Matthew 7:21-29 | Kingdom Now: No Turning Back
Download MP3When the alien Macy.
We were talking about winter camp
coming up.
My mind flash back 43 years ago
on February 19th, 1983,
when I was sitting at a winter camp
next to my first
ever tackle football coach named Rick.
It was also my first high school
football coach,
and he was a counselor for us.
Some of us high school guys at the time.
And it was it was their
43 years ago at winter camp that I heard,
what God was trying to tell me
said, I want all your life, Carl,
I don't want
I don't want just the church, kid.
I want the totality of who you are.
And, I'm.
I sat there being convicted,
and I sat there with my football coach,
and he prayed with me and over me,
about a commitment of my life
to Christ in a very profound way,
that started to shape,
you know, my ups and my downs, the valleys
and the mountains.
And so I'm excited
that our kids are going to camp.
It's it's it is a fantastic opportunity
that they have
to get away from everything else
and unplug from everything else. And,
Lord willing, hear the voice of God.
And so thank you for your generosity.
I say all the time, you don't give to us.
You give through us.
And, we want to make sure
that our counselors at the children's camp
and the junior high and high school camp
don't pay anything to go.
We want to pay for them to be able
to give their weekend to counsel our kids
and help lead them to Jesus.
And so thank you for your generosity.
And and, and one thing
I've realized in the past 43 years
is camp has gotten more expensive.
And so we
want to be able to provide for our kids.
You know, partial scholarships
to be able to go.
So thank you for your continued
generosity.
It's bearing good fruit.
Just by way of, some Maisy and Allie.
I didn't ask them to share with you,
but I just want to make sure
that you understand that you're invited
to my Bible study on Wednesday night
at 6:00, right
in this place called the forge, where we
we talk about verse by verse.
We go through Scripture
because we understand that,
faith is formed by the Word of God.
And so if you don't have a regular Bible
study, come Wednesday night at 6:00,
and also just as a reminder,
you mean, February
14th, Valentine's Day
morning, men's right.
Group breakfast right here in this place.
We're going to have breakfast.
We're going to have a bunch of competition
with, opportunity
to win a great big gift card
so you can take your Valentine out
to dinner that night.
So if you're connected to one and you love
her, come win something to treat her.
If you don't love her, don't show up.
So, ladies,
you'll know if you're loved or not.
But just let us know you're coming
so we can make sure that we got breakfast
provided.
So please drop us a note somehow.
Let us know, but please take advantage.
And then on the 15th, the day after,
in the evening time, 6:00, Sunday
the 15th, I want to teach you how to share
your faith.
There are six ways of sharing our faith
in the New Testament that we see
Jesus or the disciples
do, and I want to help.
One of them fits you perfectly.
You just don't know it.
You know how to do it.
And so I want to share.
I want to help you discover
what your style of, of of
of evangelism is, honestly.
And it'll fit.
Don't make sense or be easy for you.
I'm gonna show you what yours is
and how to do it.
So please take advantage of that
on the 15th as well.
Anyway, we're going to wrap up
Matthew seven.
I think all those announcements
from my way of delaying getting into this,
I've said before, I,
I don't get excited
about teaching the sermon on the Mount
because
it's profound
and it's deep and it's convicting.
It's sobering.
It's liberating all at the same time.
But I want to be very careful
that I don't do it in a way.
That comes across
as if I can do a better job
explaining what
Jesus meant than Jesus could do.
Do you understand what I'm saying?
Like Jesus did a fine job
and and and.
The hesitation that I have.
Is to say, let me explain what
Jesus meant.
That's a that's some sacred ground.
You understand?
That's,
And so I want to make sure that I do.
This was a great deal of humility.
And and a,
with an understanding of the weight of it.
I told someone
this last week that I wish I could just
skip chapters five, six,
and seven of Matthew because it's there's
I don't want to do it a disservice.
And I don't want to do you a disservice
by teaching it
inadequately.
But we're going to wrap up.
We're going to wrap up the sermon
on the greatest sermon ever preached,
the longest single, message
that Jesus ever spoke.
We're going to wrap it up this morning
with the last verses of chapter seven.
If you have a Bible and brought one
with you, go to Matthew chapter seven.
It's the first of the four Gospels.
We're
going to look at verses 21 through 29.
The very last section of this.
But let me, let me, let me give you
this big idea as we, as we,
as we go into this, into wrap it up
this morning, the big idea is this
the gate is narrow,
the storm is certain,
and only one foundation
is going to survive.
The gates narrow.
Not everybody finds it and gets in the.
The storm is certain. There's a storm.
You're either in a storm
or you're headed into one.
The storm's coming.
There's no doubt about that.
And it's going to be more difficult.
More powerful than you can imagine.
I'm going to tell you that right now.
And there's only one foundation
that's going to survive it.
I want to recap verses 13 and
14 of Matthew seven before we get into the
the final section of it,
we talked about it last week,
but I want to recap it and and it just
unfolded a little bit more.
Verse 13 Jesus says, enter by the narrow
gate,
for the gate is wide and the way is easy
that leads to destruction.
And those who enter are many.
For the gate is narrow,
and the way is hard that leads to life.
And those who find it are few.
He says, enter through the narrow gate.
We talked last week,
and I just want to unfold this
a little bit more that the the gate
leads to the path,
and every person will go through a gate
and every person will walk a path.
And Jesus says, be mindful
to enter through the narrow gate.
But he warns us, that's going to be hard.
We talked last week
how the narrow gate, not like the path,
isn't necessarily difficult.
Jesus said, my yoke is easy,
my burden is light.
So walking with him
isn't necessarily difficult.
But getting to the gate and through
the gate is hard
because it requires self-denial.
It requires his kingdom over ours.
That's a difficult choice
for most people to make.
But he will say, other than the narrow
gate being the way of self-denial
and kingdom first, that's our stuff,
Jesus will say, and he'll define the gate.
In John ten he says, I am the gate.
Whoever enters through me will be saved.
They will come in and go out
and find pasture.
So Jesus takes this gate imagery.
He said, it's
a narrow gate because it's me.
Jesus claims exclusivity.
The only way to the father,
the only way to be made
right with God is through
Jesus and Jesus alone.
He claims exclusivity on the exclusive
and only gate and to find.
And it's a very narrow way.
Listen, not all roads lead to heaven.
And sincerity
of what you believe is not enough.
Sincerity doesn't qualify
to be very sincere
about a way of believing,
but just sincerely wrong
and good works don't work.
And Jesus says, I am the gate.
And if you want to go to the father,
you have to come through me and through me
alone.
There's no other way.
And a lot of people will look at
Christians and say, you're pretty narrow
minded.
And I would say regarding salvation,
you're 100% correct, very narrow minded,
because it's through Christ alone,
through what Jesus did on the cross.
There's a lot of religions
that teach a lot of things.
There's a lot of beliefs that teach
a lot of things about what you must do
and the things associated
with a religious belief.
And Jesus says, it's me.
And it's very narrow.
And because he claims as exclusivity,
because it's so narrow,
focused on Christ alone,
not many people find it
to understand.
And that's why it's hard.
But listen, the gate is narrow
because truth isn't negotiable.
He says I'm
the way, the truth and the life.
Nobody comes to the father but through me.
Because I am the gate.
And for most of the world,
that's too narrow an understanding of God.
And that's why Jesus says in verse 14,
there aren't many people who find it.
Because to find
it means that I'm acknowledging
that all other beliefs,
if it doesn't lead through
Jesus, are in error.
No matter how good you are,
no matter what you believe, no matter
the confirmation, the baptism,
the good works,
there's anything other than Jesus
because of God's grace through faith.
It's a wide gate
that leads to destruction.
And if that has not been
your understanding of salvation,
if that has not been your understanding
of the God who loves you,
I'm going to give you an opportunity later
in this message
to come to the father
through the son alone.
Exclusively through Christ.
Because of God's grace, you didn't earn it
through faith,
not through what you do.
There's one gate.
And the storm is coming.
The foundation
on which you build will determine
your survival.
In verses
21 through 27,
he wraps up this incredible sermon.
And it's not
let me tell you this right now.
It's not a it's not a rah rah wrap up.
He doesn't have people jumping up and down
going, yeah, this is awesome.
Jesus. You're great.
And nobody high fiving each other
as you walk out.
He's going to wrap up this message
with a profound and deep
call to commitment.
And Jesus is going to basically, he's
going to ask this question.
He's going to ask, is your faith real
or is your confession of faith
just noise?
And so let me read
for you verses 21, 22 and 23.
This is a terrifying passage.
Not everyone who says to me, Lord,
Lord, will enter the kingdom of heaven,
but the one who does the will of my father
who is in heaven.
On that day
many will say to me, Lord, Lord,
did we not prophesy in your name,
cast out demons in your name,
and do many mighty works in your name?
And I will declare to them,
I never knew you.
Depart from me,
you workers of lawlessness.
It's terrifying.
When Jesus uses these words,
you'll say to me, Lord, Lord.
That's master slave verbiage.
In order for there to be a Lord.
That's the word master.
And the only way someone's a master is
if the master has slaves.
And so the verbiage is right.
You're the master.
I'm your slave.
Or you say, go, I'll go.
What you say do all do.
The verbiage is right.
And what he's saying
is those who have the right verbiage
still might not get in.
Not because they don't
say the right words, but because
Jesus, the Son of God, doesn't know them.
It's terrifying.
Just because I say I believe in Jesus,
that is important.
But by itself, Jesus says,
apparently that's not enough.
Just because I claim
you're the master doesn't
necessarily mean
that I have a relationship with him.
And this is Jesus's
warning to those who would claim
Christian superficially,
but whose spiritual life
and spiritual habits
have no impact on their daily life.
It's those who claim to be religious,
who claim to know God.
But their daily lives
look no different than anybody
who doesn't.
A superficial confession
I was just talking
with a man this week.
And he's
he's dying of cancer, and he knows it.
And someone asked me, they said, hey,
I want you to get them baptized.
And I told,
I told this guy, baptism isn't going to do
you any good.
You're only hope
is to accept Jesus as your Savior,
to accept what he did on the cross
so your sin could be forgiven,
and all of the nastiness of your past
can be forgiven.
And to come to the father
through with this idea that your only hope
for what you're facing, eternity.
He said, I mean, I yeah, okay.
But I got a lot of people praying for me
and said,
I don't care
who you have, praying for you.
Their prayers for you
aren't going to do you any good.
Until you realize that Jesus
is your only hope of forgiveness
and salvation, it's a very narrow way.
Do you understand?
I don't see him here, he said.
Who's going to come to church either
the the, the 930, the 11:00 service.
So I'm praying.
You sure y'all pray that
he'll show up at 11:00?
Amen.
Jesus
says on that day
your words aren't going to end.
On that day.
Your words, even your acts, are going to
do what Daisy talking about on that day.
It's talking about day of judgment
and so on that day when you and I stand
before God and have to give an
an account of our lives.
When we have to stand
before God, and when God says, why, why,
why do you get to come and share
in your master's happiness
for all eternity? On that day,
every one of us will stand before God
and give him an account of our lives.
What we've said, what we've done,
what we've thought.
An account of our faith on account
of how we respond to what God,
what to what we know
that God has told us on that day.
He says on that day
many will say to me, Lord, Lord, didn't
we prophesy in her name and cast out
demons today?
Don't we do mighty, mighty,
many mighty works in your name.
Charles Spurgeon
spoke many messages.
One was about this
and I want to share with you part
of what
Charles Spurgeon said about this passage.
He says,
what's your primary object in life?
What's your objective in life?
And will you think that much of it
on that day, as you do right now?
Will you think of it on that day
as such a wise pursuit
as you think of it now?
You can defend your decisions now,
but will you be able to defend
your decisions on that day?
Their objection
is, didn't we do all of this in your name?
And Jesus doesn't
doubt their claims to miracles.
He doesn't refute that they did
these great things in the name of Jesus.
But apparently Jesus is telling us
that miracles
prove nothing.
Don't get overwhelmed by signs
and wonders,
though.
They did them in Jesus's name.
Apparently they had no loving relationship
and fellowship
with Jesus.
The name of Jesus has great authority,
but even those
who don't have a relationship with him
obviously.
So they hear Jesus's words depart from me.
I never knew you.
See, in
the end, the basis of a salvation is this.
And I don't want you to miss this.
It's both knowing Jesus and being known
by Jesus.
According to what Jesus is saying
in Matthew seven,
this is the basis for our salvation.
Jesus didn't say, oh, I know your works.
You're good.
He says, I needed to know you.
In essence, he's saying,
you may have claim to know me, but I never
knew you.
It's not that these people
lost their salvation.
Apparently,
they never had salvation to begin with.
And so the question has got to be,
how do I make sure that I know
Jesus and am known by Jesus?
Isn't that the question?
We say it all the time.
I hope it sinks in.
It's about a relationship, not religion.
It's just not about what you believe.
It's about a
relationship that you've entered into.
Where you know Jesus, certainly,
but he also knows you
and what Jesus is saying here.
So we have to be very careful that we're
just not people who claim to know Christ.
Yeah, I believe in God.
Yeah.
No, I know, I know, yeah,
but does he know you?
There's a there's a
there's a level of intimacy that Jesus
is addressing here
that not everybody who claims to know
Jesus possesses.
See, a heart
that knows Jesus and is known by
Jesus is a heart
both that is open and receives
Jesus and then opens itself
to Jesus.
Receiving him by faith
and revealing yourself to him
in relationship.
Where the confession is, I believe, Jesus,
that you're the only way to heaven,
that you died on the cross,
that you rose from the grave,
and that you shed your blood
for the forgiveness of my sin.
Absolutely.
I know you and I accept you,
and likewise Jesus.
This is all of me.
And I'm giving all of me to.
I want you to know me,
not just know about me
in the sovereign mind of God,
but to know me personally.
That you know my inner.
You know who I am.
You know my tendencies,
you know my failures.
I have let you into my life
and you know all the deep, dark resources,
just not in a knowledge sense, but
in a personal sense that I let you into me
in every part of me and every part of me
responds to this relationship with you,
and I let you transform the inner
stuff in me, just not my outward behavior.
Do you understand?
It's knowing Jesus and Him knowing me.
It's the difference
between I know someone and I write them
text messages or letters
and the intimacy of a marriage where
husband and wife know each other.
And apparently Jesus is saying,
until there's that intimacy,
I don't know you
because you haven't let me in.
You believe in me.
You say you accept me,
but you don't haven't let me in.
So depart from me.
You may know me, but I don't know you.
You understand?
And so to that end.
I want to give you an opportunity
right now.
Not just to confess that you know Jesus,
but to let Jesus know you.
There's
no magical body position for prayer,
but because many of us are like
little black
lab puppies that just, oh.
When we pray,
we close our eyes
because it helps us not to be distracted.
And so I'm going to invite you
in this moment just to close your eyes
so you're not distracted.
And you do your own
spiritual self-assessment.
Do you know Jesus?
And have you invited allowed him access
so that he knows you?
I encourage you in this moment simply
confession of faith. Jesus.
Thank you that you
I believe that you died on the cross
so my sins could be forgiven.
You shed your blood
so my sin could be forgiven.
I accept what you've done,
and I appropriate your blood over my life
for the forgiveness of my sin.
What I know of you, I accept,
and I ask you to lead my life.
And then.
And, Jesus, I want you to know me
not in the grand, omniscient way,
but in the personal way,
where every nook and cranny and dark place
where everything that I've held on myself.
I invite you into.
And I give you authority
into every one of those places of my life.
Clean.
Make new
rule over.
I am yours and you are mine.
And every part of my life.
Your name I pray.
Amen.
Friends,
my prayer
is that none of you leave this place
without knowing Christ and Him
knowing you.
And if you prayed that prayer, please,
I'm telling you.
Let me know.
Let us know.
I want to walk with you through this
relationship, into this relationship.
Don't walk out of here
without telling one of us.
One of those was the prayer landers.
Let us pray over you.
The just.
Just confirming your decision.
It's too important.
To understand.
As Jesus goes on
and wraps up this this sermon
in verses
24 through 27, he tells this parable
parables
Jesus used because they're profound.
They're profound stories
that teach the unchanging,
the unchanging truth
of the kingdom of God
and citizens of the Kingdom.
And the reason Jesus taught him parables.
He tells us why in Mark chapter four,
when he was alone, those around,
those around him with the 12 disciples,
they asked about these parables
because he's talking
to parables all the time.
And he said to them, to you,
you know me, and I know you.
We have this deep, intimate relationship
with each other.
To you.
You've been given the secret
of the kingdom of God.
That's why I'm talking to you.
Parables. You get it?
The parables are telling you
the secrets of the kingdom of God.
But to those on the outside,
they may
say they know me, but I don't know them.
They're on the outside.
Everything's in parables,
so they may indeed see,
but not perceive, and indeed hear,
but not understand.
Otherwise they would turn to be forgiven.
I wish they would turn to be forgiven,
but they won't. Why?
Because they they perceive,
but they don't see it.
They hear but they don't understand it.
They're on the outside.
Don't get it.
And so I teach the secrets of the kingdom
for those who get it,
who are not going to trample on it
and defame it.
That's what he just said,
a few verses earlier about throwing
a pearls to the dogs and pigs.
He said the pearls of the kingdom,
the mercy and grace of God,
the kingdom of God, the love of God,
the forgiveness.
That's right.
That's that's beautiful.
And you give that they're
just going to trample on it and defame it.
And so I'm going to speak in parables
that those who get it
will get the secrets of the kingdom of God
and those who don't.
All they're going to do
is trample on anyway,
because they see if they don't
perceive it, they hear, but they don't.
They don't understand.
It's interesting to me
that as part of this group was Judas
and Jesus spoke in parables.
And one reason, because I think he knew
Judas was just going to trample
on to fame, on the mercy
and grace and forgiveness of God.
He saw it.
He just didn't understand it.
And so he tells this parable,
and this is what he says in this parable.
Everyone who hears these words of mine,
everyone who's heard what I've said,
we're in that camp.
We've all
heard the words that he said
in these three chapters.
Every one of us
who's heard these words of mine
and does them, will be like a wise man
who built his house on a rock.
And the rain fell, and the floods came,
and the wind blew and beat on that house.
But it did not fall. Why?
Because it was founded on the rock.
And everyone
who hears these words of mine,
just like we have
and does not do
them, will be like a foolish man
who built his house on the sand,
not the rock.
And the rain fell and the floods came,
and the winds
blew and beat against that house,
and it fell.
And great was the fall of it.
There's one gate,
storms coming,
and only one foundation
is going to survive. It.
When Jesus tells this parable,
I want you understand what he's saying.
He's saying there's three truths here
that we're all building.
We're all building our lives.
That's that's the
that's the that's the house.
We're all building our lives.
Storms are coming,
without a doubt.
Some of you are in it.
Some of us are headed into it.
That's just.
That's just the truth of life
and the success of what I build.
The success of what you build
will be determined
by the foundation on which it's built.
You know, it's interesting
in this, in this, in this parable
that Jesus tells, every building
looks the same from the outside.
We all look the same.
The foundation is the most important part
of the of the structure, and it's unseen.
And though
it's unseen,
the found every foundation is proven.
When the storm hits.
Though we all look the same.
We all go through the same stuff.
Nobody sees the foundation
until the storm hits.
And then it's apparent to
see with the building.
The facade is for show,
but the foundation determines the future.
And there are some lives who have built
nothing but a facade.
And so when the storm comes,
destruction and great is that destruction.
When Jesus used this,
this, this analogy of the storm,
the storms in this day
was the greatest experience of power
that they knew.
Because they didn't have nuclear stuff
then they didn't have the fossil
fuel stuff.
They so it's like the storms
are the ultimate in power.
And Jesus says, what is that?
That type of forces
coming against your life?
Here's what he's saying,
that every one of us is going to face
some type of storm against us.
That is going to be far
beyond our power to handle.
We won't be able to handle it.
The power
of the storms are going to be so great
that it's going to be so far
beyond our power to to endure.
That is going to shake us
to the very foundation
of what our life and faith is built on.
And if it's built on any other thing,
then Jesus himself.
It's a sandy foundation
and great will be the fall.
Sea. When the storm shifts,
we don't rise to the level of the storm.
We default
to the foundation.
Most of us think when the storm hits like
God won't give me anything more than I can
handle.
That's a lie from the devil.
He absolutely will give you more
than you can handle.
He won't allow you to be tempted
more than what you can handle,
but he will absolutely allow you
to have more than what you can bear. Why?
To test the found. To not test.
To reveal the foundation.
And most of us think, well, when that time
comes, I'll just,
you know, I'll be able to handle it all.
I want to know you won't because
we don't rise to the level of the storm.
We sink.
Our default is the foundation.
Think about this as a parent.
I mean, just imagine
you had a child and you're like, hey, boy,
go clean up your room. It's a pigsty.
And your son says, I hear you
all right.
Walked away.
Our hour and a half comes back.
You say, son, clean up your own.
No. And clean up.
But I heard what you said.
And I have paid attention to your words
so much.
I even memorized what you said.
And your words were so important to me.
I just memorize them,
but I translate them.
I could tell you what you said
in Greek. Isn't that impressive?
What are you going to say as a parent?
Right?
I don't care, idiot.
I didn't ask you to
like, like go clean.
Do what I said.
And so many people.
Lord, Lord,
I heard what you said.
I even memorized some of it.
I studied it.
I don't you didn't.
You didn't do it.
Great.
Is the four.
Many will think I'm.
I'm coming to church.
I'm learning what you said that
that's good.
And that's a start.
But that ain't the end game.
James 122.
Don't be.
Here's of the word and only
and deceive yourselves.
Do what it says.
We have to get to the
to the place where we do believe,
so that we will belong
to the family of God 100%.
But after belonging to the family of God,
just because we say the words Lord, Lord,
then we become by the doing of the word
a transformed person,
a transformed husband, a transformed wife,
a transformed
son, daughter, student
work, a transformed.
And as you were transformed,
we give what we have all our resource
to the work of the Kingdom.
When we go on mission with God.
And that's how Jesus wraps up this
sermon.
And the results of it are profound.
Look at what it says.
And when Jesus finished these sayings,
the crowds were astonished at his teaching
for was teaching them as one
who had authority and not as the scribes.
What was so amazing about this method?
What was so authoritative about this?
Let me tell you,
the other rabbis and teachers,
all they did was simply quote
other rabbis and teachers.
They didn't stand on their own authority.
They stood on this sort of what
everybody had already said before them.
Jesus spoke from his own authority,
with his own inherent power and authority.
Here's here's his point.
Whenever God's Word,
this God's Word is authoritative
in and of itself.
It doesn't need anything
to authenticate it.
It doesn't need any.
It doesn't need to borrow the power
from the anything else
to be authoritative and powerful.
This is it.
And Jesus spoke
with the authority of the Word of God.
He didn't have to quote anybody.
He was the Word of God.
And as he taught
with this type of authority,
they had never heard such doctrine before.
They had never heard says truth
about the kingdom of God
and what was required of the citizens
of the kingdom of God.
See, whenever God's Word is presented with
with its own inherent power and authority,
it is amazing.
We don't have to fancy it up.
We don't have to preach and teach
for sound bites.
We don't have to try to amaze
people with it.
It is amazing in and of itself.
God's word is amazing in and of itself,
and when we do it,
we experience the amazing Kingdom of God
and it's astounding.
His whole
Jesus boils down
this whole thing with authority.
He asked the question,
have you decided to follow me?
Not with lip service,
not with what you claim,
but with unquestioned devotion
and obedience.
I asked Jeff and Ali to sing this song
for us and with us.
At the end of this message,
I'm. Invite them up.
And I chose this song
because I think it drives home
what Jesus is demanding of us.
At the end of his sermon.
This song is derived from the words
that were spoken
during this event,
and I'm going to tell you about
how these words weren't spoken as a song.
They were spoken as a declaration,
and someone
later came on and made these words a song.
During the Welsh revival
back in the turn of the century,
early in 1900s,
God's Spirit
broke out in such profound ways
amongst people that were called,
they calling them to repentance
and calling them to give all their lives
to the service of the kingdom.
And out of the results of the Welsh
revival, all these, these men and women
decided, God, I'm going to give my life
to you on the mission field.
And many of them their hearts were drawn
to the area in North India
that had not heard the gospel yet.
And some of these missionaries were called
by God
to go to the Goro tribe in North India.
They were a headhunter tribe,
and their culture was such that
when they would conquer people,
they would cut off their heads
and hang their heads around the village
as symbols of their of
their power and their might.
And so these
missionaries went to the Galle tribe,
and they eventually gained the opportunity
to talk to them about what
the God who had changed their life
in the person of Jesus.
And it was during those conversations
that one man
named NOK Singh accepted Christ,
and through him his wife and his two sons
became Christ followers.
And they were so overwhelmed
with the message of the gospel
and the truth of Jesus's life.
Death is resurrection to be made new.
They start to evangelize
until everybody else in their tribe of the
the Galle Headhunters about Jesus
and the story of Jesus started to spread
and it got to the the,
the leader of the tribe and he was irate.
They were evil, they were demonic.
They had all this other religious beliefs,
and they did not want the message
of Jesus, this one savior,
to override all their belief system.
And so
the leader of the tribe
got knocked sing
and his wife and his two sons,
and brought him before the tribal council
in the center of the of the tribe,
and said, you must cease
and stop talking about Jesus.
And if you don't,
we'll kill you.
And in response
not, Singh said these words,
I have decided to follow Jesus.
No turning back.
And at that the chief gave the orders
to the archers, and they drew back
their their bows, and they shot
both of his sons before his eyes,
and his sons fell down dead in the dirt.
He says, you must stop preaching.
Jesus and not saying, look down.
The story of history tells us
he looked down at his sons in the dirt,
and he looked up at the tribal leader.
He said,
though none will follow.
Though none go with me.
Still I will follow.
No turning back.
And at that
the king, being irate, commanded.
The archers
pull back arrows and shoot his wife.
And they did,
and she fell down dead next to her sons,
and not.
Singh looked at his wife and his two sons,
and then looked at the tribal leader.
And he said these words, the cross
before me,
the world behind me.
No turning back.
And at that the tribal leader
commanded the archers
to put arrows in his body.
And they did,
and he perished.
And in a moment of wonderment,
the the story of history tells us that
the King looked at NOK Singh and his wife
and his two sons, and said, who would?
Who would believe in
in such a man so much that
they would lay down their lives like this?
This, and the start of this process
in the leader.
To investigate Jesus.
And he came to faith,
and through his faith the entire village
accepted Christ.
Because one man.
Said, I have decided to follow Jesus.
No turning back,
though
none go with me. Still I will follow.
No turning back
the cross before me, the world behind me.
No turning back.
And so Jesus has asked us,
will you follow?
Not with lip service.
But every part of your life.
Will you follow?
To narrow gate.
Only if you find it will you be one.
As we sing this song,
I'm not going to ask you to stand it.
We're not going to close this service
with a roar roar thing.
It is. This isn't rah rah.
This is.
Lord,
I need to do business in my own heart.
And so as we sing this song, I'm
not going to ask you to stand up until
if and until you can sing these words
as your declaration.
I don't want you to stand and sing
the song as we wrap up the service.
If you choose.
To sing the song,
these words as a declaration.
Then you stand up
as your declarative statement.
And again, please, I want to implore you
in the name of Jesus,
if you've made a decision to follow him,
tell us.
Tell some of these prayer people.
Let us pray over you
if you need prayer for something,
don't leave this place
without going to God with somebody.
I've decided.
