Summary: The purpose of this sermon is to lay groundwork for a study on The Da Vinci Code or other study of cults.

GOD’S PLUMB LINE

June 25, 2006 a.m.

Hillcrest Baptist Church

Text: Amos 7:7-9; 1 Corinthians 15:1-4

Purpose: The purpose of this sermon is to lay groundwork for a study on The Da Vinci Code or other study of cults. It is to help members understand the basis for biblical knowledge.

Introduction: One of my first jobs I had after college required me to walk a few blocks downtown to get to the office building. I passed a certain shop every day that had a tripod in the window. A weight hung from it and a sign read “Caution: This point is directly over the Center of the Earth.” Well obviously.

A plumb line is “a cord from which a metal weight is suspended pointing directly to the earth’s center of gravity; used to determine the vertical from a given point” (wordnet.princeton.edu/perl/webwn). Literally a plumb line is used to help determine whether a wall is completely straight or not. If a wall is not built “True to plumb,” disaster can result.

Spiritually speaking it is used to determine whether a behavior or doctrine is correct. If a doctrine or behavior is not true to plumb, disaster can result.

I. God Establishes a Plumb Line in the Old Testament (Amos 7:7-8a)

A. Exp:

1. God’s third vision to Amos was of God himself standing on a wall He had built “true to plumb.”

a) He had used the plumb line as a skillful master builder to make sure it was straight.

b) The wall was built correctly and with sturdiness.

2. The wall represented “kingdom of God in Israel, as a firm and well-constructed building” (K&D).

a) It represented God’s purpose in building His kingdom.

b) What God builds is straight and strong.

3. God will lay the plumb line next to Israel’s behavior, and worship and tear down whatever is not straight. God was no longer going to spare what did not measure up.

a) What was crooked or leaning over was to be torn down.

b) You can imagine the danger in building a wall as the layers of brick or rock go up.

c) Just a slight divergence at the beginning and then a little more each time will cause the wall to collapse under its own weight.

B. Illus:

In So What’s the Difference, a book on cults, Author Fritz Ridenour writes: “Working under the inspiration of God, Amos referred to this familiar tool to explain that God would measure men and their devotion to Him by His Standards –by His Word- not man’s” (page 3).

C. App:

1. God has also established a plumb line. It is not subjective. It is not based on our personal ability to understand or our sentimental feelings. We will not be compared to one another to see if our lives measure up to see if we are true to plumb. In the judgment it will not matter whether my life is straighter than yours or your life is straighter than mine. We will be compared to the perfect standard, which is found in Christ. He is the plumb line by which we must measure ourselves.

2. When it comes to God’s word, a standard also exists. We do not pick and choose what doctrines to believe or reject based on how they make us feel. God has given us a standard by which we measure what is true to plumb.

3. We must be diligent to remain true to God’s plumb line so that we do not deviate from the truth. In the words of 1 Tim. 4:16: “Watch your life and doctrine closely”.

II. God Judges by His Plumb Line (Amos 7:8b-9)

A. Exp:

1. The “High places were shrines on the hills in the open country. Sanctuaries were temples usually located in cities such as Bethel and Dan. Together the two terms cover all the religious sites in Israel” (NAC 133).

a) God’s judgment will fall on the idolatrous people and practices of Israel.

b) He is no longer going to pass by their false shrines and temples and ignore them.

2. God will destroy the house of Jeroboam.

a) “‘The House of Jeroboam’ refers to the dynasty of Jeroboam which came to an end when Jeroboam’s son and successor Zechariah was assassinated (2 Kings 15:8-10)” (Ibid. 143).

b) Jeroboam became king after Solomon died. When Solomon’s son, Rehoboam, ascended the throne, his subjects, led by Jeroboam, asked him to reduce taxes. Rehoboam sided with his young friends and promised to tax them more. Jeroboam led a revolt and ten tribes pulled away. The kingdom split. To keep people from going to Jerusalem to worship, Jeroboam set up a new system in the northern tribes. He built shrines in Bethel and Dan. He set golden calves there for the people to worship.

3. “Jeroboam, Israel’s’ first king, was a religious apostate who gave his character to his kingdom and to succeeding kingdoms. His example was followed by every succeeding king. They all trod in the steps of the idolatry he established” (Lockyer, All the Kings of the Bible, “Jeroboam I the King who Established His Kingdom on Idolatry” 149).

4. God’s period of grace and patience with Israel was about to end. He would overlook their idolatry no longer.

a) The sword is a military term.

b) God is not just talking about a gentle chastening.

B. Illus:

“In 21 cases where Jeroboam’s name is mentioned, his apostasy is linked to it, ‘who did sin, and made Israel to sin’” (Ibid. 151).

C. App:

1. God’s patience eventually comes to an end. He waits patiently for us to respond, but eventually if we do not repent, discipline will follow.

2. “The Lord’s threatened intervention would not be directed by arbitrary motives, but by an incorruptible test, the plumb line” (NAC 133). God does not act in a whimsical or capricious manner. He does not change. He does not override or supersede Himself.

3. We forget how seriously God takes sin and idolatry. He will even use strong force where necessary.

III. God Establishes a Plumb Line in the New Testament (1 Cor. 15:1-4)

A. Exp:

Three Key Points:

1. The Person and work of Christ (who He is and what he did).

2. The nature of man (a sinner in rebellion against God and in need of a Savior). Does not need improvement.

3. The Truth and reliability of the Bible (the inspiration of Scripture). (From So What’s The Difference).

B. Illus:

C. App:

1. The walls of false notions, ideas, and altars would be pulled down. They will not stand the plumb line test of God’s word. Paul also commands us to “pull… down strongholds, cast…down arguments and everything that exalts itself against the knowledge of God” (2 Cor. 10:4-5). Whatever does not measure up to the standards of God’s word must be torn down. That means that our own pet ideas about God if they are not in harmony with God’s word.

2. People who follow such ideas are like the people of Athens in Acts 17:21, who “spend their time in nothing other than telling or hearing something new.” They are like those in Eph. 4:14 who are “children tossed to and fro and carried about by every wind if doctrine, by the trickery of men, in the cunning craftiness of deceitful plotting.”

Conclusion: How is the wall of your life built today? When God holds the plumb line of his word against your life, how will you measure up?