·
It isn’t enough just to hear about something;
·
It isn’t enough just to know that you ought to
do something
For
us to get the most out of any application, we must apply it, because: “application
makes all the difference.”
Our
main Bible verse for this entire series has been James 1:22. This tiny verse
packs an enormous punch. This verse reminds us that listening isn’t enough.
James,
the brother of Jesus says: “Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves.
Do what it says.” (James 1:22, NIV)
James
was reminding Christians—the followers of Jesus--that it’s not good enough just
to show up to church; it’s not good enough just to hear that you’ve got some
things to change.
·
Simply hearing about something doesn’t change
your life;
·
Owing that piece of gym equipment won’t help you
get in shape;
·
Looking at a full can of paint, will not change
the color of your walls.
James reminds us
that we are deceiving ourselves if we are only hearing the Word.
James reminds us
that the application is in the doing, because application makes all the difference.
We’ve taken the
time to look at 3 specific life apps; three tools that God wants His people to
apply to their lives.
The first life
app was Trust. This app helps me—you—deal with the sin of worry.
The second life
app was prayer. This app helps us
deal with, get through, endure, any situation.
The third life app
was rest, and we looked at ways to incorporate this app as we are on
the treadmill of life.
(I heard that
some of you, men, followed my advice to the letter…Awesome!!)
The Life app
that we are going to be looking at this morning is one that we'll all have to
use at one time or another. It’s the Life app of confession.
As we get
underway, I want to clear something up. Confession is more than just saying: “I’m Sorry”.
A person can say “I’m sorry”, until they’re
blue in the face and still never change their ways.
Confession is
more than just saying “I’m sorry”
ILLUSTRATION- My daughter, Erica will say
I’m sorry after she does something wrong. Every time. A few moments later, she
will do that very thing she just said she was sorry for.
I will correct her, and a few moments after
that, she’ll do the same thing again, and the cycle will continue, because
there is no change.
In
order for Erica—for me, for you—to change our ways, we’re going to have to do
more than “I’m sorry.”
Saying “I’m
sorry” each time we’ve done wrong might be true, but it does nothing to address
the problem.
Allow me to
share a personal story to illustrate what I’m trying to say.
ILLUSTRATION- Several years ago, while
attending Kingswood University, I was living a life I wasn’t supposed to be
living.
When
the truth finally came out, I was suspended for two weeks, and forced to spend
some “quality time” at home.
Several
weeks after I had served my suspension, I was scheduled to meet with the DBMD-
District Board of Ministerial Development. This would be the equivalent of you meeting
with your boss’s boss…
As
I was sharing with these people about what I had done, I made it sound like,
that after reading and praying, and much soul searching, I discovered on my own
that I wasn’t living the life I was supposed to be living, and I went to tell
the Dean of the school in order to make things right.
Then
one of the board members helped me see the error of my ways.
They made me realize that I went to the dean of students that day
because I was scared of getting caught, not because I was sorry for living an inappropriate
life for a man of God.
It
was after that encounter that I realized that I needed to be more than sorry
for my wrong doing.
I needed to do
more than say: “I’m Sorry”, because my being sorry actually led me deeper and
deeper into sin, because nothing changed. I was still doing the same things
over and over again.
I
needed to confess that I was wrong and I needed to turn and go in the opposite
direction.
Someone
once remarked that: “confession is good for the soul.”
It might be, but confession isn’t done
just to make me feel better—because I feel terrible when I confess my sin to my
wife or to my accountability partner.
Confession isn’t done just to
make me feel better; confession is done to change my life.
I
think that’s huge, and we need to hear it again: Confession isn’t done just to make me feel better;
confession is done to change my life.
Andy
Stanley reminds us that: “The goal of confession is not a clear conscience, but a
changed life. Genuine confession leads to genuine change.”
A
changed life is the purpose of today’s life app. We confess, not to make
ourselves feel better, but to live a changed life.
Take
the story of David for example. One day, when he should have been out at war,
he took a walk on top of his palace and saw a smoking hot woman taking a bath.
Instead
of diverting his attention, he said to his officials: “I WANT HER RIGHT NOW.”
They
bring Bathsheba to his room, things get intense, she gets pregnant, David finds out and tries to cover it up by
bringing Bathsheba’s husband home from the war.
Because Uriah
was a noble man, he did not sleep with his wife while his friends were out in
battle. Even when he was drunk, Uriah still acted better than David did.
David becomes
furious with Uriah, and orders that he be sent back with the army, and
stationed at the front of the line, where he is killed in an intense battle.
Word comes back
to David that Uriah has died, and David says: “I’m sorry” and he then summons Bathsheba into his care, they
marry and she gives birth to a son.
The only time
that God is mentioned in this entire passage is at the end of verse 27: “the thing David had
done displeased the LORD.”(2 Sam. 12:27b, NIV)
You know that
thing that you are constantly doing; that sin that keeps tripping you up; that
thing you do that really hurts your relationship with God and other people, you
know that thing you are doing, it displeases the Lord.
God never
intended for His children to be bound by chains.
Jesus didn’t
make His way to the cross over 2000 years ago this week so you and I would keep
getting tripped up over and over again by the same stupid sin and all we have
to say about it is “I’m sorry”.
Jesus paid the
ultimate price so you—me, we—could be free.
Paul said it
like this: “It is for freedom that Christ has set us free. Stand firm,
then, and do not let yourselves be burdened again by a yoke of slavery.” (Gal. 5:1, NIV)
Jesus never
intended for us to keep getting tripped up by the same sin over and over again.
He intended for
His people to be free; but freedom only happens as we move away from saying
“I’m sorry”—to actually being sorry, sorry enough to change, because genuine
confession leads to genuine change.
The writer of
Hebrews said it this way: “…let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that
so easily entangles, and let us run with perseverance the race marked out for
us.” (Heb. 12:1b, NIV)
The wording here
suggests taking your sin and throwing it as far as you can. It doesn’t mean
pick it up whenever you want to.
It means throw
it away and don’t touch it again.
Some of us are
letting the same old sin trip us over and over again.
It’s not because
God is not strong enough to save us from our sin. It’s because we’re not sorry
enough to do something about it.
In order for real life change to
happen, we must experience genuine confession, because genuine confession leads to genuine change.
How do I know
this to be true? Because I’ve see it played out in my own life.
ILLUSTRATION- It wasn’t until I got serious
about God, and serious about living the life that He wanted me to live, that I
confessed and repented of my sin.
I was tired of
messing up my life, tired of hurting the people in my life, and when I
experienced genuine confession, I experienced genuine life change.
David
also knew this to be true.
The length of
time between 2 Samuel chapters 11 and 12 is almost an entire year.
Bathsheba is now
David’s wife, and no one is taking about how she became his wife, for you
didn’t dare talk back to the king.
Some of the
people might have forgotten what David did; but God didn’t forget.
In 2 Samuel 12
we read that God sent the prophet Nathan to David.
Nathan begins by
telling David this story: “There were two men in a certain town, one rich and the other
poor.
2 The rich man had a very large number of sheep and cattle, 3
but the poor man had nothing except one little ewe lamb he had bought. He
raised it, and it grew up with him and his children.
It shared his food,
drank from his cup and even slept in his arms. It was like a daughter to him.
4 “Now a traveler came to the rich man, but the rich man
refrained from taking one of his own sheep or cattle to prepare a meal for the
traveler who had come to him.
Instead, he took
the ewe lamb that belonged to the poor man and prepared it for the one who had
come to him.”
5 David burned with anger against the man and said to Nathan,
“As surely as the LORD lives, the man who did this must die!
6 He must pay for that lamb four times over, because he did
such a thing and had no pity.” (2
Sam. 12:1b-6, NLT2)
David is
oblivious to the fact that he is the central character in Nathan’s story. After
all, it had been an entire year and he had said: “I’m sorry.”
Then, Nathan hit
David right between the eyes: “…Nathan said to David, “You are the man!” (2 Sam.
12:7a, NLT2)
“You struck down
Uriah the Hittite with the sword and took his wife to be your own. You killed
him with the sword of the Ammonites.” (2
Sam. 12:9b, NLT2)
Nathan
confronted David with his sin, and what happens next is a picture of genuine
change, and remember genuine confession leads to genuine change.
The Bible records
for us, in Psalm 51, David’s honest confession. In the middle of this Psalm we
read these words:
“Create in me a
pure heart, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me.
11 Do not cast me from your presence or take your Holy Spirit
from me.
12 Restore to me the joy of your salvation and grant me a
willing spirit, to sustain me.” (Psalm 51:10-12, NLT2)
For the first
time David came face to face with his wrong doing and he owned it.
He confessed his
sin and his life was genuinely changed.
He still had to
face the consequences of his sin: his son still died, his family was still a
mess, but David’s heart was now pure, because he had confessed his sin.
Some of us in
this room have been carrying around a particular sin for a long time.
This one sin has
been messing with your mind, messing with your life, messing with your
relationships. This sin controls you.
Simply saying “I’m sorry”
will not address the sin problem that you have. Simply hearing about the life
app of confession will do nothing to fix this problem.
If you want to
experience genuine life change, you must confess your sin.
The Bible says: “If we confess our
sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from
all unrighteousness.” (1 John 1:9,
NIV)
(BAND to come)
I wonder this morning,
how many of us need to spend some time at the foot of the cross? I wonder how
many of us need to confess the sin that is in our lives.
You may have
been hiding this sin for years, but God’s not blind, He has seen your sinful
actions, but He still invites you to come to the Cross and receive the
forgiveness that He longs to bring.
You’ll never
break the vicious cycle of sin without genuine confession.
You’ll never
break the vicious cycle of sin on your own, you need to confess your sin to God
and to someone who will love you and pray you through this time.
If God has been
speaking to you about a particular area in your life that you’ve been hiding,
the time to stop hiding is now.
You won’t feel
condemnation at the foot of the cross, you’ll only –find freedom.
James reminds us
that simply hearing about confession and the changed life it brings, isn’t
enough.
James would
remind us that the application is found in the doing, because application
makes all the difference.
If you’ve got
business to do with God, please take some time this morning and kneel at the
alter and confess because genuine confession leads to genuine change.
Confession
isn’t just limited to me and God, to you and God. Most of the time confession
also involves another person.
It could be that
my sin hurt my wife, then I need to go and tell my wife I was wrong, I need to
confess to my wife.
It
could be that while you are confessing your sin to God that He brings to mind
another person. If this happens, chances are that we need to confess our sin to
that person as well.
James
5:16 says: “Therefore
confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be
healed.” (NLT2)
Part
of the application of this life app is talking to God, but the other part is talking
to that person who you have wronged.
Can
I encourage you to take some time this week to not only restore the
relationship between you and God, but to also restore the relationship between
you and that other person?
Why? Because application
makes all the difference (genuine confession leads to genuine change)
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