Thursday, January 22, 2015

Do You Care?

(Transcript of a sermon preached at Bible Truth Baptist Church, Griffin, GA, on 21 January 2015.)

Text: Ezek. 9:1-11


INTRODUCTION
In reading through the book of Ezekiel over the years, I've always found chapter 9 to be a fascinating and stirring chapter for a number of reasons.  In this chapter, the Lord gives Ezekiel a terrifying glimpse of coming judgment on Jerusalem, beyond that which it had experienced already in Ezekiel's time.  Ezekiel is a contemporary of Jeremiah, whom I spoke about last time, and while Jeremiah is prophesying to the Jews remaining in the homeland, Ezekiel is prophesying to the captive Jews in Babylon of what's to come.
     In chapter 9, God gives him a glimpse of his just dealings with the Jews remaining in Judah:  he will preserve those worthy of preservation and destroy the rest.  Note in v. 4 whom he marks (literally) for preservation: “the men that sigh and cry for all the abominations that be done in the midst thereof” (i.e. of Jerusalem).  In other words, those who were concerned or really cared about the spiritual state of Judah...like Jeremiah (he was preserved, wasn't he?). Their sighing and crying showed that they cared, and God took note of it.
     An important final note about this passage before I get into the message.  The man with the inkhorn sent to mark such men in Jerusalem seems to come back quickly, indicating that few men were marked...maybe just Jeremiah and a few others [Baruch, the Rechabites, Ebed-melech, Ahikam, Sheriah, et al.].  A sad conclusion, but I'm convinced that's what it's meant to show.
     When you think about it, few people, including few believers, really care about spiritual matters.  Paul speaks of the Corinthian believers being, as a whole, carnal, even though they were saved.  Their lives were dominated by the flesh, even though they were saved.  It's quite possible and quite widespread, if you've got to know many Christians in your lifetime.  It doesn't mean that they're not saved; but it does mean that they need to grow up and become spiritual believers and quit walking “as men” like Paul says in 1 Cor. 3:3. 
     But what is it to “care”? And what should a believer care about?  I'd like to show you what the Bible defines care as, then give you a few examples of things that you should, as a believer, care about deeply.  The golden mean between being “care-ful,” which Paul says we shouldn't be in Phil. 4:6, and “care-less” is to care, and that's what I like for us to meditate on. 


DEFINITION
I found a good working definition for “care” in 1 Sam. 9, where young Saul is seeking his father's donkeys. By God’s providence (not luck), he runs into Samuel, who is tasked with anointing him as the first king of Israel.  Notice how vv. 5 and 20 define “care” for us:

1 Sam. 9:5, “Come and let us return; lest my father leave caring for the asses, and take thought for us.”  So to care for something is to take thought for it; caring is taking thought. But I think that it’s more than just thinking about something, and v. 20 brings this out.

1 Sam. 9:20, “And as for thine asses that were lost three days ago, set not thy mind on them…”  So to care about something is not merely to think about it, but to set your mind on it. 

So in this message we’ll be looking at things that we should set our minds on, things that we should be deeply concerned about, so much that they deserve continual thought, not just occasional. 


ATTRIBUTE OF GOD
Before we look at some things that believers should care about, I’d like to point out that caring is an attribute of God.  Care is connected with love, as we’ll see later, and since “God is love” (1 John 4:8, 16), scripture shows that care is an attribute of God as well.  Let’s look at a few verses to support this. 

1 Peter 5:7, “Casting all your care upon him; for he careth for you.”

2 Cor. 8:16, “But thanks be to God, which put the same earnest care into the heart of Titus for you.”

God is a caring God, and he puts his care in believers’ hearts for certain things; therefore, we need to learn what God cares about and participate in this care, like Titus did, and not hinder it. 


THINGS THAT BELIEVERS OUGHT TO CARE ABOUT
Now let’s look at a few things that we as believers ought to care about, if we are in tune with the caring God living in us.

Eternity
The first place “care” is mentioned in the new testament is Mt. 13:22, where Christ warns that “the care of this world” can make someone “unfruitful.”  Of course we have to tend to earthly matters: Paul commands us to work and to provide for our own (2 Thes. 3:10; 1 Tim. 5:8).  But the context here is inordinate or excessive care.  In 2 Tim. 2:4, Paul calls it entangl[ing] [your]self with the affairs of this life.”  This entanglement is totally unfitting for a believer, since you don’t even live in this world—you live in heavenly places (Eph. 2:6; Phil. 3:20; Col. 3:3).  So when Paul tells you to “Set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth” (Col. 3:2), he does so for a reason: because you’re real life is up there and out there, not down here. 
     Now let’s look at 1 Tim. 4:7-8.  My wife and I recently joined LA Fitness, so exercise is on our minds quite a bit these days; but there’s an exercise far more important than any we’ll ever do at a health club.  It’s what Paul refers to as “exercis[ing] [your]self unto godliness” (v. 7).  We need to exercise our bodies, obviously, if we want to enjoy good health, long life, and a good testimony (Phil. 4:5), but why should we exercise ourselves unto godliness?  Look at v. 8.  Because there’s not only “the life that now is” to be concerned about, but also “that [life] which is to come.”
     We should care deeply about eternity since that’s where we’re all headed and actually live now. God lives in eternity (Is. 57:15), and if we’re in him then we live there too.  How could you be lost if you’ve already gone to heaven? All that we’re waiting on right now is the salvation of our bodies.  That’s what Paul was referring to when he said, “…for now is our salvation nearer than when we believed” (Rom. 13:11): the salvation or redemption (Rom. 8:23) of your body.  I purposely put this care, the care about eternity, first, since you have to begin with the end in mind, if you wish to succeed as a Christian.  Many Christians are so caught up with this world that they’re ignorant of what’s going to happen to them in the next life, beginning with the rapture, then the judgment seat of Christ, then everything thereafter.  But not the apostle Paul:  he knew who he believed (2 Tim. 1:12); he knew where he was headed (2 Tim. 4:8, 18); and he even knew what rewards were waiting for him on the other side (2 Tim. 4:8).  But excessive “care of this world” will cloud all of those things if you let it. 
     I’ve got three other things that you should care about, but I put eternity first for good reason.  If you don’t have an eternal perspective, you won’t care about these two things like you should.  You’ll see what I mean when we look at them more closely, but having an eternal perspective, or “long look” as some call it, is critical to caring about the right things. 

Family
I know that this seems obvious, but plenty of people could care less about their family’s welfare. That certainly shouldn’t be true of any believer.  We should be the ones who care about our families the most.  I appreciate ministries like No Greater Joy, Focus on the Family, and Vision Forum that are promoting the welfare of Christian families from all angles. We sure need them, since we’re being attacked from all angles!  Scripture mentions caring for your spouses, children, and your entire “house” in general, which could also include your parents and other relatives.   

·       1 Cor. 7:32-34.  Spouses fulfill their worldly duties to each other because they care about one another and want to please one another.  You don’t care about your spouse if you’re not meeting their physical needs, no matter how spiritual you think that is. True spirituality involves helping others physically (Acts 20:34-35; Eph. 4:28; etc.), including your spouse.

·       1 Sam 9:5, 10:2; 1 Tim. 3:5.  Parents should care about their children.  Again, this seems to go without saying, but in the last days, men will be “without natural affection,” including proper parental affection.  If you’re a good parent, you care about who your kids hang around, what they watch and listen to, and what types of habits they’re forming, to name just a few things. 

     I saw a Facebook post where a parent took their teenager to see an R-rated movie and raved about it.  Any parent who lets their kids watch R-rated movies doesn’t care about them like they should. I thought to myself, do you want that kid to have that violence, and cursing, and nudity stored in their brain the rest of their life?  That’s what’s happening, whether you realize it or not, when you allow yourself and others to watch garbage.  It’s stored in the supercomputer between your ears for life, so better be careful what you store up there, since you reap what you sow (Gal. 6:7-8).  Care about your kids, and think about their future today by the example you set as well as what you say. 

Believers in Christ
According to 1 Thes. 4:9, believers in Christ “are taught of God to love one another.” So it’s natural for us to care about other believers, but just as we don’t want to let “the care of this world” fill our hearts, we do want to let care for other believers fill it.  But it’s up to us to do so. God won’t make us care about other believers.  We must choose to.  Paul told the Philippians in Phil. 2:20, “For I have no man likeminded, who will naturally care for your state…” which is sad.  What was the problem? Look at v. 21, “For all seek their own, not the things which are Jesus Christ’s.”  The problem was selfishness, or self-love.  The greatest hindrance to caring about others is caring too much about yourself.  But God has a put a natural care in you for other saints that is stronger than your self-love, if you will allow it to work.  Now let’s look at some references that show the scope of our care for the saints.

Individual saints (1 Cor. 12:25).  [Let’s start on the most basic level: caring about individual saints.] The body of Christ is a spiritual organism, but it’s made up of individuals, and you need to care about all of them, because of who they are in Christ.  Fellowship with many believers is impossible due to their disobedience, but that doesn’t mean you don’t care about them and do everything that you can to help them. The “same care one for another” in v. 25 is recognizing each member’s value, your need of them, and your duty toward them. Where they thrive, you thrive; where they suffer, you suffer, they suffer (v. 26).  The great enemy of this care is “schism” or division, and at its root it’s not caring about the other members.  If you really cared about others, you wouldn’t be divisive.  Sometimes it’s necessary to separate, but even that shouldn’t be done with a divisive spirit, but with a spirit of meekness (Tit. 3:2).  We need to care about the individual saints that make up the larger body of Christ.

Congregations (2 Cor. 8:16; 1 Tim. 3:5).  The care in both of these passages is that of ministers for congregations, one an evangelist (Titus) for the young church at Corinth, the other a bishop for his local congregation.  As ministers and believers, we should care about the welfare of congregations, and not just our own.  Paul said in Rom. 16:16b that “The churches of Christ salute you…”, and that’s not talking about the cult.  That is showing that the churches at large cared about the Roman church, and we should have the same spirit, even one that transcends denominations, as long as the group in question is preaching the gospel.  Paul was grateful for however Christ was preached, even if the motive or method wasn’t exactly right, as long as the truth was getting out (Phil. 1:18).  That’s how urgent it is to reach people, so more power to anyone that’s trying to get the true gospel out, even if they’re not doing it perfectly.  So we need to care about congregations: top-down (leaders for their flocks), internally (our own congregation), and externally (other congregations). 

Body of Christ at large (2 Cor. 11:28).  Paul speaks of caring for “all the churches” in a pastoral sense, but it’s more than that.  Every believer needs to care for the body of Christ as a whole.  All believers in Christ are a unit, as we saw in 1 Cor. 12, and there are ways that we can show our care for them as a whole, even if we are not globe-trotting evangelists.  An obvious way is by praying for the entire body of Christ.  Did you know that you can and should do that?  Look with me at Eph. 6:17-20.  We’ve all heard of “the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God” (6:17), but look what follows that…another part of the armament: prayer.  Sorry, folks, but you can’t triumph over the enemy without prayer.  Verse 17 ends with a colon, so the thought continues into v. 18.  Part of your spiritual defense against the enemy is prayer, and your prayers, at their farthest level, should reach “all saints.”  You can go to God and ask him to help the entire body of Christ in numerous ways.  How about asking God to help everyone else to stand against the wiles of the devil, the subject of this passage?  Ask him to supply the saints’ physical needs, to help them mature in the Lord Jesus, to comfort them in their troubles, to help them reach and convert sinners, and so on.  If you want to know how to pray as a believer, study the prayers of Paul, who is the apostle to the Gentiles and the pattern for all believers in this age.  God inspired him to reveal his prayer burdens to us, and I believe that we should pray along the same lines ourselves, following Paul’s example.  Paul cared deeply for the body of Christ, and it’s evident in his life and prayers, both of which we should study closely. 

Ministers (Phil. 4:10).  Finally, to complete the cares that should be present within the body, churches should care for their ministers.  This may seem obvious, but often it is shamefully absent.  The concept of rewarding ministers physically for their spiritual service goes all the way back to Melchizedek, and the general principle running through scripture is this: “…The labourer is worthy of his reward” (1 Tim. 5:18).  That’s Paul in the church age quoting Christ under the law (cf. Mt. 10:10; Luke 10:7).  One other Pauline reference that illustrates this principle is Gal. 6:6, “Let him that his taught in the word communicate unto him that teacheth in all good things.”  The sense of “communicate” here is not talking to them but giving to them (Phil. 4:15).  You owe your teachers for giving you the word of God, whoever they are: evangelists, pastors, or Bible teachers. I think that Paul uses the words “taught” and “teacheth” to emphasize that every minister should be teaching his people the scriptures.  Paul wasn’t just a preacher; he also mentions his teaching ministry in numerous places (Col. 1:28; 1 Tim. 2:7; 2 Tim. 1:11; etc.).  If you’re receiving the word of God from someone, you should care about their physical needs as well as their spiritual.

The World
Lastly, you should care about the world.  In Gal. 6:10, Paul says that we should care for other believers first, but our care doesn’t stop there.  The believer’s heart should embrace the whole world.  Do y’all remember that old Coke commercial that said, “I’d like to buy the world a Coke, and keep it company”?  Well, folks, the world needs far more care than that.  They need you to care about their eternal destinies first and foremost, and after that their physical needs.  Most people are oblivious to the first need and devote their energies to the second, which really doesn’t leave the person any better spiritually, even if they’re better physically.  Remember the words of Jesus Christ, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceedeth out of the mouth of God” (Mt. 4:4) and the words of Job, “..and I did esteem the words of his mouth more than my necessary food” (Job 23:12b).  A few scriptures on caring for the world.  

·         Ps. 142:4.  David wrote this when fleeing from Saul, so historically it refers to him, prophetically to Israel in the great tribulation, but inspirationally it could apply to every lost sinner “having no hope, and without God in the world” (Eph. 2:12).

·         John 12:5.  We should indeed care for the poor, as Christ affirms in 12:8, esp. poor saints, which is the context of Paul’s instructions on giving in 2 Cor. 8-9.  As we saw earlier, we’re commanded to do good to “all men,” not just the church, which is fitting, since God doesn’t just do good to the church, but to all men. Ps. 145:9 says, “The LORD is good to all; and his tender mercies are over all his works...” and Acts 14:16-17: “Who in times past suffered all nations to walk in their own ways. Nevertheless he left not himself without witness, in that he did good [to all nations], and gave us rain from heaven, and fruitful seasons, filling our hearts with food and gladness.”

·         Luke 10:34-35.  Finally, we care about those who are “in any trouble” (2 Cor. 1:4). Christ helped us “when we were yet without strength” (Rom. 5:6), and, like him and the good Samaritan, we should be ready to lend a helping hand to those in need, even our enemies.  A great example of this from church history is the Anabaptist Dirk Willems.  Let’s read about him from Martyr’s Mirror, the Anabaptist “Foxe’s Book of Martyrs”:

“Concerning his apprehension, it is stated by trustworthy persons, that when he fled he was hotly pursued by a thief-catcher, and as there had been some frost, said Dirk Willems ran before over the ice, getting across with considerable peril. The thief-catcher following him broke through, when Dirk Willems, perceiving that the former was in danger of his life, quickly returned and aided him in getting out, and thus saved his life. The thief-catcher wanted to let him go, but the burgomaster, very sternly called to him to consider his oath, and thus he was again seized by the thief-catcher, and, at said place, after severe imprisonment and great trials proceeding from the deceitful papists, put to death…by these bloodthirsty, ravening wolves, enduring it with great steadfastness, and confirming the genuine faith of the truth with his death and blood, as an instructive example to all pious Christians of this time, and to the everlasting disgrace of the tyrannous papists.” 

This man’s care moved the thief-catcher so deeply that he wanted to let Willems go, but he was overruled, and this act of kindness cost Willems his life.  I realize that this may be an extreme example of caring for the world, but I doubt that the thief-catcher ever forgot that incident, and I hope that it haunted him all the way to the cross.  What a great picture of Christ’s care for us!  We were the enemies of God and sinking in the icy waters of sin, when Christ turned about and helped us, yet we, as a race, put him to death and forgot about him.  But not everyone: Down through the ages, a few have been moved by his care for us and opened their hearts to him, and now his care is working through them toward others.  


CONCLUSION
Do you care, folks?  God cares…it’s who he is, and since he now lives inside of you, you should care too.  Believers should be known as the most caring people in the world, and if we don’t care it’s simply because we don’t know God like we should and what he’s done for us and in us through Christ.  May God help us to care like we should about the things we should, as long as we should. Amen.

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