'Every Christian a Lexicographer'
John 1:5-2:2 September 10, 1989 (Series on 1 John: No. 3)
A lexicographer is someone who compiles a dictionary, someone who is interested in and
cares about the precise and accurate definition of words. And that is what a Christian
ought to be, because words, especially the special words of the Bible, the words which are
particularly important for conveying the Bible's main truth and chief themes, ought to be
and will be of immense significance to every genuine believer. By words we learn the mind
of God and experience the full impact of divine truth in our heart and our life.
Dictionaries, especially dictionaries of Biblical words in Hebrew and Greek, or
lexicons as they are also called, are a chief tool of the minister's trade. I measured my
library's collection of such books and found that I had almost five feet of shelf space
occupied by such dictionaries or lexicons. And that is as it should be; for God has spoken
to us in words, and we learn his truth and love by those words.
In the first two verses of 1 John 2, there are two such weighty, special words--words
which have become of great importance by the use the Holy Spirit makes of them in Holy
Scripture. In each case, the NIV has translated a single word with a phrase, and thereby
has perhaps unwittingly dulled the edge of these two potent and wonderful words.
I want briefly to define these two words, and then, as a preparation for our coming to
the table of the Lord this morning restate John's great exhortation and encouragement with
which the second chapter begins.
The first of these two words is 'parakletos' which you sometimes hear transliterated
into English as 'paraclete' and which the NIV has rendered 'one who speaks in our
defense.' John is the only NT writer who uses this word. The word itself, by its etymology
or the original meaning of its parts put together, meant--'someone called alongside, i.e.,
as a helper.' Later it came to have a legal use for the officer of the court we might call
a defense attorney--someone who pleads your case in court. Indeed, the early Latin
translations of the Greek NT used the Latin legal term 'advocate' as a translation for
'paraclete.' Here, there certainly seems to be something of this courtroom flavor sense,
though the word's general sense of helper, or intercessor, anyone who pleads your case or
takes your side also makes good sense.
Remember, in John's Gospel, in the discourse in the Upper Room, the night of our
Savior's betrayal and the Last Supper, he spoke of his returning to the Father but of his
sending another 'advocate' or 'paraclete' to take his place, that is, the Holy
Spirit. Clearly then, both Jesus and the Holy Spirit have this office of pleading for, of
taking the side of, and of arguing the case for the people of God. And this work of
pleading our case the rest of the NT agrees is the joint work of both the Lord Christ and
the Holy Spirit. Paul speaks of the Spirit 'interceding for the saints' in Romans 8:26,
27, and in verse 34 of the same chapter, speaks of Jesus, who is at the right hand of God,
who intercedes for us.' John may be the only NT writer who uses the term 'paraclete', but
the idea conveyed by that great word is a commonplace in the NT.
Here John says we have Jesus Christ as our paraclete, our advocate, the one who
pleads our case with God the Father.
The second word which carries the weight of John's great statement in 1 John 2:1-2 is
'hilasmos.' One of the measures of the importance of words is how often great
controversies in theology and in the interpretation of the Bible are over the proper
definition of words. 'Hilasmos' is such a word and such a controversy.
The KJV translated 'hilasmos' with the English word 'propitiation.' Propitiation means
the turning away of wrath, the placating of anger. And that is, in fact, as careful
research has demonstrated time and again, exactly what 'hilasmos' means.
But the idea that God is a God of wrath, that he is angry with the wicked, and that
that anger must be turned away from us if we are to be saved, is not a popular idea among
sinners, including scholarly sinners, and a number of sophisticated efforts have been made
to take the 'wrath' out of the word 'hilasmos'. Usually the claim is that the word means
simply forgiveness or expiation.
These writers point to the pagan religions, which all had the idea that their gods
often lost their tempers, flew off the handle against their human subjects, and had to be
appeased and mollified by gifts and presents. Remember in Homer's The Iliad that
when the Greek expeditionary force set off to rescue Princess Helen, who had been captured
and carried off to Troy, their ships were hampered by contrary winds. Agamemnon, the Greek
General, sent home for his daughter and had her sacrificed to appease the evidently
hostile gods. The move paid off in Homer's epic, the west winds began to blow and soon the
Greek fleet was anchored off Troy.
That would be propitiation, these scholars argue, and it is unworthy of the God of the
Bible, the God of justice and love. And, of course, they are right. That
kind of propitiation, and that kind of ill-tempered wrath are unworthy of God. But
that is not what the Bible teaches at all concerning the true propitiation for our sins
which Christ Jesus accomplished. There is nothing low, mean-spirited, or ill-tempered
about the wrath of the true and living God: that wrath is his holy justice and purity
expressing itself against our sins. And it is not we who mollify him, but God himself, who
in his matchless love determined to deliver his beloved people from sin and death, who
sends his only and beloved Son to suffer his own wrath that it might be turned away from
us.
As John writes in 4:10, the only other place where 'hilasmos' appears in First John:
'This is love: not that we loved God, but that He loved us and sent His Son as the
propitiation for our sins.'
This is propitiation, the appeasing of divine wrath, provoked by our sins--but it is
the farthest thing from such pagan notions of propitiation--it is pure, holy, and flows
from the all-merciful heart of God himself. John Murray, the late theologian, put it this
way: 'The Doctrine of Propitiation is precisely this that God loved the objects of his
wrath so much that He gave his own Son to the end that He by his blood should make
provision for the removal of this wrath. It was Christ's so to deal with the wrath that
the loved would no longer be the objects of wrath, and love would achieve its aim of
making the children of wrath the children of God's good pleasure.'
The NIV translates 'hilasmos' in v. 2 as 'atoning sacrifice'. Now the translators did
that not because they think 'hilasmos' means simply forgiveness and not propitiation. They
chose their translation because they didn't think anyone knew any longer what the word
'propitiation' means. I think they made a mistake in that, because anyone can look up
'propitiation' in a dictionary and find out that it means 'the turning away of wrath or
the placating of anger'. But no one is sure and no one can very easily find out what
'atoning sacrifice' means unless you are well acquainted with the OT teaching about how
the Levitical sacrifices represented the turning away of God's anger from a sinner through
the death of a substitute.
Anyway, what John says, is that Jesus Christ, our paraclete, our advocate with the
Father, in the heavenly court room as it were, is the propitiation--which is only a short
way of saying, is the one who by his life and death in our place as our substitute, has
turned away from us God's anger on account of our sins.
Now here is the genuine believer's dilemma: he or she knows that with a new nature
granted by the Spirit of God, and with a great salvation which deserves a perfect and
whole-souled obedience, love, and service in return, and with a Savior whom he or she
loves passionately and desires above all things to please--I say, a genuine believer knows
that he or she should not sin, need not sin, and must not sin. But sins, nevertheless,
continue: sins of the heart, and sins of the tongue, and sins of the hand; sins of
attitude and sins of behavior; secret sins and sins committed in the full light of day;
betrayals of everyone of the ten commandments and each of them a still deeper betrayal of
one of the two greatest commandments.
A young Christian or a new Christian may think, for a while, that he or she is living
quite well, but as understanding grows of the exquisite holiness of God and the infinitely
high demands of his holy law, an astonishment sets in that a new creature in Christ can
really still harbor so much wrong in his or her life. And as the years pass and those
hated sins continue, despite all the penitential tears and all the painful, secret labors
of a much tried and consecrated heart, it comes to every Christian, sooner or later, to
wonder if he or she has not tried the heavenly Father's patience past the breaking point,
to wonder if God will at last say 'NO MORE' when he or she comes pleading for the
umpteenth time for the forgiveness of the same still utterly inexcusable sins.
Well, seeing our sins committed for so long in defiance of God's wonderful grace and
mercy, we might well believe that God would finally cast off children as ungrateful as we
so regularly are. But we have an advocate, one who speaks in our defense. And what kind
of advocate is he who is now and always defending us to the Father, who takes our side and
argues our case?
Well, I have an attorney friend in Scotland who began practicing law in Aberdeen while
Florence and I were living there. His first case--the kind of case rookie lawyers are
assigned in big firms, required the defense of a man accused of beating up a neighbor. The
neighbor's face had been rather badly beaten, was bruised and bloody. But my friend's
client insisted upon pleading innocent, and the burden of his defense--the defense my
friend was obliged to make in arguing his very first case in a courtroom before a judge,
was that the neighbor's face had been so bruised and disfigured not because his client had
beaten him up, but au contraire because the man had beaten himself up, by
striking himself again and again in the face. Well, it may not surprise you to learn that
my attorney friend lost his first case. However competent an advocate he may have been, he
had no case. Might that be the case with our Advocate in heaven; a competent defense
attorney, but having no case?
I know of another advocate, this one much more successful. My father loves to tell the
story of a young man who came to Covenant College years ago from the prairies of South
Dakota. He was a very personable young fellow, everyone liked him, and he had many
admirable points. But he had one very bad habit. He smoked, which was against the rules.
Time after time he was caught smoking and time after time would make his appearance before
my Dad. Finally, after the umpteenth time, as much as he liked the fellow, and as much as
it pained him to do it, Dad felt he had no choice but to expel him. That very day, another
Covenant student--now a PCA pastor, came to Dad and plead for the student to be given one
last chance and promised that he himself would stand good for him and see to it that he
did not break the rule again. Dad felt that that kind of advocacy and commitment to a
fellow student deserved its reward and the expulsion was rescinded. The young man who was
thus spared by the advocacy of his friend, eventually graduated from Covenant College,
later from Covenant Theological Seminary, and has had a distinguished career as a Chaplain
in the US Army and more important still a much used and much blessed ministry in his
chaplaincy. He is now one of the Army's highest ranking and best regarded chaplains,
presently the Post Chaplain at Fort Benning, Georgia. And all because he had an advocate,
one to speak in his defense and plead his cause.
Now, that is more like the advocate we need; except our sins are much graver and much
more numerous than merely a few times caught smoking against the rules. As much as we
admire this young student advocate, we rightly feel that our case would be beyond his
ability to win.
But what of the Paraclete, who is now at the Right Hand interceding for us? No rookie
attorney, no Christian college student this Advocate. He is the Son of God, the second
person of the Triune Majesty, who was sent into the world by a loving Father to substitute
himself for his people, to satisfy the demands of God's holy justice on their behalf, and
so turn away from them the holy wrath of God against their sins. He perfectly fulfilled
his Father's commission on our behalf; he lived a life of perfect obedience, he endured
every manner of humiliation, and then suffered the full weight of divine wrath against our
sin as he perished upon the cross.
And now HE pleads our cause in heaven! He speaks in our defense.
He raises nail pierced hands while arguing our case in the throne-room of heaven.
Perfectly righteous himself; having covered all of our sins, paying for them completely
with his suffering and death, he presents on our behalf and for our sins--even the sins we
continue to commit day after day as Christian people--the perfect and complete sacrifice
he made for those sins at his Father's request.
When we come day after day confessing our sins and pleading for forgiveness, will God
say, could God say--'No more' to his own Son, to the Righteous One, to the one who had
exhaustively satisfied for all those sins in his own suffering and death. Never!
That Jesus Christ is now our Advocate, pleading our case, sin by sin, in heaven.
Augustus Toplady was only putting the Apostle John's two great words into lovely verse
when he wrote:
Be mindful of Jesus and me!
My pardon He suffer'd to buy;
And what he procured on the tree,
For me He demands in the sky!
And he demands it from a heavenly Father whose love for us was what sent Christ into
the world to die in the first place. Here then are two words which are the perfection of
our hope and our confidence as sinful people:
Paraclete: advocate, intercessor, defender
Propitiation: the turning away of God's holy wrath on account of our sins.
Our advocate is also our propitiation--a propitiation so perfect, so complete, that it
overwhelms not only all my sins and yours, but the sins of all who ever have or will by
the grace of God call upon the name of the Lord from every tongue, tribe, and nation on
this earth.
The Holy Spirit and the Apostle are saying this to us this morning: Do not sin; set
yourself against any and every sin; do not allow yourself ever to indulge the deceit that
since there is forgiveness, it matters not whether I sin.
Do not sin. But when you do, as you will, be sure of this: great as your sin is indeed,
the Savior and the salvation you have got in Jesus Christ is greater still by far. And
rest and glory in this, as Toplady put it in another of his hymns on this theme:
If Thou has my discharge procured,
And freely in my {place} endured
The whole of wrath divine,
Payment God cannot twice demand,
First at my bleeding surety's hand,
And then again at mine.
Turn then, my soul, unto thy Rest;
The merits of thy great High Priest
Have bought thy liberty.
Trust in His efficacious blood,
Nor fear thy banishment from God,
Since Jesus died for thee.
Two words to inscribe in the dictionary, the lexicon of your heart: paraclete and
propitiation: two words to live by and to die by if you would live and die in the peace,
the assurance, the joy, and the love of God.
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