Don't
Take It For Granted
Hebrews 2:1-4
Introduction:
Do we ever take things or
people for granted? I guess we're all guilty of this. It seems that
we don't know how to appreciate what we have in our hands or who we
have beside us. When we wake up in the morning and we see breakfast
already prepared on the table, are we grateful that God gave us the
food and that there are people who took the effort to prepare the
food for us, or do we look at the food and complain that you don't
like it so much, taking for granted that you are tremendously blessed
to have food on the table everyday and for at least three times a
day, when someone out there struggles to even have one meal a day?
When we turn on our computers to use the internet, are we thankful
that we have such a powerful technology which we can use to enhance
our work and communication, or do we think nothing of it, forgetting
that some twenty years ago, there was no such thing as internet
connections to talk about? What about the people whom we say we
love? We work hard and late into the night, coming home when
everyone is already asleep and you say to yourself, “I'm doing
this for my family”, but you
take for granted that your children misses you, your wife misses you.
You see, we take a lot of things in life for granted. This
stems from a lack of gratitude or from a misguided priority.
We do take things as well as
people for granted. We neglect the fact that we are tremendously
blessed or that we have much more than what our parents had. We
neglect the fact that life is more convenient nowadays compared to
before. We neglect those we love because we think they don't mind
our behavior and actions. Yes, we all have at one time or another
taken things and people for granted.
This morning, we continue our
study on the Book of Hebrews and this morning's passage, Hebrews 2:1
– 4 is all about never taking something and someone important for
granted. What and who exactly are we talking about?
Our passage this morning is
actually one of five warnings the author wanted the readers to heed.
You see, the believers whom the author was writing to were feeling
the pressure to give up their faith and return back to Judaism; thus,
he had to warn them not to allow the pressure to overwhelm them. In
giving his warning, he gives his rationale why they should not turn
their backs on Christ.
In our passage, the warning
given is that they should not drift away, and that they should pay
careful attention to what they have heard. What exactly was the
message that they have heard? The answer is in verse 3 where the
author talks about salvation. The believers were probably in danger
of ignoring God's gift of salvation. By ignoring our salvation, it
is but natural that the next thing to happen is that one will drift
away.
The phrase “drift away”
gives us the picture of a boat whose anchor has not been lowered or
poorly hooked, such that the boat is pushed by the waves to places
which are dangerous such as rocks or sandbars. When one neglects
God's gift of salvation, he is in effect like a boat without an
anchor. Now, when we talk about God's gift of salvation, we're not
just talking solely about what God does, namely his justifying work,
but we're also talking about the person responsible for our salvation
– Jesus Christ. In other words, if we take the Lord Jesus Christ
for granted, the source of our salvation, we will bring about a lot
of dangers on ourselves, dangers that will harm us spiritually.
There are three ways in which we neglect the Lord and his work of
salvation. There are also three dangers that will come upon us when
we neglect our salvation.
Now, I do not believe that a
true believer will ever lose his or her salvation, and there are
Scripture passages that will prove this. But true believers can
drift away from the Lord if they don't secure their anchors properly.
The author pointed out that God's salvation is a great one. The
question we must answer then is “how is it a great one?”
I believe there are at least three reasons as to why our salvation
is a great one.
So, this morning, we will be
answering three questions. I would like to first answer the
question, “How great is our salvation?” The second question will
be, “How do we neglect this salvation?”. The final question will
be, “What is the price of neglect?”
How
Great is Our Salvation?
So, how great is our
salvation? There are three reasons as to why our salvation is a
great one.
(1) The Scope of Salvation
The first reason why our
salvation is great is because of the scope of our salvation. People
often have the wrong notion that salvation is simply all about the
forgiveness of our sins and the ticket to heaven. While it is true
that when a person repents of his sins and receive Christ as Lord,
his sins will be forgiven and he will be made right with God, that it
just the first part of salvation, which is called justification.
However, we need to realize that salvation doesn't end with our being
justified. Salvation continues on in the process called
sanctification. Sanctification in simpler terms means we become more
like Jesus Christ in holiness. In sanctification, we are being
redeemed from the world and being changed more and more into the
image of Jesus Christ. Everyday, as we faithfully follow Jesus
Christ, we will see ourselves being saved by the Lord from
worldliness and sin, from conforming to the ways of the world to
living a transformed life. Finally, there is glorification, the
process where we receive our new, incorruptible and perfect bodies,
thus a salvation of our physical bodies. Although I do not have the
time to elaborate on the entire scope of salvation, we can see that
the Lord is not yet finished with us. We may have received Jesus
Christ as Lord, but that is not the end. That is just the beginning
of the process of complete salvation.
(2) The Person Responsible for
Salvation
The second reason why our
salvation is great is because of the person who made salvation
possible. It was none other than the Lord Jesus who, through his
life, death and resurrection, made possible for us to be saved. God
did not send just anyone to save us; he sent his own son. The task
was not given to the angels or to righteous men and women whose names
are recorded in the Bible. The angels could not die for us for they
are spiritual beings. Righteous men and women cannot die for us
because they, too, are not perfectly sinless. Thus, God sent his
perfect Son to become perfect man. Our salvation is great because
Jesus is the source of our salvation.
(3) The Price of Salvation
Finally, our salvation is
great because of the price that had to be paid in order for us to
have this salvation. Jesus did not just live a holy life here on
earth for us to have a pattern for living; he died on the cross in
order that his blood would wash away our sins. That is the extent of
God's love – he sent the very best in order to save unworthy people
like you and I. This is why we say that our salvation is a great
one. It is because God paid a very high price – his own son. If
you were given the opportunity to completely save a person from his
life-threatening illness but the price will be the life of your son,
would you do it? God did just that. He gave up his son in order to
save us.
How
Do We Take Salvation for Granted?
The second question we will
tackle is “How do we take salvation for granted?”
There are three ways in which we take salvation for granted.
(1) When We Choose to Sin
Pay attention to the phrase
“every violation” in verse 2. In other translations, the word
used is “transgression”. Transgression means a violation of the
law or an overstepping of a set boundary. The idea behind the word
is that we made a conscious choice to sin against God and against
others. It is something that we have deliberated in our minds to do
and we carry it out. Now, when we choose to sin against God, it is
to take salvation for granted because we are refusing to turn away
from evil. Salvation is not just about going to heaven, its also
about turning away from our sins and turning towards God. So, if we
choose to sin and to keep on sinning, we are in effect taking for
granted that Jesus paid a very high price just to save us from our
sins. Furthermore, to continue sinning against God is to treat with
contempt the blood of Jesus (see Hebrews 10:29).
(2) When We Refuse to Obey Him
Choosing to sin is what I
would call as the sin of commission. Refusing to obey Him, on the
other hand, is the sin of omission. In verse 2, the word used is
disobedience. We do not do what God wants for us to do. He wants us
to go this way, we want to go that way. He wants us to do this, we
want to do that. When we refuse to obey Him, we are actually
treating his salvation lightly because when Jesus died on the cross,
it was in order to purchase us from the grip of sin and to make us
his children. In 1 Corinthians 6:20, we are told that we have been
bought with a price, therefore we are to honor God with our bodies.
By refusing to obey Him, we are denying his rightful ownership over
us. By denying that ownership, we are insulting his act of
salvation.
(3) When We Fail to Be Grateful
We
can also take God's salvation for granted by failing to be grateful.
By this, I am not just referring to our verbal expression of
gratitude. I am also referring to three things. First, we fail to
be grateful to God when we still long for the old life. True, we may
not commit sins of commission and omission, but we sometimes may sigh
and say to ourselves, “How I wish I were not a
Christian.”. By saying that,
we are declaring that we don't appreciate being God's child. Second,
we fail to be grateful when we are ashamed of being his follower. We
don't want people to know that we are believers and we hide our
identity. We don't talk about our faith openly to people because we
don't want to be called “Jesus freaks”. However, by failing to
identify ourselves as followers of Christ, we are actually being
ungrateful. To the single ladies here, would you want to say “yes”
to a guy who courts you but tells you beforehand that he doesn't want
to let others know that you're his girlfriend if you should say “yes”
to him? Of course not! You want him to acknowledge you publicly.
The same is true with Christ. We believe and trust Him, thus we
should also be willing to publicly acknowledge Him before others.
The third is, we don't cherish our relationship with Him. If we are
truly grateful to someone, we want to spend time with that person.
We value that relationship. If we are truly grateful to Jesus Christ
for the salvation He has given to us, we will want to spend time with
him in prayer and in reading the Word. If we are always in a hurry
in our lives and we don't take time to meet with Him, we are being
ungrateful by not valuing our relationship with Him.
What
Will Be The Price of Our Neglect?
We
come to the third and final question that needs to be answered. It
is the question, “What
will be the price of our neglect?”
Again, let me reiterate that a person who is genuinely saved will
not lose his salvation. However, he can go through a period of his
life where he neglects his faith and suffers because of that neglect.
When a person continues in sin, when he disobeys God and when he
fails to be grateful, the following will happen:
(1) His Spiritual Life Will Be
An Empty One
The person who neglects his
salvation will be running on empty soon. You can compare your
spiritual life to a car. A car needs gas to run. If your fuel meter
hits “E” or the warning light goes on, you know you're supposed
to fill up on gas. I am not of the habit of letting my car's gas
tank hit “E”. I usually gas up when there's still around ¼ gas
left. In the spiritual realm, your “gas tank” needs to be filled
everyday. When you neglect your faith, what happens is that your
tank gets empty. You will find yourself becoming fruitless and
frustrated. You will find that you're not growing in faith. God
seems distant to you (actually, you were the one responsible for
growing distant from God).
(2) He Does Not Have the Joy of
the Lord in Him
When we neglect our salvation,
we will find that there is no joy in life. We will simply go through
life existing but not really living. We will find that the things we
do feels like drudgery. Remember the Fruit of the Spirit? One of
the characteristics of a spirit-filled person is that his life will
have joy. The person who neglects his salvation will lose his sense
of joy. Remember David in Psalm 51? His prayer was that God would
restore the joy of salvation to him after he had confessed his sins.
You see, when David persisted in sin and strayed from God, he lost
his joy. Likewise, if we stray from the Lord, we will find ourselves
listless, without a trace of real joy in us.
(3) He Will Be Spiritually
Stunted
Finally, when we neglect our
salvation, we will be spiritually stunted. In other words, there is
no growth whatsoever in us. When we are not growing, but declining
instead in our spiritual life, this will not bring pleasure to God.
What it brings is sadness to Him. Who among you parents, upon seeing
how cute your baby is, would ever wish that they would stay that way
forever? Of course, none of us would ever make such a wish. Yet,
that is how we are before God when we neglect our salvation. We stop
growing. It's like someone who's 20 years old already but whose body
is still that of a 5-year old. God desires that we grow spiritually.
If we are already believers for 20 years, our maturity should match
the years. Unfortunately, many believers are spiritually stunted.
It is because they have taken their faith for granted. After more
than 20 years of being a Christian, they still don't know how to pray
and they don't even pick up their Bibles to read it. This results in
a believer being spiritually stunted.
Conclusion:
Don't take your salvation for
granted. That is the warning given by the author of Hebrews. We've
looked at the scope of our salvation, as to why it is great. We've
learned of how we can take our salvation for granted. Finally, we
know the consequences of taking salvation for granted.
Salvation is a free gift. It
is also a gift once given to us, will always be ours. However, it is
never to be taken for granted, nor should it be neglected and abused.
Have you and I been abusing God's grace by taking his gift of
salvation for granted? If we are truly saved, we should not neglect
God's grace. May the Lord help us all to cherish our salvation
dearly.