By Derek Prince
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Be encouraged and inspired with this Bible-based sermon by Derek Prince.
Be encouraged and inspired with this Bible-based sermon by Derek Prince.
Discover how to transition from understanding the atonement as a legal concept to experiencing it personally in 'From Legal To Experiential', a sermon by Derek Prince. Explore the profound exchange that took place on the Cross, where Jesus was punished so we could be forgiven, and through His sacrifice, receive healing, righteousness, and acceptance. Part of the 'Atonement' series, Part 17, this teaching provides insight into the abundant blessings available through the Gospel.
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This is the final four sessions in this series of teaching on the atonement. Today Iām going to seek, with Godās help, to try to give you some insight and instruction on how you can appropriate all that God has provided through the atonement. But I think it would be good first, and in line with the principles of teaching, to do a little brief recapitulation. Somebody who was in the teaching profession came out with this statement: āRemember, nothing has been taught until something has been learned.ā So it isnāt a question of how much Iāve said, itās a question of how much you have learned.
So, weāre going to recapitulate two things. First of all, the aspects of the exchange that took place when Jesus died on the cross. Iāll tell you the second one next. But letās see if we can do this. This is always a test of my own memory. Letās be simple and childlike, using our left hand for the bad things, our right hand for the good things. Okay. Are you ready? Jesus was punished that we might be forgiven. Jesus was wounded that we might be healed. Jesus was made sin with our sinfulness that we might be made righteous with His righteousness. Jesus died our death that we might share His life. Jesus was made a curse that we might receive the blessing. Jesus endured our poverty that we might share His abundance. Jesus bore our shame that we might share His glory. Jesus endured our rejection that we might have His acceptance. Our old man died in Jesus that the new man might live in us.
I saw some of you really saying it without looking at your note outline, so congratulations! Iām impressed.
Then yesterday in our sessions we looked at five different aspects of deliverance through the application of the cross in our lives. Theyāre all contained in Galatians. So, letās see if we can do that. Through the cross we receive deliverance from this present evil age, from the law, from self, from the flesh and from the world. Again, Iām impressed. A lot of you have mastered it.
Now all that is what God has done. But it doesnāt avail us unless we know how to appropriate it. So thatās going to be my theme throughout the sessions today. Let me say by way of help that if anybody misses what Godās provided, it will not be because itās too difficult, it will be because itās too simple. Thereās nothing complicated in Godās plan for appropriating His salvation.
I want to start with a little example from the Old Testament from the book of Joshua. Because, I believe this is a wonderful pattern for us. Iām just going to read Joshua 1:2ā3, which were the words that the Lord spoke to Joshua when he was given the responsibility of bringing the Israelites into the land of Canaan after the death of Moses. I think youāll agree that Moses was a hard person to fill the shoes of. So it was a tremendous responsibility that had come on Joshua. This is what the Lord said:
āMoses my servant is dead. Now therefore, arise and go over this Jordan, you and all this people, to the land which I am giving to them [the children of Israel]. Every place that the sole of your foot will tread upon, I have given you as I said to Moses.ā
I want to point out two different tenses. In verse 2 the Lord says, āI am giving.ā But in verse 3 He says, āI have given.ā Now, the Lord is the disposer of everything in heaven and earth. The earth is the Lordās, the fullness thereof. So when the Lord gives something, that settles it, thereās no arguing about it. The Lord said, āI am giving this territory that you see in front of you to you.ā And then He said, āI have given it to you.ā And as far as I understand, from that moment onwards, legally the entire land of Canaan belonged to the sons of Israel.
But they didnāt actually occupy anything more than they had before the Lord spoke. They could have had two wrong reactions. The first would have been discouragement. āWell, the Lord said Heād given it all to us and we donāt have anything more than we had before. Weāre still in the same place!ā
The other would be presumption which is the opposite of discouragement. And here we take a little picture of Godās people and we could apply it to the church. I donāt want to use any names but suppose you view the crossing of the Jordan that was to follow as receiving the baptism in the Holy Spirit. So, thereās two different ways the Israelites could have acted presumptuously. They could have lined up on the east bank of the Jordan, folded their arms, looked westward and said, āItās all ours.ā But they wouldnāt have any more than they had before they started. Or, they could have been a little more adventurous, crossed the Jordan, lined up on the west bank, look westward, folded their arms and said, āItās all ours.ā Legally they would have been right. Experientially they would have been wrong. The Canaanites still knew who possessed the land.
So I think sometimes the church can be like that. Whichever side of the Jordan you might happen to be on, you look across at the Promised Land and you say, āItās all ours.ā Legally youāre right, experientially youāre wrong. Iāve heard people sayāyou may have heard itāāI got it all when I was saved.ā My answer to that is, āIf you got it all, where is it all? Letās see it.ā But itās perfectly true. Legally once you are saved and born again, you are an heir of God and a joint heir with Jesus Christ. Everything that belongs to Jesus belongs to you. But, you donāt possess it. So you have to distinguish between the legal and the experiential.
This is true in what weāre talking about. Legally, everything that Jesus did on the cross is for us, itās already ours. Itās already provided. But experientially, most of us havenāt entered into everything what Heās provided. In fact, I doubt whether thereās anybody who has actually appropriated in experience all that Jesus provided through His death on the cross.
Do you remember the scripture that we were saying at the beginningāwhich we could well say again, Hebrews 10:14:
āFor by one sacrifice He has perfected forever those who are being sanctified.ā
So thatās the one sacrifice. Itās like God saying, āI have given it.ā But the being sanctified in like crossing the river and going into the land and taking possession of it. And itās an interesting fact if you study the history of Joshua, God did two tremendous miracles to bring the Israelites into the land. The crossing of the Jordan and the destruction of Jericho. But from that time onward they had to fight for everything they got. I personally believe this is true in the Christian life. God will do certain miracles to bring you in. After that you only get what you fight for. And if you donāt fight for it, you donāt get it.
Historically, the Israelites at that time never really took over the whole land. They coexisted with the alien forces, which was a disaster for them. I think that perhaps is a picture of the church, trying to move in and coexisting with a lot of enemy forces which shouldnāt be there.
Anyhow, I just want to encourage you that Joshua and the Israelites entering into the inheritance is, in a certain sense, a pattern for us. So, donāt be discouraged if you find yourself involved in tremendous battles. Itās part of the whole process. Donāt just fold your arms and say, āItās all ours,ā because youāll be disappointed.
Thereās a scripture, too, in the prophet Obadiah. Some of you donāt really know much about Obadiah. Heās the shortest of all the prophets but heās got a message. If you want to know where to look for him, heās between Amos and Jonah. If you donāt know where to find Amos, well then you have a problem. I just want to read one verse from Obadiah, verse 17. This is a picture of the restoration of Israel to their inheritance at the close of this age, which is at present as I believe, under wayāalthough itās got a lot further to go.
āBut on Mount Zion there shall be deliverance, and there shall be holiness; the house of Jacob shall possess their possessions.ā
Now there are various different translations, Iāve looked at two or three. But the essence is there. Three things: deliverance, holiness, and Godās people possessing their possessions. You see, we can have possessions that we never possess. And I personally believe that these are the steps in very simple outline by which Godās people will get back into their inheritance.
I am intimately involved in Israel and in the Middle East. Iām not Jewish but my view of history is that the Jews, because of disobedience, were exiled from their God-given inheritance for something like 19 centuries. At the present moment theyāre on their way back. This you may not agree with but as one of my friends says, āHow can I help it if Iām right!ā What I want to suggest to you is this is not only true of Israel, itās equally true of Godās covenant people, the church. For almost the same period of time, I believe the church has been in exile from itās God-given inheritance in Christ. If you look at the church portrayed in the New Testament and in the book of Acts, and look at the church as it has been through the centuries, youād have to say thereās very little correspondence between them. So in a sense, Israel returning into their geographical inheritance is a pattern and a challenge for the church returning into its spiritual inheritance in Christ. I believe the steps are the same. Deliverance, holiness and then possessing our possessions.
We spoke yesterday about five forms of deliverance in the book of Galatians. Deliverance from this present evil age, from the law, from self, from the flesh, from the world. I believe those deliverances are essential if Godās people are to get back into their inheritance. But I also believe that we will not really enter into our inheritance without holiness. You remember Hebrews 10:14, how can you ever forget it from now on?
āBy one sacrifice He has perfected forever those who are being sanctified [or made holy].ā
In other words, as we progress in holiness we qualify to get back into our inheritance. So thereās just a little picture from Obadiah.
Now, I want to come to what you call the practical aspect. How can we appropriate the provision thatās made for us by the cross? The first thing which has to be established, itās not new but itās trueāand incidentally, Iām not interested in people preaching something new. Iām interested in people preaching what is true. Some Christians always want to hear something new. Very often, what is new is not true. So, letās come back to the old truism, faith is essential. Hebrews 11:6:
āBut without faith it is impossible to please Him [God]...ā
So itās no use trying to please God without faith because itās impossible.
ā...for the one who comes to God must believe...ā
Must do what? Believe, thatās right. And must believe two things:
ā...that God is [that He exists] and that He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him.ā
Now most people believe that God exists. But itās not enough, youāve got to believe that if you diligently seek God, He will reward you. And so, faith is essential but something else is essential, too. Whatās that? Diligence. You look carefully through the Bible and find if you can ever see anything in it that speaks well of laziness. If you do, well, I could give you a big reward but Iām not going to offer it. I donāt believe thereās one good word for laziness anywhere in the Bible. The Bible condemns drunkenness but it condemns laziness far more severely than drunkenness. And you see, some of our values in the church are distorted because weāre down on the people who are drunk and we tolerate lots of people who are lazy. Is that right? Are there any lazy people in our churches? The question is, are there any people who are not lazy?
So, we have to have faith. Praise God, if you remember, I told you how you can get faith. I think it was the second session, I gave my personal testimony of how Iād been sick for a year on end in hospital, desperately seeking faith. And God gave me this wonderful scripture in Romans 10:17. Oh, how I thank God for Romans 10:17! It was a ray of light in my darkness.
āSo then faith comes by hearing, and hearing by the Word of God.ā
This scripture is very real to me. I mean, it was my lifeline out of hospital. So I want to say to you donāt over-simplify it. Some people say faith comes by hearing the Word of God. That isnāt exactly what Paul says. He says what comes from the Word of God is hearing, and what comes from hearing is faith. In other words, theyāre two stages. When you expose yourself to the Word of God with an open heart and mind, what first comes is hearing, the ability to hear what God is saying. It becomes real to you. And out of hearing there develops faith. The problem is that a lot of people donāt allow the time thatās needed for hearing to produce faith. You have to expose yourself to the Word of God without setting time limits. Ruth and I have discovered one thing in our walk with the Lord, that we shouldnāt set time limits to God. If we begin to pray with the attitude weāve got half an hour, well, we get what we can get in half an hour. But if we have the attitude weāre here to hear from God, no time limits; itās totally different. And almost invariably, sooner or later we hear from God. What Iām suggesting is that youāve got to be prepared to give more time than most Christians presently give to hearing what God is saying to you through His Word. Hearing comes first, then faith. If you donāt take time for hearing, all youāll do is read the Bible. But it doesnāt say faith comes by reading the Bible, does it? A lot of people interpret it that way. It says faith comes by hearing, hearing by the Word of God.
And the Word there is that famous word which has gone around the world now, rhema. Itās not the established Word of God in heaven, itās the word that God is speaking to you at that moment. Jesus said in Matthew 4:4:
āMan shall not live by bread alone, but by every word [rhema] that proceeds out of the mouth of God.ā
We donāt live by the Bible, if I can put it that way. We live by the Word made real to us personally by the Holy Spirit. See, what is the Bible? Itās white sheets of paper with black marks on them. Thatās not going to do you any good. What transforms those black marks into something that produces faith? My answer is the Holy Spirit. Itās the Holy Spirit that makes the Word of God live, makes it a living word. For about nine months when I first went in the British Army, I studied the Bible as a philosopher. Because, I felt it was my philosophic duty to know what the Bible had to say. I didnāt want to know, I just felt that I really couldnāt speak with authority about the Bible if I didnāt know what it said. And, it was wearisome. I mean, only determination kept me going. I said, āNo book is going to beat me, I started at the beginning and Iām going to read it through to the end.ā After nine months I had a supernatural encounter with Jesus in the middle of the night. No intellectual decision, but an experience. The next day when I picked up the Bible to read it, it was totally different. It was the voice of God speaking to me personally. It was just as if there were only two persons in the universe: God and me. And the Bible was God speaking to me. Thatās it, you see. Thatās where we have to come. Whatever it takes, donāt stop short of a relationship with God where His Word speaks personally to you. I believe thatās what faith comes from. First we have to have hearing, and then out of hearing there develops faith.
God does not offer instant faith. Weāre so used to instant everything now that we think God deals that way. As a matter of fact, frankly there are a lot of people in the church that think that God is a kind of heavenly automatic vending machine. So, if you find the right coin and put it in the right slot, youāll get the right kind of soft drink. God is not like that. Heās not a machine, Heās a person. You have to relate to Him in a very personal way to get the results.
Anyhow, I just want to offer some suggestions in closing this session on how to receive the scriptures. First of all, in 1 Thessalonians 2. Paul was really proud of the Thessalonian Christians. He said, āYouāve been an example to all the other Christians around.ā One reason for their success is stated in 1 Thessalonians 2:13:
āFor this reason we also thank God without ceasing, because when you received the Word of God which you heard from us, you welcomed it not as the word of men, but as it is in truth, the Word of God, which also effectively works in you who believe.ā
So if you will receive this not as a word of men, not on the same level with human writings and human wisdom, but as God Himself speaking to you, then it will do its work in you. It works effectively in those who believe. When you open your heart by faith to Godās Word, it will do in you what God has said it will do. Iād like to emphasize that but I must move on.
Now thereās another requirement in the epistle of James, chapter 1 and verse 21:
āTherefore, lay aside all filthiness and overflow of wickedness, and receive with meekness the implanted Word, which is able to save your souls.ā
How are we to receive it? With meekness. What does that mean? Humility. God is the teacher, we are the pupils. God is teaching us. We donāt tell God how He should run the universe, how He should have managed our lives. We let Him teach us. Thatās meekness.
I came up with a new definition of faith just recently. Thereās no limit to the definitions of faith and I understand that. This is a very simple one: Faith is taking God seriously. Reading the Bible with faith is taking seriously everything that God says. So when God says ādo something,ā you do it. Let me give you an example. If you will catch on to this, it will change your lifeāmost of you. Some of you may have been changed already. 1 Thessalonians 5:18:
āIn everything give thanks...ā
In how many things? In everything. Do you believe that? Do you take it seriously? Do you do it? Praise God. All right. So when you get into the car, you thank God for your car. When you drive along the highway, you thank God for the highway. We donāt take the highway for granted. It took a lot of money and labor to build those highways. When you put on your clothes, you thank God for your clothes. And bear in mind there are a lot of people that donāt have enough to wear. I think most of the world doesnāt have shoes. What do you do when you put your shoes on? In other words, donāt just sporadically thank God when it comes to your mind, make it a habit to thank God in everything. It will change you. But thatās an example of what I mean. You receive with meekness the Word of God. You donāt say, āGod, that doesnāt sound reasonable to me. After all, I paid for these shoes.ā You say, āThatās right, Lord. Iāll thank you for them.ā
Now we come to Matthew 6:33, which is just what I want to close with:
āSeek first the kingdom of God, and His righteousness...ā
So, you have to give God and His Word priority in your life over everything else.
Where available, this teaching includes a sermon outline and transcript for personal use, message preparation, or Bible study discussions.