Straight from the Heart

Straight from the Heart

“Straight from the Heart”

(Luke 6:43-45)

Series: Certainty in Uncertain Times

Rev. Todd A. Linn, PhD

Henderson’s First Baptist Church, Henderson KY

(9-26-10) (AM)

 

  • Take your Bibles and open to Luke, chapter 6.

 

We are preaching our way, verse-by-verse, through the Gospel of Luke and we are in a very practical section of Luke’s Gospel, a section known as the “Sermon on the Plain,” called that because Jesus is preaching this sermon on a level piece of ground where hundreds of people gathered together to hear him.  The sermon is preached primarily to those who are followers of Jesus Christ and so we ourselves find almost immediate application as followers of Christ.

 

So we’ve heard Jesus say that Christians are to love their enemies, to give to those who ask of us, to be merciful, just as our heavenly Father is merciful, to “Judge not,” to “Condemn not,” and to be forgiving.  And the only way Christians can do any of these things consistently is to have a changed heart.  When God changes our heart, our inner being, by the power of the Gospel, we are then in a position to do these things: to not be judgmental, to love our enemies, and to forgive.  And this is essentially what Jesus says in the few verses that are the subject of our text this morning.

 

Got your bibles open?  Look down at verses 43-45.  We’re going to read these verses, but I want you to see the context of them.  Everything that precedes these verses in the Sermon on the Plain, especially beginning at verse 27 forward, all of the things Jesus says there about loving our enemies, doing good to those who ate us, giving, being merciful, not being judgmental, not condemning others, forgiving others, removing the plank from our eyes—all these things are possible for us to do consistently only if we have changed hearts, which is what Jesus says in verses 43-45.  Okay?  Everybody got that?  I don’t want to read verses 43-45 until we understand their connection to everything that precedes them.

 

  • Stand for the reading of God’s Word.

 

43 ” For a good tree does not bear bad fruit, nor does a bad tree bear good fruit.

44 “For every tree is known by its own fruit. For men do not gather figs from thorns, nor do they gather grapes from a bramble bush.

45 “A good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart brings forth evil. For out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.

 

  • Pray.

 

Introduction:

 

Many of you know that this past summer our family took a trip to the San Francisco bay area of northern California.  And one day we traveled across the bay to my childhood home in Walnut Creek.  I started kindergarten there and elementary school and we moved just before I turned 11-years-old and so I had all these memories and I relived a bunch of them and pointed out things to my boys, who were very patient with dear old dad.  As we walked around my old neighborhood, I wanted to locate a certain pomegranate bush.  I remembered my friends and I getting pomegranates off that bush and eating those things and getting the red juice everywhere. The juice would stain my clothes and my mother would fuss at me.  So we walked to where I recalled the bush being and was delighted to see that it was still there.  Not only was it still there, but it has grown into a tree like 10 feet tall!  It actually had pomegranates on it at the time and I had to pick one off for old time’s sake, even though it wasn’t quite ripe.  But I remember just being excited that, after 35 years, this small bush had grown into a tree and was still producing fruit.

 

Now Jesus teaches that Christians are a bit like that pomegranate tree.  We start off small, having believed in the Gospel, God changes our hearts and we begin to grow and bear fruit.  And we continue growing, year-by-year, decade after decade, and we continue bearing more fruit.  People can come by and look at us and “check us out,” much as I had checked out that pomegranate tree, and they can see evidence of life and vitality.  People can see the fruit of our lives.  People can see evidence that we are Christians by the way we love our enemies, by the way we are not judgmental, by the way we are merciful toward others, and by the way we forgive others.  That’s the fruit of our lives that indicates we are true followers of Jesus Christ.

 

Let’s look at these verses again a little more closely and make sure we understand them correctly, verse 43:

 

43 ” For a good tree does not bear bad fruit, nor does a bad tree bear good fruit.

 

Another way to say that is, “A tree is known by the fruit it produces.”  A tree is known by the fruit it produces.  That’s what Jesus says in the beginning of the next verse, verse 44:

 

44 “For every tree is known by its own fruit.

 

This is so simple and straightforward it seems senseless to go into detail here.  I mean, we all get it, right?  You go to an apple tree and you will find apples.  You go to an orange tree and you find—what?  Oranges.  Don’t you love it when the questions are easy?!  A tree is known by the fruit it produces.  So, again verse 44:

 

44 “For every tree is known by its own fruit. For men do not gather figs from thorns, nor do they gather grapes from a bramble bush.

 

Okay, this is what is so cool about Jesus’ teaching.  He teaches the one thing, but you know he’s really teaching something else, right?  I mean, you know it’s not Jesus’ main concern to teach us all about horticulture.  Although we’ll be quick to add that while the Bible is not primarily a science book, what it teaches about science is true because God is behind all science.  God created the man who observes what the man calls science and all truth is God’s truth wherever it is found.  So let’s not allow for thoughtless statements that separate the Bible from science as though the two were incompatible.  They are not incompatible.  The Bible and science go together beautifully.

 

But Jesus’ main concern here is not to teach about fruit trees and thorn bushes.  His main concern is to teach about how we are like fruit trees and thorn bushes.  Verse 45:

 

45 “A good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart brings forth evil. For out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.

 

Can I paraphrase this?   Verse 45 teaches that “what is inside a man will come out.”  What’s inside a person will come out.  Whatever character exists inside your very being will eventually come out by your actions.

 

Adrian Rogers used to say something like, “If you want to see what a man is made of, shake him up a bit.”  And what he meant was if you wanted to find out whether a nice man is really a nice man, just ruffle his feathers a bit and see what happens.  We can all act like we’re nice and good and kind on the outside, but it’s who we are on the inside that produces fruit, showing people who we really are.   So if you’ve got a guy who talks about love, mercy, and patience, as though he’s got it all figured out and someone else comes along and hits that guy across the face or steals his car or embarrasses him in front of others, how that man responds will determine who he really is because his response will come from what’s inside, straight from the heart.

 

Who we are on the inside determines what we do on the outside.  Can I say that again?  That’s worth writing down!  “Who we are on the inside determines what we do on the outside.”

 

So let me give you these three things we need to remember this week.   First:

 

I.  Christians are known by the Fruit they Produce

 

If a man says he is following Jesus Christ, that man will produce fruit and it will be good fruit.  Remember the context!  If a man or if a woman says they are a Christian then they will give evidence of their Christianity by loving their enemies, by being merciful toward others, by not being judgmental, by not condemning others, by forgiving others, and by removing the plank from their eyes.  Christians are known by the fruit they produce.  If you’re a Christian, you will love your enemies.  You will be merciful toward others.  You will forgive.

 

By the way, we have confirmation here that what we said earlier about the phrase “Judge not” in verse 27 is true.  We said that the phrase “Judge not” does not mean what so many people in today’s American culture use it to mean.  People use this phrase “Judge not” to exclude any kind of judging whatsoever.  So some preacher preaches something that doesn’t sound quite right and someone says, “Well, you’re not supposed to judge,” or somebody comes tumbling out of a bar and reeks of alcohol and plops down behind the wheel of a car and drives away.  And another watching this says to the guy next to him, “Well, you know, you’re not supposed to judge.”  That is not what “judge not” means.  As we’ve noted before, when Jesus says “Judge not,” He does not mean that we’re to never make decisions based upon people’s behavior.  He just means that we’re not to look down our noses upon others as though we are better than they, being judgmental.   That’s different.

 

But of course we are to make decisions and render judgments based upon people’s behavior.  The reason you nominated the men you nominated to serve as deacons is why?—because you observed their behavior and rendered a thoughtful, moral judgment.  You read about the first deacons in Acts 6 and then you read about the qualifications of deacons in 1 Timothy 3 and you thought about men whose behavior was consistent with those qualifications and you nominated them.  You made a judgment about them. We all do this all the time.

 

This is why Jesus says “every tree is known by its fruit.”  He is saying, “You can determine whether a person is a true follower of Christ by the way they live their lives, by their behavior.”

 

Now again, contextually, this means that Christians will love their enemies, will be merciful, will forgive, and will remove the plank from their eyes.  Why?  Because we have changed hearts.

 

Paul says in 2 Corinthians 5:17, “If any man is in Christ he is a new creation.”  When we receive Jesus Christ as our Lord and Savior God gives to us the Holy Spirit to dwell within us.  And Paul writes in Galatians 5 that when we have the Spirit of God in us we will bear the fruit of the Spirit, fruit like, “love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control.”

 

So here again is a reminder that we don’t do these things in order to become a Christian, but we do these things because we are a Christian.  We can’t get into heaven by being good because none of us is perfectly good.  So we don’t read the Sermon on the Plain as conditions that must be met in order to be saved.  The standard is perfection and none of us can meet that perfect standard.  When we speak of Jesus dying on the cross for us we must also remember that the Gospel means that Jesus lived for us.  He lived according to the perfect standard.  He never once lied, He never once was unforgiving, He always loved His enemies.  He was perfect.  If we believe in Jesus Christ then we are credited with His perfection.  So the Gospel is that Jesus died to take the punishment I deserved for my sin, but the Gospel is also that Jesus lived the perfect life I could not live.  That’s why we can sing the hymn chorus:

 

Living, He loved me; dying, He saved me;

Buried He carried my sins far away;

Rising, He justified freely forever;

One day He’s coming – O glorious day!

 

But again, “Living, He loved me.”  Jesus loved us so much that He lived for us the life we could not live ourselves because we were in bondage to sin.  We were enslaved to sin.  So Jesus lives and dies for us that we may be free from sin.  And while we’re still not perfect, we now have the ability—the Holy Spirit within us—to live the life God wants us to live.

 

So the reason we love our enemies, the reason we’re merciful, the reason we forgive our spouse and our children and the classmate and the guy who wrongs us at work is because our hearts have been changed by the power of the Gospel.  We have the Holy Spirit within us to live the life God has called Christians to live.  Christians are known by the fruit they produce.

 

On the other hand, if we say we are Christians, but there is no fruit to back it up, then we are deceiving ourselves.  JC Ryle says, “There is only one satisfactory test of a man’s religious character.  That test is his conduct and conversation.”  He adds, “Let it be a settled principle…that when a man brings forth no fruits of the Spirit, he has not the Holy Spirit within him.”

 

Christians are known by the fruit they produce.  Number two:

 

II.  It’s Possible for Christians to bear Bad Fruit but Not for Long

 

Because we’re not perfect we’re going to make a mistake from time to time.  We’re going to slip into a sinful thought, a sinful action, or sinful words.

 

It’s at these moments we need to remember to preach the Gospel to ourselves.  When we sin we immediately confess that sin and go to the cross.  We say, “God, I have sinned.  Thank you for dying for that sinful thing I just did, or that sinful thought, or that sinful word I just spoke.  I’m sorry.  I repent.  Forgive me for hurting You and thank You that because of Your grace and mercy, You have already forgiven that sin through Jesus Christ my Savior.  I love You Lord, Amen.”  And we feel the joy and warmth and sweet fellowship of our heavenly Father.  You see, the Gospel is not just for when a person gets saved, but the Gospel is for every moment of every day as the Christian lives his or her life.

 

So a Christian can bear bad fruit, but he will not bear bad fruit for long because the Holy Spirit will convict him of his sin and he will cry out to God and repent.  Remember, the evidence that one is a Christian is revealed in a general pattern of bearing good fruit.

 

I like to use the picture of a line graph.  If you can imagine a line graph here with my hands, if this point here represents the point in time when I came to Christ and over here is the other point at the end of my life then the graph should look like this nice, straight line.  Every day I am becoming more like Christ, growing in my sanctification, until I reach this point here.  That’s how it should look, but it actually looks like this (up, down, big up, big down, up, up).  So there are points where I may fall (think King David and his sin with Bathsheba and the murder of her husband, Uriah), but the overarching pattern is one that goes up.

 

So if someone says he is a Christian, but there is no overall pattern of growth, he is not a Christian.  Why?  Because “a tree is known by the fruit it produces,” because, “a good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart brings forth evil.

 

So it is possible for a Christian to bear bad fruit, but not for long.  When he does something he shouldn’t do or says something he shouldn’t say, he will experience conviction by the Holy Spirit within him and he will repent.

 

In his commentary on Luke’s Gospel, Kent Hughes tells about a man who was saved under the ministry of Martyn Lloyd-Jones.  I believe I read it before in Ian Murray’s biography of Lloyd-Jones.  Hughes writes of the conversion of this particularly foul-mouthed man:

 

His speech was so blasphemous and filthy that even the toughest acquaintances were sickened by him, so that he was almost always left to drink by himself.  After meeting Christ, he found that he could not speak without swearing.  The words poured forth before he could even think.  He was sickened himself by the filth.  But deliverance came.  He was dressing for work and could not locate his socks.  Instinctively, he shouted to his wife, “I can’t find my _______ socks!  Where are the _______ things?!”  As his words echoed back, sorrow gripped him, and he fell back on his bed and cried aloud, “O Lord, cleanse my tongue.  Lord, I can’t ask for a pair of socks without swearing.  Please have mercy on me and give me a clean tongue.”  Lying there, he knew something had happened.  Form that day on no foul or blasphemous word ever came from his lips.”

 

So yes, it is possible for a Christian to bear bad fruit, but not for long.  He will be so convicted by the Holy Spirit that he will cry out as David cried out in Psalm 51, “God be merciful to me, a sinner!  Create in me a clean heart!”

 

So what have we learned?  Christians are known by the fruit they produce and it’s possible for a Christian to bear bad fruit, but not for long.  Thirdly:

 

III.  The Most Obvious fruit Christians bear is Good Speech

 

Verse 45 again:

 

45 “A good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart brings forth evil. For out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.

 

What’s inside a man, what is in his heart, will come out, and will come out through his speech.  Let me say that again, what’s inside a man will come out in what he says.

 

This teaching is not just about our not saying bad things, though it is that.  It is also important for us to consider what we spend the majority of our time thinking about because what is in our hearts will come out.  Ralph Waldo Emerson said, “A man is what he thinks about all day long.”  That’s true.  Out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.

 

Let me give a quick example.  Dr. Akin preached a powerful message last Sunday morning about reaching the nations for Jesus Christ.  It was powerful and convicting.  I think most of us felt that way while he was preaching.  Now, how long did you feel that way?  Did that message get down deeply into your heart and stay there throughout the week?  Did you continue thinking about how you spend your money and whether more could be given to overseas missions?  Did you think about what you could do personally to reach the nations for Jesus Christ?  On the other hand, we could hear a powerful message like that, but before the day is out we’ve forgotten most of it and the topic of conversation returns to the latest fad, movie, song, or food because that’s what’s really in our hearts.  Out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaks.  What do you spend the majority of your time talking about?  It will likely be what you spend the majority of your time thinking about.

 

This verse also reminds us to guard our tongues and say only things that glorify God and edify others.  We speak on average about 16,000 words per day.  Some think women speak more words then men.

 

A husband looking through the paper came upon a study that said women use more words than men.  Excited to prove to his wife that he had been right all along when he accused her of talking too much, he showed her the study results. It read, “Men use about 15,000 words per day, but women use 30,000.”  The wife thought for a while, then finally she said to her husband, “It’s because we have to repeat everything we say.”  Her husband said, “What?”

 

The truth is it’s hard to find documentation of studies proving women use more words then men.  There is one study, however, they documents the fact that men and women both use about 16,000 words per day.  Given this fact, we should curb our tongues.  Someone said, “A tongue three inches long can kill a person six feet tall.”

 

In Colossians 4:6, Paul says, “Let your speech always be with grace, seasoned with salt, that you may know how you ought to answer each one.”

 

In James 1:26, James says, “If anyone considers himself religious and yet does not keep a tight rein on his tongue, he deceives himself and his religion is useless.”

 

In Proverbs 6:16-19 Solomon lists six things the Lord hates and one of them is “one who sows discord among the brethren.”  I want you to remember that the next time you’re inclined to say something negative about anyone in this church family.  The Lord hates the one who sows discord among the brethren.

 

Remember the children’s proverb:

 

“If you your lips would keep from slips 5 things observe with care: of whom you speak, to whom you speak, and how and when and where.”

 

The preacher Gordon MacDonald tells of a time he was in Japan on a speaking tour with a close personal friend.  Gordon says, “He was a number of years older than I was. As we walked down the street in Yokohama, Japan, the name of a common friend came up, and I said something unkind about that person. It was sarcastic. It was cynical. It was a put-down. My older friend stopped, turned, and faced me until his face was right in front of mine. With deep, slow words he said, ‘Gordon, a man who says he loves God would not say a thing like that about a friend.’

 

Gordon said, “He could have put a knife into my ribs, and the pain would not have been any less. He did what a prophet does. But you know something? There have been ten thousand times in the last twenty years that I have been saved from making a jerk of myself. When I’ve been tempted to say something unkind about a brother or sister, I hear my friend’s voice say, “Gordon, a man who says he loves God would not speak in such a way about a friend.” [Gordon MacDonald, in the sermon “Feeling As God Feels,” Preaching Today audio (#196)]

Stand for Prayer.

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