20 -- THE SIN THAT REJECTS GOD
Dear reader, we have come to the
place that it seems to us it would be the thing to take up
the mountain-top sin in a broader sense, or get down to the root of the
matter, and see just what the
mountain-top sin is. And by the way, we feel led to say that in the
dispensation of the Father the
greatest crime that could be committed was to reject God the Father,
and in the days of the Son of
Man the greatest sin of that age was to reject the blessed Son of God,
and under the dispensation of
the Holy Ghost, it is to reject the Holy Ghost. So we find the three
dispensations, that of the Father,
and of the Son, and of the Holy Ghost. In order to get at the sin of
all sins, we will have to take
them up in their natural order, and if we do we shall see the
mountain-top sin, and the sin that
eclipses all other sins.
First, we will go back
and look at the dispensation of the Father and see just what is the
greatest sin in His age. Let the reader remember that Christ said all
manner of sins should be
forgiven unto man but the blasphemy against the Holy Ghost. Many people
have wondered just
what that sin was. Well, when I get up to it I think I can tell you
just what it is, and I want to make
it so plain that you will understand it all the rest of your life. Now
we will go back and see what a
fellow had to do under the dispensation of the Father to be a lost man.
First, we will notice God's
first warning to man. In Gen. 6:3, we read that "My Spirit shall not
always strive with man." At a
glance you can see that away back when this old world was young, that
if a man acted in such a
way that God's Spirit quit striving with him, that he was a lost man.
Now let's look at a number of
scriptures that show you that a man in that age could grieve God away
until he was lost. In II
Chron. 36:14-16: "Moreover all the chief of the priests and the people,
transgressed very much
after all the abominations of the heathen; and polluted the house of
the Lord which he had hallowed
in Jerusalem. And the Lord God of their fathers sent to them by his
messengers, rising up betimes
and sending; because he had compassion on his people, and on his
dwelling place: But they
mocked the messengers of God and despised his words, and misused his
prophets, until the wrath
of the Lord arose against his people, till there was no remedy."
The reader will notice in
the above text God did all that a gracious heavenly Father could
do, but the people rejected Him and His prophets and rejected His
messengers, and misused them
until there was no remedy for them. Here was their trouble; they were
under the dispensation of the
Father, and their only hope of heaven was to go through the kindness
bestowed on them by the
Father. When they rejected Him and polluted His house, and turned their
backs on Him, there was
no remedy for them in the world.
It is like this: If I am in
a deep pit and my only hope of ever getting out it is in one man, and
he comes to help me out and I deliberately reject him, you see at a
glance that I am a doomed man,
for there is no hope for me in the world. At a glance you can see the
condition of these people.
When they turned their back on God the Father until there was no
remedy, what could they do but
perish? So the only way to heaven was to go through the love and
compassion of the Father, and
they reject Him and turn away from Him, and as it were, take the reins
in their own hands and
make shipwreck out of themselves and their posterity. No more remedy
for the crowd who rejected
the Father while they were under His dispensation.
In connection with this
lesson we will look at some more scriptures. We next notice Prov.
1:24-32: "Because I have called, and ye refused; I have stretched out
my hand, and no man
regarded; but ye have set at naught all my counsel and would none of my
reproofs; I also will laugh
at your calamity and mock when your fear cometh, when your fear cometh
as desolation, and when
distress and anguish cometh upon you. Then shall you call upon me, but
I will not answer; they
shall seek me early, but they shall not find me; for that they hated
knowledge; and did not choose
the fear of the Lord: they would none of my counsel, they despised all
my reproof. Therefore shall
they eat of the fruit of their own ways and be filled with their own
devices. For the turning away of
the simple shall slay them, and the prosperity of fools shall destroy
them."
Now reader, it would
take all of your time for the next ten days to try to go into detail and
explain this long quotation, but we can see at a glance that all of the
above is a record of the
people who rejected God the Father and were cut off from their hope of
heaven. Under the
dispensation of the Father, the only hope of heaven was to go through
the Father, and when a
people rejected the Father, there was no hope for them, and they were
cut off without a ray of hope
to hang over their doomed souls, but darkness would settle down over
them and they had no God.
For when they rejected the Father there was no one else to take His
place. They were hopelessly
lost, for we hear the Father say, "Because I have called and ye
refused, and I stretched out my hand
and no man regarded, but ye have set at naught all my counsel and would
none of my reproof, I also
will laugh at your calamity and mock when your fear cometh."
This is one of
the most fearful statements in the Old Testament. Of course I don't
suppose
that it literally means that the great God would really laugh at the
damnation of a lost soul, but
when the poor souls are passing out into outer darkness, and no hope in
sight, and no God to call
on and no one to lean on, and in the awful agony of the lost soul they
call on God, but they have
treated Him with such contempt that while they cry for mercy, God does
not listen to their awful
sad cry. They had their day, but said "No" to God the Father, and when
they rejected God the
Father they had no claim on the Son or the Holy Spirit. They were
offered heaven by the love and
kindness of the Father, and they became God-rejecters.
In proof of the fact that
they cut themselves off, we turn now and read in Jer. 7:13-15, "And
now because ye have done all these works saith the Lord, and I spake
unto you rising up early and
speaking, but ye heard not, and I called you, but ye answered not;
therefore will I do unto this
house which is called by my name wherein ye trusted, and unto the place
which I gave to you and
to your fathers as I have done to Shiloh, and I will cast you out of my
sight as I have cast out all
your brethren, even the whole seed of Ephraim; therefore pray not thou
for this people, neither lift
up cry nor prayer for them, neither make intercession to me for I will
not hear thee." Now reader,
here is a class of people who grieved God and rejected God and acted in
such a way that the Lord
even asked the people not to pray for them, for He said, "I will not
hear thee." Notice here just
what He said about it: "Therefore, pray not thou for this people,
neither lift up cry nor prayer for
them, for I will not hear thee."
It would seem from reading
the above text that a people can grieve the Lord until it is a real
source of dissatisfaction to Him even to listen to anybody pray for
them. The reader will remember
that the Lord reproved Samuel, the best man in Israel in his day, for
mourning over King Saul after
He had rejected him and removed him from the kingship of Israel. The
Lord said to Samuel, "How
long wilt thou mourn for Saul, seeing that I have rejected him from
reigning over Israel." See I
Sam. 16:1.
If the Lord can be so misused and
mistreated and so rejected and so despised and set at
naught and snubbed and laughed at and mocked that He will leave the man
forever, and if it be
distasteful to the Lord even to hear the man's name called, and all of
the above scriptures say that it
can, don't you see at a glance that the fellow is a doomed man? There
is no hope in the universe for
such a man. Just think of it, the Book says that a fellow can go so far
that the Lord won't listen to
his prayers and won't even listen to the man's friends as they pray for
him. The Lord said don't
even lift up cry or prayer for them or make intercessions for them, for
I won't hear you. So you see
the man has put himself out of God's reach, so far as love and mercy
are concerned.
Now we are beginning
to see what it means to sin against the Holy Ghost. A man can reject
the Father until he is lost, and under the dispensation of the Father
they did that very thing, and they
were cut off in their sins without one ray of hope and without one
glimmer of mercy left to them,
and all you have to do to blaspheme the Holy Ghost is to treat Him in
His dispensation as these
people did the Father in His dispensation. No one act of sin is the sin
against the Father, so no one
act of sin is the sin against the Son, and no one act of sin is the sin
against the Holy Ghost. But one
continual, long drawn out stubborn rejection of the Father, settled it
with them forever and ever; no
hope in their skies.
Well now, we turn to the
prophecy of Zech. 7:11-13, and read a few verses. "But they
refused to hearken and pulled away the shoulder and stopped their ears
that they should not hear;
yea, they made their hearts as an adamant stone lest they should hear
the law and the words which
the Lord of hosts has sent in his spirit by the former prophets.
Therefore came a great wrath from
the Lord of hosts. Therefore it came to pass that as he cried they
would not hear. So they cried, and
I would not hear saith the Lord of hosts."
Now the reader will
see a class of people here who the Lord said stopped their ears in
order that they might not hear the law, and that they would not listen
to the Spirit that was sent to
them by the Lord through the former prophets, and he goes on to say
that they made their hearts as
an adamant stone. Now folks, don't you see that there is no hope for a
man with his heart as hard as
an adamant stone and his ears stopped? And at the same time He says of
them that they turned away
their shoulder; that is, they turned away with a kind of sneer and
turned up the lip and turned up
their nose and gave their head a toss and raised their shoulder as a
sort of defiance to the God of
Israel. And they refused to hearken, so the Lord says. We get a glance
of them and we see at once
that there is no hope, for they are in the dispensation of the Father,
and the dispensation of the Son
has not been inaugurated, and it is far off to the dispensation of the
Holy Ghost, and the only one to
deal with is the Father, and they have turned away from the Law and
would not hearken to it; they
have turned away from the prophets and will not hear them; and they
have turned away from the
Father, and will not hear Him, and have stopped up their ears and
refused to hear, and have made
their hearts as an adamant stone; so of course there is no hope.
Now what is to become
of them? Well, they are as in much lost as if they were already in
the pit. God is out of their thoughts, and of course if He is they are
without hope. Don't you see that
a man with a heart like an adamant stone can't think of feeling or
loving or giving or shouting or
praying? Don't you know that a rock can't do the service of the God of
Israel? These men had
become stones, and were rejected because they had rejected God.
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