Seven Promises That Have Kept John Piper
Audio Transcript
One of the most common families of questions we have received relates to the topic of what it means to have a genuine relationship with God. How do you get one? How do you keep one? And of course, that line of thinking will eventually lead you to a big hurdle: Why does God sometimes withdraw his presence from us? Why? How? And how does that work? That’s the question next time.
Today we have a question about how to find this authentic relationship to begin with. It’s a question troubling a woman named Elina. “Pastor John, hello to you,” she writes. “I write with a heavy heart. I have recently concluded that I treat the Bible as literature and treat Christianity as a social culture. Meaning, I study both from an outsider’s perspective, lacking personal conviction. I do think the Bible is true, but I haven’t experienced a close or personal relationship with Christ at all. It feels wrong and dishonest to describe my faith as walking with Christ when I so rarely feel God’s presence. How do I move from what feels like being an outsider to the faith to becoming a genuine Christian believer?”
O Elina, God has a thousand ways to bring you to himself in the kind of experience you long for. And unless I am badly mistaken, I think every one of those thousand ways would involve, one way or the other, God’s word portraying for you some particular greatness or beauty or value of God and what he’s done for you in Jesus Christ. So, what I’m going to do in these few minutes is pray that God would touch your heart with his word as I simply tell you some of my favorite promises that give glimpses into what God and his Son are like. Faith comes by hearing, and my prayer is that your faith will be awakened to the kind of authenticity that you long for, by hearing.
I may not feel as outside Christianity as you do right now, but I do feel the danger of that tendency in me. These are some of the promises God has used to keep me from drifting away. If they had that function for me, to keep me, perhaps God may use them to draw you back, or perhaps for the first time, into what you long for. So, here we go. I think I have seven glimpses of God for you.
1. He did not spare his Son.
I think the most foundational promise in the Bible is Romans 8:32: “He who did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with him [freely] give us all things?” Which means, if God has done the hardest thing for us (sacrifice his most precious Son), then the thousand acts of help that we need in life and death are easy for him to do. If he did the hardest thing for us, he will most certainly do the easy things, which is everything we need. So, we trust him with our lives.
2. He secured every promise.
This means that if the death of Christ guarantees God’s thousandfold blessings forever, we can understand why Paul said in 2 Corinthians 1:20, “All the promises of God find their Yes in [Christ]. That is why it is through him that we utter our Amen to God for his glory.” Christ paid with his lifeblood for every promise in the Bible for his people. Every promise is bought by Jesus for those who are in Christ. Every one of them belongs to us as we are in Christ. And we are in Christ if we receive and treasure him and hold fast to him as just that: the Savior who secures every promise for sinners like us who trust him. Amazing! Every promise is secured by the blood of Jesus.
3. He will uphold us.
Oh, how many hundreds and hundreds of times I have entered a situation that felt hopeless and impossible (or just scary and awkward), and as I entered I preached to myself these words from Isaiah 41:10: “Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you, I will uphold you with my righteous right hand.” Elina, when I combine those words, Isaiah 41:10 with 2 Corinthians 1:20 (that every promise is Yes in Christ), I hear the very voice of God, and you can too. I hear the very voice of God speaking to me in those words: “John Piper, I, almighty God, Creator of heaven and earth, I am with you. I am your God. I will strengthen you. I will help you. I will uphold you.” And oh, how precious, how delicious are those personal words of God Almighty, spoken directly to me in my unworthiness.
They are words bought — that’s why I can have them — with the blood of Jesus for an unworthy John Piper, and they can be yours, Elina. For it is almost beyond imagination that the Creator of the universe, infinite in holiness, in transcendent purity, could actually rejoice over doing me good.
4. He will rejoice to do us good.
Listen to this new-covenant, which means blood-bought, promise in Jeremiah 32:40–41: “I will not turn away from [you to do you] good. . . . [And] I will rejoice” over you, John Piper, Elina — “[to do you] good . . . with all my heart and all my soul,” says the Lord. Let that be personal and breathtaking. It really is life-changing to let it be personal, God speaking to his child, the one who receives his Son. That’s what he said in John 1:12 — whoever receives the Son, he gives power “to become children of God.” To those who become the children of God through receiving the Son, he is saying, “I’ll always do you good. I will never stop doing you good. And when I do that good to you, it will be because I like to. I want to. It makes me glad to do you good. It is my joy to do you good.”
5. He will keep us.
One of those good things he will do for us is keep us, hold onto us. “My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they will never perish, and no one will snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all, and no one is able to snatch them out of the Father’s hand” (John 10:27–29). The older I get, the more precious is God’s promise to keep me. I love the song, “He will hold me fast. He will hold me fast, for my Savior loves me so. He will hold me fast.”
“The older I get, the more precious is God’s promise to keep me.”
Isn’t it amazing that the most lavish doxology in the Bible is a celebration of the truth that God holds his people fast? “Now to him who is able to keep you from stumbling and to present you blameless before the presence of his glory with great joy, to the only God, our Savior, through Jesus Christ our Lord, be glory, majesty, dominion, and authority, before all time and now and forever. Amen” (Jude 24–25). That is the greatest doxology, and all of it is a celebration that he keeps us. He holds onto us. He won’t let us go once he has taken hold of us and we’re in his hand. He welcomes you to that, Elina. He welcomes you. He invites you into that.
6. He has destined us for Jesus.
Another promise that becomes increasingly precious with age is 1 Thessalonians 5:9–10. When I put my head on the pillow at night as an old man (79 now), I know that the probabilities that I might die in my sleep are increasing. So, for some years now, I have gone to sleep hundreds of nights with these memorized words in my mind: “God has not destined [you] for wrath,” John Piper. “God has not destined [you] for wrath, but to obtain salvation through our Lord Jesus Christ, who died for [you] so that whether [you] are awake or asleep, [you will] live with [Jesus]” (1 Thessalonians 5:9–10). “Wake or sleep” in this context means “live or die.” So, I am sleeping now, and if I die in my sleep, that will not be wrath. I will be with him. “There is . . . now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus” (Romans 8:1) — nor will there ever be, Elina.
7. He is with us.
Finally, there will never be a moment from now to eternity when I do not have the greatest person in the universe as my friend, who never leaves me and never will. “No longer do I call you [slave] . . . but I have called you [friend]” (John 15:15). “And behold, I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20). Not just to the end of the age, but always to the end of the age. Meaning there will never be a moment when my God, my Creator, my Savior, my friend will not be with me. Not one.
Oh, Elina, do you taste this? This is so good. He is so good. Jesus invites you. He sent me in this little podcast with this invitation from the book of Revelation to you: “Let the one who is thirsty come; let the one who desires take the water of life without price” (Revelation 22:17). It’s free, so come on in.