Welcome to the Im4God.org
/ Songbook.ManuelAdam.com January 30th, 2008 Newsletter!
You can email Webservant Peter J. Louie by replying to this message.
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In this issue, we discuss the fear of the Lord. Sinfully, I fear
the wrong things. I forget God's goodness and His promises of
faithfulness to me. I fear failing a law school exam, what
people think of me, not having enough money, that I will not have my
physical needs met. Fear, fear, fear! In contrast,
the Scriptures call us to fear the Lord. This fear will
consume all our other idolatrous fears. The fear of the Lord
is the beginning of wisdom. It is a good thing. Fear the
Lord, all you saints, for those who fear him have no lack!
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Psalm 34:8-10
Oh, taste and see that the LORD is good!
Blessed is the man who takes refuge in him!
Oh, fear the LORD, you his saints,
for those who fear him have no lack!
The young lions suffer want and hunger;
but those who seek the LORD lack no good thing.
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Audio Sermons:

Staring Down Fear
by Mike Sharrett
(MP3, 39 minutes). Based on
II Kings 6:8-23
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Does Fear Belong in the Christian's Life
by John Piper
It is often said that fear of God has no place in
the Christian’s life for “There is no fear in love, but perfect love
casts out fear. For fear has to do with punishment, and he who fears
(for himself) is not perfected in love” (1 John 4:18).
But there are many commandments to fear in the New
Testament; for example, Romans 11:20, “They [the Jews] were broken
off because of their unbelief, but you stand fast only through
faith. So do not become proud but fear.” Similarly,
Hebrews 3:12 warns against unbelief (although the word “fear” is not
used): “Take heed, brothers, lest there be in any of you an
evil unbelieving heart leading you to fall away from the
living God.” (Other texts admonishing fear: 1 Peter 1:17; 2:17;
Philippians 2:13; Luke 12:5; Isaiah 66:2; Acts 9:31; 2 Corinthians
5:11; 7:1; etc.)
But we shouldn’t get the idea that the writers of
the New Testament are taking sides here, some in favor of fear
(Paul, Hebrews) and some against (John). For even though Romans
11:20 admonishes fear, Romans 8:15 says, “For you did not
receive the spirit of slavery to fall back into fear, but
you have received the spirit of sonship.”
And even though Hebrews 3:12 admonishes fear of an
unbelieving heart (which is the same as saying the fear of God who
requites unbelief with punishment), Hebrews 4:16 says, “Let us
with confidence draw near to the throne of grace that we may
receive mercy and find grace to help in time of need.”
Therefore, the problem is not so much a disagreement
between the authors of the New Testament books, but rather the
problem is how the same author can say on the one hand, “Fear!” and
on the other hand, “Have no fear! Be confident.” The solution will,
I think, be found in the suggestion that a sober fear of God will
motivate us to trust his mercy shown in Christ and this “trembling
trust” will then gradually remove the fear that drove us to it as we
see more clearly what out Lord has done for us.
I was reading Lewis’ Anthology of George
MacDonald and found some helpful comments. He points out that
absolutely nothing less than perfect love (both from God toward man
and man toward God) should cast out fear. We are prone to want to be
rid of fear at any cost, by any means. John says there is and should
be only one means—perfect love for God should cast out fear.
We think we will be better Christians when we stop
fearing—that may be quite false. We will be better Christians when
we love God the more for his perfect love. The perfecting of love
necessarily drives out fear, but the driving out of fear does not
necessarily mean that love is being perfected. One may wish to be
rid of fear in the same way he wants to be rid of a bad conscience
and he may use all the same deceptive means to shed this discomfort
(e.g., alcohol, drugs, or more commonly, the elimination of all the
commands in the Bible to fear God and to love him with your whole
heart. See Deuteronomy 10:12).
MacDonald writes (page 67),
Persuade men that fear is a vile thing, that it
is an insult to God, that he will none of it—while they are yet
in love with their own will and slaves to every movement of
passionate impulse and what will the consequence be? That they
will insult God as a discarded idol, a superstition, a thing to
be cast out and spit upon. After that how much will they learn
of him?
Fear is an imperfect bond to God, but it is a bond
which should be replaced only by an infinitely closer bond—the bond
of love (page 67). Nothing else should cast out fear.
Should fear, then, play a role up to a certain point
and never again in the Christian life? The point after which fear
will have no proper place in the Christian’s life is the point at
which his love is perfected. But none of us is yet perfected in
love; none of us is without moments in which his delight in God
fades and the “things which are seen” become deceptively attractive.
In these moments we are in need of a warning from
Paul (Romans 11:20) or from Hebrews (3:12) or from Jesus (Luke
12:5). In these moments we ought not to be completely free from
fear, because we are not completely controlled by love for God; that
is, we are not living completely by faith. But the fear that we are
to feel as Christians is itself a work of grace. It is a fear which
casts us back into love for God and trust in his mercy, and thus
destroys itself. Fear is the proper servant of love for imperfect
saints.
The second line of “Amazing Grace” is not merely a
once-for-all experience:
‘Twas grace that taught my heart to fear,
And grace my fears relieved;
How precious did that grace appear,
The hour I first believed.
On January 7, 1974, I found the following quote in
Jonathan Edwards’ Treatise Concerning the Religious Affections
(London, 1796), p. 102ff. I think it states just what I am trying to
say.
So hath God contrived and constituted things in
his dispensations toward his own people that when their love
decays and the exercises of it fail or become weak, fear should
arise; for then they need it to restrain them from sin and to
excite them to care for the good of their souls and so to save
them up to watchfulness and diligence in religion: but God hath
so ordered that when love rises and is in vigorous exercise,
then fear should vanish and be driven away for then they need it
not, having a higher and more excellent principle in exercise to
restrain them from sin and stir them up from their duty. There
are no other principles which human nature is under the
influence of that will ever make men conscientious but one of
these two, fear or love: and therefore if one of these should
not prevail as the other decayed, God’s people when fallen into
dead and carnal frames, when love is asleep would be lamentably
exposed indeed. And therefore God has wisely ordained, that
these two opposite principles of love and fear should rise and
fall like the two opposite scales of a balance; when one rises
the other sinks…
Fear is cast out by the Spirit of God, no other
way than by the prevailing of love: nor is it ever maintained by
his Spirit but when love is asleep…