======================================================================== TOTAL COMMITMENT TO CHRIST by William MacDonald ======================================================================== Summary: The sermon emphasizes the significance of Calvary and the benefits of salvation, including being saved, forgiven, receiving eternal life, being accepted in the beloved, being complete in Christ, and being children of God. Duration: 41:15 Topics: "The Cross", "Christian Commitment" Scripture References: Romans 3:23 ------------------------------------------------------------------------ DESCRIPTION ------------------------------------------------------------------------ This sermon delves into the profound reflection on the sacrifice of Jesus at Calvary, emphasizing the immense love and grace displayed through His death. It explores the significance of understanding who Jesus is, what He did for us, the depth of our sinfulness, and the blessings that flow to believers as a result of His sacrifice. The call to respond with total commitment to Christ and surrendering our lives for His service is highlighted as a fitting response to the overwhelming grace shown at Calvary. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ CONTENT ------------------------------------------------------------------------ Would we turn in our Bibles please to Psalm 8. The 8th Psalm. I'd just like to read two or three verses here. Beginning with verse 3. Psalm 8, verse 3. When I consider your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars which you have ordained, what is man that you are of mine called him, and the son of man that you visit him? For you have made him a little lower than the angels, and you have crowned him with glory and honor. If I could just paraphrase that just a little, I don't want to take liberties with the text, but what we're going to be thinking about this morning is, when I consider Calvary, the work which the Savior did there for me, the shedding of his blood on my behalf, what is man that thou art mindful of him, and the son of man that thou visitest him? Last night we were thinking about the immensity of our redemption. We felt our brains, as it were, pushing against the sides of our heads, trying to take it in. But what really happened that day, 2,000 years ago, on that cross outside the city of Jerusalem, generally in our minds we just think it was a man. We think of him as a man like ourselves, and he was dying there as a substitute for us. But last night we tried to remind ourselves that it wasn't just a man. It was the incarnate God who died there on Calvary's cross. We mentioned how we get used to the fact how it becomes routine to us. We no longer gasp. We no longer weep when we think of it. We can be quite unemotional about it all. But we did mention that every once in a while a flash of light does seem to come through. Some person realizes in a way he or she has never realized before what our salvation costs, the Son of God. And we suggested that four arresting facts take hold of that person. First of all, who the Lord Jesus is. We've already discussed that. What he did for us. The persons for whom he did it. And the blessings that have flowed to us as a result. Last night we talked about who he is and what he did there on Calvary's cross. And this morning I'd like to just carry on who we are, the persons for whom he did it. The whole drama of our redemption becomes even more staggering when we think of the people for whom the Lord Jesus died. The one whom he purchased with his own blood. As we read in Acts 20, 28 last night. Of course, speaking about ourselves, the whole human race. First of all, we're very insignificant. In the universe of the Hubble telescope, we're really microscopically tiny. In fact, there are no words that would really describe what we are. When you think of the Hubble telescope looking out into what seems to be endless space. And you know, the planet on which we live, planet Earth, it's not exactly the biggest thing in the universe, is it? It's really a speck of cosmic dust. Can you believe that? Earth, the Earth is a speck of cosmic dust in this universe. And if the Earth is that small, what am I? Well, I'm a microscopic midget on a speck of cosmic dust. That's what I am, right? And that's what brought forth from the psalm is that breathless question, what is man? That thou art mindful of him, that the son of man, that thou visitest him. And not only are we insignificant, we're very frail creatures. We're not only minuscule, we're just made of nothing more substantial than dust and water. Not very important, are we? One day we're full of athletic strength, and the next day a non-filterable virus enters our system and we're as weak as water. We who were so strong yesterday, one moment we're able to cope with any problems that seem to arise, and the next day something comes crashing in on us and we're basket cases emotionally. And not only are we frail, but we're perishable. Perishable. Born but for one brief day, we're transient. In the light of eternity, our life doesn't even register on the time scale. In the light of eternity. Our poets, that is the Bible poets, have likened life to a breath, a swift ship, an eagle's dive, a shadow, a hand breath, a sleep. Life is like smoke, vapor, grass, flowers of the field, a weaver's shuttle. Spurgeon reduced our biography to two words, four words, sown, grown, blown, gone. And not only are we perishable, but we're really not very nice people. I think that's probably the understatement of this century. We're all sinners and sin has affected every part of our being. Paul brings this out very graphically in Romans chapter 3, doesn't he? He's an x-ray of the human person, and we see that we're totally sinful. It's affected every part of our being. And although we haven't committed every sin in the book, we're capable of it. I want to tell you, it scares me when I think of the depth of depravity of my heart. And the potential for evil that's there. You know, I can be shocked by the behavior of others. I forget that I could do worse than they're doing. Worse than they're doing. What I am is a lot worse than anything I've ever done. You know, that was the truth that really resulted ultimately in my salvation. Because I had lived a very sheltered life, a very secluded life. I had never committed any of the generally considered sins. So when I was 18 years of age, the Lord came in by the Holy Spirit of God and he showed me that what I was inside was a lot worse than anything I'd ever done. And that made me in a hurry to get saved. I knew that somebody like that could never go to heaven. Shortly after that I bowed the knee and trusted the Lord Jesus. Our potential for evil is monstrous. And that's why the prophet Jeremiah reminded us that the heart of man is deceitful above all things and desperately wicked. And it's no overstatement. Whatever. No one, no one of us ever realizes the depth of depravity of our personal hearts. And that's not all. Either we're unclean. We're really unclean. Bildad, one of Job's so- called comforters, he gave us the ultimate put-down when he argued that if, as far as God is concerned, the moon does not shine, the stars are not pure in his sight. He said, how much less man who is a maggot than the son of man who is a worm. Wow. That's in your Bible. Did you know that? Man who is a maggot than the son of man who is a worm. Well, Isaiah was a little bit more delicate than that when he said that the inhabitants of the earth are like grasshoppers to him who sits above the circle of the earth. We're unclean. That's not all. We're God-haters. It's terrible when you think of it, isn't it? We're God-haters. This was the attitude of unsaved, the unsaved heart of man. We said, depart from us, for we desire not the knowledge of your ways. It often made us uncomfortable to think about God. And we were ashamed to talk about him. I notice that when I get on the plane and take out my Bible and put it there on the little table in front of you. People sitting next to you try to get as far away from it as possible. Why is that? Incidentally, if any of you do travel, I recommend that you do that. Every trip, take out your Bible. Sometimes it does lead to a wonderful conversation. But in our unsaved state, we're ashamed to talk about the Lord. Ashamed of Jesus. Can it be a mortal man ashamed of thee? Ashamed of thee whom angels praise whose glory shines through endless days. Yes. Unsaved, we're only happy when we can forget him. And only sad when we remember him. I tell you, our attitude was that no cosmic deity was ever going to run our lives. We saw ourselves in the words of Major Andre. He said, against the God who built the sky, I fought with hands up with a bit of heart. Despised the mention of his grace. Too proud to seek a hiding place. Not a very nice picture, isn't it? But that isn't all. We were murderers. We were murderers. Never know the depths of depravity of the human heart. Did you stand before that place called Calvary and look up that cross and watch man killing the Lord of Glory? That's exactly what happened. The thought is absolutely overwhelming. It's breathtaking. It's unimaginable. God comes to earth to rescue mankind. The man turns around and kills him. And as I said last night, while they're doing it, their very breath depends on it. The very fact that they're alive depends on him. And they're killing the Lord of Glory. Because that was not the end. Blessed he rose from the dead the third day and ascended back to heaven. And ever since then he's been offering eternal life as a free gift to all who would come and trust him as Savior. That's what grace means. God could have turned his back on the human race. I'll tell you he could have. I must never allow the thought to enter my mind that somehow or other the Lord had to come and die for me. Ridiculous. He could have stayed in heaven. And he would have been as much God as ever. And there would be nobody here to accuse him of injustice. Instead of that he chose to populate heaven with those who had spat in his face and nailed him to a cross. That's what I talk about, the immensity of our salvation. Not only that, but we're murderers. We're forgetful. If we constantly remembered that the Christ of Calvary is the God of eternity, we'd be lost in wonder, love, and praise. Here full hearts could only be bound in love's mysterious deep. It would be such an astonishment to us that we'd want to share it with everybody we met. Sometimes you find a fanatic for Jesus and you think, well, he's a little bit odd, you know. He's not odd. He's the sane one. We're the odd ones. I say we wouldn't want to talk about anybody else. It would bow us in worship, compel us in service, and motivate us in witness. But we don't remember. We commit the awful sin of taking it for granted. And not only are we forgetful, we're unmoved. We've lost the titanic wonder of it all. We've recited the scripture so often and so mechanically they've lost their effect on us. They become dull for us. And I want to tell you, the older we get, the harder it is to maintain the spiritual glow. It's something you have to fight all the time. Too often we have to ask ourselves, am I a stone and not a man that I can stand, O Lord, beneath thy cross and number drop by drop thy blood's slow loss and yet not weep? There's something the matter with me. Too often we have to admit, O wonder, to myself I am thou living, loving, dying lamb that I can stand the mystery o'er and not be moved to love thee more. J.H. Jowett said something that I'd like to just quote him on. He marveled at our insensibility. He wrote, we leave our places of worship and no deep and inexpressible wonder sits upon our faces. We can sing those lilting melodies and when we go out into the streets our faces are no different than the faces of those who've left the theaters and the music halls. There's nothing about us to suggest that we've been looking at anything stupendous and overwhelming. And what is the explanation of the loss? Preeminently, our impoverished conception of God. I was speaking at an assembly not too well, some months ago now, and there's a young lawyer there and he's really on fire for Jesus. He's one of these fanatics I was talking about. And I was speaking about the wonder of Calvary's love. He came up to me after this, he said, brother, he said, when I walked down the aisle after the meeting, he said, those people were talking about a football game. He said, are they saved? Well, let me tell you that they're saved. They just lost the wonder of it all. And we have to recapture the immensity of Calvary. The suffering savior there on the cross at Calvary is the omnipresent, omniscient, omnipotent Lord of Glory. God who manifests in the flesh. It's so breathtaking, it's a wonder I can stand here and talk about it today. Who he is, what he did, the people for whom he did it, and then the blessings that flow to us as a result of that. Some people wear a T-shirt, it says on the back, his pain, our gain. Have you seen that T-shirt? It shows a hand with a spike driven through it. It says, his pain, our gain. Consider the incomparable benefits that flow to us through Christ. First of all, we're saved. That's wonderful. And I think when we think of that, when we think of our redemption, that's one of the first things we think about. We're saved from hell, from the lake of fire. It's fire that's unquenchable and everlasting. Concerning the inhabitants of hell, the Lord Jesus said, where their worm dieth not, and the fire is not quenched. In other words, their mental anguish and physical suffering are unending. Hell means separation from God, and I cannot think of anything worse than that. It's existence in the blackness of darkness forever. It means to be in a place where there's no love. It means to be in a place where man still has all his sinful temptations, but he doesn't have the ability to fulfill them. That's hell. And I want to tell you, dear friends, if the Lord Jesus had done nothing but deliver us from that fate, that would have been wonderful. He could have. He could have stopped there. He could have put a period in the sentence there. But he didn't. Not only we say we're forgiven, our sins are forgiven. That's wonderful. All of them. Christ paid the penalty. God can righteously forgive us when we put our faith and trust in his Son as our Lord and Savior. Listen to what the Scripture says. Our sins are gone as far as the east is from the west. That's good. I'm glad it doesn't say north and south because I could measure that. As far as the east is from the west. Buried in the sea of eternal forgetfulness. Blotted out as a thick cloud. Cast behind God's back. Cast into the depths of the sea, made white as snow. God's forgiveness is so great that as he looks down, he can't find a single sin on William MacDonald with which to punish him with eternal death. That's pretty good, isn't it? Not a single sin. As sinners, we receive judicial forgiveness the moment we trust Christ as Savior. As believers, we receive parental forgiveness when we confess our sins. Good to remember that. There are two kinds of forgiveness in the New Testament. The judicial forgiveness, that's the forgiveness of God the Judge. And I receive that judicial forgiveness when I trust believing. It's done through believing. As a child in a family of God, I receive parental forgiveness when I confess my sins. 1 John 1.9. We're saved, we're forgiven, we receive eternal life. Eternal life is not the same as endless existence. Even the unsaved have endless existence, don't they? When you think of eternal life, don't just think of endless existence. It's more than that. It's the life of Christ. Eternal life is the life of Christ. It means that we receive a new quality of life. We become partakers of the divine. It doesn't mean we become God, as some TV preachers say today. It doesn't mean that, but we become partakers. In other words, a new nature is brought into us, and that explains the explosive effect of salvation in a human life. It explains how this young fellow, he's on drugs, he's on liquor, he's burned out with sex and all the rest, and he gets saved, and he's out preaching the gospel of redeeming grace today. You know, no psychology will ever explain that. It's the impartation of a divine nature. It's called eternal life. All things become new. A new love of holiness, a new hatred of sin, a new love for one's fellow believers, a new desire to witness for Christ, a new freedom from the dominion of sin, a new life of righteousness, and a new desire to confess Christ. It's interesting, isn't it? When a person gets saved, he wants to confess Christ. Interesting. He didn't want to an hour before, he didn't want to. Not only that, we're accepted in the beloved. I think this is one of the great truths of the New Testament. As long as we were in our sins, we had no right to enter into the presence of God. We were unclean, unholy, unworthy. The moment we're born again, God sees us in Christ and he accepts us on that basis. Our hymn says that so beautifully, God sees my Savior, and then he sees me in the beloved, accepted and free. As to our standing before God, we're just enveloped in Christ. God looks down and he sees Jesus and not me. A beggar can't enter a ruler's presence because he's unworthy. But if somehow or other the royal prince befriended him, the royal prince could take him in to see the ruler, couldn't he? And there the beggar doesn't go on his own merits. He goes in the person of the royal prince. The Lord Jesus is our royal prince. He brings us into the presence of God and we're absolutely qualified for that presence. And then Paul tells us in Colossians that we're complete in Christ. That's a wonderful thing, complete in Christ. What does that mean? It means that the moment you have the Lord Jesus Christ, you're as fit for heaven as God can make you. Because you have Christ and you can't improve on him. It's really marvelous when you start to think who could have ever devised a plan of salvation like this? Would you tell me? No man could have ever done it. That's why there are no degrees of fitness for heaven. A lot of people saved in this room this morning, but nobody's more fit for heaven than anybody else. Why? Because if you have Christ, you have perfect fitness. You can't improve on that. Can't improve on that. The Lord Jesus is our fitness for heaven. I wish that were more commonly known in the Christian world. Because we have Christ, that the Father has made us fit to be inheritors of the saints in life. Made us fit to be partakers of the inheritance of the saints in life. And not only that, we're children of God. We take this for granted. Children of God, what a wonderful thing to be able to look up and call God your Father. We're born into the family of God. I tell you, no angel is as privileged as that. This is something that's reserved for sinners saved by grace. To be a child of God, a member of his family. I think it's marvelous when we study the starry universe or even study the living cell, we can say, my father made it all. And he did too. My father made it all. I tell you, their whirlings may boast of their ancestry. Their relatives, their ancestors came over on the Mayflower and all the rest. Their links with the famous people of this world or their ties to the wealthy. But I'm going to tell you, all of these honors are tawdry compared to being a child of God. This was purchased for us at the cross of Calvary. It becomes even more breathtaking where heirs of God in joint heirs with Jesus Christ. I don't think any of us knows what that means today fully, do you? Heirs of God in joint heirs with Jesus Christ. This means, hold your hats. All that God has is ours. That's what it means. Apostle Paul says, all things are yours and you are Christ and Christ is God. And when we think of that, when we think of all things are yours, we immediately think of things material. It's not just material things. Paul explains the all things. He says, God's servants, you don't have to choose whether you like this preacher better than this preacher. They're all yours if they belong to the Lord. And he not only goes to that extent, but he says the world, life, death, things present, or things to come, they're all yours. And I think it's safe to say that our minds are incapable of fathoming all that's included in being an heir of God. But I want to tell you the day is coming when we're going to enjoy it fully when the inheritance is going to be ours fully. And I want to tell you there's no Cinderella story like this one from such rags to such riches. Isn't it wonderful that in devising a plan of salvation, the Lord had all of this in mind? He did. Not only so were we involved by the Holy Spirit of God. This really causes me to stand back in awe that the Holy Spirit of God, one of the persons of the Trinity, actually dwells in my human body. I tell you, if I just lived in the daily consciousness of that, it would make an improvement in my spiritual life, wouldn't it? It would really have a sanctifying influence on me. He's there as a seal. He's there as a seal marking me out as belonging to God. He's there as an earnest, as a down payment, guaranteeing me that just as surely as I have him, the whole inheritance is going to be mine someday. He's there as the anointing. He enables me to distinguish between truth and error. And he's there as the helper, the comforter, the one who draws near in times of need. He guides us. He prays for us. He produces the fruit of holiness in our lives. We may well ask, what good and needed ministry does the Holy Spirit not perform for us? Guy King said, Guy King in one of his books was going over some of these things. He said, what lucky beggars we are. We know there's no luck in the family of God, but he said just the same. What lucky beggars we are. Then we're the bride of Christ. Members of the bride of Christ. The church is the bride of Christ. And this speaks of the special love that he has for us. Christ also loved the church and gave himself for it, that he might sanctify and cleanse it with a washing of water by the word, that he might present it to himself a glorious church, not any spot or wrinkle or any such thing. Friends, this is marvelous. That one day we're going to be presented there in heaven and not so much as a wrinkle, not so much as a birthmark, not so much as a blemish. Without spot and without blemish in that final day, what has God wrought? I want to tell you to be a member of the bride of Christ is a greater honor than to be a member of any fraternity, sorority, organization that the world has to offer. The church means more to God than all the nations of the world put together. Did you know that? I'll tell you why. Because the nations are a drop in the bucket to God. That's what they are. That's what Isaiah said, a drop in the bucket. You have to be out the bucket and you look and there's a drop in there. It doesn't say that about the church. It doesn't say the church is a drop in the bucket. No, it says the bride of Christ, the body of Christ, the fellowship of the excellence of the earth, all purchased for us by the blood of the Lord Jesus. Then another blessing that flows to us, we're able to pray. We're able to pray. We have constant access to the sovereign of the universe in prayer. I read recently in one of the news magazines that people who have to get to President Clinton quickly, if they want to write a letter, there's a special zip code. If they put that zip code on the letter, whenever that zip code, whenever that letter hits the mail room to the White House, it goes directly to the President. There's a special phone too, a special phone number. If they want immediate access to the President, they have a special phone number. Dear friends, we have something better than that. We don't need a zip code. We don't need a special phone number. All we need to bow the knee, raise our hearts to the Lord. We have instant access day and night to him in prayer. We don't realize what a wonderful thing we have. By faith, we enter the sanctuary of God with our praise, our worship, our supplication, our thanksgiving, our intercession, and we know that he answers every prayer. So he doesn't answer every one of mine, yes he does, yes he does. If you're a child of God, God answers every prayer in exactly the same way you would answer it if you had his wisdom, love, and power. To me, that's a wonderful encouragement in a life of prayer. God answers every prayer in exactly, you say, well I didn't get what I wanted. No, his wisdom kept you from getting what you wanted. His love kept you from getting it. He answered it. He answered it in the way that you would if you had his wisdom, love, and power. And just remember, this privilege of prayer that you have was purchased for you when God incarnate died on the cross of Calvary. You say, you've exhausted this? No, I haven't exhausted this. I haven't even scratched it. But we have eternal, we will have eternal glory. Savior was not satisfied to save us from hell or to give us prolonged existence on earth. He could have done that. I think that's what would have happened to Adam if he hadn't sinned. He'd just have gone on living on earth until he did sin. That's no fun. You have this sword of Damocles hanging over your head all the time with fear that you'd make a botch of it all. I don't want prolonged existence on earth. The Lord Jesus will not be fully satisfied in how I'm there in heaven in a resurrected body, just like his resurrected body, a glorified body. And be with him in heaven. No wonder Garvey wrote those wonderful words, and is it so? I shall be like thy son. Is this the grace that he for me has won? Father of glories, thought beyond all thought in glory to his own blessed likeness. Dear friends, after we've said all that, we haven't even scratched the surface. Haven't even scratched the surface of the blessings that flow to us from the cross. Paul sums it up in Ephesians 1. He said, we're blessed with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places in Christ. We're blessed with every blessing that the wisdom of God could conceive. That's a lot. Blessed with every spiritual blessing that the wisdom of God could conceive. We're the most favored people on earth, in the universe, the most favored people in the universe, and it's all because of Calvary. His pain, our pain. Now dear friends, we need to respond. We need to respond. There's only one conclusion when you think of all of these four wonderful things, four wonderful things. Who he is, what he did, who we are, the blessings that have flowed to us as a result. As we said last night, it has to be everything or nothing. God didn't put you and me down here just to make money. There's more to life than that, making money. The Savior didn't die for me so that I would just go on living my life the way I wanted. He died for me so that henceforth I would live. God doesn't want you and me to fritter away our lives in trivial pursuits. If I really believe what I've been talking about today, I will not be content to be a minor official in a transient enterprise. I have to determine that love so amazing, so divine, will have my heart, my life, my all. I want to tell you that if we really wake up to the truth of Calvary, it leads us down a one-way street that ends in total commitment to Christ. You say, Brother MacDonald, I trusted Christ as my Savior years ago. That's not what I'm talking about. You can trust Christ, as you said. You can turn your life over to the Lord Jesus for salvation. The question is, have you ever turned it over to Him for service? Have you ever got down on your knees and said, Lord Jesus, you bled and died for me. Here is my life. I just disavow any plans, any ambitions, any desires of my own. From this moment on, I want only to do what you want me to do. As I say, it's possible to trust Him for salvation, be delivered from hell, but it's another thing to turn control of your life to Him. To say, O Christ, Thy bleeding hands and feet, Thy sacrifice for me. Each wound, each tear, demands my life of sacrifice for Thee. I want to tell you, if some people from this conference would rise to the challenge and do that, and turn their lives over to the Lord for whatever He might have, they never can know what could result. You never know, on the day you do that, what wonderful things the Lord has in store for you. If He could say to you today, now look, I want you to sit down and think of the very best pattern, the very best blueprint for your life that you can think of. He could do better than that. He can do better than the best you could think about, because He has options that you don't know anything about. And God's way is the best way. We're going to go on in our following meetings and talk about this whole subject of commitment in the Bible, thread that runs through the whole Bible, subject of commitment. Get here. Shall we look here? Father, we just think of the marvelous, tremendous, astonishing, staggering truths that we've been contemplating today, and we realize that these things require a response from us. We pray that you'll give us grace, Lord, to turn the reins over to you, turn control over to you. Help us to give up our small ambitions, Lord. Step out in faith that you will do only what's best for us. We ask it in the Savior's name. Amen. ======================================================================== Video: https://sermonindex2.b-cdn.net/bAPPWEllRnc.mp4 Source: https://sermonindex.net/speakers/william-macdonald/total-commitment-to-christ/ ========================================================================