Timothy Keller Sermons Podcast by Gospel in Life - Rich in Faith

Episode Date: January 28, 2026

If you’re not radically generous, you’re a thief. The Bible is full of this teaching. If the money you have was yours and you’re not generous with it, you’re just being stingy; but if the mone...y is somebody else’s and you’re not generous with it as the owner directs, it’s robbery. The Bible says your attitude toward your wealth and your possessions is not an incidental or peripheral or optional issue. It’s at the very heart of what it is to be a Christian. A Christian says the money you have is yours to enjoy and take care of as a trustee, but you must give it generously as God directs. James 2 says real faith inevitably leads to three characteristics: 1) it’s radically generous, 2) it’s radically gracious, and 3) it’s radically practical. This sermon was preached by Dr. Timothy Keller at Redeemer Presbyterian Church on January 14, 1990. Series: Ten Commandments 1989. Scripture: James 2:1-17. Today's podcast is brought to you by Gospel in Life, the site for all sermons, books, study guides and resources from Timothy Keller and Redeemer Presbyterian Church. If you've enjoyed listening to this podcast and would like to support the ongoing efforts of this ministry, you can do so by visiting https://gospelinlife.com/give and making a one-time or recurring donation.

Transcript
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Starting point is 00:00:02 Welcome to Gospel and Life. During January, we're inviting our listeners to consider becoming a gospel and life monthly partner. If you'd like to learn more, keep listening at the end of today's podcast for details. Have you ever wondered what it really means to live a great life? The Bible says the Ten Commandments aren't confining rules, but a framework for building a life of true greatness. Today, Tim Keller takes an in-depth look at one of the Ten Commandments and helps us understand what it means to live the way God designed us to, free, whole, and rooted in his love. Glorious Lord Jesus Christ, don't show favoritism. Suppose a man comes into your meeting wearing a gold ring and fine clothes
Starting point is 00:00:52 and a poor man in shabby clothes also comes in. If you show special attention to the man wearing fine clothes and say, here's a good seat for you, but say to the poor man, you stand there or sit on the floor by my feet, have you not discriminated among yourselves and become judges with evil thoughts? Listen, my dear brothers, has not God chosen those who are rich in the eyes of the world to be rich in faith, pardon me, who are poor in the eyes of the world to be rich in faith and to inherit the kingdom, be promised to those who love him? But you have insulted the poor. Is it not the rich who are exploiting you? Are they not the ones who drag you into court? Are they not the ones who slander the noble name of him to whom you belong? If you really keep the royal law, found in Scripture, love your neighbor as yourself, you are doing right, but if you show favoritism,
Starting point is 00:01:45 you sin and are convicted by the law as lawbreakers. For whoever keeps the whole law and yet stumbles at just one point is guilty of breaking all of it. For he who said do not commit adultery also said, do not murder, if you commit adultery but do not commit murder, you have become a lawbreaker. Hear this. Speak and act as those who are going to be judged by the law that gives freedom, because judgment without mercy will be shown to anyone who has not been merciful. Mercy triumphs over judgment. What good is it, my brothers, if a man claims to have faith, but has no deeds, can such a faith save him? Suppose a brother or sister is without clothes and daily food.
Starting point is 00:02:28 If one of you says to him, go, I wish you well. Keep warm and well fed, but does nothing about his physical needs, what good is it? In the same way, faith by itself. if it is not accompanied by action is dead. This is God's word. Review. Last week and this week, we're looking at the Eighth Commandment. We've been moving through the Ten Commandments,
Starting point is 00:02:56 and the Eighth Commandment is thou shalt not steal. And last week we mentioned, to me, one of the most intriguing verses, Psalm 4, pardon me, not Psalm, Ephesians 4, verse 28. I'm sure Psalm 4 is intriguing too, but Ephesians 4. 428 that says, let the thief no longer steal, but let him give to those with a need. Let the thief no longer steal, but let him give to those with need. That is putting it in its most startling way. A thief hasn't stopped being a thief until he's generous.
Starting point is 00:03:35 Unless, another way to put it, to obey the commandment, it's not enough simply to not steal. to obey the Eighth Commandment, you must be radically generous. You have to be radically generous or you're a thief. That's what the Bible says. Radical generosity is more than just the willingness to shell out the money. Radical generosity is an attitude of life. It's an attitude toward your possessions. It's an attitude really toward yourself.
Starting point is 00:04:04 It's a willingness to lend your possessions. It's a willingness to not be so possessive of your possessions. to not be so protective of your space, of your things, of your time, of your money. It's an attitude toward your space and yourself. It's letting people in. It's being unusually sensitive to see needs and meet them. I will remember a Bible study, after a Bible study one morning, the woman in whose home the Bible study was meeting approached the Bible study leader.
Starting point is 00:04:42 with tears in her eyes. And she said, you can't have this Bible study here anymore. My furniture is getting all nicked up, and the coffee cake crumbs are being ground into my rug. And the Bible study leader looked at her and said, my dear friend, someday the earth is going to burn up in the sun. The sun's going to go out, the earth will burn up. All the rugs will be burned up. But people, the people in this room and the Word of God will last forever.
Starting point is 00:05:10 Do you want to put your money into something that will burn up or into something that will last forever? Well, he was rude, but right. I don't think he should have said that. He said, I'm a pastor and I'm a pastor. I think he was being pretty insensitive, but as a preacher, he was right on. If you're not radically generous, you're a thief. Now, what's the rationale? And I'll recap that one too.
Starting point is 00:05:37 The rationale for that remarkable statement is the Christian understanding of wealth. And let me kind of quickly go down this again from last week, and many of you wouldn't have been here, and we can all review it. Capitalism says, by itself, capitalism says, that your money is your own, and you can do with it what you want. Communism or socialism says, and of course I'm oversimplifying, your money, the money that you earn is the peoples, and you must do with it as the community needs. and a Christian says the money you earn is God's, and you must do with it as he directs. And those are three very different systems. And capitalism's always had a problem. The problem of social injustice, how do you really lay a powerful enough motivation on people that they'll be generous?
Starting point is 00:06:29 And communism has a similar problem, only it's a motivation problem. Communism has the problem of taking away ownership from people, and then they lack motivation for production. And they also, I think, as we can see in these last few days and weeks, they lack the human dignity that comes with ownership, needing human beings need to have a part of the world that it's theirs to take care of. But Christianity says, the wealth that you have, you enjoy, and it's yours to take care of as a trustee, but you must give it generously as your owner directs, that's God, and he directs that you give it to the work of the God, to the poor and to Christians with needs. And as a result, you see, you can say,
Starting point is 00:07:14 if that money was yours and you're not generous with it, you're being stingy. But if that money is somebody else's and you're not generous with it, as the owner directs, it's robbery, it's embezzlement. And that's why we can say a thief is no longer a thief when he's generous. That's when he stops being a thief, when he's radically generous. Now, why spend it a thief? another week on it. Because, you know, the Bible is so full of this teaching. It's very, very, very difficult. The number of people said, why don't you get back and preach on sex again, and I will.
Starting point is 00:07:48 And yet, frankly, the Bible doesn't say as much about it sex as it does about money. In fact, the entire Gospel of Luke is almost about money. And the thing we're going to talk about today is a very important principle that we see here and it's throughout scripture. and that is your attitude toward your wealth and your possessions is not an incidental or a peripheral or an optional issue. It's at the very essence of what faith is, and it's at the heart of what it is to be a Christian. It's not like why I can be a Christian, and then what I do with my wealth and possessions is something I'll get to someday. This passage tells us, and the Bible tells us, that your attitude toward wealth and possessions is of the essence of faith.
Starting point is 00:08:32 It's at the heart of being a Christian. Recently, I was talking to somebody, a friend of mine from England, called me and he said, pray for me. He called me a week ago. He says, I'm going to Romania. I said, why? He says, well, we here in England have many contacts with the Christians in Romanian. Of course, Romania has been a closed country, and Christians have been persecuted. And now that the doors are open, we're going to visit our friends.
Starting point is 00:08:57 We're going to take them Romanian Bibles because the border is open. But pray for us. We want to encourage them, but especially pray for this. This is what he told me. Of all of the Eastern Bloc countries, the church is the most vital in the places where it has been the most persecuted. And Romania has the most vital of all the Eastern Bloc churches because it's been the most persecuted. Pray that now that there's freedom there, it won't just go down the drain spiritually.
Starting point is 00:09:25 And you know, you can be glib and you can make a great mistake and be oversimplified and say, well, isn't that amazing? We hear that the church in China, when the missionaries were kicked out when the communists took over and they began persecuting the church, that was the very thing the Chinese church needed. And the Chinese church has flourished. And you can be glib and say, that's the difference between them and us. That's why they have so much vitality because of persecution.
Starting point is 00:09:49 And that's a mistake. It's a superficial analysis. The difference is materialism. It's the persecution, yes, but the persecution has said it. so that the difference between them and us is materialism. Those churches have got no buildings. Those churches have got few possessions. They share what they have.
Starting point is 00:10:13 And they're like the early church. The early church amazed the Romans, remember? Because of two things in which they stood out from the culture. Number one, their sexual purity and number two, their financial promiscuity. They were sexually pure, but they were promiscuous with their money. They gave it all over the place. And the world was amazed. In fact, a few months ago I read this, but most of you weren't here at the time. Do you know, one of the early Roman emperors, a man named Julian, desperately tried to stamp out Christians.
Starting point is 00:10:48 And he lived in the 3rd century AD, and the Christians kept multiplying and multiplying and multiplying, and they were taking over everything. And at one point, Julian wrote this very, very disgusted letter to one of his pagan priest's friends. And in it, he says, I don't know what to do. the Christians are multiplying, and you know why they're multiplying, he says, and this is what he said. Nothing has contributed to the progress of the superstition of these Christians as their charity to strangers. The impious Galileans provide not only for their own core, but for ours as well. Isn't that amazing? Here was a Roman emperor trying to figure out what is the reason that Christianity is spreading like wildfire. What gives it their dynamic?
Starting point is 00:11:35 What gives its dynamic? And of course, Julian wasn't a Christian. He couldn't understand everything, but he saw what the rest of the Roman world saw. And what gave it its attractive power? And what was that? Radical generosity. These, you know, the Jews took care of the Jewish poor,
Starting point is 00:11:51 and the Greeks took care of the Greek poor, and the Romans took care of the Roman poor. But these Christians are promiscuous about this stuff. I mean, they goop their generosity all over everybody. It's unheard of. And not only that, it's unbelievable. unbelievably attractive. Now, why do you think, in many ways, the church spreads in persecuted places, largely because of the way Christians are radically generous with one another and
Starting point is 00:12:18 with the people around them? They stand out. How do we do? How do we do? Do we stand out? Is the world marveling? Look, this particular passage we read, it's a long passage, very involved, and I just want to point out three important things that this passage teaches along the lines of what we've already been saying. This passage says the way you can tell real faith, the way you can tell true saving faith, is that it inevitably leads to radical generosity. In fact, this passage says real faith, not nominal faith, not just a claim or profession of Christianity, not just an emotional experience of Christianity, but real faith has three characteristics. It's radically generous, it's radically gracious, and it's radically practical.
Starting point is 00:13:05 Those three things. Let's just take a look at them. Most of you usually get those three things written down on your sheet in the bullet, and they're not there. You'll have to listen. Radically generous, radically gracious, radically gracious, and radically practical. Very quickly. Number one, radically generous.
Starting point is 00:13:23 I'm looking at these verses. Speak and act as those who are going to be judged by the law that gives freedom because judgment without mercy will be shown to those who did not have mercy. But mercy triumphs over judgment. And then it goes on in verse 14 and says, What good is it, my brothers, if a man claims to have faith but has no deeds? Can that faith save him? How do you know the difference between saving faith and just emotional or lip service? The answer is radical generosity. And it says, on judgment day, the way we can tell people who have got real faith is by their mercy. There will be judgment without mercy
Starting point is 00:14:04 for those who have shown no mercy. Now the word mercy is interesting here. In the New Testament, mercy can have a broader and a more specific meaning. It can have a broader meaning and a specialized meaning. In the broad sense, mercy is just the way we use it. It means seeing someone and just loving them and giving them help, loving them. That's mercy. But the specific meaning in the is to help somebody with their economic, physical, practical needs. For example, in Matthew 18, there's a story about a king who has a servant who owes him 10,000 talents, and he forgives him the debt. He wipes out his economic debt. And at the end, he's very angry at the servant. We won't go into the parable now. But he says to the servant, shouldn't you have had
Starting point is 00:14:52 mercy on your fellow servant as I had mercy on you? The economic help was mercy. When the blind men. You know, when Jesus was going by, the blind men would call out, Son of man, have mercy on me. What was he doing? Was he just asking for forgiveness of sins? No. He was using the word mercy in the specific way. I've got a physical problem. I've got a practical problem. I'm blind. Do something about my body. Do something about my physical suffering. And the most important place is in the parable of the good Samaritan, you remember it. The Samaritan finds a man lying in the road. He picks him up. He He gives him transportation, he gives him medical care, he gives him a financial subsidy, he stays up all night and tends to his wounds.
Starting point is 00:15:38 Practical work, huh? Social work. And at the very end, Jesus says, that's the one who had mercy. And the word mercy has that specific meaning often in the Bible of economic, physical help. Now, in the context, what does the word mercy mean in verse 12, 13? What does it mean? It's very clear. At the end of chapter 1 of James, James says, true religion, religion that God our father accepts as pure and faultless as this, to look after orphans and widows in their affliction.
Starting point is 00:16:13 And then in chapter 2 we read in verse 6, it says, let's honor the poor man. And down in verse 15, which we read, it says, if you have faith without deeds, what good is that? And then gives an example of the mercy we're talking about. If you see someone without basic necessities, and you see someone, you don't deal with their need, if you don't feed them if they're hungry, what good is that? It's very clear. Mercy will be without judgment. Pardon me. Judgment would be without mercy for those who have shown no mercy, but mercy triumphs over judgment.
Starting point is 00:16:44 And that simply says that on judgment day, your mercy will show whether or not your faith is real. And if there's mercy, having come out of that faith, that shows that your faith is real, and you will not be judged. but if there's been no mercy, then that shows your faith is not real, and you will be. And this does not teach that God saves us because of our generosity. It teaches that if we believe and are saved because of our faith in Jesus, grace, and mercy, then there will be grace and mercy growing up out of any real faith like that. In fact, James here, listen, James tells us a lot about faith. Some people are very concerned.
Starting point is 00:17:24 They find faith a very mysterious thing. this book, this chapter can tell you a great deal about faith. Let me give you a couple of pointers. Paul says, we walk by faith, not by sight. Paul never says we walk by faith, not by reason. Paul never says we walk by faith, not by thinking. Because faith and reason, faith and thinking are not opposed to each other. Faith and sight are opposed to each other.
Starting point is 00:17:52 Because faith is being controlled by the truth. We all chase things like success, true love, or the perfect life. Good things that can easily become ultimate things. When we put our faith in them, deep down, we know they can't satisfy our deepest longings. The truth is that we've made lesser gods of good things, things that can't give us what we really need. In his book, Counterfeit Gods, the empty promises of money, sex, and power, and the only hope that matters. Tim Keller shows us how a proper understanding of the Bible reveals the truth about societal ideals. and our own hearts, and shows us that there is only one God who can wholly satisfy our desires.
Starting point is 00:18:34 This month we'll send you counterfeit gods as our thank you for your gift to help Gospel and Life share the love of Christ with people all over the world. You can request your copy at gospelonlife.com. That's GospelonLife.com slash give. Now here's Dr. Keller with the rest of today's teaching. Let me give you a couple of illustrations. Let me think of a couple of illustrations. No, here's one.
Starting point is 00:18:59 You know, first things first, you have to have surgery. That's a scary thing. So you start to ask around who's a good surgeon, and someone says to you, you know, I know a woman who is a marvelous surgeon who does that kind of surgery, and so you begin to investigate this surgeon. And you talk to other people who she has operated on. And you, let's just say for the sake of our illustration, you're able to talk to other surgeons and find out what they think.
Starting point is 00:19:26 And you're even able to somehow find medical records to find out how this woman is done. and you find out, everybody says, the best. She's the best. She's never lost a patient. She's never had an unsuccessful surgery. The evidence is overwhelming. You say, fantastic. So you sign up, and on the day of surgery, you chicken out.
Starting point is 00:19:46 You start to get there, and you start, you smell the antiseptic. You go into the hospital, and maybe you see a few surgical tools lying around. You see some bloody little gloves lying around, and you panic, and you say, I can't do it. What's happened? You've lost your faith in her. Why? Because you got new information? Because you were reasoned out of it? No. Because you're going by sight.
Starting point is 00:20:08 You're being controlled by what you see. You're being controlled by appearances. You're being controlled by feelings instead of what you know to be true. Are you going to walk by faith or by sight? Are you going to go in there and do it? Because you've got to say to yourself, look, I need it. This is the best person. Are you going to walk by faith or by sight? Give you another illustration.
Starting point is 00:20:26 single women can identify with this, but all of us can understand it. Some great-looking guy asks you out. That's wonderful. You're pretty excited. But one of your friends says, now listen, let me just tell you something. He's a nice guy, a wonderful guy, but be careful. If you tell him anything very intimate or secret, he is a blackguard mouth. It will be all over.
Starting point is 00:20:51 Even a big city, it will be all over. Everybody will know about it. He always likes to talk about personal things. things and you feel real intimate, but then he tells people, so be careful. He's a great guy, you have a good time, be careful. So this one friend tells you, then another friend tells you the same thing. Then a third friend tells you the same thing, and you begin to say, you know what, there must be something to this. I better really be careful. And then you go out. Boy, he is good-looking. Boy, it is a nice place. Boy, the food was really great. And he starts to ask
Starting point is 00:21:21 you more, well, tell me more about yourself. Now, are you going to walk by faith? Now, he is to walk by faith or by sight? You're starting to lose your faith in what you know to be true. Because all those warnings start to begin to fade, you know, because they're not, you don't have those people right alongside of you. You're not hearing their voices in your ear. You see his face. And you, and, you know, you're there. Are you going to walk by faith or are you going to walk by sight? When you lose your faith, it doesn't mean you've stopped. Yeah, it doesn't mean you've started to think. You lose your faith when you're going to be you're going to when you stop thinking. I can go on.
Starting point is 00:21:59 Another great illustration is you need a, this will be real short, you need a detective. And somebody says, there's the best detective, he never fails, he always get, so you call the guy up and you go to, and he comes over to see you, and it's Colombo. And you know, he's blind in one eye, and he's, you know, he dresses like a slob,
Starting point is 00:22:16 and as he comes up to see you, you know, he backs his car into the telephone pole, and he comes out and he says, I'm so sorry, you see. And then he comes up, and he says, what can I do for you? And you sit there, are you going to walk by faith or by sight?
Starting point is 00:22:32 In fact, you know, the whole Colombo series is based on people who walk by sight instead of faith. They may hear that this is a New York cop, this is a homicide detective, a good one, but he acts like such a buffoon, you see, that what always happens, the whole idea of the Columbus series,
Starting point is 00:22:49 is that the criminals start to say, come on, look at this guy, look at his appearance, see? what I see tells me that this guy is incompetent. Now, my dear friends, when Jesus talks about faith, he always says faith is not the opposite of thinking. Doubt is the absence of thinking. He says, for example, and he's talking about possessions in Matthew 6, he says in Matthew 6, don't worry about what you will eat or what you will drink or your body or what you'll put on.
Starting point is 00:23:22 He says, don't worry about those things. consider the lilies of the field. God takes care of them. Consider the birds of the air. God takes care of them. Won't he take care of you? O ye of little faith. The pagans run after these things.
Starting point is 00:23:35 Material possessions, but not you. O ye of little faith. Do you see what he's saying? If you want to have faith, you have to consider. That means to think. Consider the lilies of the field. Consider the birds of the air. Argue with yourself.
Starting point is 00:23:49 Think. The cults have a different view of faith. The cult say, believe, don't think. They say, have faith, don't think, don't ask questions. Don't sit down and wonder about these things. That's the exact opposite of what Jesus says faith is. He says, if you want to have faith, you have to think. Doubt is the absence of thinking.
Starting point is 00:24:12 Jesus in Luke chapter 8, Jesus is asleep in the storm, and the disciples are seeing the storm, and they're seeing the waves, and they're saying, oh, my word, we're going to perish. And Jesus Christ wakes up and he looks at them and he says, where is your faith? He doesn't say you need more faith. He says, where is your faith? Get it out. I ought to be here. He says, look, you saw me raise people from the dead. You saw me promise to you that I was going to take you this place and this place and this place.
Starting point is 00:24:41 You saw these things. You knew what I can do. You knew who I was. And yet when I was just out of sight, you were looking at the waves. You were looking at the waves. And so you were scared. He doesn't say you need more faith. He doesn't act like faith is this mysterious thing that has to be wumped up. Some people have and some don't.
Starting point is 00:24:58 He says, you know what you should have been doing. Where is your faith? Get it out. It ought to be here. And Jesus specifically, specifically applies this to possessions. He says, if you worry about possessions, if you're consumed about money and about what you eat and what you drink, you show that you don't really know you're not being controlled. by what the Bible says about God the Father.
Starting point is 00:25:24 God the Father owns everything. God the Father will take care of you. He closed the grass of the field. He takes care of the birds of the air. What James is saying here, what Jesus is saying in Matthew is simply this. An enslavement to visible things calls into question our faith in invisible things.
Starting point is 00:25:46 Enslavement to visible things radically calls into question and our real faith in invisible things. If you know that there's a God who's taking care of you, who owns everything, that changes you totally and your attitude toward other things. You look at things and you say, wait a minute, look, if you have an opportunity to bless somebody by giving a lot of time or giving a lot of money,
Starting point is 00:26:09 right away you say, I can't afford it. And at that minute, you have to decide, will I walk by faith or by sight? Will I be controlled by what I know to be true that there's a God who's created me that owns everything that can give me everything I need, or while I be controlled by the ads in the paper, to tell me what I should,
Starting point is 00:26:27 what's standard of living I should be at? Are you looking at the ways, or are you looking at Jesus? Are you walking by faith or by sight? Don't you see that the essence of faith is to be controlled by who God is, and that will show itself up in your attitude toward your money and toward your possessions and toward things? Real faith is radically,
Starting point is 00:26:51 generous. That's the main thing that the Bible this passage teaches. The other two things I can be briefer about. Number one, number two, real faith is radically gracious. Gracious. You know up here where it says, my dear brothers, has not God chosen those who are poor in the eyes of the world to be rich in faith and to inherit the kingdom? Now that's an interesting verse. On the one hand, I believe that is pointing out something that's been true throughout history. And that is that as a general rule, in the history of the world, Christian movements have most often, radically great, tremendous, dynamic Christian movements have most often started with the poor. It's true.
Starting point is 00:27:34 Most of the early Christians are poor. Most of the great revivals happen among the poor. And you know why? Because I believe that poor people very often can see the game. When you're playing these social games and you're winning, you don't see that it's a game. and you don't like anybody calling it a game. It's when you're losing, you like to call it a game. You know how that is.
Starting point is 00:27:55 Those of you who in high school were on the out of the social life, you know, it was easy because you were losing to say, what a game they're all playing. If you were winning, you didn't think it was a game. All human beings are poor because they're dependent. A poor person economically is a dependent person. When a person's got enough money, we call them what? Independently wealthy.
Starting point is 00:28:18 If you have enough money, you're independent. that you don't need anybody giving you money. You don't need even to go out and get a job. You're independently wealthy. And that's why economic poverty is a matter of dependence. But really, every person in relationship to God, no matter how much money you have in the bank, is spiritually poor. You're a dependent every minute for every breath on God.
Starting point is 00:28:40 And sometimes only the really economically poor can see that. But what the Bible teaches is that anybody, anybody who wants to be, belong to God. Anybody, anybody who's going to be saved, anyone who has real faith is poor in spirit. Matthew 5.3, blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. Without poverty of spirit, you cannot enter the kingdom of heaven. Do you hear that? You can't. Poverty of spirit, what's it mean? Well, to be poor in wallet means I'm bankrupt. I have nothing with which I can make good in my debt. To be poor in spirit is to come to God and say, I have nothing good to give you.
Starting point is 00:29:21 Even my best deeds aren't good enough. I owe you everything. Save me for Jesus' sake. And if you are poor in spirit, you will be rich in faith. To be poor in spirit means to go like this. I see that I'm saved strictly by God's mercy and riches. And then when you look at a person who's broken, when you look at a person who's ruined,
Starting point is 00:29:41 when you look at a person who's messed up, you know you're looking in a mirror. No matter how ugly it is, you know you're looking in a mirror because a person who's poor in spirit says, no matter how good I look physically, no matter how much money I've got in my wallet, I know that that's what I look like to God apart from Jesus Christ. And so it makes you radically gracious, gracious to the messed up people around you. And let me put it like this.
Starting point is 00:30:07 Let me just show you how it changes you. Sometimes married people do a very dangerous thing. We marry people often will say to each other, do you love me? the other person says, of course I love you, which is what you have to say. Of course I love you. But then the first person
Starting point is 00:30:24 might say something very, very dangerous. They say this, why do you love me? Now when that happens, you know, everything is on the precipice. And there's one way to go. And the one way to go is this. Well, the reason I love you is because
Starting point is 00:30:42 because you serve me. because you're a really great person. You never blow up. You never lose your temper. You never seem to get upset. You never get down. And will that make the other person feel great? The other person is saying,
Starting point is 00:30:57 oh, my word. You know, what pressure? How awful. You know, I begin to feel bound by this kind of love. What you want to hear is this. I love you. Because I love you. Nothing can get behind my love.
Starting point is 00:31:13 There's no other cause from my love. accept itself. My love is its own rationale, and then you're liberated. That's the kind of love every person needs to know. That's the kind of love God gives you. God comes to you and says, I'm giving you my mercy and love, not because you're good, because I love you. That liberates. And the reason it liberates is because you're able to say this. You're able to talk like this. You feel rich when you realize you're saved not on the basis of your good deeds. It's simply because of his mercy. You talk like this. You say, the stars may fall. from the heaven, but his love for me will stand. And it will triumph. I've got pride, I got problems,
Starting point is 00:31:52 it will triumph. I am not loved because I'm good. I will be good because I'm loved. My pride, my bad habits, my sins will all fall before his triumphant love because he loves me, because he loves me, because he loves me. And anybody who's grabbed that becomes gracious to people around. Absolutely gracious, absolutely. Last thing. Real faith is radically practical. And this is the way I can encourage you. Right here at the end it says in verse of 15 and 16,
Starting point is 00:32:25 it says if you see someone without daily food and clothes, and you say, go, I wish you well. If you only talk and you don't do anything, what good is that? It says, faith by itself, if it is not accompanied by action, is dead. The last thing I can tell you is this. Some of you are sitting here and saying, well, I hear what I'm supposed to be feeling. You say, I should be feeling generous because of God's grace. I should be feeling confident because I trust in the one who owns everything.
Starting point is 00:32:57 I should be feeling like that, but I don't. You can be honest with me. I don't feel like that. I got a lot of inner turmoil, but I don't feel that generous. It's not easy for me to let people into my space. I realize what James is saying, but I don't feel like that. That's okay. Why?
Starting point is 00:33:16 Because real love, real Christian love, is never sentiment anyway. It's action. With all due respect, do you think when Jesus was on the cross, giving himself in the greatest act of love in history, do you think he was full of warm, toasty feelings toward us? And with all due respect, you think he was saying, oh, I feel such wonderful warm feelings toward these people who are putting nails and thorns and spears into me?
Starting point is 00:33:39 Do you think there was anything like a warm, toasty feeling in his heart? No, but he loved us. He gave. And if anyone is here saying, you know, I see how I'm supposed to feel, but I don't, I see what James is saying is true. I wish it was that way. I wish, and you're discouraged. Don't be afraid. Your discouragement is a sign that God's working in you.
Starting point is 00:34:01 Your desire to be like that is a sign that God's working in you. Your discouragement is evidence that you shouldn't be discouraged because it's the beginning. of grace. It's the beginning of grace. So what should you be doing? Don't worry that you somehow have to have all this incredible amount of faith and love. Just take a look around you. How much should you be giving? You know, last week we talked about the tithe. Don't let that bother you for a minute. How much should you be giving more? Almost every one of you. More. Just start with that. Don't worry about how much it should be. Just start with more. And begin to realize ways in which you're selfish, ways in which you're looking at the ads and walking by sight and not by faith.
Starting point is 00:34:39 begin to look around for the needs, there's plenty of opportunities. The last thing I'll say, there's anybody here who has never really gotten a grip on being poor in spirit, you can't enter the kingdom of heaven. Before you can be rich toward other people, before you can be rich toward other people, you've got to be poor toward God. And that means this morning, we're going to pray here. That means this morning, you may need to say to God something like this, Lord, I now say I've always been poor, but I've never been poor in spirit till now.
Starting point is 00:35:10 I've never come to the place where I can say to you, Lord, I have nothing to make good my death. And so I ask that you save me strictly because of the riches which are mine through Jesus Christ, because of what he did. When you're poor in spirit, you then can begin to be rich in faith. It's not so you're poor in spirit can you begin to say, he loves me because he loves me, and begin to feel rich, and to say the stars may fall from heaven.
Starting point is 00:35:35 But my love, the love that I have from God will stand. Nothing can take it away. Don't you know that he's chosen those who are poor to be rich in faith? Let's pray. Thanks for listening to Tim Keller on the Gospel and Live podcast. If you'd like to see more people encouraged by the Gospel Center teaching and resources of this ministry, we invite you to consider becoming a Gospel and Life monthly partner. Your monthly partnership helps us to plan and steward our resources throughout the year to be the most effective in reaching people all over the world with the life-giving power of Christ's love.
Starting point is 00:36:23 And as a small thank you for your monthly support, we will mail you a physical copy of each new life in the gospel quarterly journal that you can enjoy and share with others. To learn more, just visit gospelonlife.com slash partner. That website again is gospelonlife.com slash partner. Today's sermon was recorded in 1990. The sermons and talks you hear on the Gospel and Life podcast were recorded between 1989 and 2017 while Dr. Keller was senior pastor at Redeemer Presbyterian Church.

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