Confusion
is one of the cleverest tools of the Devil. If he can get us confused on
a matter he quickly gains an advantage. First of all, confusion breeds
discouragement. We get quickly discouraged when we don’t understand
things. Second, confusion brings controversy, mainly because
misunderstandings grow out of it. And thirdly, confusion breeds
disunity. It’s hard to be united on something when everybody’s all mixed
up.
The Devil
has used confusion to retard and restrict people’s understanding about a
multitude of things. I want to discuss just a few to illustrate that
fact.
Confusion about sin.
Sin has been softened in this generation. In fact, you seldom see the
word used. You’ll search several issues of your local paper without even
seeing the word. Actually, there’s no such thing as sin to most people.
Oh, they might say murder’s a sin or perhaps child abuse or something
like that. But pornography? Naa. How about homosexuality? Naa. Cheating?
Depends on who’s doing it and why. Lying? Well, sometimes it’s a little
wrong, but sin? Naa. Sin is called sin only in the most extreme
conditions. What about God’s definition of sin? He says it’s
“transgression of the law”
(I Jn. 3:4-5).
You mean even the “little” transgressions? Yes, sir, sin is any
transgression of the law. “To him that knoweth to do good and doeth it
not, to him it is sin,” God said
(Jas. 4:17).
You mean
if I know something is good and I don’t do it, God holds that against
me? Yes, sir. Omission of known good is just as much a sin as murder or
child abuse. And
Romans 14:23
says that
wilfully ignoring what you believe to be right or wrong is a sin, too:
“whatsoever is not of faith is sin.” Sin is sin. And just because you
ignore it doesn’t mean it goes away. Don’t be confused. “The soul that
sinneth, it shall die”
(Ezek. 18:20).
Confusion about faith.
The devil
has confused men about faith. For instance, faith, to most people, is
merely mental assent, just “accepting Christ.” There’s more to faith
than just the admission that Jesus Christ is the Son of God. For one
thing, there’s no such thing as a faith that does not work. In fact,
James says that “faith without works is dead, being alone”
(Jas. 2:17).
You mean
that faith always does something to prove its validity. Yes, sir. Read
how that “by faith, Abraham, when he was called to go out into a place
which he should afterward receive for an inheritance, obeyed”
(Heb. 11:8)
and how
that “by faith the walls of Jericho fell down, after they were compassed
about seven days”
(Heb. 11:30).
Faith is
not just some feeling better felt than told; it’s a conclusion not only
that God is, but that He rewards “them that diligently seek Him”
(Heb. 11:6).
Confusion about baptism.
The devil
has even confounded some of my own brethren about baptism. They have
reached the untenable conclusion that because they’ve been baptized,
they’ve been saved. Now that’s true, if you want to talk about being
saved initially, or being “born again”
(Jn. 3:3-5).
But
that’s what baptism does, it brings about the new birth; it doesn’t
assure your salvation. Once you’re born, you have to begin to grow. You
mean that when I’ve been baptized, I’ve not guaranteed my salvation?
That’s right, all you did was get ready to grow up in Christ. “If ye
then be risen with Christ (I know of no other kind of being “risen” than
being baptized), seek those things which are above, where Christ sitteth
at the right hand of God; set your affections on things above, not on
things on the earth”
(Col. 3:1-2).
Paul then enumerates the things that we must “put off” and the things
which we must “put on” to insure our salvation. He calls it putting on
the “new man”
(Col. 3:10).
Just as there’s more to faith than merely acknowledging Christ as your
Savior, there’s more to salvation than merely being baptized.
Confusion about judgment.
People are confused about the judgment. For instance, they have reduced
God’s judgment to little more than a kind of slapping of the hand of the
sinner. How clever, the Devil! God will not admit the unrighteous into
His eternal abode: “Not every one that saith unto me, ‘Lord, Lord’ shall
enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he that doeth the will of my
Father which is in heaven”
(Matt. 7:21)
Make no mistake about it: God cannot tolerate sin. He will punish the
sinner with an eternity in hell. “God is not mocked; whatsoever a man
soweth, that shall he also reap”
(Gal. 6:10).
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