Embrace God's Design (Joe Penner) - podcast episode cover

Embrace God's Design (Joe Penner)

Oct 06, 202442 min
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A few weeks ago when talking about God's law, Pastor Jake used this this illustration of a road trip. And when you're going on a road trip, you have a destination in mind. And as you travel down the road, there are many signs that are pointing you to your destination. But he talked about the fact that if we focus too much on those signs and we pay too much attention to those signs, we lose sight of what those signs are there for and the purpose that they are there.

The signs if if they accomplish what they intend, guide you safely to your destination and once you get to your destination, you won't be thinking back to the signs that got you there. You'll be enjoying your vacation or whatever destination you were seeking to arrive at and throughout the Bible God has given many signs. One of the ones that we think of is the rainbow.

We think of Noah, we sin came into the world through Adam and Eve. And it didn't take very long for sin to become so bad that God decided he had to destroy everything. But he found. But Noah found favor in God's sight. And so God delivered Noah and his family and and the animals and preserved them through an ark.

And when they came out the ark on the other side, they offered a sacrifice to God. And God was so pleased with their sacrifice that he said he made a covenant and he said I will never again flood the earth. And the sign that he gave for that covenant was a rainbow. Now rainbows are incredibly beautiful. I remember a few months ago I was working at the golf course in the morning and, and I was struggling this particular morning and, and struggling with things going on in my life and,

and I was listening to music. And also in this song, it said God is faithful to his promise. And I turned around and this is what I saw. Now it was way better in person, I'll tell you that. But here's a, a, a full rainbow over the tree. That's what I turned around and I saw. And, and then that moment I just was reminded of God's faithfulness to his promise. Here is a visible reminder of God's faithfulness to us in our

day. Now, if we focus on that rainbow and just talk about the rainbow's beauty and its colors and how vibrant it is and, and how it works scientifically and all of these things, we lose sight of what the rainbow is pointing us to, which is God's promise, God's faithfulness. This morning as we continue in our series through First Corinthians, which is we're continuing through our series in First Corinthians, which is a letter that Paul wrote to the church that he started in Corinth.

And this morning we're getting to Chapter 11 where Paul talks about head coverings. Now Paul has, has been talking about Christian freedom over the last three chapters. And now he's going to begin a discussion about this is how worship needs to look in your churches. And he, he begins the conversation with husbands and wives. Paul is going to tell the women to wear head coverings, but the head coverings point us to God's design. And the same thing with the

rainbow. If we focus too much on the head covering itself, we forget the purpose and the the symbol that that head covering is pointed to. Now it seems that head coverings were a cultural norm in the city of Corinth. This was not just a Christian practice. This was also a practice in Greco Roman society and their culture. They wore head coverings and the reason they wore them was to show that they were married and submitted to the authority of their husband. And during the time of Paul's

write what? During the time of Paul's writing there was a new rebellious woman that was emerging in society. Now, during that time it was socially acceptable for a man to be promiscuous, but not women. And so these women were rebelling against this inconsistency in society. And one way that they would show their rebellion was they would remove their head coverings. And so Paul wrote to the church to remind them of God's design that they are to honor and obey. And so maybe you've wondered

about head coverings. Maybe you wonder where we stand as a church. But it's probably pretty obvious just by looking around that, that we do not feel that this is something that is, that is held, that they're not binding on us in our day and in our cultural context. But that doesn't mean that we just skip over this passage.

There's a principle behind the head covering that we must embrace and live by. Today we're going to see that we must embrace God's design for authority, embrace God's design for roles, and embrace God's design for gender. Let's bow for a word of prayer. Father, we thank you for your word to us this morning, and we recognize that it is your word.

It is not my word. It is not our word, it is not ours to use, to manipulate, to say whatever we want it to say, Lord, but we are bound to the meaning that You have given to Your word. We are bound to how You instruct us and have instructed us faithfully through Paul. And we pray, Lord, that You would give us eyes to see what Your Word has to say to us this morning, the principles that are to lead and guide us in our worship and how we live our

lives. And that that will be a sign to the world around us, to our culture, of the fact that we follow God and His authority and not just at the whims of the day. We pray for wisdom through your Spirit to open our eyes to see your Word and to have the faith to obey it so that we may bring glory and honor to You. We ask this in the precious name of Jesus, Amen.

Turn with me in your Bibles to 1st Corinthians Chapter 11 and I will read verses 2 through 16. First Corinthians Chapter 11, verses 2 through 16. Now I commend you because you Remember Me in everything and maintain the traditions even as I delivered them to you. But I want you to understand that the head of every man is Christ, the head of a wife is her husband, and the head of Christ is God. Every man who prays or prophecies with his head covered

dishonors his head. But every wife who prays or prophesied with her head uncovered dishonors her head, since it is the same as if her head were shaved. For if a wife will not cover her head, then she should cut her hair short. But since it is disgraceful for a wife to cut her hair or shave her head, let her cover her head. For a man ought not to cover his head, since he is the image and glory of God. But woman is the glory of man. For man was not made from woman,

but woman from man. Neither was man created for woman, but woman for man. That is why a wife ought to have a symbol of authority on her head because of the angels. Nevertheless, in the Lord woman is not independent of man, nor man of woman. For as woman was made from man, so man is now born of woman, and all things are from God. Judge for yourselves. Is it proper for a wife to pray

to God with her head uncovered? Does not nature itself teach you that if a man wears long hair it is a disgrace for him? But if a woman has long hair, it is her glory, for her hair is given to her for a covering. If anyone is inclined to be contentious. We have no such practice, nor do the churches of God. So the first thing we see this morning is that you need to embrace God's design for authority. Now, authority and submission get a really bad name in our day and in our culture.

And it's just not because the authority and the submission is a bad thing. It's because our world looks at sinful, poor models and they think that you just throw out this idea because there's been people who don't exemplify it. Well, sin is not sin is the problem, not God's design. And besides that, we, we accept authority in every area of our lives. So these people who say, well, authority and submission are wrong or evil are not good.

Well, we do it all the time. We, we embrace the authority of our government when we pay taxes. We embrace the authority of a police officer when he pulls us over. We embrace the authority of our boss because he has the authority to tell us what to do. There's authority all around us, and we deal with it all the time. And so why would we throw out authority in the church and in marriage? This is part of God's design, and so we need to embrace it.

First, let's look at authority that honors God. Look at verse 3. Paul says, I want you to understand that the head of every man is Christ, the head of a wife is her husband, and the head of Christ is God. Here we see God's authority, God's design for authority. First, we have Christ as the head of man. He is authoritative over every man, and men are to submit to the lordship of Christ in their lives.

And we willingly do this, because Christ himself willingly gave Himself as a sacrifice for us. And so we joyfully give our lives to Him as our head, as our Lord. 2nd, we see that the husband is the head of the wife. He has authority over her, and wives are to submit to their husband's authority. The man is is to model that same Christ like sacrificial love for his wife, and she submits to

that authority. Now you may bristle at that idea, but I want to submit to you that it's because of culture that you bristle at that idea. Because look at what? Look at what Paul says next. The head of Christ is God. Now the amazing thing that we see with authority and submission is that Jesus Christ, God the Son, willingly submitted himself to the will of his Father. In John chapter 6 verse 38, he said I have come down from heaven not to do my own will, but the will of him who sent me.

And the Holy Spirit actually does the same thing where Jesus says the Holy Spirit only says what the Father tells him to say. And so even in the Godhead, God the Father, God the Son, God the Holy Spirit, we see submission to one another. The Son submits to the Father, and the Holy Spirit submits to the Son and to the Father. And so if you bristle at the idea of of having a head over you, you're in good company that that Jesus himself submitted himself as well. This is God's design for

authority. And authority is not a bad thing. It's a good thing, and we must embrace it. Next we see authority that dishonors God. Look at verses 4 through 6. Paul says every man who prays or prophecies with his head covered dishonours his head. But every wife who prays or prophecies with her head uncovered dishonours her head, since it is the same as if her head were shaved. For if a wife will not cover her head, then she should cut her

hair short. But since it is disgraceful for a wife to cut off her hair or shave her head, let her cover her head. And so again, in that society, in that culture, it was custom for wives to have that covering on their head. This signified that submission to their husbands. And so in that culture, when a woman wore a head covering and a man did not, they showed their submission that they were embracing God's design for

culture. If man wore a head covering and a woman did not, it showed that they were rejecting God's design. They were rebelling against it. Even worse, it was a disgrace. Now, in that day, Paul talks about shaving your head. And that day it was only prostitutes and feminists who shaved their head. And it was incredibly disgraceful in that culture. And Paul's saying, you know, for a woman not to wear a HUD covering, it brings that same sort of shame to the woman.

And so he tells them to wear a head covering. And so now the question for us today is, does does this command from Paul to the Corinthian church apply to us today? Now again, in that day, it was very culturally obvious when a woman would wear a head covering or not, what she was saying. Now in our culture that that same idea doesn't exist, that doesn't carry that same weight, it doesn't carry that same

meaning. There's not a cultural shame when women don't wear head coverings and most people don't even understand the meaning of the head covering. John MacArthur in his commentary says the apostle is not laying down an absolute law for women to wear veils or coverings in all churches for all time, but is declaring that the symbols of the divinely established male and female roles are to be genuinely honored in every culture.

This is what the the sign, the symbol of the head covering is pointing to. And what God is wanting to remind you. And what is wanting you to understand is that He has designed a structure for authority that you need to embrace. Husbands are to lead their wives. Wives are to submit to that authority and leadership of their husbands as the husband submits to Christ. And right from the beginning of the Bible we see the breakdown of this authority, don't we? Adam and Eve are placed in the

garden. They have everything they could ever want or need. They can eat from any tree of the garden except for the tree of knowledge and good and evil. And we know the story. The serpent comes and, and goes to Eve and begins to tempt her and, and to question God's goodness. And she takes of the fruit and she eats and she gives to her husband who is with her and he eats. And we have so many questions, so many questions from this passage. Why did did she not defer to her husband?

Why does she not turn and ask him where is Adam? Why? Why is Adam not taking control of the situation? Why didn't he step in and remind Eve of God's command? Why didn't Adam protect his wife? Adam failed to fulfill his role of authority over Eve, and so they suffered the consequences of their actions. And it is interesting that though Eve was technically the first one to sin, she's the first one who takes of the fruit and eat. It is Adam who is held responsible for plunging mankind

into sin. Look at what Paul says in Romans 5 verse 12. Therefore, just as sin came into the world through one man and death through sin, and so death spread to all men because all sinned. Adam had been given the responsibility to lead and protect his wife, and he failed. Husbands, God has called you to lead and protect your wife and your family. And it's easy for us to to go to work and to provide for our family and feel like, OK, now my job is done.

I have done the job and the work of providing for my family. No, you must also lead your family spiritually. That is a part of your role. Husbands, God has made you the head of your wife. It is your responsible responsibility to lead and disciple your wife and your children to grow them in Christ. It is your responsibility to call out sin and to protect your family from the consequences of sin. It is your responsibility to protect your wife and your family from the enemy.

You have been given that authority not to use and abuse your wife and your children for your pleasure, but to sacrifice your life for their health for their benefit. When you lead well, you honor Christ your head and you will be held responsibility responsible. Don't pass off this responsibility to your wife. Step up and lead your family as a godly man. And I'm not standing here in

judgement of you as pastors. We were talking about it this weekend and how we see the areas where we fall short and the areas where where we have neglected to step up and, and lead our families. Well, we're all in this together, but we need to be diligent. We need to be faithful. We need to step up and lead. And maybe you're wondering where to start. And I just want to give you a resource. We have a free resource for you this morning.

We, we purchased these books called Family Worship by Donald Whitney and we brought them for our men's conference last week and we got, I don't know, maybe 60 to 80 of them left on the table out there. Maybe you, it's a short little book, maybe you don't know where to start. And that book would be a really great resource for you, a way for you to be encouraged at how you can begin family worship and

leading your family. Another wonderful thing that we're already doing for you is Pastor Jonah has has this curriculum that we're using on Sunday mornings. And if your children go to Sunday school, you receive an e-mail on Sunday morning that says, here, parents, walk with your children through the lesson that we went through on Sunday. All of it, all of it's done and it's there for you. Take that resource and lead your family with what is there.

And maybe you just start small by picking a day of the week and saying, on this day, we're going to sit down and we're going to read God's Word together and we're going to pray. It doesn't need to be long. It doesn't need to be a sermon. It just needs to be you faithfully leading your family for Christ and wives, God has called you to submit to the authority of your husband. He is there to lead you, to guide you, to protect you and to sacrifice himself for your

benefit. Don't try to control and take over, but invite him to lead your family. Encourage him where he steps out in faith. Honour the ways that He does lead and protect you. And when you submit to Him as your head, you honour Christ. Next, you need to embrace God's design for roles. Once again, this is something that we sense that culture is pushing back on very strongly. Now, churches generally take two approaches when it comes to gender and roles.

You may you may have heard the terms. There's complementarianism and egalitarianism. Now complementarianism teaches that that men and women have been created by God to complement one another. This view argues that that differing roles between men and women are a part of God's design. Egalitarianism teaches that in Christ there are no longer distinctions between male and female.

This view argues that these differing roles have been done away with in Christ. Well, here at LEMC we believe that the most consistent view with the Bible is complementarianism, and that is exactly what Paul teaches in this passage. First, he says men and women are distinct. Look at verses 7 through 10. For a man ought not to cover his head, since he is the image and glory of God, but woman is the glory of man. For man was not made from woman, but woman from man.

Neither was man created for woman, but woman for man. That is why a wife ought to have a symbol of authority on her head because of the angels. Here Paul clearly shows the authority of a man over a woman, and he links it back to creation, indicating that this was a part of God's design. Men and women are distinct from one another, and that distinction was placed in the garden before the fall. It wasn't a result of the fall. It was before the fall.

Woman came from man and was made for man to be his helper, not the other way around. God created man and then created woman from that man. And since this was God's intended design, Paul wants the Corinthians to maintain this order. And he says because of the angels now that word angels is messengers and and it can mean angels or it can mean messengers from other churches.

And so at whatever Paul is meaning is, he's meaning to say whether the angels are watching or whether someone comes from a different church and comes here. They should be able to see your good order and that you are following God's design. Now, now Paul recognizes what the Corinthians might be thinking at this point. And so he goes on to to make the point that men and women are equal. He says nevertheless in verse 11 in the Lord, woman is not independent of man nor man of woman.

For as woman was made from man, so man is now born of woman and all things are from God. Now Paul is very clear. He's he's very quick to say, look, hey, be careful. This is what I'm not saying is that men are superior to women. That's not what I'm saying. They are equal before God. They need each other. And in the same way that that Eve came from Adam, now men come from women. And so in this beautiful creation that God has set forward, he shows the equality of men and women.

And yet they are distinct. They are both equal in God's eyes, having been created in his image, and yet created specifically with distinct roles to serve and build God's Kingdom. And when we embrace those God ordained roles, we bring glory to God. Now, I don't know if there's anybody out there like me, but I don't really enjoy taking out the trash. And it's usually because I remember once I lay down and then I have to get back up because I don't want to get up

at 5:00. That's when the garbage truck runs by our house. And that's too early. So now I have to get out of bed and I have to go. And, and it gets worse when it's winter time, right? Because you get out there and you're like, well, I really don't want to throw on winter boots and a coat and everything to just walk to the edge of the driveway and come back. So I'll usually just if I'm in shorts and AT shirt, I'll throw on, you know, my slides and I'll run out.

I don't know if there anybody out there about me, but this usually ends up being a bad idea, right? Especially when there's snow on the ground. But you're like, you know what, if I lift my foot and I step just right, I'm not going to get any snow in my sandals, right? Has anybody anybody been there? You're like, I can make it. I can do it. You know, that is it always fails. It ends badly. But that's because you're wearing shoes that are not

designed to walk in snow. You're wearing sandals. They're, they're designed for summertime. They're not designed to to trek through the snow and bring the, the trash to the road. And in the same way, when you're about to sit down on the couch and lounge and and maybe pop some popcorn and watch a movie, you don't go throw your winter boots on and kick your feet up on the coffee table, right? That's not what those winter boots were designed for.

Both the sandals and your snow boots are, are equally types of footwear, and yet they're designed with specific functions in mind. And if you try to use them against what their design is, then then you're going against the purpose for which they were created. And this is true of men and women as well. We're all equal in God and yet in his beautiful, magnificent creation, he's created us with distinct roles and abilities.

And we see this, you know, before we get to like the church and the family, just look at the natural abilities of men and women, right? Women have this natural ability to to multitask. I couldn't do two things at the same time to save my life. OK, But women can think of 100 things at the same time and do 15 things at the same time. And I don't understand it. I was my wife is always doing something. I'm like, you're not even listening to me. She's like, yeah, you said this,

this, this and this. And I'm like, all right, I do. I don't know how you do that, but you do it. Women are good at communication, expressing their thoughts, expressing their feelings. They have a good intuition, right, Man, you know your, if you know your wife, they're like, man, I just, I have this feeling. And I don't mean nine times out of 10, they're right. It's, it's amazing that ability they have.

Now, this isn't always true. It doesn't mean there's not men who are good at those things, but generally speaking, women are good at those things. And so men, when we try to do things that are that women are good at or that our wives are good at, we feel like we're wearing sandals in the snow. You know, it doesn't feel right. We're not good at it. Men also have natural abilities. They have natural abilities for

strength. And so they have jobs that this gives them jobs and roles inside the workplace, right? Manual labor. They have a spatial awareness, awareness of their surroundings, a sense of direction, which most women don't have. I, I, I, Jessica always tells me to tell her when I'm going to mention her in the service and I didn't, I didn't tell her this one, but sometimes I'll let her

walk out first. If we're coming out of Walmart, I'll let her go out first because I'm always so interested to see which way she's going to go. She has no idea where we parked the car. And I just find it so funny. But men are better have a spatial awareness. Men have a natural ability to leadership, right? They, if there's a, if there's a void of leadership, they'll naturally step in and fill in

that void. Again, it's not 100% true, but generally speaking, men, men do that better than women. And so these are natural abilities. And so women, when you try to do things that men were designed to do you, you feel like you're wearing snow boots in the house. You know, it just doesn't feel right. And when it comes to God's Kingdom, both men and women are tasked to work together for the building of God's Kingdom.

I think that's the first thing that we need to say because sometimes we can be tempted to say it's like the men do the work of ministry and the women just sit by the wayside and do, and they just, you know, cook and clean and, and pray They they do all of those things. But women are actually together when God gives his order to say, have dominion in the book of Genesis, that command is to the man and the woman. So we work together for the building of God's Kingdom, and

yet we have distinct roles. We've already seen that in the home the man is to lead while the woman submits. And in the church we have the same sort of idea where God says that men are the ones to lead the church. They're the ones to have authority to shepherd, to pastor the church. Women come alongside to help in any sort of role that that doesn't involve teaching and

having authority over men. And so we work together for the building of God's Kingdom, but each with our own distinct roles and abilities. This is God's design for the roles of men and women, and you must embrace them. And when you do, you bring glory and honor to Christ your head. So, so far we've seen that you should embrace God's design for authority, embrace God's design for roles. And next, you should embrace God's design for gender.

Now, I don't have to tell you how our culture is pushing back on this idea of gender in our day, right? We see the effects of it, of it everywhere. Our world doesn't doesn't even know how to define a woman. Our world doesn't know what the role of a man should be. Our world doesn't know how to raise the next generation, and so they're letting the next generation raise themself. Here Paul shows simply and clearly what God's design for gender is. First, God created 2 genders,

male and female. Look at verses 13 and 15. Judge for yourselves. Is it proper for a wife to pray to God with her head uncovered? Does not nature teach you that if a man wears long hair it is a disgrace for him? But if a woman has long hair, it is her glory, for her hair is given to her for a covering. Now I'm not saying that this is the point Paul is making in this section. I'm I'm simply noticing what Paul is doing here. And I'm doing that because of our culture and our day.

I feel like it needs to be said that Paul here mentions male and female. That's it. There's not a whole bunch of other genders. This isn't Paul's main point, but this is the two genders that there are our world following Satan and their flesh is rejecting God's good design. They're living in rebellion to God. They're they're attempting to distort God's creation, to distort God's design through surgery. They themselves are deceived and they're deceiving other people, even children.

We must embrace God's design for gender and faithfully teach our families, faithfully teach our children, and correct others gently, lovingly, patiently. We must correct them and teach the truth. Next, Paul argues that men should look like men and women should look like women. He again says in verse 14, does not nature itself teach you that if a man wears long hair, it is a disgrace for him, but if a woman has long hair, it is her glory, for her hair is given to

her for a covering. Again, men and women have been created and they're distinct from one another. And even though we're removed from that culture in Corinth, we see that this principle applies today as well. When a man has long hair like a woman does, it doesn't look natural. But when a woman has that long hairdresser glory, it is, it does look natural. It does look beautiful. And the same goes for a woman.

If a woman's going to shave her head, that looks unnatural, but a man who shaves his head looks totally fine. We don't see any problem here. And it's interesting actually, that when we when we look at this idea of hair, a man's hair just naturally doesn't grow the same way a woman does, right? That's why we call it male pattern baldness. You know, as men, as we get older, it's not uncommon for men to go bald, but that doesn't happen nearly as often with

women, right? And so there's a natural way that God has designed us and men should look like men, women should look like women. That's a an order and a design that we ought to be faithful to in God's word. Now, Paul isn't getting into a debate about hair length. He's just simply making that point. Men should look like men, women should look like women. So God created only two genders. They are each unique and distinct. So don't resist how God created you. Embrace it.

This week I was listening to Doctor Linda Siler and her testimony and, and maybe you've heard it, Focused on the family aired a talk that she gave and she shared her story of being freed from Jesus, from gender dysphoria. She was confused about her genders and, and as she was growing up as a boy or she was growing up, she longed to be a boy. She struggled with with attraction to girls, but she always kept this a secret.

She kept it to herself because in that day nobody was talking about it. And so she kept it to herself. And when she went off to college, she she joined this campus ministry and she became a genuine believer in Christ. And so she still kept her her desires, her flesh. She kept it a secret because now you take while the world isn't talking about it and you're definitely not talking about it in church, right? We're definitely not talking about this stuff. This was like the early 90s.

And so she kept this a secret and it wasn't something that that they talked about. And she thought, man, as I grow in Christ, this struggle is just going to eventually go away. But it didn't. It only intensified and she came to a breaking point in her young Christian life where she wrestled through the thought of, you know, at some point I'm either going to have to live sold out for Jesus Christ, or I'm going to have to give in to my desires and just live and

satisfy my flesh. And at a conference, she heard a speaker say, if you're stuck and you're caught in habitual sin, the answer is James 5, verse 16. Therefore, confess your sins to one another and pray for one another that you may be healed. In her testimony, Linda said, I didn't hear anything else the speaker said that day. I just knew that unless I took what was in the dark and exposed it into the light of Christ with a trusted leader, I would never get free.

And I did discover the truth that when you take what's in the dark and you bring it into the light, it breaks the power of the enemy to energize that sin in your life. But when we keep sin quiet and hidden and silent, it actually energizes the enemy. And we are naturally going to be opposed by God because God opposes the proud.

When we're too proud to get our sin into the light because we're afraid of what other people would think of us and we wear a mask and we pretend like everything's OK, you will stay in bondage to those areas. But you know what Scripture says? He opposes the proud, but he gives grace to the humble. Linda decided to open up to her pastor about her sin and she was terrified at how he was going to respond. But he showed her grace, he

said. Linda, thank you for sharing that with me. It took so much courage and I want you to know that doesn't change our opinion of you. We love you. We see the hand of God in your life and we're going to get you the help that you need.

Through counselling and through being involved in discipleship in her church, Linda was able to overcome the lies of the enemy and embrace God's design for her gender and the female that He made her to be. Maybe you're struggling with those feelings of gender dysphoria. Maybe you think that you are the wrong gender. You need to know this is a lie from the enemy. Satan came to steal, kill, and destroy you, and he does that

through deception. But Jesus came that you could have life and have it abundantly, and you can have that abundant life through His truth, through embracing God's design for who He made you to be. Maybe you've never shared that with anyone and you're terrified. You're terrified because you think that you'll be judged, but you're only going to break the power of that sin in your life or any sin in your life. This, this, I am talking about gender dysphoria, but this goes

for any sin in our lives. If you want to break the power of sin in your life, you need to confess it to someone, bring it to the light. Find someone that you trust and share your struggle with them and begin the journey to embracing who God made you to be. Now maybe you don't struggle with gender dysphoria, but I want to ask you the question how would you respond if someone came and shared that struggle with you?

Would you have the same grace and compassion as Linda's pastor, or would you judge and condemn? Would anyone even share their sin with you? Or are you such a hypocritical, judgmental person that that you are not a safe place to go? You are not a person that anybody would even come to to share their sin? We all struggle with sin. We don't all struggle with the same sin, but we all struggle with sin nonetheless. And so pray for the Lord to give you a compassionate heart for

others in their sin. Commit to having a gracious response if someone were to share a sin struggle with you. We all need grace as we seek to embrace God's will for our lives. Now, as we close this morning, Paul wrote this letter to the Corinthians so that they would wear coverings. That's what he was telling them to do. But if we focus too much on the head coverings themselves, then we've missed the point of why they were there. And so here at this church, we

we have Christian freedom. If you feel convicted to wear a head covering, then we would encourage you to do that. But don't forget the purpose for why you wear it. Embrace God's design for the symbol. And if you do not feel convicted to wear a head covering, we encourage you to embrace that freedom. But don't forget God's design. You are obligated to be obedient

to God's design for your life. And so we've seen that God has given us his design for authority, for roles, and for gender, and we should embrace those designs. But the problem is that in our flesh we resist God's design for our life. We reject it in our flesh. The world, the flesh and the devil are all fighting against us, trying to lure us into the things of the world, and they're fighting against God's design for our life. And we've all sinned and fallen short of God's glory.

And look at at earlier in the book, Paul gives his judgement of those who are caught in sin. He says, do you not know that the unrighteous will not inherit the Kingdom of God? Do not be deceived. Neither the sexually immoral, nor idolaters, nor adulterers, nor men who practice homosexuality, nor thieves, nor the greedy, nor drunkards, nor revilers, nor swindlers will inherit the Kingdom of God. Our sin, our rejection of God in our lives leads us to not getting to experience His Kingdom.

But look at the hope that Paul gives in the next verse. And such were some of you, but you were washed, you were sanctified. You were justified in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ and by the Spirit of our God.

For those who have put their faith and trust in Jesus Christ and the sacrifice that He made on your behalf, you have been washed and you will inherit God's Kingdom, not because of anything good in you, not because of anything good that you will do, but because you have trusted in the goodness of Christ and what He has done for you. Have you been cleansed and forgiven through faith in the sacrifice of Jesus? Maybe you think you're too far gone, maybe you think you're too sinful.

No, your sin is what qualifies you to come to the Saviour. Jesus said come to me, all who are heavy are labour and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Don't wait to find the rest that you're looking for trusting in Jesus. It doesn't mean everything's going to go perfect in your life. It doesn't mean that everything's going to be great

from here on out. But it does mean that you can live with joy and peace and hope knowing that all your sins are forgiven in Christ and you will be with him forever in eternity. And if you would like to talk with us about that, we would love to have a conversation with you. We welcome you to come up afterwards. I'll I'll be around and feel free to find me. We'd love to chat with you and then talk about what it means to give your life to Christ. Let's bow our heads in prayer

this morning. Father, we thank you for your design for us. You are the Creator. You are the designer. We see your creation at the beginning of your Word, which says that you breathed all things into existence. And we see your grand design. We see the order in your creation, and Lord, we confess that that in our sin we have rejected Your design. We reject the ways that which You have made us. And our world seeks to lead us astray.

Satan seeks to lead us astray through our world, through our flesh. But Lord, we pray that You would lead and guide us by Your Spirit, that we would be a people of Your Word, that we would embrace Your design, embrace Your authority over our lives, that we would seek to

live for your glory and honor. And we pray that Your Spirit would strengthen us to be faithful examples so that when the world looks at us, they can see the beauty and the wonder of their design and give glory to You as their Creator. We ask this in Jesus name, Amen.

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