{"id":23,"date":"2011-03-29T15:10:00","date_gmt":"2011-03-29T15:10:00","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/articles1\/?p=23"},"modified":"2014-10-21T14:10:33","modified_gmt":"2014-10-21T14:10:33","slug":"the-fear-of-god-part-iv","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/the-fear-of-god-part-iv\/","title":{"rendered":"The Fear of God Part IV"},"content":{"rendered":"<div class=\"pf-content\"><p><strong><a href=\"http:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/03\/source-of-the-fear-of-God.jpg\"><img loading=\"lazy\" decoding=\"async\" class=\"alignleft size-full wp-image-42\" title=\"source of the fear of God\" src=\"http:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-content\/uploads\/2011\/03\/source-of-the-fear-of-God.jpg\" alt=\"\" width=\"271\" height=\"180\" \/><\/a>Source of  the Fear of God<\/p>\n<p>Albert N. Martin<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>One eminent commentator on  the Bible has said, \u201cIt is well known that the fear of God is used  to signify not only the whole of His worship but all godly affections  whatsoever, and consequently the whole of true religion.\u201d  This  writer could say that it is commonly understood by anyone who knows  his Bible that the fear of God can be used as a synonym for the whole  of true religion.  I believe that a study of Scripture leads to  that conclusion.  But that also means that there is this terrible  negative implication.  If the fear of God is synonymous with the  whole of true religion, then the absence of the fear of God is indicative  of the absence of true religion.<\/p>\n<p><!--more-->We have asked and answered  a number of pivotal questions from the Scriptures pertaining to this  important subject of the fear of God.  But another useful question  we may ask regarding the fear of God is, Where does it come from?   What, according to Scripture, is the source of the fear of God?   Suppose your child had never seen a delicious, moist chocolate cake;  but you have just baked such a cake and set it in front of him.   He asks you what it is, and you respond that it is a cake, something  delicious to eat.  He asks you what it is made of, and you list  the ingredients:  flour, shortening, baking powder, chocolate,  and so on.  You have told him not only what it is but also what  makes it what it is.  You have told him the ingredients.   He may next ask where the ingredients came from.  You explain that  the flour came from grain that is grown out in the field, and the shortening  came from either grain or a certain animal that fed upon the field.   You are explaining the origin of those ingredients. <\/p>\n<p>What we have done in our study  thus far is to explain what the cake is\u2014or in our case, what the fear  of God is.  It is that regard of God which, considering Him in  the majesty and glory of His person produces in us that sense that His  smile is the greatest of life\u2019s blessings, and His frown the greatest  of life\u2019s curses.  We have also explained three ingredients of  the fear of God.  As we consider where those ingredients come from,  we must bear in mind that this inquiry is not a mere academic exercise.   One of the most crippling errors in all religious experience is to be  content with ignorance of the origin of virtue.  Remember what  Paul said of his fellow Jews.  They knew that righteousness was  necessary to be saved.  But Paul said of them that, \u201cBeing ignorant  of God\u2019s righteousness, and seeking to establish their own, they did  not subject themselves to the righteousness of God\u201d (Romans 10:3).   They knew they had to have righteousness, but they weren\u2019t concerned  to find out what was the source or the origin of the righteousness that  alone is acceptable to God. <\/p>\n<p>It is not enough simply to  know that you must have the fear of God; you must know where to get  it.  Crippling harm can come to you if you don\u2019t know where to  get the fear of God.  This is a matter of great spiritual concern.   What is the origin or source of the fear of God?  First we will  see that the fear of God implanted in the heart is a distinct blessing  of the covenant of grace.  Secondly we will note from Scripture  how the fear of God is planted in the heart by the work of God\u2019s grace.<\/p>\n<h1><strong>A Distinct Blessing of  the Covenant of Grace<\/strong><\/h1>\n<p>First then, let us establish  from Scripture that the implanting of the fear of God in the heart is  a distinct blessing of the covenant of grace.  All of God\u2019s dealings  with men are on the basis of His covenantal relationship to them.   God pledges to do certain things upon certain conditions that he Himself  determines.  The blessings of salvation come to us in the terms  of what Scripture calls the \u201ceverlasting covenant\u201d (Hebrews 13:20),  described sometimes under the terms of the New Covenant, when it is  contrasted with the Mosaic economy.  Jesus said, when He instituted  the Lord\u2019s Supper, \u201cThis cup is the new covenant in my blood\u201d  (I Corinthians 11:25).  In other words, all that He is to do in  the shedding of His blood has reference to the blessings to be secured  within the framework of the New Covenant.  No man receives any  blessing of the covenant apart from the blood that Jesus shed; but all  who receive any benefits from that blood receive them in terms of the  distinct blessings of the New Covenant. <\/p>\n<p>What blessings were promised  in that covenant?  Several blessings are specified in the prophecies  of the New Covenant in Ezekiel 36 and Jeremiah 31 and 32.  (We  know that these passages refer to blessings to be enjoyed under the  New Covenant, especially based on Hebrews 8 and 10.)  We will focus  our attention on Jeremiah 32, since it directly addresses the matter  of the fear of God and its place in the New Covenant. <\/p>\n<blockquote><p>And they shall  be my people, and I will be their God:  and I will give them one  heart and one way, that they may fear me forever, for the good of them,  and of their children after them:  and I will make an everlasting  covenant with them, that I will not turn away from following them, to  do them good; <em>and I will put my fear in their hearts, that they may  not depart from me<\/em>.  Yea, I will rejoice over them to do them  good, and will implant them in this land assuredly with my whole heart  and with my whole soul (Jeremiah 32:38-41).<\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>In this context of God\u2019s  promising mercy to His people, He says He will put His fear into their  hearts, thus securing their perseverance in His ways.  Notice the  relationship:  \u201cI will put my fear in their hearts that they  may not depart from me.\u201d  In the Old Covenant, even though God  set His law before the people with displays of His majesty and His power  so that they trembled and dared not even touch the mount, they still  committed spiritual adultery against Him time after time.  Eventually,  God sent the entire nation into captivity because of their spiritual  whoredom.  Now, He says, in the administration of this New Covenant,  all those who come under the blessings of this covenant will not become  adulterers against Him.  They will not depart from Him, and the  reason is this:  \u201cI will put my fear in their hearts\u201d (verse  40).  That is, \u201cI will so establish My fear in their heart\u2014that  is, the very seat of their being\u2014that they will cling to Me and to  My ways and will not depart from Me.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>What do we learn from this  statement in the prophecy of Jeremiah?  We learn first of all that  the fear of God is a distinct blessing of the everlasting covenant.   No man truly and rightly fears God unless he has the fear of God within  the framework of the covenant of grace.  Secondly, it is a distinctly  sovereign work of God:  \u201c<em>I will put<\/em> my fear in their hearts.\u201d   How can God state any more clearly that He is the One who is going to  do this?  He will do it within the framework of the everlasting  covenant.  Also, He says He will put it <em>in the heart<\/em>.   What He does will not be a surface thing that will merely affect them  for a time, as in the administration of the Mosaic economy.  Then,  the pattern of the nation as a whole was a pattern of spiritual whoredom  and turning from God continually.  But He says that all who come  under the blessings of this New Covenant will have His fear implanted  in the heart.  It will secure their cleaving to Him.  And  further, this passage tells us that it will be done in a context of  gracious blessing.  He says, \u201cI will be their God\u201d (verse 38);  \u201cI will not turn away from following them, to do them good\u201d (verse  40); \u201cI will rejoice over them\u201d (verse 41).  He will implant  His fear within the context of the blessings of grace.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Conclusions<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>What can we conclude from this  prophecy of Jeremiah?  We can conclude two things.  First  of all, there is no way for anyone to be a partaker of the fear of God  but to have it put into his heart as a distinct blessing of the New  Covenant.  No such fear is ever found growing in purely Adamic  soil.  The fear of God is an attitude that will not grow in our  hearts by nature.  As Romans 3:18 says, speaking of natural men,  \u201cThere is no fear of God before their eyes.\u201d  The natural man  will never fear God with a fear of awe and veneration that binds him  to God in a relationship of love and obedience.  Only those who  come under the blessings of the New Covenant know that kind of fear.   Such fear does not come through education; it doesn\u2019t come by spiritual  osmosis.  It comes only as one enters into the blessings of the  New Covenant. <\/p>\n<p>The second conclusion we draw  from this passage is that all who are partakers of the blessings of  the New Covenant will give evidence that the fear of God has been planted  in their hearts.  There is no such thing as a sinner forgiven by  the blood of the covenant who doesn\u2019t fear God.  There is no  such thing as one who comes to Jesus, the mediator of the New Covenant,  and is pardoned, but who then goes out to walk in a manner indifferent  to God and as a stranger to His fear.  There is no way to know  the fear of God but by coming under the blessings of the New Covenant.   And all who receive any of its blessings also receive this blessing  of the fear of God.<\/p>\n<h1><strong>A Work in the Heart by  the God of Grace<\/strong><\/h1>\n<h4><strong><em>The Heart Inclined to  Obedience<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>Now consider the manner in  which the fear of God is imparted to the human heart in the New Covenant.   I pose this question reverently:  Does God simply form a disposition  called the fear of God in someone\u2019s heart, plunking it down into the  heart of a sinner much like someone puts money into a safe?  We  must say that God certainly <em>could<\/em> operate in that way.   But Scripture reveals that God\u2019s working in grace does not bypass  the natural structure of how man is made.  It does not circumvent  the operations of his mind and affections, but it works behind and in  and through them, so that often it is difficult to discern our working  from His working.  Paul says in Philippians 2:13, \u201cIt is God  who worketh in you both to will and to work, for his good pleasure.\u201d   It says that God \u201cworketh in you.\u201d  When God works in us, we  do not just become puppets at the end of a string that God is manipulating,  so that we merely wait for impulses to move us to pray or to obey His  commands.  No.  God \u201cworketh in you to <em>will<\/em>,\u201d says  Paul.  He works beneath the level of my consciousness.  When  I go to church, all I am conscious of is that I choose to go, that I  choose to give myself to pray as the congregation seeks the face of  God.  But, although I was not conscious of it, God was working  in me to will and to do of His good pleasure.  God doesn\u2019t work  in us by overriding what we are as human beings but by laying hold of  all that we are and working in us.   As we read in Jeremiah  31:33, \u201cBut this is the covenant that I will make with the house of  Israel after those days, saith Jehovah: I will put my law in their inward  parts, and in their heart will I write it.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>What then is the first distinct  blessing of the New Covenant?  God says that the first thing He  will do is to powerfully and inwardly incline His people to a life of  obedience.  What He requires of them will not be merely external  to them, but He said He will write His law upon the heart.  There  will be an inward affinity to that holy law so that there will be an  inclination to keep and to obey it.  God says, \u201cI will not only  set My requirements before them, but I will also inwardly incline them  to a life of obedience.\u201d  What is that but an awareness of our  obligation to God, or what I called the third ingredient of the fear  of God?  Yes, the law is external to me, telling me what to do.   But it is also <em>within<\/em> me, <em>inclining<\/em> me to live the life  of obedience.\u201d<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>God Owns His People,  and they Own Him<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>What else does God say He will  do?  In the latter part of verse 33, He says, \u201cAnd I will be  their God, and they shall be my people.\u201d  \u201cAll that I am as  I have revealed myself\u201d\u2014and we know from our perspective in the  New Covenant that that takes in all that He has revealed in the person  and work of His Son\u2014\u201cthey will gladly own.\u201d  And He says  not only that He will be their God, but they shall be His people.   They will not only own Him as He has revealed Himself, but He will own  them.  What is this but God bringing Himself into an intimate covenant  relationship to His people, filling them with a pervasive sense of His  presence and of their relationship to Him and His to them?  And  isn\u2019t that the second ingredient of the fear of God?  A man recognizes  that this great, mighty, transcendent, holy, powerful God is not simply  a God out there somewhere, but He is my God and I am His child.   I belong to Him and He belongs to me in this covenantal relationship.   This is what God has pledged in the New Covenant.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>True Knowledge of God<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>And what else does He promise?   In verse 34, He says:<\/p>\n<blockquote><p>And they shall  teach no more every man his neighbor, and every man his brother, saying,  \u2018Know Jehovah\u2019; for they shall all know me, from the least of them  unto the greatest of them, saith Jehovah. <\/p><\/blockquote>\n<p>God says that in the New Covenant  He will impart a true and inward knowledge of Himself to His people.   Under the old economy there were some who truly knew God, but the great  masses of the people didn\u2019t know Him.  They saw mighty demonstrations  of His power firsthand, but they were utterly ignorant of His heart.   God told them, \u201cI hear your groaning down there in Egypt.  I  am moved with pity and compassion, so I\u2019ve sent Moses to be a deliverer,  to bring you out.\u201d  But they are no sooner out of Egypt, at the  shore of the Red Sea, and what do they do?  They come to Moses  and say, \u201cGod brought us out to kill us!\u201d  They didn\u2019t know  Jehovah.  The truth is that they found themselves standing at the  shore of the Red Sea precisely because God heard their cries and had  compassion on them and desired to deliver them.  But they turn  around and say He brought us out to kill us!  How would you feel  as a father if you told your son, \u201cI\u2019ve planned a wonderful day  for you.  We are going to one of your favorite places to do one  of your favorite things.\u201d But as soon as you get into the car he says,  \u201cAre you going to run this car off a cliff and kill me?\u201d  You\u2019d  say to him, \u201cSon, you don\u2019t know me.  I\u2019ve told you what  my plans are.\u201d  The Jews didn\u2019t know God.  A few did,  but the rest didn\u2019t know Him.<\/p>\n<p>God says, in the New Covenant,  they will not need to be tutoring one another saying, \u201cKnow the Lord\u201d;  for one of the blessings of the New Covenant will be the impartation  of a true and inward experimental knowledge of God.  And what is  that but right views of the character of God, inwardly and spiritually  perceived?  So the three ingredients of the fear of God are all  here.  God says I will put these things into their heart.   And when the three ingredients are in the heart, you have the fear of  God. <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Forgiveness of sins<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>But notice carefully that there  is one phrase at the end which I left out.  This is in effect the  pivot upon which everything else stands and rests.  It is in the  light of, and with reference to, and because of this great blessing  that God says He will do all that He does.  \u201cI will forgive their  iniquity, and their sin will I remember no more\u201d (Jeremiah 31:34).   In other words, the base upon which all these other blessings rest is  the blessing of full and final forgiveness of sins.  \u201cAll of  these things that I said I would do\u2014inclining you to My will, giving  you an experimental knowledge of Myself, owning you as My people so  you own Me as your God\u2014all of this,\u201d He says, \u201cis inseparably  joined to the forgiveness of sins.\u201d  Only he who receives that  forgiveness will know the other blessings of the New Covenant implanted  in his heart.  Jeremiah saw\u2014because God revealed it to him\u2014an  inseparable relationship between possessing the fear of God and being  in a state of conscious forgiveness through the blood of the covenant.<\/p>\n<p><strong>The Forgiveness of Sins  and the Fear of God<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>There is one text of Scripture  that ties these two thoughts together beautifully.  In Psalm 130,  the people of God are in a state of dejection.  They are in what  the psalmist describes as \u201cthe depths.\u201d  The psalm opens, \u201cOut  of the depths have I cried unto thee, O Jehovah\u201d (verse 1).   Next we get a hint as to what His depths are.  \u201cIf thou Jehovah,  shouldest mark iniquities, O Lord, who could stand?\u201d (verse 3).   He is conscious that, if such a holy God should take account of every  sin he has committed, he could never abide in God\u2019s presence or stand  in the judgment (cf. Psalm 1:5).  And if we cannot stand before  God with delight, we cannot walk in His fear.  How can you hold  delightful communion with a God before whom you sense nothing but dread  and terror?  Who could stand before God in such a state?   There is the question.<\/p>\n<p>Verse 4 provides the answer  to the dilemma:  \u201cBut there is forgiveness with thee, that thou  mayest be feared.\u201d  He says \u201cLord, no one could stand before  You if You were to mark iniquity, if You were to give me what I deserve.   And if I cannot even stand before You, I will know nothing of a heart  inclined to do Your will.  I will not be able to own You as my  God and have You own me as Your child.  I will know nothing of  this inward experimental acquaintance with You, such that You will delight  in me and I in You.  I will know nothing of true fear.  I  can know dread.  But, Lord, I cannot stand.\u201d <\/p>\n<p>The answer to the dilemma is  that a way of forgiveness has been discovered in God.  A discovery  of God\u2019s way of forgiveness will always secure the fear of God in  the heart of the one who discovers it.  But how is this so?   If the text had read, \u201cThere is <em>justice<\/em> with God that He may  be feared,\u201d we could understand that.  But there is <em>forgiveness<\/em> with God that he may be feared?  How does the discovery of the  forgiveness of God secure the fear of God?  I suggest that there  are two ways in which the experience of forgiveness gives rise to godly  fear. <\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>The Display of God\u2019s  Character<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>First of all, in the work Christ  did to secure forgiveness for His people, there has been the fullest,  most intense and glorious display of all the attributes of God.   If the fear of God begins with right views of God\u2019s character, seeing  His majesty and His glory, then certainly to discover God\u2019s way of  forgiveness is to discover the brightest display of all His glorious  attributes.  Therefore, because there is forgiveness with God,  He is feared.  How did that forgiveness come?  We are astounded  when we contemplate the wisdom that framed worlds and formed the intricacies  of the little cell as well as the great galaxies.  But such contemplations  are like kindergarten knowledge when we stand before the wisdom of the  virgin\u2019s womb and the Incarnate God.  That is the wisdom that  conceived that sinful men could be forgiven through God Himself actually  becoming a man, the offended God taking the offense upon Himself and  so discharging that offense that He can be just and the Justifier of  them that have faith in Jesus.  No wonder Christ is called the  wisdom of God (I Corinthians 1:24). What a display of wisdom! <\/p>\n<p>But what about God\u2019s holiness?   If you had been able to look with Abraham at what was once Sodom and  Gomorrah, but was now simply a vast plain going up in smoke \u201cas the  smoke of a furnace\u201d (Genesis 19:28), you would see His holiness in  that frightening display of His hatred for sin.  Well, that display  of God\u2019s holiness pales in comparison to Golgotha.  For when  we look to the cross, we see the shrouded heavens covered in blackness.   We look upon the heaving bosom of the Son of God, and we hear that cry,  \u201cMy God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?\u201d (Matthew 27:46).   The the only answer is that God is so holy that when the sins of man  are laid upon His own beloved Son, He must bring down the stroke of  His wrath upon Him until He cries out with a cry that eternity will  not be able to fathom. God is so holy that He does this even to His  dearly beloved Son who had Himself never committed evil.<\/p>\n<p>To discover the way of forgiveness  forged in the terrible agonies of Christ is to see the display of wisdom  and holiness that far outstrips any other display God has made.   It is to see the display of power beyond any other display, even the  power that raised Christ from the dead.  We read in Colossians  2:15 that Christ made an open show of the powers of darkness when He  triumphed over them in His death and in His glorious resurrection.   Think of all the powers of hell that would have sought to keep Him in  a state of death.  But Peter says that \u201cit was not possible that  he should be holden\u201d by death (Acts 2:24).<\/p>\n<p>Then there is the display of  God\u2019s love.  Who can fathom it?  \u201cGod commendeth his own  love toward us, in that, while we were yet sinners, Christ died for  us\u201d (Romans 5:8).  Here is the display of the majestic condescension  of the Son of God.  He \u201cthought it not robbery to be equal with  God,\u201d yet He emptied Himself and took upon Himself the form of a servant  (Philippians 2:6-7).  Can you see how the discovery of the way  of forgiveness produces the fear of God?  How can you discover  those things without standing amazed before such a God?  It is  impossible.<\/p>\n<h4><strong><em>Peace with God and Filial  Fear<\/em><\/strong><\/h4>\n<p>The second reason why forgiveness  and fear are joined together is that a believing reception of the forgiveness  which God offers through His Son brings peace and rest from the fear  of dread and of terror, and it binds the heart to God in grateful love  and glad submission.  When a sinner is forgiven by God, the fear  of dread is exchanged for the submission of an adopted son.  Who  can discover that kind of forgiveness in God without saying, \u201cHere,  Lord, I give myself away, \u2019tis all that I can do\u201d?  God, by  showering mercy upon the undeserving and extending forgiveness to the  sinner, brings him out of a state of terror and into a condition of  reverent, filial fear.<\/p>\n<p>Mercy and grace therefore combine  to elicit the fear of God in a way that all the terrors of the law could  never rival.  This godly fear considers God\u2019s mercies and benefits  received more than His judgments threatened.  The fear of dread  thinks of judgment, and it trembles.  The fear of God thinks of  mercies given, and it worships.  It regards more the open hand  of God\u2019s blessing than the closed fist of His judgment.<\/p>\n<h1><strong><em>Forgiveness of Sins  Misused<\/em><\/strong><\/h1>\n<p>There are several practical  implications of this teaching.  First of all, we behold the folly  of all man-made religions.  For every man-made religion either <em> seeks to produce the fear of God on some other basis than forgiveness<\/em>,  or it <em>promises<\/em> <em>forgiveness in a way that does not produce  the fear of God.<\/em> Every scheme to attain the righteousness  of God based not on the gospel but on human \u201cwisdom\u201d will fail in  one of those two ways.  They\u2019ll say, first, that you can\u2019t  tell people they are fully accepted and forgiven, or they\u2019ll go out  and live like hell.  That\u2019s the argument of the Roman Catholic  Church.  They don\u2019t dare preach free and full forgiveness; otherwise,  they reason, people will think they can sin with impunity.  They  believe rather that the way to produce the fear of God that results  in obedience is to rub the conscience raw with terrors and insecurity  and doubts about one\u2019s acceptance.  Then the person will fearfully  attempt to obey God, hoping he will attain His favor.  But what  we have seen about the way God produces His fear in the heart of man  exposes Romanism for what it is.  God takes the raw conscience  full of the terrors of the damned and, disclosing the way of forgiveness,  binds that heart to Himself in fear that is based upon love and trust.<\/p>\n<p>The second type of false religion  operates in an almost opposite manner.  Its proponents affirm that  through the blood of the cross sinners indeed receive complete forgiveness.   But those who receive their message are generally utterly devoid of  the fear of God.  They don\u2019t show any concern to walk before  Him with a careful conscience.  They don\u2019t know what it is to  be powerfully inclined to obedience to God\u2019s holy law from the heart.   They have no terror whatsoever.  They don\u2019t tremble the way many  poor Roman Catholics do, wondering if maybe they\u2019ll wake up in purgatory  tomorrow.  They are dead sure they are going to wake up in heaven  because they are forgiven through the blood of the cross.  Yet  their lives manifest an utter lack of the fear of God.  They desecrate  God\u2019s holy day, giving Him a token two hours, and using the rest of  the day as they please with no reference to His law.  They order  their homes and their time and the use of their television with no reference  to His law.  Why?  Because they have believed a lie\u2014that  they could have their sins forgiven, yet remain strangers to the fear  of God. <\/p>\n<p>Both of those errors are damning  at the core.  You can\u2019t fear God as you ought until you come  into the blessedness of full forgiveness.  But if you come into  that blessedness, you <em>must<\/em> fear Him.  If you don\u2019t, you  have never truly experienced the saving mercy of God.<\/p>\n<p><strong>Practical Words of Instruction<\/strong><\/p>\n<p>Do you have a conscience that  has been rubbed raw?  Have the terrors of the law and of God tracked  you down?  Do you have a fear of dread, but know nothing of the  fear that is based upon forgiveness?  Do you have the spirit of  bondage, but know nothing of the Spirit of adoption that makes you cry,  \u201cAbba, Father\u201d?  If this is your condition, you must understand  that you will find no rest and no true fear of God until you come, as  you are, to Jesus.  He is the Mediator of the New Covenant, and  He is seated upon the mercy seat, and it is in that mercy seat that  there is a way of forgiveness that He may be feared.  You will  not fear Him until you trust Him as your Savior.  Cast yourself  upon Him just as you are\u2014for that is how He bids you to come\u2014and  He will receive you.<\/p>\n<p>There is also a word of consolation  for troubled souls.  There are true children of God who feel themselves  so sinful that, at times, they wonder how it can be that God bears so  long with them.  If that is your condition, don\u2019t listen to the  people who tell you to just forget your sin and rejoice in the Lord.   No; don\u2019t forget your sin.  Rather, let the Holy Spirit show  you all of your sin that He knows you are able to bear\u2014realizing He  has only shown you the one thousandth part of it.  God\u2019s Spirit  will enable you to say with the psalmist, \u201cIf You should mark iniquity,  who could stand?\u201d  Then, the more you see of your sin, the more  you will be amazed at the magnitude of God\u2019s glory in providing forgiveness.   And the more you see the magnitude of His glory in providing forgiveness,  the more you will fear Him.  \u201cThere is forgiveness with thee,  that thou mayest be feared.\u201d  Octavius Winslow wrote, \u201cSoak  the roots of thy profession daily in the blood of Christ.\u201d  That\u2019s  what we all need to do.  And as you soak them there and come again  and again to Jesus, the mediator of the New Covenant, you will find  the fear of God deepening in your soul. <\/p>\n<p>There is also here a word of  conviction to any who are deceived.  You may feel yourself to be  forgiven, while, at the same time, you experience no dread, no fear  of hell, because you feel that all is well.  You say, \u201cI have  the blessings of the New Covenant!\u201d  But, the question is, Where  is the fear of God?  God\u2019s own Word says that if He has brought  you into that covenant He has put His fear within your heart.   Do you display the constraining awareness of your obligations to Him?   Do you manifest a pervasive sense of His presence?  Has your understanding  of forgiveness bound you to a life lived in the fear of God?  Let  me make it more personal: if someone were to ask your children, What  is the one thing that characterizes your mom and dad above everything  else, would they be able to answer, \u201cThey fear God\u201d?  Would  they be able to say, \u201cIn everything in the home, Daddy\u2019s first concern  is what God says about it.\u201d  Would your children say that the  fear of God is s dominant characteristic in his father and mother?   The testimony of your children that you live a life characterized by  godly fear can\u2019t be bought; it has to be earned, and it is earned  by a life lived in the fear of God.<\/p>\n<p>Must you admit to yourself  that your children\u2014or whoever lives close enough to you to know what  \u201cmakes you tick\u201d\u2014could not bear that testimony concerning you?   If that is the case, call out to God today, and plead, \u201cOh God, give  me such a sight of forgiving grace that I will begin truly to fear You.\u201d   The fear of God begins with forgiveness of sin, in the climate of all  the gracious provisions of the New Covenant.<\/p>\n<p>Posted with Permission. All Rights Reserved.<\/p>\n<\/div>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p>Source of the Fear of God Albert N. Martin One eminent commentator on the Bible has said, \u201cIt is well known that the fear of God is used to signify not only the whole of His worship but all godly affections whatsoever, and consequently the whole of true religion.\u201d This writer could say that it &hellip; <a href=\"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/the-fear-of-god-part-iv\/\" class=\"more-link\">Continue reading <span class=\"screen-reader-text\">The Fear of God Part IV<\/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-23","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\/23","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=23"}],"version-history":[{"count":11,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/23\/revisions"}],"predecessor-version":[{"id":609,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/posts\/23\/revisions\/609"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=23"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=23"},{"taxonomy":"post_tag","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/heraldofgrace.org\/biblicalexpositions\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/tags?post=23"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}