{"id":20,"date":"2011-03-29T15:07:51","date_gmt":"2011-03-29T15:07:51","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/articles1\/?p=20"},"modified":"2014-10-21T14:11:04","modified_gmt":"2014-10-21T14:11:04","slug":"the-fear-of-god-part-iii","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/the-fear-of-god-part-iii\/","title":{"rendered":"The Fear of God Part III"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"pf-content\"><p><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/03\/ingredients-of-the-fear-of-God.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-45\" title=\"Alone in the wilderness\" src=\"http:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/03\/ingredients-of-the-fear-of-God.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"225\" height=\"300\" \/><\/a>Ingredients  of the Fear of God<\/strong><\/p>\n<p><strong>Albert N. Martin<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Suppose someone were to read  through his Bible with pen and paper in hand and jot down every explicit,  overt reference to the fear of God he came across.  In addition,  he would record passages that contained, although not the explicit words,  yet the thought and illustrations of the reality of the fear of God.   I am quite confident that he would be able to fill many pages with references  to this great theme.  For the fear of God is one of the most dominant  themes in Holy Scripture.  It is that which the writer of the Proverbs  says is the beginning or the chief part of all knowledge (Proverbs 1:7). <\/p>\n<p>We have seen the fear of God  illustrated and defined from Scripture.  Now, we need to consider  what are the essential ingredients of the fear of God.  First,  there must be correct concepts of the character of God.  Second,  there must be a pervasive sense of the presence of God.  Third,  there must be a constant awareness of our obligations to God.<\/p>\n<p><!--more--><strong>Correct Concepts of the  Character of God<\/strong><\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>God is Majestic in Holiness<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Revelation 15:3-4 asks a question:   \u201cWho shall not fear, O Lord, and glorify thy Name?\u201d  Here are  the victorious saints\u2014the redeemed who have overcome the beast and  his image.  They are in the presence of God, and we read, beginning  in verse 3: <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>And they sing the  song of Moses the servant of God, and the song of the Lamb, saying,  \u201cGreat and marvellous are thy works, O Lord God, the Almighty; righteous  and true are thy ways, thou King of the ages.  Who shall not fear,  O Lord, and glorify thy Name?  For thou only art holy; for all  the nations shall come and worship before thee; for thy righteous acts  have been manifest.\u201d<\/span><\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>As they behold their God, they  ask the question, \u201cSeeing You as You are, and therefore having right  views of Your character and Your ways and Your judgments, who shall  not fear You?\u201d  They ask this rhetorical question, saying in  essence, \u201cAnyone who sees You as we see You must fear You.\u201d   It is the acknowledgement that correct concepts of the character of  God are an indispensable element, an indispensable ingredient, in producing  the fear of God.<\/p>\n<p>One of the great problems in  our day is that we have lost sight of those aspects of the character  of God that are calculated to produce His fear\u2014namely His majesty,  His immensity, His holiness.  It is as though we are looking at  a landscape.  In the foreground there is a beautiful meadow, the  perfect picture of tranquility and peacefulness.  But the backdrop  of that landscape is made up of massive mountains, with rugged, snow-capped  peaks.  Off to the sides and behind and above those mountains are  great thunderhead clouds with lightning flashing and playing off the  edges.  If a man only focuses his attention on the foreground of  the picture, he may have a very accurate view of one part of it, but  his response is inadequate to the totality of that picture.  If  he can look at the scene and feel nothing but tranquility and ease and  have no sense of awe and breathless wonder, it is because he is only  looking at the foreground and not looking at the background.  If  you have ever been in the Rocky Mountains, you know what I mean.   There is that sense of being overpowered by the might and the grandeur  and the sheer massiveness of those mountains. <\/p>\n<p>So it is with the character  of God.  The Scripture sets before us the softer lines of God\u2019s  mercy and His compassion and His fatherly tenderness.  But never  do the Scriptures set those attributes before us in isolation from the  more awesome and breath-taking characteristics of His holiness, His  wrath, His immensity, His eternity, His omniscience and His omnipotence.   In our day, we have lost this aspect of the character of God.   Therefore we have greatly lost the fear of God. <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>The Cross Intensifies  our View of God\u2019s Holiness<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Many tend to think that, now  that God has revealed His love in the cross of Jesus Christ, it only  remains for us to be enthralled in that love rather than to tremble  in fear.  But if, as Scripture tells us, sinless creatures hide  their faces in the presence of the God of burning holiness (Isaiah 6:1-3),  why should we ever think that the sight of the wounds and the sacrifice  of Christ will negate the necessity for us to draw near with veiled  faces and with trembling hearts?  It is accurate to say that perhaps  nowhere in all of Scripture is this principle more clearly seen than  in the cross itself.  For what is the cross but God\u2019s clearest  revelation of His inflexible justice?  What a display of inflexible  justice it is when God spares not His Son but brings upon Him the full  brunt of His wrath against sin!  What a display of spotless holiness!   God is so holy that He will turn His back upon His only Begotten, the  One of Whom He said, \u201cThis is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased\u201d  (Matthew 3:17).  An enlightened view of the cross of Christ, rather  than canceling or negating or diluting any of the scriptural teaching  on the fear of God, serves to heighten and to seal that concept so that  all of our relationship to God through Christ is a relationship in the  climate of the fear of God.<\/p>\n<p>There will not be any measure  of the fear of God in your heart until you begin to take seriously the  revelation He has made of His own character and begin to tremble before  Him with the fear of dread and of terror\u2014until you would cry for rocks  and mountains to hide you from His face.  And dear friend, the  Gospel will then become good news to you\u2014the good news that One was  hidden from the face of the Father so that you and I might be forgiven.   That One is the Lord Jesus Christ.<\/p>\n<p>And if you are a child of God,  you must be convinced that you will not grow in the fear of God unless  you grow in your awareness of and sensitivity to the scriptural teaching  of the immensity, the majesty and the holiness of God.  This is  not something that is incorporated into the life once and for all.   I would be intensely practical and exhort you to spend much time meditating  upon such portions of the word of God as Isaiah chapters 6 and 40 and  Revelation 1 and 19 and some of the other passages that especially set  forth God in His transcendent majesty and holiness and immensity.   Meditate on them until you begin to feel something of the climate of  the biblical patterns of thought and to take your place before Him in  true godly fear.<\/p>\n<p>It is this profound sense of  His majesty and holiness that becomes one of the great motivations for  a life of holiness and godliness.  The first essential ingredient  of the fear of God is a correct concept of His character.  If your  thoughts of God have been such as to leave you devoid of His fear, there  is something wrong with what you are thinking about God.  May God  help you to begin to conform your thinking to the statements of Holy  Scripture, that you might have that fear of the Lord which is the chief  part of knowledge.<\/p>\n<h1><strong>A Pervasive Sense of the  Presence of God<\/strong><\/h1>\n<p>The foundation of the fear  of God is correct concepts of the character of God.  The next building  block in the fear of God is a pervasive sense of His presence.   Something that is pervasive is something that spreads throughout a given  area.  A key ingredient of the fear of God is a pervasive sense  of the presence of God.  It is a sense of the presence of God which  spreads throughout the entirety of our lives so that there is no place  or circumstance in which we find ourselves, but that we are conscious  that God is here.  And He is here in all His majesty, His holiness  and His immensity\u2014He is not \u201csomewhere out there\u201d, but He is right  here.  The fear of God will always be constructed of this pervasive  sense of the presence of God.<\/p>\n<p>I remember years ago hearing  a statement by the late Dr. A. W. Tozer.  He said, \u201cThe most  profound word in the human language is God.\u201d  You can go to your  dictionary to look up a word like \u201cpervasive\u201d, as I did, and it  says, \u201cThat which is spread throughout.\u201d  You can define the  word \u201cpervasive.\u201d  But try to define \u201cGod.\u201d  Think  of all the thousands of theological books that have been written in  all the hundreds of languages throughout the earth, trying to define  God.  If you could put them all together into one language and  read them all, when you are all done you would have to say that we only  know the edges of His ways.  The most profound word in the human  language is <em>God<\/em>.  Then Tozer said, \u201cThe most profound  fact in all of human experience is the sentence, \u2018God <em>is.<\/em>\u2019\u201d   All that the Scripture tells us about Him, He is right now.  And  then the third thing:  \u201cThe most profound experience is the recognition  that God is <em>here<\/em>.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>It is interesting to note that  in most of the instances where the fear of God is described for us in  Scripture, it is described in a context of the realized presence of  God.   Think about some of the texts we have considered thus  far in this study of the fear of God.  When Jacob awoke from his  dream he said, \u201cSurely Jehovah is in this place; and I knew it not\u201d  (Genesis 28:16).  We are told that Moses, at the burning bush,  \u201cwas afraid to look upon God\u201d (Exodus 3:6).  Isaiah, when he  beheld the Lord in a vision, said, \u201cWoe is me! for I am undone . .  . for mine eyes have seen the King\u201d (Isaiah 6:5).  If you trace  out these illustrations of the fear of God you will find that almost  exclusively, they are set in a context where men are experiencing the  realized presence of God.  God is there, and they know He is there;  they know that they are in His presence. <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Exodus 3<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>In Exodus 3, Moses sees the  bush burning.  He turns aside to examine it, and God speaks out  of the bush.  When he recognizes that God is there, he covers his  face and will not even look upon it.  At that point, Moses sensed  that God\u2014in the totality of His being, as all that Moses understood  Him to be\u2014was not \u201cup there and out there somewhere\u201d, but He was  right there, in his very presence.  So he hid his face.  It  was the same with Jacob.  He wakes from his dream, and when he  reflects upon it he says, \u201cThis is none other than the house of God.   How dreadful is this place.\u201d  Why?  \u201cIt is dreadful because  God is here\u2014and I have been in His presence.\u201d  The place is  dreadful; and it is made dreadful because the Dreadful One is there. <\/p>\n<p>Even the fear of terror has  this thought in it.  Remember how Adam answered the Lord when He  said, \u201cWhere art thou?\u201d Adam responded, \u201cI heard thy voice in  the garden, and I was afraid\u201d (Genesis 3:10).  As long as Adam  could think of God as being off somewhere out there, he wasn\u2019t gripped  with that sense of terror and dread.  But he said, \u201cWhen I heard  thy voice\u201d\u2014that is, when I knew that all that You were and are as  God You were <em>right here<\/em>, in close proximity to me\u2014\u201cI was  afraid.\u201d  This tells us that the second essential ingredient  of the fear of God is a pervasive sense of His presence.  I must  be conscious that all that I comprehend God to be is present here in  this very place where I sit, or where I stand, at any given moment.<\/p>\n<p><strong><em>Psalm 139<\/em><\/strong><\/p>\n<p>But there is a passage of Scripture  that teaches this truth in a sustained and concentrated way.  Psalm  139 describes, probably more clearly than any other text, a man who  has right concepts of the character of God, and a man who is at the  same time convinced that this God, in His immensity, majesty and holiness,  is right here.  This man, David, is filled with a pervasive sense  of the presence of God.  He begins by expressing his consciousness  of the omniscience of God, that is, that He knows all things:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>O Jehovah, thou  hast searched me, and known me.  Thou knowest my downsitting and  mine uprising; thou understandest my thought afar off.  Thou searchest  out my path and my lying down, and art acquainted with all my ways.   For there is not a word on my tongue, but, lo, O Jehovah, thou knowest  it altogether (Psalm 139:1-4).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Up to this point, David is  describing what he knows about the character of God as an all-seeing,  all-knowing God.  But how is he looking at it?  Is he looking  at God\u2019s omniscience as if God were somewhat like a spy satellite,  which can take pictures from many miles above the surface of the earth,  yet produce photos which reveal the greatest of detail?  Is that  the concept David has of God\u2014that He is this great, immense, all-knowing,  all-seeing God who is up there, out there, somewhere?  And that  everything I do, like the great eye of the orbiting spy satellite, He  sees and knows?  Is that the concept?  No.  Notice the  transition in the next verse, verse 5:  \u201cThou hast beset me behind  and before, and laid thy hand upon me.\u201d  David is saying that  the God who has searched and known him\u2014who understands his thought  and knows his every word\u2014knows and understands <em>not<\/em> like the  orbiting spy satellite, from miles and miles away, but He knows and  understands him because His hand is upon him.  Notice how David  goes on to develop this thought: <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>Such knowledge  is too wonderful for me; it is high, I cannot attain unto it.   Whither shall I go from thy Spirit?  Or whither shall I flee from  thy <em>presence<\/em>?  If I ascend up into heaven thou art there:  if I make my bed in Sheol, behold, thou art there (verses 6-8). <\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>David does not simply assert  that he is unable to flee from God\u2019s <em>knowledge<\/em> or <em>omniscience<\/em>\u2014he  says he is not able to get away from His <em>presence<\/em>.  He says  that no matter how far he could travel in either direction\u2014whether  up into heaven itself or down to the grave, to Sheol\u2014God is there.   He is not just <em>aware<\/em> of David; He is <em>there<\/em>.  It is  not just that He will <em>see<\/em> David; He will be there with him.   In verse 9, he says, \u201cIf I take the wings of the morning, and dwell  in the uttermost parts of the sea; even there shall thy hand lead me,  and thy right hand shall hold me.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>David obviously is not thinking  in terms of \u201cbare omniscience\u201d\u2014that God simply happens to know  everything.  Nor is he possessed of the notion that God is some  heartless, formless being without personality, who simply happens to  be everywhere.  Rather, he says, \u201cWherever I go God is there,  as the personal God whose hand is upon me, whose hand holds me, whose  hand covers me.\u201d  And he even traces this all the way back to  his very conception in his mother\u2019s womb in the beautiful imagery  of verse 13:  \u201cFor thou didst form my inward parts: thou didst  cover me in my mother\u2019s womb.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>Therefore the fear of God to  David consisted also of this second element, a pervasive sense of the  presence of God.  It is this sense that will create that awe, that  sense of wonder, that sense of reverence that will make even the thought  of disobeying such a God, of grieving Him by walking contrary to His  will, unthinkable to a Christian.  That is why Scripture says that  the fear of the Lord is to depart from evil.  For if I am living  in the sense of the immediate presence of this great God, I will not  dare to fly into the face of His holy commandments and His laws. <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>The Effect of Sensing  God\u2019s Presence<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>How often have we been tempted  to do something sinful, and the presence of another person has kept  us from it?  A child may be considering taking something that is  forbidden to him\u2014until his brother or sister walks into the room.   If the presence of another creature, who has no power to judge him for  his actions, has the effect of radically changing the child\u2019s conduct,  what happens to the man who knows he is always in the immediate presence  of the One before whom he is accountable for all that he does?   Will it have any ethical and moral effect?  Indeed, it will.<\/p>\n<p>Suppose you want to find out  all the facts you can gather about the Grand Canyon.  You have  never been there, but you want to learn all about this remarkable national  park.  You gather all these facts about the immensity, the majesty,  the beauty and the transcendent splendor of the Grand Canyon.   Suppose you memorize all those facts and even become an expert on the  physical properties of the Grand Canyon.  The next day, however,  all that you have come to know about the immensity, the majesty, the  grandeur, and the glory of the Grand Canyon doesn\u2019t affect one bit  the way you live.  But suppose one morning, you suddenly found  yourself saddled up on the back of a ray of light that broke over the  eastern coast and, within the snap of a finger, you stood right in the  midst of the Grand Canyon.  What would happen?  You certainly  wouldn\u2019t take out your tube of toothpaste and start brushing your  teeth!  Rather, you would say, \u201cWow!  This is the Grand  Canyon!  Yesterday, I learned all these facts and figures about  it, but this is the real thing!  This is the Grand Canyon!\u201d   What has happened?  Not one of all the facts and figures has changed.   You can look out and see the mile or two-mile expanse; you can see the  depth; you can see all the features you learned about.  But what  has happened?  You have been put into the presence of the canyon  itself.  And all the characteristics of the Grand Canyon that you  read about suddenly grip you with a sense of awe and wonder.  Why?   Because it is right there, and you are right in the middle of it.<\/p>\n<p>That is what I am saying about  God.  You can have all the facts about God\u2014good, biblical and  Reformed truths about God.  He is holy, sovereign, transcendent,  immense, free, boundless and all the rest.  But unless you learn  to cultivate that all-pervasive sense of His presence, it won\u2019t make  much difference in how you live.  That\u2019s why some people, who  may have a \u201csmaller God\u201d in terms of their theological understanding,  but have more of the sense of the presence of God, live a lot better  than people who have a \u201cgreat big God\u201d in their theology, but who  have a distant God in their experience.<\/p>\n<p>God is not the orbiting spy  satellite.  He is the ever-present, personal God.  And in  a certain sense, He is the very environment in which we live.   As Paul said, \u201cIn him we live, and move, and have our being\u201d (Acts  17:28).  This is not pantheism.  But it is a biblical concept  that I fear that we know too little about experientially.  And  this sense of the presence of God is an essential ingredient of the  fear of God. <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>God\u2019s Presence with  Abraham<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Let us consider two illustrations  of how this pervasive sense of God\u2019s presence has its practical effect  upon the life of the man who learns it.  In Genesis 17:1 we read,  \u201cAnd when Abram was ninety years old and nine, Jehovah appeared to  Abram, and said unto him, \u2018I am God Almighty; walk before me, and  be thou perfect.\u2019\u201d  That is, \u201cWalk in the constant awareness  of My eye upon you, My presence with you and your relationship to Me  being the all-important thing in every circumstance.  And be thou  perfect.\u201d  Here is the moral and ethical implication for a man  who believes what is revealed about the character of God and cultivates  an all-pervasive sense of the presence of God:  he will live a  life of obedience to that God.  And this is exactly what we see  in Genesis 22, when God commanded Abraham to take Isaac, the son of  promise, and to kill him.  Just as Abraham is about to do the very  thing which God told him to do, God prevents him from carrying out the  act.  Notice what God says to him in verses 11 and 12:  \u201c<em>Now  I know that thou fearest God<\/em>, seeing thou hast not withheld thy  son, thine only son, from me.\u201d <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>God\u2019s Presence with  Joseph<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Then there is that classic  example in Genesis 39.  Here is this handsome young man, in Pharaoh\u2019s  court, beholding all of this moral filth on every side.  He is  a normal young man with normal heterosexual desires, and he begins to  receive overtures from Potiphar\u2019s wife.  Joseph rejects her initial  overtures, but she persists, until one day, in absolute frustration,  seeing that everyone else is out of the house, she actually lays hold  of Joseph physically.  It is in the midst of this intense period  of testing that Joseph reveals what it was that preserved him through  the trial.  Joseph says to Potiphar\u2019s wife in Genesis 39:9, speaking  of his master, Potiphar, \u201cHe is not greater in this house than I;  neither hath he kept back any thing from me but thee, because thou art  his wife: how then can I do this great wickedness, and sin against God?\u201d <\/p>\n<p>The first step into any sin,  when there is definite inducement to sin, is to eradicate any sense  of the immediate presence of God.  Think about it.  Many of  the sins we commit would be prevented or stopped by simply the presence  of another human being.  If you are having a spat with your wife,  what happens when a fellow human being, not even necessarily a Christian,  comes to the door? The presence of another human being is enough to  check your words, and suddenly you can become very sweet.  Or you  could be cheating at school and think that nobody sees you.  As  soon as the teacher stands over your shoulder, however, you stop.   Why?   Because of the presence of another human being.   What effect would it have upon us if we had an all-pervasive sense of  the presence of God?  We see what it did for Joseph.  It kept  him from sin. <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>God\u2019s Presence a Restraint  against Sin<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>This is why, even in the New  Testament, we are called to live lives of ethical and moral purity,  and we are called to live such lives motivated by the fear of God.   We see this in Paul\u2019s Second Epistle to the Corinthians:  \u201cHaving  therefore these promises, beloved, let us cleanse ourselves from all  defilement of flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness <em>in the fear of  God<\/em>\u201d (II Corinthians 6:15-7:1).  We are to carry our holiness  to perfection in the climate of the fear of God, a climate which has  as one of its indispensable elements this all-pervasive sense of the  presence of God.  Why should I strive to cleanse myself from every  defilement of spirit?  Because God is here; He sees and knows and  is grieved with whatever is unlike Him and is a contradiction of His  holy character.  He is not \u201cout there somewhere\u201d, but He says,  \u201cI will dwell in them and be their God.\u201d  And Paul says in  the light of that promise, let us carry our holiness, our sanctification,  on to perfection in the climate of the fear of God. <\/p>\n<p>The fear of God is the chief  part of knowledge.  That fear is first of all founded upon right  views of God\u2019s character, and secondly constructed of this all-pervasive  sense of His presence.  Do you know something of this fear?   If you are a Christian, then surely your heart cries out, \u201cLord, I  thank you for the little I know; but, oh, how precious little it is!\u201d   Isn\u2019t this the explanation for so much of our shoddy living and so  much of our spiritual deficiency?  We have conveniently learned  to push the Grand Canyon out to Arizona instead of standing in the midst  of it.  May God help us that we shall walk in His fear.<\/p>\n<p><strong>A Constraining Awareness  of Our Obligations to God<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>The third essential ingredient  of the fear of God is what I am calling <em>a constraining awareness  of one\u2019s obligations to God.<\/em> In other words, to live in  the fear of God is not only to know who He is and that He is here, but  that in the circumstance in which I find myself, the most important  issue is my obligation to this great God who is here.  Do you see  the connection of it?  To walk in the fear of God is to walk not  only with right views of God which will elicit awe and reverence, and  to walk in the sense that He is here, but also to walk with the consciousness  that the most necessary thing is to know and to discharge my obligations  to Him.  To quote one servant of Christ, <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>The fear of God  implies our constant consciousness of our relationship to God, so that,  while we are also related to angels, to demons, to men and to things,  our primary relationship is to God, and all other relationships are  determined by and are to be interpreted in terms of our relationship  to Him.  The first thought of the godly man in every circumstance  is God\u2019s relationship to him in it and his relationship to God.<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>This point can be illustrated  using the setting of a church worship service.  As stated in this  quote, the Christian has many relationships.  As you sit in the  pew and worship God, you are sustaining relationships to angels (Hebrews  1:13-14; I Corinthians 11:10) and to demons (Ephesians 6:12; Matthew  13:19).  You sustain relationships to men:  you sit next to  your spouse, mother, father, brother, sister, friend or acquaintance.    You are also related to things:  you bear a relationship to the  pew you are sitting on, the hymnal you hold in your hand, the clothes  which are on your back.  You have many relationships as you sit  and worship God.  But if you entered that church building in the  fear of God, you came in and you sit there recognizing that the only  relationship which really matters, the one which takes precedence over  every other relationship, is that which you sustain to God.  And  your concern as you sit there is the answer to the question, What is  God\u2019s relationship to me, and what is my relationship to Him?   What does He require of me, and am I rendering to Him what He requires  of me at this moment?  If you are worshiping in the fear of God,  the most important relationship for you is your relationship to God.   And your greatest concern is whether you are fulfilling your obligations  to Him.<\/p>\n<p>The importance of the fear  of God, and the fact that it includes the conscious concern to discharge  your obligations to Him, makes this question relevant and vital:   What has been the most important relationship to you in the act of worship?   Is it your relationship to God?  Or is your relationship to your  watch the most important thing?  Do you say, \u201cWell, I\u2019ve suffered  through three quarters of this; only another quarter of an hour to go\u201d?    Or is your relationship to your father or mother the most important?   Do you think to yourself, \u201cI\u2019m here because Dad and Mom said I had  to be, so I\u2019ll suffer it out.\u201d  Or is your relationship to  your reputation the most important thing?  \u201cI am a member of  this church, and if I don\u2019t go people will think I\u2019m unhealthy spiritually,  so I\u2019ll just show up.\u201d  Is that what brought you to church?   Do you see how practical this is?  What is the most pressing issue  to you from the time you walk through the sanctuary doors\u2014and even  before you actually walk through the doors?  If you are walking  in the fear of God, then you are overcome with a constraining awareness  of your obligations to God.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>The Essence of Our Obligations  to God<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>If an essential ingredient  of the fear of God is a constraining awareness of my obligations to  Him, what then is the essence of my obligation to God?  I believe  that all of our obligations to God can be broken down into three great  headings:  to love Him supremely, to obey Him implicitly and to  trust Him completely. <\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<ul type=\"DISC\">\n<li>To Love Him Supremely<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>What is the first and great  commandment?  What is the summation of all that God requires of  us?  \u201cThou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and  with all thy soul, and with all thy mind.  This is the great and  first commandment\u201d (Matthew 22:37-38).  Here I am in relationships  with men, with angels, with things.  And in all of those relationships,  the man who walks in the fear of God strives to remember and be constrained  by the recognition of his obligation to God.  He seeks to love  Him supremely.  Perhaps he sees that shiny new car glistening in  the showroom and wishes he had it\u2014not because it is part of a wise  economic plan for his family, but simply because it looks so nice.   Now of course, getting that car means he won\u2019t be able to increase  his giving commensurate with this year\u2019s increase in salary.   Oh yes, God says that we are to honor Him with the first fruits of all  our increase (Proverbs 3:9), and the man knows that his giving is to  be proportionate as God has blessed him; but it sure would be nice to  have that shiny new car.  He is in a relationship in which he is  sorely tempted to love paint and chrome more than His God.  He  is not walking in the fear of God.  If he is walking in the fear  of God, he won\u2019t have that idolatrous attachment to that new car. <\/p>\n<p>Am I saying people shouldn\u2019t  get new cars?  No.  The point is that, if the motivation to  get the car is a love for the car which rivals and supersedes the love  one has for God\u2014which ought to be supreme love\u2014and it prevents obedience  to God\u2014which ought to be implicit obedience\u2014then that is not walking  in the fear of God.  Jesus, when He calls men to Himself, says,  \u201cIf any man cometh unto me, and hateth not his own father, and mother,  and wife, and children, and brethren, and sisters, yea, and his own  life also, he cannot be my disciple\u201d (Luke 14:26).  He says,  \u201cIf you come to Me, even legitimate love for yourself, which expresses  itself in the desire to preserve yourself, must be sacrificed.   A love for Me must take you beyond self-preservation to the point that  you see your very own life as expendable.\u201d  Living in the fear  of God means that you love God supremely no matter what the cost.<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<ul type=\"DISC\">\n<li>To Obey Him Implicitly<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>Then, as the only proof of  that supreme love, to obey Him implicitly is the second thing.   Jesus said, \u201cYe are my friends, if ye do the things which I command  you\u201d (John 15:14).  We must obey the laws of the land; God tells  us to do so.  We have to obey ecclesiastical leadership:   \u201cObey them that have the rule over you, and submit to them: for they  watch in behalf of your souls\u201d (Hebrews 13:17).  We are to obey  the government (Romans 13:1).  We are to obey our superiors (I  Peter 2:18).  But God alone is to be obeyed implicitly.  And  if there is any contradiction of the expressed will of any superior  appointed by God, be it civil, ecclesiastical, domestic or occupational,  then Acts 5:29 comes into play:  \u201cWe must obey God rather than  men.\u201d  Notice the word \u201cmust.\u201d  We <em>ought<\/em> to obey  God.  It is our <em>obligation<\/em>, Peter says, to fear\u2014to obey\u2014God  rather than man.  Peter was a man walking in the fear of God; and  walking in the fear of God, he said, \u201cI have an obligation which transcends  any obligation to obey you men.  That obligation is to obey my  God.\u201d <\/p>\n<ul>\n<li>\n<ul type=\"DISC\">\n<li>To Trust Him Completely<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p>And the third thing is to trust  Him completely.  \u201cWithout faith it is impossible to please him\u201d  (Hebrews 11:6).  We saw demonstrated in the life of Abraham the  constraining awareness of his obligation to God to love Him supremely.   Abraham proved that he loved God more than he loved his own son when  he took hold of the knife to plunge it into Isaac\u2019s breast.   He demonstrated that his obligation to love God was supreme.  Of  course he was to love Isaac his son; and he found this no burden.   It was the delight of his heart.  Isaac had been given to him and  Sarah when they were past the age when men and women normally have children.   It was no burden to love Isaac.  There was a depth of attachment  naturally.  There was also love which had not only a natural stream  but also a stream of spiritual identification and of spiritual purpose,  because all the covenant promises were tied up in Isaac.  Yet notwithstanding  the great depth of that love, Abraham reveals his determination to love  his God supremely, to obey Him implicitly and to trust Him completely.   Thus, Abraham\u2019s fear of God, which is the one virtue singled out above  all others in God\u2019s response to the test, is a fear that expressed  itself in this constraining awareness of his obligation to the living  God. <\/p>\n<p>This is precisely the thing  to which God calls us when He says to us concerning our \u201cIsaacs,\u201d  \u201cLovest thou me more than these?\u201d  He calls upon us to walk  in a course that immediately arouses the voice of natural affection.   Parents, what are your ambitions for your children?  If God were  to summon you into His presence right now and gaze into your eyes with  those eyes as a flame of fire before which all things are naked and  open, so you couldn\u2019t prevaricate; and God were to ask you what you  want for your children, what would you answer?  Could you answer  almost without thinking and say, \u201cOh God, I have one ambition:   that they be what <em>You<\/em> want them to be.  If that means You  want to save them at age seven and take them home at age nine, Thy will  be done.  If that means You want to lay hold of them and send them  out to labor in the gospel in some obscure place and to die there in  poverty\u2014 total failures in the eyes of the world and even of the church\u2014so  be it Lord.\u201d  Could you say that?  If not, my dear parent,  you are not walking in the fear of God; you are not loving Him supremely  and trusting Him completely.<\/p>\n<p>Some young people may have  a deep and intimate relationship with their parents.  The time  may come when the voice of God says to them, \u201cThis is where you must  go, and this is what you must do.\u201d  The young man or young woman  may be tempted to say, \u201cBut, Lord, if I do that, Mom and Dad won\u2019t  understand.  Mom and Dad may turn against me.\u201d  If God puts  you in such a spot, what are you going to do?  At that point you  need to say, \u201cOh God, by Your Spirit, so flood my heart with Your  fear that I will be constrained by the consciousness that my essential  and primary and supreme obligation is to You, and to You alone.\u201d   There may be times when the only way you can walk down the pathway of  the will of God is to step on your own father and mother\u2019s heart.   You may have to do it with tears.  You may have to do it with the  sense of inner grief.  But do it you must, if you are to walk down  the path of the revealed will of God.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Christ\u2019s Example of  Obedience in Godly Fear<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>But then there is perhaps the  most beautiful example to be found in the life of our blessed Lord Himself.   And Scripture says of our Lord in Isaiah 11:2, that \u201cthe Spirit of  Jehovah shall rest upon him, the spirit of wisdom and understanding,  the spirit of counsel and might, the spirit of knowledge and of <em>the  fear of Jehovah<\/em>.\u201d  The Lord Jesus walked in the fear of God;  not the fear of dread and of terror.  But He walked in that sense  of reverential awe.  Just how did the fear of God operate in our  Lord?  We can observe in Him the same three things we saw in Abraham.   First, we especially see that He loved the Father supremely when we  come to that inner sanctuary of Gethsemane and Calvary.  As the  Son of the Father\u2019s bosom He loved and delighted in His conscious  communion with the Father.  He could say, \u201cFather, . . . I knew  that thou hearest me always\u201d (John 11:42).  But now the Father\u2019s  plan for the Son demands that he walk down a path in which He will be  stripped of the sensible comfort of the support of God.  He will  have to give up life itself.  Yet the Lord Jesus so walked in the  spirit of the fear of God that His supreme love to the Father caused  Him to say, \u201cNot my will, but thine, be done\u201d (Luke 22:42).   There is the second essential element of our obligation to God:   implicit obedience to Him.  Though everything in Him recoils, Scripture  says that Jesus became \u201cobedient even unto death, yea, the death of  the cross\u201d (Philippians 2:8).  \u201cThough he was a Son, yet [he]  learned obedience by the things which he suffered\u201d (Hebrews 5:8). <\/p>\n<p>And in the midst of that supreme  love to the Father and that implicit obedience, our Lord\u2019s trust in  the Father was put to its deepest test.  Someone has said that  our Lord\u2019s last words upon the cross, \u201cFather, into thy hands I  commend my spirit\u201d (Luke 23:46), were perhaps the greatest act of  faith ever exercised upon God\u2019s earth.  Here, with no sensible  delight of the Father\u2019s countenance, the heavens shrouded in blackness,  the Son of God feeling within Himself the Father\u2019s wrath and displeasure  against the sins of His people, in that dark situation, Jesus Christ  displayed complete trust in God.  Isaiah 50:10 prophesies, \u201cWho  is among you that feareth Jehovah, that obeyeth the voice of his servant?  he that walketh in darkness, and hath no light, let him trust in the  name of Jehovah, and rely upon his God.\u201d  As the Lord Jesus spoke  His last words, this prophecy was perhaps more fully realized than at  any other point in history.  Here was the Servant of God, who obeyed  the voice of God, walking in darkness.  Yet He so stays Himself  upon His Father and upon the certainty of the Father\u2019s promise that  He says, \u201cInto thy hands I commend my Spirit.\u201d <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>The Christian\u2019s Obligations  and the Fear of God<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>We should not be surprised  to find the fear of God often joined immediately to obedience.   See how the Lord joins fear, obedience and love in Deuteronomy 10:12-13:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>And now, Israel,  what doth Jehovah thy God require of thee, but to fear Jehovah thy God,  to walk in all his ways, and to love him, and to serve Jehovah thy God  with all thy heart and with all thy soul, to keep the commandments of  Jehovah, and his statutes, which I command thee this day for thy good?  (cf. also Deuteronomy 6:24)<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>Similarly, in Philippians 2:12  we are told, \u201cAs ye have always obeyed, . . . work out your own salvation  with fear and trembling.\u201d  Child of God, would you grow more  in the fear of God and walk in that fear?  Then you and I must  constantly remind ourselves of this fact.  At this moment and in  my present circumstances\u2014and, in fact, at any given moment and in  whatever circumstances\u2014the most important thing is my relationship  to God and what He requires of me in this circumstance.  This God,  glorious in Himself; this God who made me; this God who redeemed me;  this God is the One to whom I owe allegiance. <\/p>\n<p>Therefore, when the price of  keeping the smile of my boss is that I must pare off a little corner  of truth, I cannot do it.  Why not?  Because of my obligation  to the God who has commanded me to speak only the truth.  Do you  see the ethical implications?  A young man may be facing a great  temptation to fulfill his lustful desires.  Though everything in  him may cry out for the gratification of his physical appetite in that  circumstance with that young woman; and his passions cry out, \u201cGratify  me!\u201d and his flesh cries out, \u201cIndulge me!\u201d  In that situation,  his God says, \u201cFlee youthful lusts\u201d (II Timothy 2:22).  It  is the constraining sense of the supremacy of his obligation to God  that will enable him to resist and to do the will of his Lord.<\/p>\n<p>We must constantly remind ourselves  of the fact that in whatever relationship and whatever circumstances  we find ourselves, our obligations to God are supreme.  We must  constantly remind ourselves what obedience to God involves.  We  must constantly seek to enlarge the scope of our understanding of what  He requires by meditating upon and searching out His precepts in His  word.  And we must constantly pray for grace to forget all else  that would blind us to this.<\/p>\n<p>If you are not a Christian,  here is the explanation for why you live the way you do.  Romans  3:18 says of unconverted people, \u201cThere is no fear of God before their  eyes.\u201d  Why do you live the way you live?  Because you have  no profound sense of the greatness of God\u2019s person, no pervasive sense  of His presence and no constraining awareness of your obligations to  Him.  That is why you find it so easy to cheat at school or in  the workplace.  That is why you can lie to your parents.   That is why you can open your mouth and curse.  That is why you  can give your body to sensual indulgence.  Why?  Because you  have no profound sense of the majesty of God\u2019s person, no pervasive  sense of His presence and no constraining awareness of your obligations  to Him. <\/p>\n<p>My friend, you will go on that  way until God is pleased to give you a new heart.  Jeremiah 32:39-40  says that in the New Covenant, God\u2019s distinct work is to put His fear  within our hearts that we may not depart from Him.  The Holy Spirit  never comes into the heart of a man or woman, boy or girl but as <em> the Spirit of the fear of the Lord<\/em>.  If you have no fear of  the Lord it is because you are devoid of the Spirit.  And if any  man does not have the Spirit of Christ, Scripture says, \u201cHe is none  of his\u201d (Romans 8:9).  This is something you can\u2019t conjure  up.  You can\u2019t just crank it out.  For the God of grace  and mercy who has treasured up in His Son all that is necessary for  the salvation of men bids you look to Him through His Son.  And  he bids you cry to Him that in grace He would be pleased to grant you  a new heart and to grant you the Spirit who is the Spirit of the fear  of the Lord.<\/p>\n<p>May God grant that this constraining  awareness of our obligation to Him shall so grip us and be our portion  that every other relationship will fade into the background.  May  we in every circumstance of life be constantly reminded of this principle,  so that we shall be \u201cin the fear of the Lord,\u201d as Scripture commands  us, \u201call the day long\u201d (Proverbs 23:17).<\/p>\n<p>Posted with Permission. All Rights Reserved.<\/p>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Ingredients of the Fear of God Albert N. Martin Suppose someone were to read through his Bible with pen and paper in hand and jot down every explicit, overt reference to the fear of God he came across. In addition, he would record passages that contained, although not the explicit words, yet the thought and &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/the-fear-of-god-part-iii\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading <span class=\"screen-reader-text\">The Fear of God Part III<\/span> <span class=\"meta-nav\">&rarr;<\/span><\/a><\/p>\n","protected":false},"author":3,"featured_media":0,"comment_status":"open","ping_status":"open","sticky":false,"template":"","format":"standard","meta":{"footnotes":""},"categories":[3],"tags":[26],"class_list":["post-20","post","type-post","status-publish","format-standard","hentry","category-the-fear-of-god","tag-albert-n-martin"],"_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/20","targetHints":{"allow":["GET"]}}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/post"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/3"}],"replies":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/comments?post=20"}],"version-history":[{"count":6,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/20\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":610,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/20\/revisions\/610"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=20"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=20"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=20"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}