them in the verses, generally, when we reflect, what do we realize the Spirit has done for us? When we were dead in sin, He gave us rebirth. What a blessing it is that He used the power which raised Christ from the dead and spiritually resurrected us, opened our minds, changed our hearts, and renewed our wills? He convicted us of sin, illuminated our minds to see the glory of Jesus Christ, united us to Him, transferred our sin to Him, imputed His righteousness to us, justified us and made us adopted children of God in family of the Triune God, becoming heirs of God and joint heirs with Christ. We are joined to Jesus Christ–the crown of all spiritual blessings. He broke the dominion of sin over our lives. He even now supplies us the grace of perseverance. He sanctifies and illuminates us to see the glory of our inheritance. These are some of the Holy Ghost’s blessings. So first, Spiritual blessings are enjoyed through the work of the Holy Spirit.
  2. They are unchangeable blessings. Any physical blessings change; fade; because your needs change. Every worldly blessing changes: your riches, family, health, house, job, your marriage (oh that is always changing). Today we may be famous, have a big name and market; Our family and society may value us today; but that will change. We always live in fear of this change. Oh how the soul is yearning to set itself on something that never changes!

    In contrast to all of this, these [spiritual] blessings never change. They’re not subject to time, situation, or place. Nothing in this world can touch these blessings. Nor does our need for them change.

    Have you noticed it is given in the past tense? Blessed with every spiritual blessing? What about blessings we will receive in the future – resurrection, full redemption of body and soul, and eternal heaven? Paul, seeing the panoramic view of the whole scope of salvation from eternity to eternity, stands back, viewing the whole thing. To convey certainty of all blessings–their unchangeableness–he uses the past tense. These are absolutely certain and unchangeable blessings to us in the purpose of God, given to us by the immutable God who never lies. So Paul can mention it as though it’s already fully accomplished. If we are chosen and saved, then it is 100% certain that we will go to heaven and enjoy all these blessings; just as he used the past tense. Romans 8:30, For whom He foreknew, called, and justified. And then he puts in the past tense, as though it’s already done, Whom He justified, He glorified, even though we’re not yet glorified.

    Because the blessed God who gives these blessings never changes. He is the immutable God; Malachi 3:6, “For I am the Lord, I do not change; Therefore you are not consumed, O sons of Jacob.” COF His gifts and callings never change. Though many storms and floods arise and beat against believers, many temptations of Satan may come and fall on us, though unbelief may plague us and cause the sensible sight of the light and love of God to be clouded and obscured from us for a time, yet He never changes. This God’s covenant never changes. His promise never changes. His love towards us, grace towards us, never changes according to the situation. His relationship with us never changes. No matter what we are, no matter how wrong we go, how far we go, He never changes in love. Our atonement, our justification, our adoption, and even our glorification doesn’t change. These are unchangeable blessings.

    If you’re discouraged–maybe you’ve failed, or fallen–if you are a true believer, your blessings are still in Christ Jesus. These are ours no matter what else is going on in our life. No matter what our situation is, no matter what our present condition is, in the midst of this life and all its trials and its disappointments there are spiritual blessings which are ours to have and to enjoy which no man can take away from us, which are ours by the grant from the hand of the heavenly Father, and they are ours through the indwelling work of the Holy Spirit. This is a life-altering reality.
  3. These are sufficient blessings for all this life’s situations, and eternity

    How much of these special blessings has He given to us? Has He forgotten to give anything? Or has He said, “I will give you 50% now; if you show yourself good and walk properly, then I will give you a little more, and a little more”? No. “Blessed be God who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ,”

    The word “every” removes every limit; unlimited blessings; all the highest blessings the infinite God can bless us with; all – nothing left; everything included in the package. That is to say, there is no gap or lack in our blessings. It is whole; rounded, complete and perfect. Whatever your needs may require, whatever your hopes can dream, whatever wishes you can stretch out towards, it is all here, compacted and complete. The spiritual gifts are encyclopediacal and all-sufficient, They are not segments, but completed circles. When God gives He gives amply.

    2 Pet 1:3, “as His divine power has given to us all things that pertain to life and godliness,” Everything you need, everything you need for life and godliness has been provided for you by your Father through the Holy Spirit. You lack nothing. Everything you need in this life for sanctification, godly life, salvation; every spiritual blessing, every benefit, every provision is given through the Spirit. You talk about blessings that will have radical implications on how you live your life going forward with joy and blessings; they are these.

    God has already given them to you. They belong to you. Wife, you’ve got a grouchy husband, and you find him exceptionally difficult to live with. Or husband, you have a wife who makes your life difficult; and it’s a hard life day after day, after day. God in Christ, through the Holy Spirit, has given you every spiritual blessing that you need to endure and handle it. You have wayward kids who test your patience? God has given you every spiritual blessing you need to endure and handle them. You have difficulties, you have financial difficulties, difficulties at work, huge decisions that need to be made, you feel like your life is crumbling all around you? Remember, God has given you everything that you need for life and godliness. You’re battling temptation, you have a certain thorn in the flesh or a certain trial, you have something that just seems to have the upper hand on you all the time, and you act like you’re defeated and you act like you’re never going to change; not going to be blessed. That’s a lie from the devil. God has given you every spiritual blessing that you need to overcome. In terms of the things of the Spirit, we are wealthy beyond measure. Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing.

    Amazing: All blessings are given; we don’t need anything more. We possess them all today. They’re all available and accessible. All has been given, but the great question is how much has been taken; how much do we experience them? We are truly like that Aram Bikarai who lived a beggarly life while there was hidden treasure below his feet. There is boundless wealth belonging to us by right, and by the Father’s gift. Yet, here are we, many of us, living like beggars; with all that wealth, paupers still.

    You already have everything, not so much in realization, but you have it in the Lord Jesus Christ. That one word, “every,” signifies blessings in the widest sense. Only eternity will be an adequate commentary on this text, and only the redeemed in heaven who see the eternal unfolding of the gifts of grace will be the best commentators of the word “every.”
  4. Heart satisfying blessings

    They affect not only your outward man; but your whole being, whole man. They are heart, conscience, and mind satisfying blessings.

    There are blessings that put us in a good house, good car, good dress, but your heart still may not be affected; it may be sad, tense, and guilty. Most earthly blessings remain without us, and they pass outside of us. If that is the only thing you have to praise God for, you sometimes have to outwardly thank God with some regrets and not with a full heart. You cannot rise to this level of blessing God. The blessings of the world always leave us empty; they cannot fully satisfy our hearts. “Material possessions and worldly success can’t touch the deepest parts of our hearts, but the joy from the Holy Spirit overflows within us.” These spiritual blessings from the Holy Spirit affect your deepest heart – your inward man, your soul – and fills you with the fruits of the Spirit – love, joy, peace, patience, hope, strength, guidance – and transforms your whole character, emotions, thoughts, and words. What worldly blessings can do that? Let’s face it: Earthly life is, by its very definition, mundane life. It is a visible, tangible life. Yes, we may thank God for our house, car, job, and family, but after some time they become mundane. In contrast, there is nothing mundane about these spiritual blessings. They are glorious, fresh, and affect your deepest heart. They are something that is otherworldly, something wonderfully futuristic. “Earthly pleasures may touch the surface, but the Holy Spirit’s blessings immerse our hearts in an ocean of joy.” “God used the world’s gifts as shadows in the Old Testament for the Holy Spirit’s blessings, which is the substance of true joy.” So, HUSH.


Thirdly, how do we experience these blessings? Climb and Sit

First: Climb – Notice the Place or Realm of these blessings 

Where are these blessings? “…blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ,” 

Grammatically Paul has made a fatal error. He uses an adjective that doesn’t have a noun. He says, “in the heavenly.”  Heavenly what?  So you’ll notice in your Bibles you have “places” in italics. It is added to give clarity. There’s no noun there. It’s a unique phrase. Grammarly may point this out as an error, but this is divine grammar. Paul is not just talking about heaven, but a heavenly, divine realm. Firstly, this realm is where my spiritual blessings started, when God elected and foreordained me. There was no physical world at that time. “Heavenly” is the place of origin of all these blessings. Secondly, Paul probably also has in mind the idea that is God’s storehouse of blessings, completely prepared and guarded. All these blessings are stored in the heavenly realm. Not only the origin and storehouse, but beyond all that–more importantly–in order for us to experience these blessings, we must rise in our soul and go up there.

All the commands in the scripture to set your heart on above; seek the things above – Why? Because all these spiritual blessings come into experiential reality in our lives when we seek it from there. We must, through prayer and meditation, rise up to experience these blessings. We don’t receive this if our eyes are always looking down on earth, on the things below. If we are living in the low levels, we will not experience these blessings. Yes, this is the reason that even though we are blessed with all such blessings, with such a large provision made for all possible necessities and longings of all sorts, we are so weak, feeble, poor, and with little enjoyment of any of these blessings. 

Olden days’ church worship would begin, “up with your hearts!” Why? The blessings are in the heavenly, and if we want them, we must go where they are. It is not enough to drink little drops flowing through the rock cracks; you have to climb up, up, and up, through meditation and prayer. Climb up to the headwaters, where the great, pure fountain gushes out abundantly and inexhaustibly. The blessings are heavenly, and there they abide, and there we must mount if we want to experience them. 

Secondly, Sit: These blessings are enjoyed in union with Christ. 

This is Paul’s favorite song, “in Christ,” like biggest string on his guitar! Every spiritual blessing that has been given to us by the Father could only be enjoyed in union with Christ. How can we enjoy these blessings? Not only by climbing. Paul, talking about our position, will say in chapter 2, verse 6, “and raised us up together, and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus,” Again the same ‘heavenly places’ phrase. That is the true identity of the believer – in union with Christ. Even while we pilgrims are here, temporarily moving among illusions and changing scenes, in the depth of our true being and identity we are seated with Christ in the heavenly places. 

We have to climb through prayer and meditation to this place not to immediately jump down afterwards, but to learn to sit at rest with Christ to experience the fullness of these blessings. This is not just theoretical truth, but, as A.W. Pink puts it, an “experiential union.” This points out that we have to live in experiential union with Christ to inherit our blessings. That is what Paul will teach us: To learn to have our lives ‘hid with Christ in God,’ and sit together with Him in the heavenly places. 

So how do we experience it? It’s in union, it’s in trusting, it’s in faith in Jesus Christ that we find the sphere, the arena, of these spiritual blessings. That union is the very life of this epistle to the Ephesians. I showed how repeatedly “in Christ” appears. This is that glorious union by which it is possible for poor, empty, sinful creatures like us to be filled with His fullness, animated with His life, strengthened with His power, and to experience all these blessings.

So the only way to experience all these spiritual blessings is in union with, and abiding in, Christ. Didn’t He Himself clearly teach this? “I am the Vine, ye are the branches,” “Abide in Me,” “Without Me ye can do nothing,” and get nothing, and are nothing. 

Mcclaren says if we abide in Him by faith, by meditation, by love, by practical obedience, and the great effort of our lives is to keep close to Him, we experience the power of these blessings in our lives. If we disconnect from Him by wandering away in thought and desire, by allowing sin, earthly lusts to surge in and break the connection, we will be helpless without any power like switching off the electricity! “Abide in Me and I in you:” There is nothing else that will make us blessed, nothing else that will meet all the circumference of our necessities, nothing else that will quieten our hearts and sanctify our understanding. 

So we see God who blesses us; HUSH–4 traits of these wonderful blessings; and how to experience these blessings. 

Application – 2 

Unbelievers: Some people get angry because I say “unbelievers.” What I feel is He specifically talks to me, exposes my state, and makes me feel uncomfortable here. There is a day coming when many, innumerably so, will stand before Christ and say “Lord, Lord, did we not go to church, think ourselves believers, and do miracles?” Christ will say, “I never knew you; depart into hell.” You should really be happy because I can call some of you unbelievers. Our country is filled with churches where even though you are an unbeliever, they are all doing everything to make you think you are a believer. What a sad end is waiting for all of them! How foolish to go to such places, and live in deception. Such places will harden us more against the gospel, never allowing us to be truly saved. 

I know the tricks to make you feel good; if used, maybe we would have 100s in our church. But we want to be true to your soul. Like Paul’s disciples, we don’t want your blood on our heads. The only way to be saved is to be in a place where they tell you the truth about your soul. Every time the Word is preached, it will show whether we are saved or not, and it will create the Holy Spirit’s pressure to come to Christ. That will never happen in false churches. They will only harden us so as to never be saved. 

Can I tell a good test to show whether you are saved or not by this verse? How excited were you when I explained spiritual blessings? Did your heart fill with praise? Or suppose I tell you God has promised blessings; make you believe that He is going to remove all debts from today; He is going to bless you with prosperity; your account balance will cross a minimum of 10 lakhs; you will get an SMS saying, “10 lakhs credited,” before you leave this church: oh what excitement! 

Contrasting that, what if I tell you God has graced you with the most wonderful blessing in your life by divine warrant? That from this moment on, you’ll never struggle again with your besetting sins? Upon divine warrant, I have a promise that from this time on, you’ll never know what it is to feel jealousy, covetousness, anger, short temper, lust to other people; that you will experience the fruits of the Spirit – love, joy, peace, patience? If I tell you you’ll never have a day without experiencing close communion with Jesus Christ, behold his unclouded face…  What would your reaction be if I promised such spiritual blessings to you today upon divine warrant? 

Now, if I sat both before you and said, you can either have this or that, but you can’t have both, would you debate for a moment which one you’d take? Would there even be a moment’s hesitation? Would there? That shows your spiritual condition. No question, God’s children are like the Apostle Paul: I count all things material as loss; even my life as dear to myself. One thing I count dear. That I may know Him. Experience conscious fellowship with my God and with His Son. 

See, Paul, though he spoke about these blessings, he tells the object of these blessings. He doesn’t say these are for everyone. Notice the little word “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ who hath blessed us.”  The “us” of verse 3 are people described in verses 1 and 2: Paul, an apostle of Christ Jesus and saints at Ephesus and believers in Christ Jesus.  

Though I call you unbelievers, I have good news for you. You heard about all these blessings; I know for some of you it must be dead boring: “What blessings? No money, no gold, no house…” It is because all you can see is only this. There are blessings beyond that. You can see them all only when you believe and are united to Christ. And the only way to get any of those blessings is to be in Him. In Him you have all these blessings; Out of Him, you have none of them. You may have temporal blessings. He sends His rain upon the just and the unjust. But you don’t have one distinct spiritual blessing unless you’re in Him. For God has constituted the Lord Jesus the exclusive yet infinite reservoir of all spiritual blessings. Jesus Christ is the great fountainhead of all blessings. He is life. Severed from Him, we live in a living death. He is wisdom. Severed from Him, we stumble in our ignorance. He is light. Severed from Him, we grope in darkness. Believe in Him and turn from your sins, so God can open your eyes to see there is life beyond eating, drinking, working, and having a family. 

For believers: I think the main application again is praise: “Blessed be God.” 

Paul’s desire is that this adoration might overflow to his readers, so that they will be stimulated to respond as he does and give glory to God for all of His gracious blessings to them: with an outburst of praise. This has to become contagious; to add coal or other solid fuel to stoke our praise and our adoration for God. Not only should it make us bless God, but also re-orient our life to God.

We will continue to read the list of blessings; but every time we read them, it should bring us back to this top mount of blessing God. I pray it has that effect upon us that we shall bless Him as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. 

It’s almost as if Paul the announcer says, “Let the praise begin.” And he means it to be contagious. Is the blessing of God in your heart and lips this morning? Could you say it with Paul after hearing, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ”? Could you say, “Yes Paul, blessed be God, blessed be God, blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ”? He’s worthy of praise. If the Pentecostals, with silly superficial Old Testament blessings of worldly healing which most times are false, are so excited, how much more should we be excited with true blessings! 

Paul is calling us to praise God. C.S. Lewis says,

All enjoyment spontaneously overflows into praise. Also, the world rings with praise. Lovers praising their lovers, readers their favorite writers/poet, tourists praising scenic places; travel experts; players praising their favorite game, fans praising their celebrities; citizens; politicians; praise of the weather; food; dishes; vehicles; historical persons; children; flowers; mountains. As men spontaneously praise whatever they value, so they spontaneously urge us to join them in praising it. Isn’t she lovely? Wasn’t it glorious? Don’t you think it was magnificent? Very nice food right!? 

So Paul, in telling everyone to praise God, is simply doing what all men do when they speak about something they care about.

We delight to praise what we enjoy because the praise not merely expresses but completes the enjoyment. It is its appointed consummation. Do you enjoy the true and living God? Because if you do, you will praise Him. If you are not a worshiper of God, you are not a Christian. Jesus tells us in John 4, the Father is seeking such worshipers. 

We need to learn this Trinitarian praise: As Paul thought of all the blessings in Christ, he said, “Blessed be the God and Father,” including the Holy Spirit in “spiritual blessing.” True praise should be suffused with Trinitarian concepts. Today it is all shattered; one group there is nebulous and unclear in their talk about God; God Jehovah without Jesus Christ. Another side is all “Jesus, Jesus;” No “blessed be the God [of Jesus Christ]” Another group is full of superficial emotions–all “Holy Spirit, Holy Spirit,” without God or Jesus Christ. True biblical worship will bring all three persons in their worship.

How this one verse shatters false religions: Pentecostals: If every spiritual blessing has already been given to us by God, then why seek a second blessing?! Why are you torturing yourself with 21 days fasting, waiting, still seeking a second blessing? The second, third, 1000th blessing is already blessed. Roman Catholics, CSI, and other works-based religions: If God blesses us with all these blessings based on Christ, why are you running on works to gain favour of God? “If I’m not good enough. I should do more works and God will bless me.” No He blesses you only through Jesus Christ. All blessings come only by Him. For believers, God has already given it to you. Our problem is one of ignorance. Our problem is weak faith; little faith. We have to climb in faith and sit with Christ, and abide in Him to experience these blessings.

Blessed be God -Eph 1:3   

Eph 1:3: “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ…” 

Martyn Lloyd Jones said, ‘In 35 years of pastoral experience, Christians who are most miserable, sad, and struggling in their lives are those always thinking about themselves, their situation, and their feelings; what they will get.’ Much of the trouble in Christian life comes from this cursed subjective self-obsession–an egocentric perspective: always wondering what I will get, how I feel, and what I am going through. It is all about ‘me.’ The secret to being happy and always being blessed is to forget yourself and look to God. We will never be truly happy until we learn to take our eyes off ourselves and fix our gaze on God. 

By design, God created man to find happiness in His glory. A children’s catechism based on the Westminster Shorter Catechism answers ‘Why did God create you?’ with, ‘To glorify and enjoy Him forever.’ Our forefathers sought to teach this from childhood, but many of us, even in old age, fail to learn it, and thus we live sad and miserable lives. God created us to live joyfully with a Godward focus, but sin turned us selfward; that is why we are so self-preoccupied, and this is the reason for much of our sadness this morning. Our great need is to lift our eyes intently and look at God, to see His wonder and what He has done for us, so we can forget ourselves and rejoice in Him. That is what we see Paul doing here in verse 3. God’s truth reorients us properly; it takes our eyes off ourselves, our situations, and our plans and focuses them on Him. The result is unspeakable joy and blessing.

So, as we begin this letter, if God has to open our eyes, we should rid ourselves of our cursed subjective self-obsession: “I have so many problems,” or “What will I get today?” Stop! Recognize that this wrong focus and disorientation cause most problems in our lives; we prioritize the wrong things.

Start where Paul does. If we grasp it and learn to pray with him, Paul’s prayer is life-reorienting. It can transform the way we pray and the way we view life. This prayer reminds us of the most important thing, the top priority of our lives and the purpose of our creation. We desperately need to be reminded. We, by default, forget every hour, which is why we are so miserable. 

What are the three most important things? [1] Who is most important in life? [2] What is most important in life? [3] What brings the greatest happiness in life?

Who is most important in life? God. The first principle of theology is that there is a God in heaven, and I am not Him. Amid our difficulties and disappointments in life, we forget Him; we fix our eyes on problems, and it seems most important in life to resolve those problems. “How can I solve this?” That is the wrong question. We need to ask, “There is a God in heaven who has allowed this; what is He teaching me in this situation? I am not important; God is the most important being in my life. This prayer will bring us back to that truth.

The second way it can reorient us: What is most important in life? Remind yourself that the chief end of your life is not primarily your happiness but to glorify God. Oh, how we forget that and create our own misery! “There is something greater in every experience of my life that I need to remember, and that is God’s glory.” In my suffering, what is most important? Should I stop everything I’m doing immediately? Say, “God, even if I have to die, let me die. Please take my life; let me evaporate; disappear; why should I suffer so much?” No, that is wrong; the main motive should be that my suffering culminates in the glory of God. Through this, I should know and enjoy my God as I have never enjoyed Him before. My experience should lead to God’s glory. Oh, how a trivial set of personal problems completely blinds us to the great chief end, the big picture! This prayer will reorient and teach us that the most important aspect in every circumstance is God’s glory, from beginning to end, for better or worse, for richer or poorer, in health and sickness, in plenty and want. God’s glory is the most essential thing in the world, and this prayer refocuses us on that.

Not only ‘who is important’ and ‘what is important,’ but thirdly, ‘what brings the greatest happiness in life.’ The god of this world blinds and deceives us constantly by suggesting that our enjoyment lies in worldly blessings such as wealth and health. He makes us chase the wind and vanity throughout life. In this prayer, Paul shows us that the true happiness, satisfaction, and fullness we seek are not found in worldly things but come from enjoying God and His eternal spiritual blessings of grace. He shows what is important, God’s glory, and what will bring joy to us created in God’s image. Our chief end is to glorify God and enjoy Him forever. Apart from Him, there is no experience of the fullness of delight. This prayer reminds you of the blessings God has lavished upon you that you often forget. Do you understand how this prayer will reorient us to realize who is important, what is important, and what will bring the greatest joy?

Imagine Paul sitting in jail amid a terrible situation, and think of these people living in Ephesus–immersed in idolatry, uncleanness, and the sexual perversion of Diana worship, not to mention the practice of black magic and fortune telling. Imagine living amid all this with all the persecution, discouragement, and temptations. How does Paul uplift these Christians? He never discusses Diana’s worship, attacks idolatry, or attempts to be relevant. Instead, he elevates their minds and souls and reveals the living God’s beauty, glory, and excellence and what the Lord has done for sinners like us through Jesus Christ.

I previously illustrated something in Philippians; let me convey it differently: Picture a flight of 500 passengers traveling for 12 hours from Africa. The baggage department discovered they had 10 deadly African snakes in a box that had escaped and slithered loose somewhere on the plane. Imagine the panic that the announcement would cause. The pilot wisely announced they were experiencing some difficulty with the oxygen supply, so he asked the passengers to wear their oxygen masks. Then he steeply ascended the plane and continued rising above the typical cruising altitude, breaking through the ceiling of the oxygen zone, up and up. As they climbed, the slithering snakes slowly suffocated and eventually died.

That is what Paul is doing here. You are worried about that snake–that problem–in your life rather than being filled with praise and joy at this moment. So, just at take-off, our pilot, Paul, kicks the flight into top gear. The flight stands upright, and we feel giddy just reading the first verse. He soars higher and higher to the highest heaven, then takes a left into past eternity and from there to the right of future eternity. As we ascend with him in this praise, our inner man strengthens. Our worries and temptations diminish; they suffocate and even die. So, ladies and gentlemen, fasten your seatbelts for an unforgettable ride of a lifetime.

The boarding pass for this flight is a spirit of prayer; you can enter this flight only in the spirit of prayer. I was teaching in men’s fellowship: knowing God is not just about listening to a sermon and leaving; it requires using that sermon and turning it into the subject of our meditation and prayer–to draw energy from it for prayer and to live a life of obedience. Do you know this whole chapter is a prayer? Verses 3 to 14 form a prayer of praise, while verses 15 to 23 comprise a petition. 

We can enter this flight only by making these verses our daily prayer. Whatever we learn, we turn into our meditation and personal prayer to God so we can climb with Paul. Verses 3-14 express praise. While we may not see it in English or Tamil, the original Greek text in verses 3-14 forms the longest sentence in the New Testament, comprising 202 words. No translation into English or any other language can maintain such a structure, necessitating the division into smaller sentences. The man keeps going on and on with one sentence: “We’ve been blessed with every spiritual blessing…” …and then he begins to list the blessings, adding phrase upon phrase and doctrine upon doctrine, saying, “…and have you thought of this… and also this one…” 

Here is an accumulation of relative clauses and phrases that the sharpest Greek scholars debate, scratching their heads. The sentence lacks a definite form or structure; no other letter or book in either the New or Old Testament contains anything similar. It represents a continuous stream of consciousness–heightened, intellectual, and informed worship. Such heightened praise is the great antidote to any prevailing discouraging climate, world-driven self-pity, or a self-focused, dead prayer life and worship. 

Imagine the state of the church as the Ephesians gathered that day. Some came with persecution, maybe because they stopped going to the temple; others were wives whose husbands left them or husbands who found themselves abandoned; some were children chased from their houses; some maybe who lost their jobs or closed idol shops, who experienced business loss and did not know what they are going to live on; some with sickness; some missing attractions of temple worship – faith struggles. Then the Ephesian church Elder got up and read the letter in Greek… Eph 1:3, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ,” and continued on and on… 

I imagine there was a pin-drop silence! They felt as though they were ascending higher and higher, and the hairs on the back of their necks stood on end. Their heart rates quickened, and some probably even forgot to breathe. They leaned forward, straining to hear every word. On and on [the letter] went, revealing the glories of what the grace of God had accomplished for them. As the Ephesian believers listened to what God had done for them (chapters 1-3), their eyes were opened; they resembled that man who had found infinite treasure. They had left their homes believing they were beggars and now realized how rich they truly were, and they were blown away to the highest heights… It was a transforming and unforgettable experience in their life. The result was that their relationships between husbands and wives changed, their children changed and became obedient, and their work lives changed. It is such doxology that overcomes the world. Paul’s praise was a tremendous eruption of a volcano. The volcanic lava flowed and filled the hearts of the Ephesians. They were lost in wonder and praise, and the lava overflowed into the city of Ephesus. With this vision of God’s infinite riches of grace, they looked at the Temple of Artemis and proclaimed, “Hear ye, men of the city of Ephesus. Behold our glorious God and the great things He has done for His people. How pitiable, useless, and blind we are to leave this God and worship hideous Diana!” 

If God must open our eyes so that we can see the treasure, we need to begin where Paul starts in Eph 1:3: “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ.” This is a tremendously rich verse. Every word is filled with meaning. I see seven things in this verse:

  1. A call to bless God 
  2. A call to bless God as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ
  3. This is God’s blessing 
  4. The nature of blessing
  5. The place of blessing
  6. The source of blessing. 
  7. The recipients of the blessing

We will cover the first two today and continue next week—well, two weeks for one verse. That is a good start! 

Ephesus is a treasure house; we don’t find gold unless we dig deep, and digging takes time and patience. We must take the time to gain Paul’s perspective. 

First: A Call to Bless God 

We understand the call to worship God, but what does it mean to ‘bless God?’ Can we truly bless God? In English, we generally use the word ‘bless’ to express good wishes for someone on their birthday or anniversary. The term is used only eight times in reference to God in a unique way. For example, Romans 1:25 states, “worshipped and served the creature rather than the Creator, who is blessed forever. Amen.” Blessedness is attributed to God the Creator and Him alone.

When God blesses us, we benefit from it. However, when we bless God, we don’t give him anything to benefit from. God is blessed forever; we cannot add anything to his blessed state. So, how do we bless God?

Blessing God differs from offering thanksgiving. When we thank God, our focus is on expressing gratitude for what He has done for us, emphasizing our appreciation for specific blessings. In blessing God, our focus is not on what God has given, though it may be big, but our focus is going beyond His gifts to acknowledge God’s inherent goodness and His worthiness of praise as the giver. The emphasis in blessing is on God’s character, love, and grace, which we recognize as the source of all blessings. Thanksgiving centers on gifts, while blessing centers on the giver.

For example, saying “Thank you, God, for this wonderful gift” expresses thanksgiving. In contrast, saying, “What an amazingly good and gracious God You must be to give such gifts,” reflects an expression of blessing. Do you see the difference? This is the correct orientation we desperately need to develop. 

When Paul reflects on who God is and what he has done, he goes beyond simply thanking God for His works; he embraces the realization of who God is in Himself and how blessed he is. This is the living God, who alone possesses immortality, dwelling in the light which no man can approach unto; who is immutable, immense, eternal, incomprehensible, almighty, in every way most holy, most wise, most free, most absolute; working all things according to the counsel of his own immutable and most righteous will for his own glory; most loving, gracious, merciful, long-suffering, abundant in goodness and truth, forgiving iniquity, transgression, and sin; the rewarder of them that diligently seek him, and withal most just and terrible in his judgments, hating all sin, and who will by no means clear the guilty [1689 LBCF, Chapter 2].

Paul views God as eternally blessed. In blessing, he is not adding to God but declaring that God deserves acknowledgment, praise, and celebration for His infinite excellencies. A call to bless God signifies nothing, yet we need to move beyond mere head knowledge of God’s attributes—simply knowing about Him—and, through daily meditation and prayer, deeply acknowledge, praise, and celebrate His blessed state. 

This is a celebration of God’s blessed state. He is forever blessed with all His perfections and attributes. God embodies all beauty. When we bless God, we genuinely acknowledge and realize what He is in and of Himself. By declaring these truths, we recognize Him, praise Him, celebrate Him, and enjoy Him. It celebrates the excellence of God’s person and His deeds.

While all creatures can thank God, Psalm 145:10 indicates that blessing God is a unique activity belonging to the saints of God. Only the saints can bless Him.“All thy works shall give thanks unto thee, O LORD; and thy saints shall bless thee.” This is a privilege for those who are regenerated by the Holy Spirit, whose eyes are opened to see God’s glory, who can rise to this angelic state above self and bless God. All creatures will one day confess the perfections that reside in God; every knee will bow and confess. But now, Paul urges us, His saved people, to bless Him voluntarily and joyfully.

Blessing God is the highest expression of veneration and worship a creature can render to the Creator. Goodwin describes blessing God as wishing well and speaking well of Him out of goodwill and a recognition of His goodness toward us. This is known as ‘eulogy’ or ‘doxology.’

This one word, ‘bless,’ encompasses deep, overwhelming feelings of adoration, praise, and thoughts that cannot be articulated. When a soul is filled with praise, it wishes well for God, speaks well of God, and is filled with a sense of God’s goodness. This transcends thanksgiving and praise. Caught up in the awareness of how great and glorious God is, the believer earnestly desires the good and glory of God with every fiber of her being. A rumbling fire in her heart erupts like a volcano, expressing itself with the words, “Blessed be God.” Consider David’s Psalm 103, where he urges his soul to reflect on what God has done for him: He forgives all your sins, heals all your diseases, redeems your life from the pit, crowns you with love and compassion, and satisfies your desires with good things. Yes, these are tremendous blessings, but his focus is not on the blessings themselves but on their giver. He cannot contain himself, proclaiming, “BLESS the LORD, O my soul.” Here, Paul, like a New Testament Psalmist, reflects on who God is and how infinitely He has blessed us, listing His blessings in this chapter, one after another, uninterrupted until verse 14. He bursts forth in a declaration of the infinite praiseworthiness of God. You cannot fully convey this experience in preaching; it must be lived. As redeemed people, this should be a daily experience, but our fallen nature has made it rare or even nonexistent.

This is where our re-orientation begins. Who is the most important thing in our lives? What is the most attractive thing in our lives? What is the greatest good? Philosophers use the term ‘sumum bonum’ to say that which controls man’s thoughts and feelings is what he will bless. Everyone sitting here has an idea of what this greatest good is for you. Some of you may be sitting here saying, “Blessed be money,” “Blessed be my lust,” “Blessed be my stomach,” “Blessed be my fashion, my food,” “Blessed be my job,” “my family,” “my house,” “my dream,” “my ambition.” Do you realize that as God’s creatures, none of these is truly important? You are chasing the wind and will never be happy. The most important thing for you is your Creator.

In a way, each human on earth is either blessing God–giving Him glory because He is sovereign, wise, and good in all He does–or cursing Him. If we do not bless Him because we think we are wiser than He is or because we are self-focused and upset about our situation, and we say, “He has no wisdom to keep me like this or to allow such financial, family, or health problems in my life,” we are essentially cursing Him.

Paul says He is blessed. It radically reorients our lives when we realize and declare that God is blessed. The highest blessedness resides in Him. My deepest and purest satisfaction is found in Him. He is the very personification of true delight. Apart from Him, true blessedness cannot be found or experienced anywhere. God is who is truly blessed, and therefore, if you want to be happy and blessed, your life orientation must be focused on God and preoccupied with Him. Seek happiness in Him.

You cannot bless like this unless you know God. I was teaching in the men’s meeting that knowing God is not merely reading some attribute of God or hearing a sermon but rather self-talking and teaching that attribute to yourself in meditation until you feel the energy to praise, thank, worship, and bless Him. We should ask in all our life situations, “In this difficult situation in life, I look to God from whom blessing comes. How can I show that God is blessed in this situation?” In every part of life, we should seek to bless God. Why? Because God is blessed. Paul is calling us to a doxological life here. The Christian life is doxological. It is directed towards God. It is preoccupied with God. It is God-intoxicated. This is why this prayer is so radically life-reorienting. 

Is this your attitude? Do you love and truly know God? Do you bless God? Do you long with all that you are in your life to bless God from within; and with your lips? That’s what Paul is calling us to do in this passage.

Second:
We saw what it means to bless God. Next, we have A Call to bless God as the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. 

From what distinct perspective does the Apostle Paul bless God? Paul, as a Jew, could have blessed God as the God of the Old Testament: “Praised be the God of Israel, the only true God.” But what is the perspective that leads him to bless God in the way he does now? Ephesians 1:3 states, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.”

Paul is not simply stringing words together; every word is filled with meaning. This is one of the most glorious descriptions of the Trinity you will find. In fact, this prayer illustrates how the doctrine of the Trinity is practical for your daily life. You do not bless God properly unless you bless Him as Paul does here, as “the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.”

There are two distinct areas of thought: First, there is a tremendous statement about God’s relationship to Christ. Second, there is a phrase that describes our relationship to Jesus Christ. When we deeply understand and experience that relationship, we will bless God. It is only by acknowledging and understanding God’s relationship with Christ and our relationship with Him that we can truly bless God.

First, let us examine God’s relationship with Christ: Ephesians 1:3 states, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” The Father and the Son are two different persons, but they are one in essence and equal in power and glory. This is how God has always been. He never became triune; He simply is triune. This verse reveals two ways that God is related to Jesus Christ: [1] God is the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, and [2] God is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. We know that God is the Father of Jesus Christ; how did God become the God of Jesus Christ? Let me use two key concepts to explain this: [The Son is] coexistent with the Father in His being and actions, yet He is subordinate in the functions of redemption. Let us explore these two relationships.

First, regarding the God of our Lord Jesus Christ. Christ is co-equal with God, but in the work of redemption, when Christ took on human nature as the mediator–the Man Christ Jesus–He submitted Himself to His Father as God. It was this God who planned redemption, appointed Christ to His office, guided Him in the fulfillment of that office, and sustained and strengthened Him in performing all the duties of that office. Christ was born, grew, lived, died, rose, and ascended, and this God empowered Him to accomplish all of that for our salvation. As a Man, God was the object of Christ’s prayers, the focus of His faith, and He leaned on the Father as God.  That is one side of Christ’s relationship with God. His Father became God because of His humiliation in the work of redemption. The scriptures illustrate this in many places.

There will be two women or two men, nicely dressed, very loving, gentle, and sweet, who will come to your house and say, “We want to teach deep truths about the Bible. Do you know the Bible clearly teaches that Jesus is not God?” They will cite a verse, for example, John 17:3, which says, “And this is eternal life, that they may know You, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom You have sent.” They argue that there is only one true God, and thus Jesus is not God. Then they may also reference the cry from Calvary, Matthew 27:46, which states, “My God, My God, why have You forsaken Me?” They might say, “Look, if Jesus was God, to whom was he praying when he lifted his eyes to heaven? Was He talking to Himself?” These people are known as Jehovah’s Witnesses. 

How do you answer them? You cannot call them “brother,” instead, say, “Hello, sir/ma’am, you have been misled by false teachings. Please learn to read your Bible properly. Because your problem is you don’t understand that in the work of redemption, the Son of God, who was equal to God and was God, took on human nature as the Mediator, appointed to bear the sins of men in His own body on the cross. As Jesus, the Man, He entered into a new relationship of subservience to God the Father. He assumed a role similar to that of a servant who always sought to please his Master. Thus, within that office, as the appointed Redeemer and Mediator, the Father was the God of our Lord Jesus Christ. He prays to Him. He depends upon Him. He seeks direction from Him and gives praise to Him. He draws all His strength and sustenance from Him. This is why He prays. He had a relationship with His Father as God. So, don’t pick verses out of context. Read your Bible properly, and feel free to contact 9743246003, which is my Pastor’s number. He will help you read the Bible correctly.” Remember that response, and don’t sweat.

Secondly, Paul contemplates God not only as the God of our Lord Jesus Christ but also as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. Here, he acknowledges Christ as the Son of God, or God the Son; in that sense, God was His Father. There was this uniqueness of the relationship.  Now, we have a problem because, in our modern minds, the connotation of ‘Father’ is primarily associated with a relationship linked to the derivation of life. For us, asking, “Who is your Father?” equates to asking, “From whom do you derive your physical life?” However, this is not so in the Hebrew culture. There, it was more of a concept of identity, of the essence of life. The relationship implied equality in all aspects. In the Gospel of John, we see that the Jews sought to kill Jesus not because He was trivially claiming to be a child of God but because He was making Himself equal with God, claiming equality of essence, possessing the very life of the Godhead. Therefore, as the apostle Paul blesses God, he exclaims, “God, I bless You with exuberant praise because You are the God and the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” 

Practically, do you see why you can bless God only when He is revealed to us as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ? For us, who seldom worship this God (since we typically only pray to Jesus), it is as if it suddenly dawns on us that we thought of ourselves as orphans without a Father, now realize that there He is, who not only now formed us in our mothers’ wombs and sustained us from birth, giving us life, breath, and all things, but He also appointed Christ as our redeemer in eternity past, sent Him into this world when the fullness of time had come, planned all that Christ spoke and did, and granted Him the power and strength to express His infinite love for us. All those words Jesus told us, that “My Father loves you, My Father sent Me,” now make perfect sense. Everything Christ did was in obedience to His Father, and all that He said was equally in obedience. He declared, “My words are not mine, but that of the Father who sent Me.” Doesn’t this reveal an ocean of the Father’s love for us? When you and I grasp that this God who is the Father of the Lord Jesus, who loved Him eternally as His greatest treasure, sent Him to die a cursed death on the cross for us… behold, God loved you and me in this world so profoundly that He gave His only begotten Son…

Secondly, God is rightly blessed only when the scriptural truths about the person and work of Jesus Christ are known, believed, and embraced. If God is the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, then everything Christ said and did is true and valid. For God is not the God of a liar or an imposter; He is the God of Jesus Christ, who said, “I am the way, the truth, and the life. No one comes to the Father except through Me.” 

Therefore, if God is His Father, all His claims must be acknowledged as coming from the very God. Unless we recognize His glorious Godhead and fall prostrate at His feet like Peter, saying, “Thou art the Christ, the Son of God,” unless we identify with Thomas, exclaiming, “My Lord and my God,” we never truly bless God as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.

Next, consider what this reveals about our relationship with Christ. It is only in this context that we can truly bless him. Notice he does not say, “Blessed be the God and Father of Jesus,” or simply, “Blessed be the God and Father of Jesus Christ,” nor even, “Blessed be the God and Father of the Lord Jesus Christ.” What does he say? “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” This little word, ‘our,’ signifies our relationship to this Trinitarian God. Look at the titles. They encompass the entirety of the work of our Lord Jesus Christ. The word ‘Lord’ connects the idea of someone with complete authority and ownership – a conqueror who is triumphant and sovereign over all. He is the ruler of the universe. The name ‘Jesus’ reflects His humanity, the name given to Him as Savior, Jehovah, our salvation, who will save His people from their sins. ‘Christ’ refers to the anointed and promised Messiah–the Anointed final Priest, King, and Prophet. Paul and other believers have comprehended who Jesus Christ is and recognized His perfect finished work for His people, thereby accepting and submitting to His Lordship. They joyfully acknowledge Him as Lord, Master, Jesus the Savior, the anointed Priest, King, and Prophet. Our hopes for acceptance and mercy with God are intertwined with what He is and has accomplished. So Paul contemplates this God. “Blessed be God.” Which God? The God who is the God of the Lord Jesus Christ, who guided Him in all that He said and did in the work of redemption for us; the Father of the Lord Jesus Christ, the second person in the Godhead. This second person is our Lord Jesus Christ. Wow, how daring that the Author mentions our names alongside the Triune, Holy, blessed God. Lord Jesus Christ, with His sovereign authority, humanity, and anointed ministry as Priest, King, and Prophet (PKP), is our possession through our union with Him. In the glorious plan of God the Father, He has made us related to the Triune God through the Lord Jesus Christ. He has included our names in His family within this relationship. When we reflect on the status God has lifted us to–the heights of His grace—we realize how good He must be; we forget about ourselves and, immersed in God’s grace, love, and mercy, cannot help but bless Him. However, such a blessing can only occur within the context of such a relationship with Christ and an understanding of His relationship with the God who was and is the source of all redemptive blessings through Him. We do not bless the true God without a sense of that relationship. Now, put all this together and hear Paul saying in Ephesians 1:3, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ.”

Application 

Do you see that true blessings and happiness come from blessing the blessed God? Only when you believe who Jesus is and what He has done will you be in the circle within which He can lift you and enable you to bless God. Then He becomes your Lord Jesus Christ, God becomes the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, and you become related to that family. Unless, by grace, the Spirit of God has brought you broken to Christ’s feet, looking unto Him in faith–a true faith that involves submission—you cannot bless God. God cannot reveal any special blessings that Paul will speak about next. He may bless you with common blessings such as food, clothes, sun, and rain, but these are merely animal blessings. All this He gives you so you seek Him and come to know Him. Unless you truly repent and believe in Jesus Christ—having a salvation experience—you can come to church and give lip service to everything bound up in the expression, “the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ,” but you can never bless God like Paul. 

So I call upon you who sit here this morning, strangers to grace: repent and submit to the Lordship of Christ. He is the Governor of this universe; His government reigns. Don’t think you can despise His saving work, defy His government, and go on. He sits now as a Prince and a Priest upon the throne, dispensing mercy. That very throne of grace will soon become the throne of judgment. Every refusal of His mercy will be judged and punished, for all judgment has been committed to Him. The very words He spoke will judge you one day.  

Believers, do you realize how disoriented our lives are? Our problems arise from not knowing the fountain of blessings. We don’t understand who is most important, what is most important, and what brings the greatest happiness. I hope this prayer makes us realize that the most important person in our lives is God, that our highest priority and motive in life is God’s glory, and that we are made to bless this God. Only then will we experience the greatest joy of enjoying this God and His redemptive blessing.  

Martyn Lloyd-Jones states (ibid., p. 49), “There is no more true test of our Christian profession than to discover how prominent this note of praise and thanksgiving is in our life.” To what extent do praise, adoration, thankfulness, and joy in God rise to the surface in your daily life? I’m not talking about glibly going around saying, “Praise the Lord!” all the time but heartfelt joy and satisfaction in Christ flooding your soul. It should not be a rare experience!

If blessing God is not as frequent as it should be, something is wrong. Remember, when we do not bless God, we are, in a way, cursing Him. If you are not blessing God regularly as a believer, you should soon fix it by meditating on this chapter.  

Realize what He has done through Jesus Christ: this God, who is the God of our Lord Jesus Christ. Think of the humiliation of Christ, who was equal to God: He was God, but He took a humble position, so God has become His God. Your sin and my sin created this need. Scripture would never record that God was the God of Christ if not for His love for us. It shows the infinite love of the Father and the Son poured forth to save us from our depravity and sin. The Son humbled and emptied Himself by giving up the divine prerogatives of the Godhead, taking on human nature, taking on the form of a slave, and even dying on the cross. He joined Himself to us in our weakness, in our sin, in our misery, and God imputed all our sins to Him, made Him ‘sin’ for our redemption, and cursed Him to bless us. It was this God who did that. O, how we should remember this truth and bless Him as the God of our Lord Jesus Christ!

O, how it should fill our hearts with wonder that He is the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! To think of that mystery of the Godhead…how many millions are blind? It was a stumbling block to the people who walked close enough to touch Jesus in the flesh: all they saw was a carpenter’s son. If being physically close to the Son of God and seeing His miracles was not enough to open their spiritual eyes, and today, all people see is only the man, Jesus Christ, how blessed are we? If the Spirit opens our eyes to see Him as the eternal Son of God, the one who is the only begotten Son of the Father, the second person of the Trinity, and we acknowledge that God loved us so much to give His only Son to a cursed death, we will burst out, saying, “Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” 

This verse teaches us how imbalanced our prayers can be. Some of us pray, focusing solely on Jesus or merely speaking into thin air in the name of prayer. Have you looked the Father in the eye, this great being known as God and the Father of Jesus Christ, and blessed Him for who He is? Paul instructs us that the Christian life is Father-focused because the Christian life is Father-blessed. Our praise is focused not simply upon God generically but at our loving and sovereign heavenly Father–the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ–because He is the source of all our spiritual blessings.

Next, examine your relationship with the Lord Jesus Christ. Is He your Lord? Is your life under the rule of His word? Are you like so many walking the broad road to destruction? One day, He will say, “You call me Lord, Lord, and do not do what I say.” Remember, if you are not blessing God, you are cursing Him. 

We have seen the call to bless God as the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. We haven’t even thought about blessings, which we will see in verses 3-14. All those blessings should lead us back to the first phrase of verse 3 over and over again: “Blessed be this God.” We shouldn’t move on and forget about blessing God. Everything we come to understand with greater clarity through the ministry of the Spirit should expand our hearts and increase our desire to bless and magnify this great God. If we understand this as Paul did, we will overflow with doxology, richly praise, and dedicate ourselves to prayer. Only to bless and glorify God can we ask Him to open our eyes. He will respond not when we ask, “Open my eyes so I can be cheerful and happy,” which is, again, self-focused, but rather, “Open my eyes to see how much You have blessed me so I can bless You!” The Lord willing, we will focus on all the spiritual blessings in heavenly places in Christ on the next Lord’s Day. 

Lift up your eyes! Behold your ascended Lord!   

Behold your ascended Lord!

Worship your ascended Lord! 

Proclaim your ascended Lord!


Ascension means 5 things:

  1. Jesus is my Sovereign King
  2. Jesus is my Triumphant King
  3. Jesus is my perfect righteousness
  4. Jesus is my blesser
  5. Jesus is my forerunner

We know to an extent the truth of our Lord’s life, death, and resurrection. Most think this is the end of our redemption story. No, in fact, this is the beginning of the redemption-applied story! The redemption Christ accomplished through His life, death, and resurrection, he started applying after his resurrection with 5 subsequent saving acts, which we can call: Ascension, Session, Holy Spirit Mission, Intercession, and Full Redemption at his second coming. The Bible connects all these saving acts to his death and resurrection as objects of our faith. If we don’t grasp them, our experience of full salvation will be weak. 

So, this will be a short series of Christ’s Saving Acts of Redemption applied. We will start with Ascension. This is a very precious truth. We know according to Acts 1:9 Christ ascended to heaven in the sight of his disciples, and a cloud received Him into heaven. This is a prophesied, historical, and divinely confirmed event. 

Ascension means five precious things to every believer: 

1 – Jesus is my Sovereign King. Lord Jesus Christ is now the exalted and enthroned sovereign king of the universe. Phil 2:9 says, “Therefore, God also has highly exalted Him and given Him the name which is above every name.” Though ascension is a step towards the exaltation and enthronement of Christ, ascension is only the visible confirmation that Jesus is exalted above all authority and power and enthroned above every name. From a state of humiliation with a human body, with all the limitations of being here or there, his ascension took him to a place of the highest authority, unbounded sovereign rule, unlimited power, and unlimited presence. A shekinah presence of cloud receiving him shows he is raised to the glory of the Godhead, and reigns supreme now. Ascension visibly proves his words that all authority in heaven and earth is given to him (Mat 28:18). 

Think of what impact this would have had on the apostles as they went out to preach the gospel to all the world. They would have every reason to doubt this truth in their lifetimes. Religious and civil authorities would rise against them; they would experience persecution. It may make them wonder if their Lord is truly reigning over this world after all. But despite whatever happened in the world, this vision of ascension always gave them faith and strength that their Lord was sovereignly ruling everything in this world, and they saw his ascension with their own eyes step by step, as though our King ascended the dais to be exalted, and enthroned as sovereign king of the universe. That is what made them more than conquerors of the world by faith.

You may be looking at the increasing crime in society, the political tensions, wars, nation against nation, and say, boy, it doesn’t look like Jesus is reigning. God says, “Lift up your eyes and behold your ascended Lord!” Did not this same Lord prophesy about these things before his second coming in Mat 24? When we struggle in our own lives, and perhaps in our families, and wonder whether Jesus is truly reigning, let us lift up our eyes and behold our ascended Lord! That will strengthen our faith and make us realize [that despite] what happens here below, I know He is reigning and ordering all circumstances surrounding me and is working all things for my ultimate good as he promised.

2 – Jesus is my Triumphant King. Ascension proves Jesus has triumphantly overcome all his enemies. In Eph 4:8, talking about ascension, Paul says, “Therefore He says: “When He ascended on high, He led captivity captive…””

The phrase ‘led captivity captive’ illustrates a picture of a Roman commander’s victory parade when he wins a battle: After the war, there was a triumphant public parade show of victory, as the commander marched into Rome with a grand red-carpet welcome, amid the whole city’s victory shouts, praises, and flowers. As he marches in, there is a display of all their spoils won in the war. One of the highlights of this spectacle is that of leading all enemy kings, princes, and nobles who were captured alive, taken captive, and tied to the Roman chariots, dragging them as slaves for Rome’s service here on. 

Christ made war with all our enemies–the world, sin, Satan, death, and hell–on the cross. You know what? He was triumphantly victorious in that spiritual war. Col 2:15 says, “Having disarmed principalities and powers, He made a public spectacle of them, triumphing over them in [the cross].” He vanquished and triumphed over all our enemies. 

So when Paul says in Eph 4:8 that when Christ ascended, ‘He led captivity captive,’ he means ascension was like that triumphant Roman public parade. As He ascended, he made all his enemies–the world, sin, Satan, death, and hell–his captured slaves, and he will use them to accomplish the purposes of God’s kingdom. How important it is to have this object of faith when we think the devil is out of control, the world is troubling us, and sin is making us feel our battle of faith is vain! God says, “Lift up your eyes and behold your ascended Lord!” Say to your heart, “He completely triumphed on my behalf. The enemies are his slave dogs accomplishing Christ’s will now. They are being used by Him as kingdom slaves to increase our faith and patience, and to sanctify us. What can separate us from [loving] Christ, for we are more than conquerors in Him!”

3- Jesus is my perfect righteousness. Faith in ascension assures believers of perfect righteousness. In John 16:8-10, Jesus says about the Holy Spirit, “[And] when He has come, He will convict the world of sin, and of righteousness, and of judgment: of sin, because they do not believe in Me; of righteousness, because I go to My Father, and you see Me no more.” I never understood verses until now. 

What he says is when the Holy Spirit comes, He will convince believers that they have perfect righteousness in Christ, by what, by his ascension, “I go to my Father”. Why? Because Christ was the sinner’s representative accomplishing full salvation. If Christ had not fulfilled all righteousness for us, he could not have ascended to heaven. So his ascension to heaven proclaims openly and loudly — That he has completely finished the work he had to do for us here, atoned all our sins, and earned perfect righteousness for us, and God was well pleased with all he did. 

When you and I by the weakness of our faith fall into sins, the devil, and sometimes even our own conscience, condemns us that we cannot go to God, and we lose the assurance of our acceptance with God; all we see is our sin, not our Saviour, and we think God is angry with us. We wallow in guilt. How do we lift ourselves up from this guilt-gutter? How do we get mercy and helping grace, as Hebrews 4:16 says?

God says here is an object for your faith that will assure you of perfect righteousness: Lift your eyes and behold your ascended Lord. This is the greatest proof from heaven that the Father has accepted Christ’s active and passive obedience in our place. You come to God with confident faith even with your guilt, saying, ‘Yes, I have sinned, but I repent, and I come to my Father based on the work of my Lord Jesus Christ, who has accomplished perfect righteousness for me, and proved it by ascending to heaven. He has given me an eternal standing before God as a justified, adopted heir of God. I don’t have an angry judge in heaven, but a loving Father who is ever willing to forgive and give mercy, who will relieve [me of] my present guilt, and, through grace, help me overcome such sin in the future because my High Priest sits next to him ever interceding for me.’

4. Jesus is my blesser. Ascension assures us all the heavenly blessings we need till we reach heaven. Very beautifully did the Lord himself show this with his ascending posture. You know how he ascended – “And He led them out as far as Bethany, and He lifted up His hands and blessed them. Now it came to pass, while He blessed them, that He was parted from them and carried up into heaven.” (Luk 24:50-51)

So beautiful. The last visible posture the disciples saw of Jesus when he went to heaven was a posture of blessing. Aren’t you happy that the one who is so exalted, enthroned triumphant in the highest heaven, went up blessing us? Has His posture changed now? Never. He ever sits blessing us. We will see his session, the Holy Spirit’s mission, and Intercession with his great offices of Prophet, Priest, and King all resulting in us being ever blessed. That is why Paul could say in Ephesians that we are blessed with every spiritual blessing. 2 Pet 1:3 – “His divine power has given us everything required for life and godliness[, through the knowledge of Him] who called us by his own glory.” 

This is so sweet. He is not blessing us as a detached spirit being. The disciples didn’t see Jesus change into a spirit and his humanity vaporize when he went to glory. They saw a bodily man in Jesus rise higher and higher, and that body was taken into the cloud. He was exalted and enthroned with the body, with all experience of all human suffering. It is so vital for us to understand that a man is at the right hand of the heavenly Father right now for us. That should make ascension very beautiful and dear. He went as our representative in our nature and our body. This guarantees endless sympathetic grace and blessing for all our human weaknesses and circumstances. Whatever you are facing, remember this ascended Lord, for He knows; not only knows, but he cares; not only cares, but he deeply feels every groan and sigh of yours because of your union with him. Not only that, he can also help because he is a mighty Savior who can save us to the uttermost. We have a sympathetic God-man in heaven, in a blessing posture till the end of the world, ensuring we are always blessed. 

5- Jesus is my forerunner. Jesus ascended to heaven as a forerunner to all His people. Just as He is the first fruit in the resurrection, he is also the first fruit in the ascension. He told his disciples in John 14, “Let not your heart be troubled…In My Father’s house are many mansions; if it were not so, I would have told you. I go to prepare a place for you. And if I go and prepare a place for you, I will come again and receive you unto Myself; that where I am, there you may be also.” (v.2-3) 

Jesus has gone into heaven as a forerunner for us. Jesus entering heaven is a guarantee of all His people joining him there. He went up not as a single person, but as our federal head, and representative. He actually, virtually, mystically, and positionally carried up all believers with him into glory. That is why Eph 2:6 says [God] raised us up together and made us sit together in the heavenly places in Christ Jesus (meaning in our union with Christ). Because of our union with Christ, his ascension guarantees our heaven’s entrance. In this union, whatever God did on Christ’s person was done on our behalf, and it will inevitably be done to us. Was Christ crucified? So are we. Is Christ risen again? So, we have risen with him. Is Christ gone up into glory? So will we. Heaven is now opened and possessed by Jesus Christ for us, and at last, we shall ascend even as he ascended.

How beautifully he says I go to prepare a place for you; he has some work to do in heaven before we go there. He has done everything on earth to purchase perfect redemption for us, and now he goes to heaven to apply that to us by his ascension, session, the mission of the Holy Spirit, and intercession. 

It is as though the Lord Jesus is a host in his own house, and we are guests. We know how some of us make great preparations before a guest comes. We want to awe and surprise them in every way and make them feel so special. So eventually when the guest arrives, we say to them, “Come in please,” and, “Welcome; everything is ready for you”. In the same way, our Lord has gone to prepare a place for us–to prepare what no eye has seen, and no ear has heard. Nobody caught it better than John Bunyan, who described that the moment the believer closes his eyes here, he would ascend to heaven and find his Lord waiting with the gates open, and arms wide open; saying, “Come on in, for all things are now ready [for you]”. That is what ascension assures us. He went as our forerunner to heaven. 

So then, dear discouraged brother and sister, lift up your eyes and behold your ascended Lord. This will thrill your soul and like those first disciples, make you go home and worship and proclaim your ascended Lord with great joy always. Amen. 

*Author: Ps. Murali

*Edited by Rajath Bhat