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How God Makes Much of You


Chapters

0:0
6:39 The Promise to Abraham
6:42 Promise to Abraham
7:48 Three God Makes Much of Us By by Having Us Sit at Table When He Returns and Serving Us as though He Were the Slave and We Are the Masters
9:35 Four God Makes Much of Us by Appointing Us To Carry Out Judgment of Angels First Corinthians 6 3
10:0 Five God Makes Much of Us by Ascribing Value to Us and Rejoicing over Us as His Treasured Possession
11:49 God Makes Much of Us by Giving Us a Glorious Body like Jesus Resurrection Body
12:16 The Righteous Will Shine like the Sun in the Kingdom of Their Father
13:30 God Makes Much of Us by Granting Us To Sit with Christ on His Throne Revelation 3 21

Transcript

(upbeat music) Welcome back to the podcast. Last Wednesday, we looked at the fact that God makes much of us, his children. He really does make much of us. Why does he make so much of us? He makes so much of us because he is glorifying himself by redeeming us.

In ABJ 1772, we looked at that point in detail. But in that same sermon, we get another point added. It's a follow-up, and one essential to the overall argument Pastor John is making. And it's worth reflecting on here in the podcast because Pastor John knows that for many people, to hear that they were saved so that God would glorify himself in us seems to take away some of the luster of that love.

Pastor John will directly push back against that point a little bit later. He'll answer that question and that concern and show clearly why it's not less loving for God to love us for himself. But before we get there, and we'll get there soon, Pastor John wants to simply dwell on this previously stated fact.

If you are God's blood-bought child, God makes much of you. He does, he really does. In fact, he makes more of you and more of me than we could ever dare imagine. Here's the biblical proof he was eager to share with his church, and this is what he told them.

So that's what I meant when I said, why does the Bible relentlessly reveal the love of God for us in a way that constantly calls attention to the fact that it is done for his glory? Because so many people, when they hear that, feel it as not loving. The point of those texts throughout the Bible where God performs his love for us for his glory is to show that he loves us in the greatest possible way.

Why? How does that show that it's a greater love? How is it a greater love when he loves me for his glory than if he just loved me and it all terminated on me? Well, before I answer that question, I will answer it. Before I answer it, let me dwell with you on the truth that evidently some have assumed, I denied, in asking, do you feel more loved by God when he makes much of you?

Or do you feel more loved by God when he frees you at the cost of his son to enjoy making much of him forever? It's been assumed by some, oh, you don't think he makes much of us. Well, that's a non sequitur. It doesn't follow from what I said, but okay, I don't want to defend myself.

Some have gotten that idea and I would like to now fix it and keep fixing it. If I get things imbalanced, I'd like to get them back into balance, okay? So here we are, trying to help those who heard it that way. The answer is yes, God makes more of you than you could ever imagine.

And I will blow you away for the next five minutes, okay? Put your seatbelt on if you have trouble with being made much of by God because you might leave otherwise. Number one, I think I have seven of these and they'll go back quickly. Number one, God makes much of us by being pleased with us and commending our lives.

Alan Jacobs wrote a great biography of C.S. Lewis and he says in C.S. Lewis's biography that the greatest sermon that C.S. Lewis ever preached was called the weight of glory. That is, believers will one day have a weight of glory that will be so heavy they will imagine, I don't know if I can bear this, it's so good.

What do you think the weight of glory was in that sermon? It was the words, well done, good and faithful servant. And here's what Lewis said. To please God, to be a real ingredient in the divine happiness, to be loved by God not merely pitied but delighted in, as an artist delights in his work or a father in his son, it seems impossible.

A weight or a burden of glory which our thoughts can hardly sustain, but so it is. But so it is and he's right. That's number one. God makes much of us by being pleased with us, making us an ingredient, ingredient in the divine happiness. Like a artist with something he painted or like a father, a son.

Number two, God makes much of us by making us fellow heirs with his son who owns everything. Blessed are the meek for they shall inherit the what? I wonder if you believe that. I do, mine. I don't need it now therefore, right? I don't need it now, I don't need to scrounge to get a piece of earth for about 50 years and then maybe lose everything.

I am very happy to belong to King Jesus, be a fellow heir of Jesus Christ who owns the universe and get my globe at death or maybe at the resurrection. And I won't mind sharing it with you. And if that's a problem, he'll make another globe. In fact, he won't have to make another globe, they're out there.

You get quasar 10, which is probably greener. The promise to Abraham, I'm reading another text on this point, the promise to Abraham and his offspring is that he would be heir of the world. Are you an heir of Abraham? You indeed are an heir. In Christ, we are Abraham's offspring and Abraham was promised the world, Romans 4, 13.

One more, 1 Corinthians 3, 21. Is this the best of all? Probably. Let no one boast of men. He's trying to help Bethlehem not boast. Boast in pastors, boast in elders, boast in buildings, boast in anything. Let no one boast in men for, here's the argument, all things are yours.

Whether Paul or Cephas or Apollos or life or death or the world or things to come, all are yours and you are Christ's and Christ is God's. What an argument. These rag tag Corinthians are being told, would you stop saying I'm of Paul, I'm of Cephas and realize you own everything.

It's just a matter of time, very short time. Number three, God makes much of us by having us sit at table when he returns and serving us as though he were the slave and we are the masters. This is the parable of the second coming that is the most unbelievable.

It's Luke 12, I'll just read you verse 37. He's describing the second coming and he says, "Truly I say to you, he will dress himself for service and have us sit at table and he will come and serve us." What will it take to make you feel much of?

Feel made much of? I used to think until I saw that parable that he did that on the earth, right? Last supper, bound a towel, got up, washed their feet. That's an incarnation action but now, name above every name, he's coming on a white horse, sword out of his mouth, slaying his enemies, making everybody serve him at table.

And that's not what it says. He will never cease to be our servant. We will tremble, we will say with Peter, "You can't wash my feet, get your towel off, I'm going to, sit down." And he will say, no he won't. I wanna say he'll say, "Get behind me Satan." But I think probably at that point, we will be sanctified enough that we won't be satanic like Peter was.

So there we are sitting at table, shortly with Jesus serving us. That's number three. Number four, God makes much of us by appointing us to carry out judgment of angels. 1 Corinthians 6 verse three, "Do you not know that we are to judge angels?" Take a deep breath and say, "Why I don't think I could do that." (laughs) You will, you will.

Number five, God makes much of us by ascribing value to us and rejoicing over us as his treasured possession. Two verses, Matthew 10, 30, 31. "Are not two sparrows sold for a penny and not one of them will fall to the ground apart from your father? Fear not, therefore you are of more value than many sparrows.

I attend to the minutest detail of a sparrow's life. You don't compare. You are, I would say, infinitely more valuable than a bird. So don't worry, I've got your back. I won't let anything happen that's not for your good. I love you, I value you. You're coming home. I decided this before the foundation of the world." Number six, oh, I said there were two verses there.

I said, "Values you and sings over you, rejoices over you." This is Zephaniah 3, 17. "The Lord your God will rejoice over you with gladness. He will quiet you by his love. He will exult over you with loud singing." You ever heard God sing? I haven't. I suppose Jesus sang a hymn when he went out into the garden.

When everybody else sang, he didn't sit there quiet. But when God sings, universes come into being. God's gonna sing, and it's gonna be a sound like you've never heard over you. Over the blood-bought bride of his son. He will lead the song at the wedding feast. Number six, "God makes much of us by giving us a glorious body like Jesus' resurrection body.

He will transform our lowly body to be like his glorious body by the power that enables him to subject all things to himself," Philippians 3:21. But here's the one that has captured me for all the years since I saw it. In the parable in Matthew 13, 43, the righteous will shine like the sun in the kingdom of their father.

Remember seeing Jesus in Revelation 1? Hair white like snow, girded, brass belt, truth, just pillars for legs, and his face, it says, "We're shining like the sun," and John was on his face. So will you. We would not be able to look at each other in the resurrection unless God had given us new spiritual resurrection eyes.

We will be so bright. No more wheelchairs, no more depression, no more fallen countenances, no more discouragement, no more disease, no more alienation, everything new, and your face shining like the sun. So that C.S. Lewis said, "We would be tempted to bow down and worship each other if God hadn't given us an eyes and a heart to know better." Most amazingly, I think, maybe not, God makes much of us by granting us to sit with Christ on his throne.

Revelation 321, "The one who conquers, I will grant to sit with me on my throne as I also conquered and sat down on my father's throne." I don't know what to do with that. So I'll try. Maybe Ephesians 1:23 helps. "The church is Christ's body, the fullness of him who fills all in all." The fullness, meaning-- OK, we're going to sit on the throne of God with Jesus because the thrones merge.

We're on Jesus' throne. He sits on the father's throne. Now we're all on the same throne, God, the son, and us sitting on the throne of the universe. If I put those two texts together, I think it means something like everywhere the father extends his rule in the universe, he will do it through you.

God created the world, you, for a reason. And it isn't to throw you away at the end. It's so that you would fulfill what he gave you to do in the beginning, namely to be a governor of the universe. Subdue it, multiply, fill it, enjoy it, make something of it.

Now I've made you new. I'll make the world new. Now get about it. And any place I stick my hand to rule, I'm ruling through people. I'm ruling. He's going through people. So let it be known loud and clear, God makes much of us. God makes much of his son's bride.

God loves his church with a kind of love that will make more of her because he makes much of her for his glory. Stunning, so rich. This is from John Piper's April 18, 2010 sermon on Psalm 79, titled "How Much Does God Love This Church?" The whole thing is online.

I'd encourage you to listen to it. I found this clip. But if you find one, email it to me. Give me your name, hometown, the sermon title, the time stamp of where the clip happens in the audio, and make a note of what stands out to you in the clip.

Put the word "clip" in the subject line of the email and send it to me at askpastorjohn@desiringgod.org. That's an email address, askpastorjohn@desiringgod.org. Well, we're going to end the week with a heartbreaking email from a young woman recently widowed. And she may be newly widowed because she made a bad medical decision about her husband's sickness.

He's now gone. And she's now left with a very heavy burden on her soul. And she writes in for counsel. Pastor John will answer that when he returns to the studio with us on Friday. We'll see you then. you