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Know Fear?

(By Paul Sheldon)

* Paul serves as the Shepherds’ Conference Coordinator at Grace Community Church.

Know Fear?God is a loving God, right? Ask anyone on the street about God and you are more than likely to get a description of God that includes love. Typically this “love” ends up meaning that God doesn’t judge sin or send anyone to hell — it’s an inadequate understanding of love. But the point remains, people understand God to be loving. 

So many of God’s attributes like grace, mercy, tenderness, patience, and forgiveness, are indicative of His love. Romans 5:8 says, “God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.” Paul affirms God’s love again in Ephesians 2:4-5 when he writes, “but God, being rich in mercy, because of His great love with which He loved us, even when we were dead in our transgressions, made us alive together with Christ (by grace you have been saved).” What about 1 John 4:7? “Beloved, let us love one another, for love is from God.” Even the glorious John 3:16 begins, “For God so loved the world . . . .”

But, have you ever noticed that despite all the descriptions of God’s love, you and I are exhorted throughout the Bible to fear God? Why? If God is love why would I fear Him? Doesn’t 1 John 4:18 say, “perfect love casts out fear?” How can I fear a God who is perfect and whose love is perfect? Perfect love does cast out fear; nevertheless, we must fear God.

You see, there is more than one kind of fear in the Bible. In Scripture we find the kind of fear that is characterized by being afraid. There are people who should fear God in this way. They should be afraid of God. Unrepentant sinners have much to fear, since their sins have not been covered by Christ’s blood. Such individuals do not realize the full implications of Hebrews 10:31. Ironically, the people who need to be afraid of God — because He is a powerful and just God who will condemn unrepentant sinners to an eternity in hell — are the very people who do not fear Him.

The other kind of fear is distinguished by two primary qualities – holy reverence and obedience. Just like someone who walks away unharmed from a car crash which should have taken his or her life, we too need to reflect on God’s love demonstrated to us through the death of His Son with a sober and reverential heart. But reverence without action makes a mockery of God’s love. If we truly fear God with a holy reverence then we will demonstrate that fear by worshiping Him.

Allen Ross puts it this way, “The fear of the Lord expresses reverential submission to the Lord’s will – it characterizes a true worshiper.” If we have a holy reverence toward God then we will worship Him, and that worship is most vividly expressed by obedience.

I am amazed just how many times in Scripture the fear of the Lord and obedience are treated as equal. In Deuteronomy 6:2 the Israelites were to fear God, “by keeping all His statutes and His commandments.” In Joshua 24:14, at Shechem Joshua challenged the people to “fear the Lord and serve Him in all sincerity and truth.” Solomon’s life-long pursuits revealed that we are to “fear God and keep His commandments.”

So fearing the God who is love does not present the believer with a conflict of interest. In fact, we fear God because He is a loving God. But our fear is not a terrified dread; rather it is an attitude of holy reverence which is demonstrated by worship and obedience.

6 Responses to “Know Fear?”

  1. on 20 Feb 2007 at 7:11 am donsands

    Nice simple teaching. But I fear it is not preached enough.

    I remember how I feared my earthly father. If I would come home late, and not call, when I was a high-schooler, he would be standing at the front door, and man, I didn’t want to go in there, but I did. I faced the music, because he was my dad, and I knew he loved me, though I was in for it.

    May the Church in America come to fear the Lord as a Holy Father, who will discpline His children. If there’s no discipline, then, we are not His children.

  2. on 20 Feb 2007 at 8:22 am Bea

    Proverbs 1:7-9, Hebrews 12:7 and 8, 1st Corinthians
    14:32-37

    ‘Know Fear’ is a great little sermon.

    Thanks

  3. on 20 Feb 2007 at 8:15 pm sarah

    Great reminder! I pray that with every passing day this becomes more and more apart of my life. He desires obedience than sacrifice.

  4. on 22 Feb 2007 at 5:47 am Steve Stewart

    When my children were young, they were taught to obey out of fear – if they disobeyed, they would be punished. However, my desire was that they mature to the point that they obeyed, not out of fear, but rather out of love. My desire was that they reach the point where they could not stand the thought of hurting their parents through an act of disobedience.
    In our walk with God, we may enter into relationship with Him out of the first type of fear – the fear of punishment. But we should grow to the point that we love Him so much that we cannot stand the thought of ‘hurting’ Him by continued acts of rebellion. Our desire should be to grow to the fullness of the stature of Christ, which includes living lives of total commitment to God, and total abandonment to His will, which is always for the good of His children.

  5. on 22 Feb 2007 at 11:58 am THE SEARCH FOR PURPOSE

    Feb 19 – 22, 2007…

    Mark Daniels has “Letters to My Non-Church Going Friends“
    John Piper: “What Will We Remember in Heaven?“
    Joe Carter has the humorous: “How To Pick A Preacher” plus “Al Gore’s Plan To Warm The Globe&#8220…

  6. on 23 Feb 2007 at 9:24 pm Beautiful Feet

    All too often, human authority is prideful and invested in power/superiority struggles so it is difficult to discern between Godly obedience and compulsion. Compulsive obedience is the slave mentality which has no permanent home with God. We ought to do the work of the Lord, which is to believe Him. He is inviting us to dinner – that is not difficult to obey,it is very much an overcoming to believe!!

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