There is a search going on in many hearts for something with more depth
and integrity than the "Christianity" which is commonly equated with
church‑going and respectability. "I want to be a Christian ... but 0
my God, let me be a real one!"
One of the biggest fears many of us have is the fear of hypocrisy. Too
many times we've been shocked to see a person who impressed us as being a genuine
follower of Christ suddenly turn out to be quite the opposite. One day we happen
to walk in when he wasn't expecting us... his mask was off ... and what a
miserable countenance we beheld! What a weak, selfish, greedy life was exposed
to our view!
Sometimes the mask that falls off is our own. We had ourselves convinced
that we were really progressing in righteousness until some small incident
tripped us, and a sea of vileness tumbled out of our lives. "Where did that come from!"
"Lord, don't let me be a hypocrite! Don't let me go through life
wearing a pious mask over an empty heart. If I can't be a real Christian, if I
can't be a disciple of Jesus on the inside as well as the outside, then don't
let me be anything."
"Is there a Christianity that really penetrates right into the
heart? Not a mask ... not a costume ... not a pair of colored glasses that
makes things look right when they're not. Is it possible to be transformed into
a man who is really like Jesus? Is it possible to become a person who can actually live the Sermon on the Mount? If so, that's what I
want to be."
You do … why?
Why do you want to be a Christian? What are you really after when you say
you want to be a Christian?
Some people want to be Christians because they've been told it will bring
serenity. They've heard that only Christians have real serenity, so they submit to certain "Christian disciplines"
hoping that as they progress the turmoil and struggle within their hearts will
cease and they will be filled with a blessed calm. Let's be frank ... you don't
have to be a Christian to find serenity. There are people outside the Christian
faith who have an amazing serenity of life and spirit. You'll find them not
only among the farmers and shepherds of the developing world, but even in the
cities of restless
Some people want to be Christians because they've been told it will bring
them prosperity. We have an
abundance of preachers who are making themselves prosperous selling this idea
... and millions are buying it ... but it's just not so. You don't have to
become a Christian in order to prosper. In fact, you
may prosper much more in terms of money and popularity if you stay away from
Christianity.
Some people want to be Christians because they've been told that the Christian
faith is the only source of happiness
in this world. "If you want to be happy, be a Christian." Open your
eyes, friend, and you'll see people who never darken a church door or call upon
the name of Jesus who are really, quite happy. They enjoy the natural pleasures
of life ... they like to read or fish or travel or putter around in their
garden. They're satisfied with that kind of life and are content to make the
most of it until the day they die. You don't have to be a Christian to be
happy.
Some people are driven to Christianity by an ominous feeling of guilt…
they feel unclean ... they feel condemned ... they're sinners ... they want an easy
conscience, and they have been told they can find it in the
Christian faith. It certainly is true that only through Christ can you find
true forgiveness. But if it is merely release from a sense of guilt that you
are seeking, a psychiatrist can meet that need. For he can set your mind at ease.
You don't really have to become a Christian to obtain an easy conscience.
All
these reasons for becoming a Christian have to do with something this‑worldly
... immediate ... "Be a Christian so you can have this blessing or that
blessing right now." But to obtain these immediate blessings you don't
have to be a Christian. When people came to Jesus for healing, he didn't say, "Wait
a minute ... are you a Christian? I heal only true Christians." When the
five thousand sat down to be fed, Jesus did not begin with an altar call ... "I
feed only Christians around here!"
Any
blessing that it is possible to have on earth you can have without being a
Christian. If it's within your power, work for it. If it's beyond your power,
pray for it. For God doesn't check you credentials when you pray.
But
there is one blessing which is reserved for Christians only ... it is a
blessing that doesn't belong to this world at all. You can have this blessing
now in a partial way. You can taste it ... you can see it dimly as through a
mirror. But you will not have it fully until this world, as we know it has
passed away. It is called the
Jesus
came and lived and died and rose in order to bring us
into the
"Seek ye first the
Now
we're talking about something which is beyond this world. We're talking about
something greater than serenity or prosperity or happiness or anything else
that can be found on earth. We're talking about a place where there is no
darkness at all ... nothing covered ... nothing hidden ... because God is its
light. We're talking about a place where there are no tears, no devil, no
demons, no lies, no pain, no sickness, no hunger, no death, because God is its
life and its joy. We're talking about a place where God is all in all.
This
is what Christianity is about ... this is its primary concern.
Rejoice not that spirits are subject to you,
but that your names are written in heaven,
This
is what Jesus Christ came to offer.
Now after John was out of prison, Jesus came into Galilee, preaching the
good news of the
He
healed the sick and raised the dead and opened the eyes of the blind to show
them that there is such a blessed kingdom where God walks and talks with us as
he did in Paradise … where God is
our Father and we his blessed children. Where our joy ... joy inconceivable to
the mortal mind ... is God himself.
Notice
the wave of praise and glory that swept over the crowd when Jesus raised the
dead son of the widow of Nain. "God hath visited his people!" they
exclaimed. That praise, brief as it was, was a foretaste of the kingdom. Have
you observed sometimes in the gathered fellowship where you worship, when a
particularly powerful manifestation of God's grace touches the people, how
praise and wonder sweep over the whole congregation? This is a foretaste of the
Whenever
people suddenly become conscious of God's presence, are swept by the Spirit
into praise of God, or are lifted up into a realm of
genuine worship, the
Jesus
never forced the general public to seek the
But
once men came to him and wanted to be his disciples (Christians), then Jesus
drew a sharp line. "If you want to enter the
"Not everyone who says to me, 'Lord, Lord,' shall enter the kingdom
of heaven; but he that doeth the will of my Father who is in heaven."
Lay not up for yourselves treasure on earth where moth
and rust doth corrupt and where thieves break through and steal,
but lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven where neither moth nor
rust doth corrupt, and where thieves do not break through and steal: for where
your treasure is, there will your heart be also.
So at
the beginning of this quest we draw the same line by
asking, "Why do you want to be a Christian? Because you want serenity,
prosperity, happiness, an easy conscience? Or, do you
want to be a Christian because you want God? You desire to love
God ... you want to dwell in the Father's house ... you want to please him ...
you want to honor him." If this is what you seek, then you will be a
Christian. Jesus himself will make you a Christian.
"Fear not, little flock; it is your Father's good pleasure to give
you the kingdom. Sell what you have and give alms. Provide yourselves with bags
which wax not old, a treasure in the heavens which faileth
not."
Ask
your heart at the outset of this quest, "What do I want?" If it's something
on earth, then you need not trouble yourself trying to be a Christian. But if
it's in heaven… the throne room of the living God ... then the way of Christ is
the only way.
Of
course, the place we have to be Christians is in the world... down in the most drab and
sordid circumstances of daily life. We shall be Christians in the shop and office, in our kitchen and
garage, amid nagging relatives and dirty politics. But we'll never be Christians here in the
jumbled and complicated world unless we know where we're going and why.
Our
goal is not on this earth ... our goal is in heaven. God is our goal. God's
kingdom is our treasure. And Jesus is the Shepherd who will bring us there, if
this is what we really want.
WHAT CAUSES THE CHANGE?
When
does a person really become a Christian? What do you have to do to be a
Christian?
We
all know the customary requirements. Each church has a set of minimum
standards. For membership in most churches you go
through a prescribed instruction period and learn basic information about the
church and its teachings. At last you stand at the
front of the congregation and make a public confession of your faith in Jesus
Christ. Then you're baptized or perhaps confirmed.
Truly
these outward forms can be quite meaningful if they reflect an inward reality.
But how often it seems like just so much ecclesiastical red tape you have to go through in order to join the "religious
outfit" of your choice. How often one has the disturbing feeling that for
all the ceremony, nothing is happening within the heart.
If
you haven't already become a Christian in your heart, the ceremony will never
make you one. Confirmation is meant to confirm a fact which already stands. And
even baptism, basic as it is to the life of the child of God, is really
something which is meant only for the believer ... the Christian. Without the
word of God and the faith of Christ already living in the heart, all the
baptisms in the world will never transform anybody into a Christian.
Then
there are those who reject all the arbitrary requirements of the churches and
set out on their own to simply try to "be Christians." They're going
to abide by "Christian principles." They're going to practice
honesty, compassion, patience, courage and generosity
in daily life.
One has to admire these people. No doubt God blesses them as
they sincerely try to do what's right and good. But if they're honest, they
will soon find that they too are on a dead‑end street. You may make a
dramatic decision to henceforth live like a Christian, and you may be utterly
sincere, but when you get out into the world and have to
face hard realities of existence, you'll see your good intentions quickly
battered to pieces like a fragile kite smashed in a hurricane. You want to be
honest, but sometimes it seems as though you just can't. You truly desire to
show mercy, but there are times when you may have to excuse yourself by saying,
"After all, I have to make a living." Christianity is not something
you can attain by trying hard. No matter how hard you try, your good intentions
will never materialize as Christianity.
Christianity
is a life which is completely the handiwork of God. It's like a house that God
has already built for you. All you have to do is enter
it. It is a highway that has been rolled out to you from heaven itself. All you
have to do is get on it. But to enter this house ...
to get on this highway ... you must pass through a narrow door, a door which is
so narrow that you can take nothing with you, but just you.
You
cannot take that ridiculous mask you wear every day before the eyes of other
men ... you cannot take that high horse of pride on which you ride all your
waking hours ... you cannot take all those loves and fears and dreams and
grudges or attachments you call your life. All these things must be left
behind.
Take
off your mask... dismount your horse... lay aside your possessions, real and
imaginary... bend down and pass through that narrow door into a new world, an
unbelievable world... a world where the air you breathe is the very Spirit of
God, and the light for your path is from the face of the heavenly Father, and
your companion on the way to the shining city in the distance is the man whose
hands still bear the marks of the nails.
The
act of passing through the narrow door is called faith. But the effect of going through the narrow door is
better known by those who have done it as death.
It's
true when people say, "All you have to do to become a Christian is exercise
faith ... believe in Jesus Christ with all your heart." Sure, but what
does it mean to believe in Jesus Christ? There are people who claim to believe
in Jesus Christ ... they believe "real hard." They believe that he
was born of the Virgin Mary, suffered under Pontius Pilate, was crucified, dead
and buried, etc. And yet this faith in Jesus Christ has no influence on the way
they treat their wives, or raise their children, or do their work, or handle
their money. In the decisions of daily life they are
governed by what they call "common sense." Jesus Christ may be
saying, "Forgive… show mercy"... but common sense is saying, "They're
taking advantage of you ... you're being a door mat." Which voice do they
heed? Common sense of course. Jesus Christ may be saying, "Give that man
ten dollars," but common sense says, "Hold on to your money, you may
need it yourself some day." Again common sense
wins.
These
people believe certain things about Jesus from the top layer of their brains.
Yes indeed, they believe that Jesus is the Son of God. But do they believe in him? Have they put faith in Jesus?
To
have faith in Jesus is something quite different from believing certain things
about him. To have faith in Jesus is to become related to Jesus in a personal
way... and to enter this personal relationship with Jesus you have to pass through that narrow door.
Notice
that whenever scripture talks about having faith in Jesus Christ it involves a
death of some kind. When Paul talks about living by faith in Christ, he talks
about being crucified with
Christ. When he talks about being baptized into Christ, he explains that it
means to be "baptized into his
death." Whenever Jesus
teaches about discipleship, he connects it with bearing a cross...
losing your life. There is
nothing morbid about this at all. It is the most liberating truth in the world.
Don't be afraid of it. To pass through the narrow door into life ... into a
living relationship with Jesus ... involves a triple death.
First,
you have to
die to all pretenses. This is the only way you will ever become small
enough to fit the narrow door. We talk
much about the importance of being honest. We usually consider ourselves to be
rather honest ... but are we? ... really?
We
read in the newspaper about a man who pretended to be a medical doctor with
astonishing success. He got on the staff of a large hospital, performed
operations, earned a good reputation, without ever seeing the inside of a
medical school. Then one day he gives himself up and admits that he's a fraud.
This makes interesting reading because we know what that poor chap was going
through. Always wondering, "What if I get caught? What if they find out
what I really am?"
When
a man finally stands before Jesus and wants to enter into
the kingdom, this is exactly what happens. In order to get through the narrow door he gives up the phony game. He confesses that he's
nothing but a pretense ... he comes down to size.
The
Bible calls this repentance. Repentance is not just feeling sorry... repentance
is to turn around, to quit the false game, to give up the fraud, to die to the
whole business and present yourself as the trembling sinner you really are
before the Son of God.
Now
you'll fit the doorway. The next thing is to step into it. To do this you have
to die a second time. Die by faith ... die by reckoning yourself dead with Jesus. You see Jesus hanging
from the cross and you assert, "There I am ... I'm in him ... this old
sinner which is the real me died when he died."
The
place where you have to begin to exercise faith in
Jesus is at the cross. Identify with him ... see yourself in him. See your sins
crucified, your pride crucified, your vanity crucified, your slothfulness
crucified. "I am crucified with Christ," says Paul ... not "I hope
some day to be crucified and delivered from these sins." I am ... it happened when Jesus died. It is no longer I
who live; I died on the cross in the body of my Lord.
One
more death remains. To pass through the door into the kingdom you must die a
third time by abandoning yourself to
Jesus. When you abandon yourself to Jesus you don't ask where he's
taking you or what is going to happen to you ... you just go.
When
Andrew and his friend asked Jesus where he was staying, Jesus did not give them
a list of instructions or hand them a map showing the risks involved in getting
there. He said, "Come and see." Never mind how far it is ... never
mind how difficult it may be ... never mind how long it takes
... just come.
Peter's
wife had dinner on the table for him one day. She knew Peter had been up all night fishing and would soon be in, very tired and
hungry. It was a lovely meal, but Peter didn't come. After a while she left her
kitchen and went down to the sea. There was the boat drawn up to the land but
no Peter.
"Have you seen my husband?", she asked an old
man sitting in the sun.
"Yes, he went off with Jesus of Nazareth."
"When will he be back?"
"Who knows?"
When
you abandon yourself to Jesus you have no idea when you'll be "back"
or where he will lead you. You have no control over your future. Everything's
unknown. It's like death. It is
death. Are you willing to abandon yourself to Jesus? ... to go out with Jesus
wherever he leads you? ... no matter what happens or what strange deserts he
may take you through.
When
you have died this third death, your
life ... life as you always planned it and hoped for it
and desired it to be, is gone, and another life, a life from above, falls like
fire from heaven upon the altar of your heart. Now you're a Christian ... you
have Christ in you the hope of glory. The narrow door is behind you and you are on the highway of the kingdom. And every
step you take (even the steps through the dark valleys) brings you closer to
the glory that awaits those who persevere faithfully to the end.
This
is how you become a Christian...not by means of an ecclesiastical ceremony ... not
through giving mental assent to certain Biblical doctrines ... not by the sincere intention to live an
upright, moral life. Salvation is God's gift from heaven, a gift received
through faith.
But
remember that faith in Jesus ... genuine, saving faith ... always has certain
effects. Faith and its effects are inseparable, like the two sides of a coin
... you can't have the one without the other. A living relationship with Jesus
will be accompanied by three deaths: a dying to all pretense, a dying of the
old self (that "body of sin" which sent Jesus to the cross), and a
dying of your self‑planned life. But the overall result of this triple
death is life ... for Christ will dwell within you with all his resurrection
power. Even as the death of Jesus was followed by his glorious resurrection and
ascension, so your death by faith in Jesus will result in newness of life. And
at the end of the highway beyond this narrow door is heaven Itself… the city of
the living God.
THE
CHRISTIAN AND THE "CHURCH"
It
would be convenient if, at the moment you commit
yourself to Jesus Christ, your life would be instantly transformed ... you get up from your knees, blink your eyes a
few times and find to your joyful astonishment that your mind is now filled
with wonderful new thoughts ... you have become absolutely Christ‑like.
All the nasty inclinations you had just an hour before are gone. Your worries
have evaporated. Your heart is now one marvelous fountainhead of compassion and
trust.
You
walk out of church to find your car stolen ... it doesn't bother you at all.
You take a bus home, have a cup of hot milk and sleep like a baby. The next day
the person who was your arch enemy at work for ten years finally succeeds in
squeezing you out of your job ... you shake his hand, wish him God's blessings and just go on trusting God. No matter what storms
may rage outwardly, your life continues to be all sunshine in the sweetness of
the Lord.
There
may be certain drugs which affect people in this way ... or hypnosis ... but
not Jesus Christ. Beware of sudden
transformations! When people are suddenly "transformed" it is
usually the symptoms of an illness. Conversion to Christ may be sudden. A
person may suddenly come to repentance ... or be suddenly arrested by a vision
from heaven ... or be suddenly visited by the Spirit of God. But the full
change of the actual life is never sudden.
It
takes only seconds for the fire from heaven to fall upon your heart making you
a Christian, but it takes more than seconds for the fire of God's love within
to "come through" your flesh in actual living. For you to live like one who is redeemed,
or act like a child of God, or
think and speak like an incarnation of the
Spirit of Jesus takes some bending and molding and battering and melting in God's
"shop" until he has formed you into the shape of his Son ... transformed you.
When
you were born, you were immediately looked upon as a little human being. You
were given a name ... the same name you have now. But for you to become the man
or woman you are today took a bit of work… it took some forming and training.
If you had been thrust out into the world as an infant to make your own way,
you would have died… because the man or woman in you was only potential.
So
how did you change from that squalling baby in diapers to the person you are
now? You were placed in a family ... among people who belonged to you and you
to them. In interaction with these other lives some of your rough edges began
to come off. When you laid down on the floor and screeched and kicked your feet
your father picked you up and gave you something to screech about. When you ate
all the cookies that were reserved for supper dessert your mother punished you.
When you ran off with your brother's marbles he took
care of you in an effective way. When you were afraid of strange noises your
father explained them to you. When you were discouraged
your mother comforted you. Soon you were making your own way in the world, but
the roots ... the principles ... that were planted in you by your family
continued to influence you ... and they do to this day.
This
is precisely what happens on a higher level when a person is "born again"
of the Spirit of Christ. In order to remake you in the image of Christ who is
now within, God puts you into a family and in this family
he begins to mold and grind you into shape.
The
church is not, as so many people seem to think, a place of escape from the
evils of the world. It is the workshop where God transforms our fleshly life
into the image of Christ ... it is the family where our Father forms us into
real people who can actually live like Christians in
the world.
This is why that little group of twelve men were gathered around
the table with Jesus in the upper room ... they were a family ... individual
men who had been drawn together so that in fellowship with each other they
could be formed into actual men
of God. In interaction with each other they were being molded into the kind of
men who could spread the fire of the gospel over the face of the earth. They
were being trained to be servants.
These
men still had natures like other men. They were status seekers. They were
looking for approval. They competed for position. James and John wanted the
seats next to Jesus in the kingdom. Peter was set to be the hero. Today when we
have a gathering of men who all want to be something we have an election ... we
form committees. We give everyone a status job. We harness this ego drive in
man and put it to work. The man who produces the most for the organization gets
the top position.
But
when Jesus puts you in the church he does just the
opposite. He is not interested in making you a boss, or a celebrity, or a hero ...
but a servant. All his
training is aimed at just this. Until you learn to be a servant ... to serve
other men ... your Christianity is worthless. Until, in the family of God, you
can perform the thankless jobs, the dirty tasks, the monotonous duties, and not
be upset because your efforts go unnoticed, your Christianity ... if you have
any at all ... is still infantile ... you are in diapers.
Jesus, knowing that the father had given all things into his hands, that
he was come from God and went to God…
He
knew who he was. He knew how far above these men he was; he was their Lord. Nevertheless he got up from the table, laid aside his
garments, took a towel and wrapped himself, poured water into a basin and began
to wash the disciples' feet and to wipe them with the towel that covered his
nakedness. The meanest, dirtiest, lowliest servant's work that a man could
perform … he did it.
"Ye call me master and Lord, and ye say well, for so I am. If I
then, your Lord and master, have washed your feet, ye ought to wash one another's
feet. For I have given you an example that ye should do as I have done to you."
Jesus
put you in the church to make your Christianity real ... not a ball of
spiritual yarn tangled up inside your head, but actual service to your fellow
men. In the family of the church you start serving
your brothers and sisters. If they never say "thank you" ... if they
never pat you on the back ... if they never show
appreciation … if they forget all about you ... just go on washing feet.
The
other people in the church are just like you are ... they're blundering
children. They have faults ... they make mistakes. They're far from perfect.
But their rough edges are the sandpaper in God's hand to smooth all your rough
edges.
We're
so far from this idea of washing each other's feet that we don't know where to
begin to serve each other. To most of us, "service" means teaching a
Sunday School class, or being an usher at services, or singing in the choir, or
serving on a committee. These things are fine ... but the service Jesus means
when he talks about washing feet is much more simple
and down‑to‑earth. If you want to know what Jesus means by washing
feet, look for the words "one another" in the New Testament.
Whenever
the Spirit of God tells us to do something for one another, he is calling us to
a form of washing feet.
To
wash one another's feet means first of all to submit to one another.
"Submitting yourselves one to another in the fear of God."
You'll
never be a servant of God out in the world if you haven't learned how to submit
... to put yourself under another believer. It makes no difference whether you
are a newborn Christian or a minister or bishop of considerable influence ...
there is not one believer in the church that you can stand over or stay aloof
from. In "the world" that other person may not make as much money as
you ... he may not live in as fine a house or have nearly the education you
have. But in the church these things mean nothing. In the church you are the
servant of that brother. If he wants to talk to you, submit ... listen to him.
If he has a word of loving advice, submit ... consider what he says. If he
wants to pray for you, submit ... look upon it as an honor.
To
wash feet means to bear one another's
burdens.
"Bear ye one another's burdens and so fulfill the law of Christ."
This
means bearing the burdens not only of your favorite objects of charity, or your
favorite friends, but any brother or sister who needs a little help. There's an
elderly couple down the block who never have a visitor from one week to the
next. Theoretically they're members of the church but who bears their burden of
loneliness besides the pastor on his routine calls? There are people in your
congregation with financial burdens, burdens of disappointments, burdens of
disgrace. To wash feet means to get under their burdens with them and help. If
you are insensitive to the burdens of your brothers and sisters in the Body of
Christ your concern for people and issues outside will
never be more than sentimental.
To
wash one another's feet means to forgive
one another.
"Be ye kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another,
even as God for Christ's sake has forgiven you."
The
place where you learn to forgive is in the church. If you can't be forgiving in
God's family, how will you ever be forgiving beyond it? When someone in the
fellowship has wronged you or you think he's wronged you ... this is simply a
God‑sent opportunity to wash feet. Don't stand around with your feathers
ruffled and your pride hurting and threaten to quit. "They're nothing but
hypocrites anyway!" Lay aside your fancy robes and get down on your knees,
as your Lord did for you, and start washing that person's feet ... forgive
absolutely and utterly from the bottom of your heart.
To
wash one another's feet means to pray
for one another.
"Confess your faults to one another and pray for one
another that ye may be healed."
How
often do you pray by name for other people in your fellowship? You pray for
your pastor ... he surely needs your prayers to fulfill the ministry he has
been given. But there are other people in your church who need your prayers
too. Start with the ones you find hardest to accept. What a blessing will come
to them, and to you, as you wash their feet by praying for them.
If we
are ever to become in actual living what God willed us to be when he made us
his children at
But
we will never grow ... our actual lives will never change ... until we begin in
fact to wash one another's feet. God help us to do this and to continue doing
it until we all come in the unity of the faith and the knowledge of the Son of
God to mature manhood ... to the measure of the stature of the fullness of
Christ.
You
don't have to read the latest books by students of the American religious scene
to know that there is a growing rebellion against "organized Christianity"
in this country and abroad. For a few years after World War II, in
These are fighting words for us who feel that we have
to defend the church‑going way of life. We argue ... "You can't
be a Christian sitting home in your living room ... you need the fellowship."
The
amusing thing about this is that most of us who do go to church are actually trying to be Christians in the same way as the
people who don't. In spite of the fact that we come to
church, we are trying to be Christians all by ourselves. We enter the sanctuary
and perhaps shake hands and smile to one another ... we worship ... we listen
to the same sermon. Yet each of us remains in a tightly enclosed little world
of our own. When it comes to opening our hearts, joining our spirits with one
accord and truly worshipping God together, we hardly know what it is. Somehow we are just as alone sitting together in church as
if we were home in our living room ... there is an invisible compartment of
reserve that walls us in.
Until these
compartments break and we have actually become one we
have nothing better than our friends out in the world who feel they can be Christians
alone. The fact that we are physically together doesn't mean very much. Jesus
took Peter, James and John with him into the depths of
This
separateness, this aloneness, which persists even when we're gathered together
in church, never lets go of us until we enter into the
reality of corporate prayer. When we have really learned to pray
together ... not as an assembly of individuals hooked up within their separate
souls, but as spirits which have openly and freely come together around Jesus
to call on God ... then we have something no isolated man, however good he may
be, can know ... out there by himself.
The
solitary individual is very unlikely to meet Jesus Christ alone in his prayer
closet until he first meets him in fellowship with at least one other believer.
"If two of you agree on earth…
Where two or three are gathered in my name…"
Think
of Cornelius, he was a man of prayer. He lived a devout, God-fearing life but
he was alone. His fellow Romans did not understand him … the Jews would have
nothing to do with him because he was a Gentile. Yet God blessed Cornelius. God
sent an angel to speak to him. But before Cornelius could receive the grace of
God he was seeking, he had to come together with a believer who knew Jesus.
"Send to Joppa for a man named Peter..."
This
is God's order ... this is God's way of doing things. Jesus was not being
sentimental when he took those three disciples with him to watch while he
prayed ... he needed them ... oh how he needed them!
When
we say a person cannot be a Christian apart from the church, this is what we
mean; he can get along without the formalities ... he can get along without the
ceremonies ... he can survive without the organization … but he cannot get
along without having some disciples with whom he can come together before God
to pray. And the sad fact is that for all the "togetherness" in
Christendom these days, we know very little about coming together to pray. We're
with the Lord in the temple ... we're with him in the upper room ... we're even
with him when he gives us his body to eat and his blood to drink in communion.
But when Jesus takes us into
What
happens when believers pray together? The primary blessing is that they have
fellowship with the Lord Jesus. When one person alone calls on the name of Jesus he or she indeed receives an answer. But when two
people or three people or ten or fifty gather ... and with one accord call on
the name of Jesus ... Jesus comes
into their midst and blesses them with the unspeakable joy of his
presence. Fellowship with the Lord comes as at no other time when Christians
are praying together.
When
Christians pray together, they are
given power to "bind and loose."
"Verily I say unto you, whatsoever ye shall bind on
earth shall be bound in heaven and whatsoever ye shall loose on earth shall be
loosed in heaven. Again I say to you that if two of
you shall agree on earth as touching anything they shall ask, it shall be done
for them by my Father which is in heaven."
God
alone knows how many times that promise has been taken at face value by
believers. But more doors have been opened and more demons have been bound, and
more tragedies have been averted (or transfigured) by simple believers crying
out together with one accord to God, than this earth will ever know. A link is
established with heaven the instant Christians begin praying together, and the invisible
powers of heaven move behind the visible things of this earth in answer to the
heart cries of the gathered children of God.
When
Christians pray together, they are renewed by the Holy Spirit. There is a
refreshing worth more than sleep or food or drink that comes to believers when
they pray together. Burdens lift ... vision clears ... vigor returns to body
and mind. The apostles were "filled with the Holy Spirit" not only on
Pentecost ... they were filled again and again. These in‑fillings
occurred ordinarily when they were gathered together
and praying. This is what kept them going.
Most
Christian enterprises these days can be characterized by an insatiable thirst
for money. Few people ever question the unspoken premise that lies behind the
endless stream of financial appeals that flood the country in the name of
Christianity... "If we had more money we could do
more good." When this is said (or implied), it is a sign that the church
is spiritually tired ... it lacks the energy of God and now turns to the energy
of man that is stored up in dollar bills. Whatever our financial needs may be
as churches or missionary enterprises, they are always secondary to the need
for the energy of the living God ... the power of the Holy Spirit. When we have
this we shall never lack money or the things it buys.
And the energy of God's Spirit will surge through the church once more when it
prays together.
This
is not a plea for more prayer groups or more prayer meetings. We could multiply
prayer groups and prayer meetings again and again and still be no farther along
than we are now. Many a prayer group meets faithfully, but somehow never enters into true corporate prayer. And there are prayer meetings
which attract large numbers every week ... still each one remains imprisoned in
his own soul.
What
we have to do is take the occasions that already bring
us together around the word of God ... at church, at home, in Bible studies ...
and turn our formal prayers into the real thing ... into real praying together.
If we
study the promises of our Lord concerning corporate prayer, we find two factors
that command attention. The first is agreement.
If two of you agree on earth as touching anything they shall ask...
Our
Lord is talking about something more than intellectual agreement. We may agree
that such unity of Christians would be a good thing... and we may say a few
prayers about this on Sunday in church... but mere intellectual agreement is
not enough. Before we can enter into real corporate
prayer, there must be agreement of heart. Are we really burdened for what we request? Do we really, deeply, want the petition we
bring? For instance, Jesus commands us to pray the Lord of the harvest that he
would send forth more laborers ... we agree ... but how deep is our agreement?
Are we agreed in our hearts that this prayer is as important as he says it is?
Are we burdened with him for the fainting multitudes who are like sheep without
a shepherd? When we agree in our hearts an arc of heavenly fire burns between
believer and believer, and it becomes the prayer of the Body of Christ.
The
second factor which will bring our corporate prayers to life is to enter into the name of Jesus.
"Whatsoever ye shall ask in my name ... Where two
or three are gathered in my name..."
Obviously this means more than ending our prayers with the
formula, "in Jesus' name, amen." To enter into Jesus' name we have to get out of our own name ... out of
ourselves. Forget who you are and what you are and what people think of you.
Leave your little private compartment. Let your spirit go forth to join the
others under the canopy of the name of Jesus. There you will find yourself able
to pray with perfect liberty.
When
we are nervous and self‑conscious in praying together, this is a sign
that we haven't entered into the name of Jesus. We're
worried about whether or not we're being accepted by
others who are praying ... a sure indication that we're still tangled up in
ourselves. Or when we are impatient and domineering in group prayer, this is a
sign that we haven't left ourselves behind ... we're afraid to let Jesus have
charge of the group. We're trying to run it. But when we have truly gathered
our spirits under the name of Jesus and let Jesus rule the praying, then there
will be accord, unity, and liberty to truly pray together.
In
our family prayers, or in the prayers that are shared in the Bible study we
attend, real benefit will come by taking time to think together about these two
factors mentioned by our Lord... agreement and being in his name. Are our hearts in agreement on the
things we're going to pray about? Are our spirits
ready to leave the protective castles of our own names and gather
together under the name of the Son of God?
When
we have agreement, and when we are unified under Jesus' name, then we can pray.
Together we will have fellowship with the Lord himself, we will exercise power
to bind and loose, and we will be renewed by the Holy Spirit. For the gathered
fellowship of praying believers is the dwelling place of Christ on this earth.
Nowhere this side of the End does the light of the
And
the scribes and Pharisees brought unto him a woman taken in adultery; and when
they had set her in the midst, they said unto him, "Master, this woman was
taken in adultery, in the very act. Now Moses in the law commanded us that such
should be stoned: but what sayest thou?" This they said, tempting him,
that they might have whereof to accuse him. But Jesus stooped down and with
his finger wrote on the ground, as though he heard them not. So
when they continued asking him, he lifted up himself, and said unto them, "He
that is without sin among you, let him cast the first stone at her." And again he stooped down and wrote on the ground. And they
which heard it, being convicted by their own conscience, went out one by one,
beginning at the eldest, even unto the last: and Jesus was left alone, and the
woman standing in the midst. When Jesus had lifted up
himself, and saw none but the woman, he said unto her, "Woman, where are
those thine accusers? Hath no man condemned thee?" She said, "No man,
Lord." And Jesus said unto her, "Neither do I condemn thee: go, and
sin no more."
There's
a hymn which we like to sing, especially when we've had a recent glimpse of the
ugliness in our own souls, or a reminder of some shameful thing we've done: "There's
a wideness in God's mercy like the wideness of the sea." What a comfort to
be told once again that God's mercy includes even me! What a relief to be
assured again that the healing stream which flows down
But
there are times when this hymn is utterly out of place ... when you have no
right to sing it. When you are presently involved in something you know is
wrong ... when you are stubbornly clinging to a path you know is not God's will
... to open your mouth and sing, "There's a wideness in God's mercy like
the wideness of the sea," is blasphemy.
God's
mercy is wide, like the sea indeed. But like the sea, it has limits. There is a
shoreline ... a point beyond which God's mercy does not go.
Here
was a woman taken in adultery, a sin which according to Jewish law deserved
stoning to death. After a few minutes of silence, Jesus lifts himself up and
finds that the scribes and Pharisees have disappeared.
"Woman, where are thine accusers?
Hath no man condemned thee?"
"No man, Lord.
"Neither do I condemn thee."
There's
the mercy of God … the woman's sin is wiped away. Now she stands before Jesus
with the same liberty as if she were one of the holy angels. At this point,
however, the mercy of God has reached its limit. Notice
carefully the words with which Jesus sends her away. Jesus does not say,
"I realize madam, that you were born with a sinful nature. You'll have
more problems ... just do your best; try a little harder." He does not
say, "Here's my calling card. If you get caught again come to me; I'll
stick up for you." Jesus says to this woman words that are as clear and
exacting as they can possibly be: "Go and sin no more."
God
is merciful and forgiving when it comes to the life you lived when you were out
in the darkness, far from your Shepherd. Every sin you committed out there is
forgiven and forgotten. But now you are not out in the darkness, you have come
into the presence of the very Son of God ... you have stepped into the light.
Now God expects you to walk as a child of the light.
"For this ye know, that no whoremonger, nor unclean person, nor
covetous man, who is (actually) an idolater, hath any inheritance in the
Once
you're in, the same God who forgave your sins now becomes exacting… exacting about what goes on in your heart:
"Be
ye therefore perfect as your father in heaven is perfect ... Love your enemies
... Bless them that curse you."
Exacting
about what comes out of your mouth:
"For
every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give
an account thereof in the Day of Judgment."
Exacting
about what you do with your hands:
"Let
him that stole steal no more, but rather let him labor, working with his hands
the thing which is good."
There
are many people who really don't believe that God expects any more of them
after they've been forgiven than he did before.
"God
must be kidding ... how can he expect me to love my enemies and turn the other
cheek? God knows my nature. He knows how weak I am. He understands that I am at
the same time justified and a sinner."
So we become lax ... we cut a few corners and compromise
here and there. When we feel a little nervous, we open our hymnals and sing
those comforting words: "There's a wideness in God's mercy like the
wideness of the sea ... There is no place where earth's failings have such
kindly judgment given" ... and soon
we're feeling better.
But
what happens? The demon that God cast out of our lives comes back with seven
other demons more wicked than itself and they enter and dwell there ... and our
last state is worse than our first.
The
most pathetic people in the world are not the gross sinners ... they are the
people who have stood in the presence of Jesus Christ, had their sins washed
away, and then go right back and do it again … as scripture says, "Like
dogs returning to their own vomit," because they did not believe it when Jesus said to them, "Go, and
sin no more ... go and live like a child of the light."
Many
people look upon the church as a kind of spiritual shower room. We come to
church and get washed off ... then we go out into the world and get dirty. We
return in a week or a month and take another shower, then we go out and do it
again. The idea is to keep the dirt down to a minimum by taking frequent baths.
If this is what your church means to you friend, you're wasting your time. If
you're just running back and forth to your church to get your sins forgiven,
and never overcoming sin or conquering it, you're presuming on God's
mercy. The Jews tried to use the temple that way. They'd sin ... then they'd
run to the temple ... then they'd sin again ... then they'd run to the temple ...
until God destroyed their temple.
Remember
this: the church is not a shower room where you keep rinsing off your guilt ...
even if every service in your church begins with a confession of sins ... this
is not its primary function. The church is a place where God gives you power to
live a godly life. God wants to bring you way beyond the point of just having
your sins forgiven. God wants to make you into the very likeness of his Son.
God
is not exaggerating when he says, "Go and sin no more ... Be ye perfect ... Love your enemies." Stop
shaking your head and saying, "I can't," and learn that there is such
a thing as an enabling Spirit.
There is a Spirit who enables
you to go and sin no more.
As
many as received him, who believed on his name, to them gave he power to
become sons of God.
There
is a Spirit who enables you to love your enemies, who enables you to bless them
that curse you, who enables you to do the will of God.
For ye were once in darkness, but now ye are light in the Lord. Walk as
children of light ... for the fruit of the Spirit is in all goodness and
righteousness and truth.
Notice
how the New Testament describes the Holy Spirit as the Enabler.
He is
the Spirit of Love.
"For
the love of God is shed abroad in our hearts by the Holy Spirit which is given
to us."
In ourselves
we have no power to love, but the Holy Spirit makes it possible to love with
the love of God.
He is
the Spirit of Prayer.
"For
we know not how to pray as we ought but the Spirit himself maketh intercession for us with groanings which cannot be uttered."
He
makes it possible for us to lift up our souls to
heaven.
He is
the Spirit of Adoption.
"For
ye have not received the spirit of bondage again to fear; but ye have received
the spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, 'Abba, Father.'"
The Spirit
makes us to know that we are
sons of God, and enables us to say, "Father."
He is
the Spirit of Utterance.
"And
they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the word with boldness."
When
the Spirit gets control of your tongue, it begins to glorify God ... and to
behave itself. Every time it steps out of line, the Spirit will convict it.
When
Christians hear the commands of Jesus Christ and fail to carry them out, there
is only one reason: It is because they are not living under the power of the
Holy Spirit. There is no excuse for this. We can live under the enabling power
of the Holy Spirit all the time ... he
has been given to abide with us forever. All you have to
do is place yourself under his authority.
There
are three ways in which this is done. You come under the authority of the Holy
Spirit in the gathered fellowship
... the Holy Spirit moves upon believers when they gather as he does at no
other time. When you come to church, don't just come to have a spiritual
rinsing ... come to receive power. Come to be renewed by the Holy Spirit. Come
asking God to fill you with the enabling Spirit, that you may go forth into the
world and do his will. When the fellowship prays, don't just stand there and let the pastor do the work. Enter
into it with all your heart ... concentrate ... think ... let your
spirit go out and join the other spirits in truly corporate prayer, and the
Holy Spirit will begin to move upon the unified gathering with supernatural
power.
When
the congregation sings a hymn or the liturgy, do not permit your mind to spin
around in neutral ... enter into the corporate praises
of God. As your spirit eagerly goes out to join the others in praise, the Holy
Spirit will renew within the fellowship the very sanctifying presence of Christ.
You
will come under the power of the Holy Spirit in daily meditation. I do not believe that there has even been
a person who has lived under the authority of the Holy Spirit who did not
engage in some kind of disciplined daily meditation.
The example of our Lord is enough to show the necessity of daily fixing the
heart upon God afresh ... listening to his word ... opening the mind to his
light. Whenever such a discipline is mentioned, there are always those who
claim to satisfy this need by praying while they shave or while they're doing
the dishes. It's fine to pray while you are doing these things, but you're
insulting God and cheating yourself if you try to make dishwater or shaving
cream prayers a substitute for a period of single-minded, concentrated waiting
upon God alone. If you want to live under the enabling power of the Holy
Spirit, make a place in each day to receive the Spirit of God into your heart
afresh.
A
third discipline which will enable you to live under the authority of the Holy Spirit
might be called the discipline of the
indwelling word.
"Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly in all wisdom."
Let
it dwell in you, not as something merely memorized, but in all wisdom.
"The words that I speak to you, they are spirit
and they are life."
The
example of our Lord and the apostles indicates the value of being steeped in
the word ... Moses and the prophets just flowed from their lips.
You
don't have to carry little memory cards with Bible verses in your pocket ...
though that may have its value. But just start calling to mind through the day
the words of Christ that are already familiar to you. Ask yourself from time to
time, 'What is the Spirit of Christ saying to me?" Against the background
of your work or your problem or the book you may be reading there will arise a
phrase from a psalm or sentence from a prophet or a verse from the Sermon on
the Mount, or some advice from an apostle. You will be amazed to find how much
of God's counsel is already stored in your heart, and you didn't even realize
it. Those words are Spirit and life.
Receive
the Spirit in the gathered fellowship, in daily meditation, through the
indwelling word. When you begin living under the power of the Holy Spirit in
this way, the fruits of the Spirit will appear in daily life in all goodness
and righteousness and truth. God indeed gives power to live up to his exacting
demands. Whenever the Spirit goes with you, it is possible to "go
and sin no more."
THE LIBERATED CHRISTIAN
The Problem ‑--- Guilt
It
requires no great flash of insight to realize that for many of us life is nothing
more than a treadmill ... it's like a
giant wheel. You walk on the wheel ... the wheel goes around ... but you don't
get anywhere. Who knows how many miles a day you walk? Yet, you're no farther
along when the day's over than when it began.
You wake up in the morning. What are you going to do? Just about what you
did yesterday and the day before and the day before that ... another boring day
to live through! ... another day filled with problems and frustration
... another day to worry about
how I'm going to pay the bills ... another day to run around trying to please
my boss or my family or my teachers. When it's all over what will I have
accomplished? Same as yesterday ... nothing.
Strangely
enough some of the greatest sufferers from this treadmill existence are folks
who are trying to be Christians. How many duties we perform in the name of
Christianity that are done, not with joy, not with liberty, not with
enthusiasm, but with heaviness of heart ... obligation. "Here it is Sunday
again. Guess I'll have to go to church." "Another letter from Aunt
Susie ... guess I'll have to go and visit her." "My neighbor's sick
again ... I suppose I'll have to make him another pot of soup." "They
need youth workers, Sunday School teachers, and choir members down at the
church, but I'm so tied down already." You're on the treadmill ... you're
not free and joyful and able to see where you are needed and where you aren't
... you're weary and pressed.
But really now, where is this treadmill? Is it really that you
have so much work piled upon you? Is it because you have too many obligations?
Is it because you're getting old? ... No ... the treadmill, friend, is in your
head. Nobody put you on that big wheel and ordered you to keep turning it but
you yourself. Who said you have to always be doing
something? Who said you may not sit down and rest? Who told you to take on all
those obligations? ... You did ... you did it to yourself. The master of the
treadmill lives in your heart. And it's not God ... God never put anyone on a
treadmill. The master of the treadmill is guilt.
Observe
how many things you do in your life, not because you want to ... not even
because you think they need to be done ... but only because you know that if
you don't do it you're going to feel guilty. Somebody comes to the door collecting for the
Society for the Prevention of Cruelty to Sparrows. You're not worried about the
sparrows ... yet you feel that you have to put something
in his little plastic jar. It's cheaper to give him a quarter than to feel
guilty.
The
more you yield to the demands of this old tyrant, guilt, the more demanding he
becomes. Gradually you become wearier and wearier. Your mind gets dull and your step becomes slow. Guilt stands over you with
a whip and says, "Get going ... move ... pray ... work... sacrifice!"
You stumble on but you know in your heart that you're not getting anywhere.
You are merely turning the wheel of the old treadmill.
You
will never get off the treadmill until you get rid of the guilt that drives you
from within. But how? ... How do I stop feeling guilty all the time? How do I
stop feeling guilty about all the things I've done or left undone?
First we try to ignore the guilty feeling. "Enough of
this ... I'm going to live a little. I'm going to do what I want to for a change.
I'm going to slack off and take it easy. I'm going to run away from the
whole mess." But the strange thing is that no matter where you go or what
you do, your guilt goes right with you. Here is a man who has spent years
trying to ignore his guilt. He divorced his wife and left his children and
tried to swing clear of his obligations.
He began to travel with a happy-go‑lucky crowd. He concentrated on
simply having fun. But every time he stopped running, who was standing by his
side?... guilt. That man isn't having fun ... he's still on the treadmill.
When
we find how futile it is to run away, we may then try to escape this guilt by
paying it off with work or good deeds. We join a church ... or we become a
volunteer, we help with the Boy Scouts or collect for the March of Dimes. There
are men and women who hardly spend a night with their families they're so busy "doing
good." They're not really doing good ... they are attempting to bribe
their guilt feelings by working themselves to death.
There
is only one way to deal with guilt ... wash it away.
There is a fountain filled with blood,
Drawn from Immanuel's veins;
And sinners plunged beneath that flood
Lose all their guilty stains.
Don't ask me how
it works I don't know how it works, but it works.
Thirty‑four
hundred years ago the Jews began having what they call the Day of Atonement ...
blood was sprinkled on the Mercy Seat in the Holy of Holies in the tabernacle.
It was the blood of an innocent animal. This blood in some mysterious way was
to wash away the guilt of the people ... and in a sense it did.
These
ancient people understood a truth which is more profound than all the books on
philosophy and religion that have been written since the world began. They
understood that there is only one way to clean up a guilty conscience ... you have to wash it in innocent blood. Nothing else will remove
the guilt from the human soul but innocent blood ... the blood of a slain life.
So the high priest took the blood of a bull or a goat
and sprinkled it on the Mercy Seat and a spirit of peace descended upon the
camp and the people gave thanks to God for his mercy. This continued for nearly
fifteen hundred years. Once a year the people would gather
together and receive a "clean slate," ... but they had to come
back again and again as long as they lived.
Then
came the real thing. Not a goat or a bull, but the Son of God in human flesh. Again we have the shedding of blood ... innocent blood. He
dies, and out of his side comes blood. Notice how often Jesus and his followers
refer to that blood.
"This cup is the New Covenant in my blood
which is shed for you."
"Much more then being now justified by his blood,
we shall be saved from wrath through him."
"How
much more shall the blood of Christ, who through the eternal Spirit
offered himself without spot to God purge your conscience
from dead works to serve the living God."
This
only had to happen once ... once for all time ... for all men. Now the fountain
is there. All you have to do is go and wash in it. Get
under it and stay under it and your guilt ... all the guilt you ever had ...
will disappear.
There
is a spiritual fatigue that sinks down over our churches from time to time.
People seem so weary. Their ministries seem so full of effort. They just don't
know how they're going to be able to continue.
Everything's such a chore! This is always a sign that the people are
being driven not by the free Spirit of God, but by the demonic spirit of
obligation ... the dark spirit of guilt. This is a symptom that the people have
been slipping away from the blood of Jesus Christ. Instead of serving God with
a clear conscience and a joyful heart, they're plodding away at the treadmill
of dead works. If you want to remain a true Christian, stay off the treadmill
and stay under the blood of Jesus Christ.
1.
Put your past failures under the
blood. No
one is really happy with his past ... no one is without
a few things to be ashamed of. But what can you do about your past? ... it is
out of your reach. You can't change it. If you stole, you can
make restitution. Or if you hurt someone, you can ask his forgiveness. But you
cannot undo what you did ... it's done. Even though you tried to punish
yourself for the rest of your life you could never remove the guilt.
Could
my zeal no respite know, Could my tears forever flow,
All
for sin could not atone; Thou must save, and thou alone.
There
is only one thing to do with your past ... put it under the blood. Jesus died
for it ... Jesus atoned already ... leave it at the cross and be at peace.
2.
Put your present failures under
the blood.
Even now there are certain situations in your life where you are wrong no matter
what you do. This person needs you and that person needs you. If you neglect
Bill to help Charlie, you are wronging Bill. If you neglect Charlie to help
Bill, you are wronging Charlie. You can make yourself very unhappy worrying
about all the people you have been unable to help. This is as sinful as to be
indifferent. Take your present failures and put them under the blood of Christ
... "Lord, you know I don't feel good about how I'm treating Charlie or
Bill, or those shut‑ins who have been waiting for me to come. Where I
could be doing better, correct me. Where
there's nothing I can do, cover it with your precious blood."
3.
Leave your future failures to
the blood.
There are people who believe that they're saved now but they're worried silly
about whether they're going to stay saved. "Will I be able to stay on the
path? Will I be able to conquer temptation? What if I fall away?" These
very fears are the most miserable sin against God. If Jesus' blood can cleanse
your past don't you think it can keep your future?
When you start worrying about your future, draw near to Calvary again and look
at the riven side of your Lord and see the blood and say to yourself, "That's
all I need … that's all I need ... nothing more."
If it
should be that you find yourself on the treadmill now, why not leave this
slavery to guilt and enter into the glorious liberty
of the sons of God? Enter into the life which is not drudgery but joy unspeakable
... joy in the simple things ... joy in the common daily disciplines of being a
Christian ... joy in meeting God in prayer every day ... joy in serving your
fellow man in the most humble ways ... joy in speaking
of Jesus to people you meet from time to time.
Joy
will come in when guilt goes out ... and guilt will leave when it is touched by
the blood of Jesus Christ. Take your life, your whole life, past, present and future, and plunge it under the blood. Believe
that Jesus has already died for every sin you have ever committed. Then, just
start praising God ... and live to God's praise.
If,
on the way home from church next Sunday, you were to fall and break your leg,
this would certainly severely disrupt your way of living for a few weeks. You
would be rushed to the hospital. You wouldn't be able to do your normal work
... your finances would suffer. But after a while the effects of the broken leg
would completely disappear. After the bone has healed and you have returned to
your normal life even your financial losses would soon be forgotten. What looked
almost like the end of the world when you rode the screaming ambulance to the
hospital turns out to be really nothing at all.
Suppose, on the other hand, that you learn in church next Sunday
that two of your young friends eloped and got married. Outwardly nothing has
changed very much. In a week they are back at their jobs looking just as they
always did. But the decision which they made will not wear off in a little
while like a broken leg ... it will influence their lives long after your
broken leg is forgotten. It was the starting point of a radically different
life.
In
other words, there are some events which are like a bump in the road. We bounce
over them, leave them behind, and forget them... like the broken leg; while other events turn out to be a pivot ... like the
marriage event. They grip us and hold us and we
revolve around them the rest of our lives.
True,
there are people who treat marriage like a broken leg. They find some
unpleasantness in it. Or they think they see something more interesting
somewhere else ... so they get over it and forget it. They don't know how to
take an event like marriage and let it deepen and grow and bless them more and
more as the years pass.
But
notice this: whenever a marriage disintegrates it is because the partners have
drifted away from the covenant which they made in the beginning ... the promise
to be faithful to each other for better or for worse. Instead of renewing this
covenant day‑by‑day ... by being faithful, giving love, serving
one another, the man blessing the woman and the woman blessing the man ... they
start letting days go by when the covenant is forgotten. Days come and go when the man looks upon himself
not as a husband of that woman, who has accepted her as she is, to be flesh of
his flesh and bone of his bone, but he looks upon himself as a separate entity,
and thinks of himself as a poor mistreated soul... as the injured one. Soon he
is thinking of himself as a bachelor. He is more and more withdrawn from the
covenant he made with her until it means absolutely nothing to him … then he is
ripe for trouble.
Or it
may be the woman who fails to renew the covenant in her heart. She stops
remembering that she is his wife ... she ceases to give herself as a wife to
her husband ... she becomes hollow and lifeless and disinterested and
withdrawn until she forgets that she is a wife and what it means to be a wife.
There
are a thousand variations of this. But basically, a sick marriage comes about
because the man and the woman have drifted away from the covenant which they
made with each other at the beginning. We talk about the knot which the
preacher is supposed to tie at the altar. There is no such thing. What happens
at the altar will never automatically hold any marriage together.
If
the two human beings who have given themselves to each other do not daily, tie the knot afresh, the
knot won't hold.
Exactly
the same
principle holds when you become a Christian. Don't ever think that the
commitment you made at the beginning of your discipleship will automatically
hold you faithful to Christ for all time ... it won't. That bright moment of
surrender to Jesus Christ will gradually fade into the past and mean nothing at
all unless it is renewed day‑by-day.
Just
as the marriage partners have to go back to their
covenant, so the Christian has to go back to
Through
the ministry of Paul, the Galatians had received a vision of the crucified
Christ. They saw their sins washed away ... they received the gift of the Holy
Spirit to go forth and live like sons of God. Their church became a
fountainhead of the miraculous. Then Paul left. In a short time
the Galatians were far more "religious" than they were when Paul was
around. They were having special feast days and fast days and days for this and
days for that ... they were taking on more complex forms of worship … they were
doing all kinds of wonderful things under the leadership of some marvelous new
preachers who came through from Judea. But the power was gone ... the liberty
of the Spirit was gone ... the joy was gone ... the love of Christ was gone...
God was gone.
Why? Because they had forsaken the ground where
they had started out with Paul ...
But
now they had left
"0
foolish Galatians, who hath bewitched you, that ye should not obey the truth, before
whose eyes Jesus Christ was openly set forth as crucified."
They
were no longer looking at Jesus on the cross ... they were no longer trusting
solely in his blood. And their faith was dried up and shriveled.
The
place where you become a Christian is Calvary ... and the place where you stay
a Christian is
When
Christians become blind and proud and stubborn and touchy and chronically
depressed, it is usually a sign that they have strayed away from the cross ...
they are drawing on their own physical and soulish powers instead of the power
of the crucified Christ.
If
you want to keep your marriage alive and fresh, keep renewing your covenant
with each other daily. But even more important ... if you want to keep your
Christianity alive, continue daily to renew your vision of the event that made
you God's child ... stay near the cross.
Stay near the cross when you
pray.
Sometimes we think it's our tears that will cause God to listen to us. But our
tears will not move God. Sometimes we think it's our fervent manner …God is not
impressed. Sometimes when we pray we even put our
faith in our faith... "Surely when God sees my faith he will answer."
None of these things will make God hear you. You don't have to do somersaults
or work up a sweat. The sweating has already been done more worthily by him who
hung on that cross. He has paid for your prayer ... he has made you worthy.
Just lift up your heart to the Heavenly Father and
know that God will indeed hear and answer your prayer, not because of your
tears or sweat or anything else, but for Jesus' sake.
Stay near the cross when you
minister to others. The power that enables us to minister anything good to other people
never comes out of us. What have you got in yourself that can heal the
brokenhearted? What power do you have to lift up the
fallen? Even when it comes to feeding the hungry and clothing the naked and
visiting the sick, if you try to go out and serve your fellow man by your own
strength you will end up crushed under the sheer weight of other men's burdens.
Many a social worker or minister or goodhearted Christian volunteer has ended
up enmeshed in the very evil from which he was trying to deliver others because
he lost touch with the fountainhead of God's grace … the cross. The heavier the
burdens, the more pressing the problems, the more intense and disciplined must
be your communion with the cross of Jesus Christ ... the place where God made you his child.
Stay near the cross when you
suffer.
There are people who tell us that suffering automatically brings blessing. They
tell us that suffering is bound to bring us closer to God ... don't believe it.
Suffering is much more likely to make you turn your back on God. What is the
first thing you always ask whenever you suffer? "Why does God let this
happen to me?" You're starting to get peeved with God. And this is the
first step away from him. When you suffer, remember that Jesus not only
promised that you would suffer, he pioneered the path
of suffering … he took the worst of it ... he's in there with you ... he knows
all about it. Keep your eye and your heart fixed upon the cross when you suffer
and the Spirit of glory and of God will rest upon you.
Stay near the cross when you
prosper. We
know that if a man who has been poor suddenly becomes rich, his marriage is
often put under a terrific strain. Suddenly he's a big shot ... he has lots of
power ... all kinds of stimulating people now become his friends. His wife who
struggled along with him during the hard years looks dull and worn ... he
begins to neglect her. When a Christian begins to prosper a similar temptation
comes to him. He feels self‑sufficient. He is tempted to forget God's
grace. What does he need God for? ... he's got everything. How necessary it is
when you prosper to keep your vision of
"Who has redeemed me, a lost and
condemned creature, from sin, death and the power of the devil, not with silver
and gold, but with his holy and precious blood, and with his innocent sufferings
and death." (Luther)
The
abiding place ... the place where you must stand if you are to remain God's
faithful child ... is that hill outside
Why
did Jesus link his crucifixion to bread and wine? ... to help us remember.
Jesus took the two basic foods of the human race and
bound them forever to the cross. He gave them bread ... "This is my body
given for you; do this in remembrance of me" ... remember. He gave them
wine ... "This is the blood of the New Covenant, shed for your sins. Do
this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me"... so you don't
forget.
God
help us to remember Jesus on the cross even when our minds grow dim and we forget everything else. For as long as we do, we
shall have his presence, his power, his compassion and
his holy peace.
WHAT IS A CHRISTIAN FOR?
If I
had the power to do it, there are several words which I would eliminate from
the vocabulary of organized Christianity. The first word I'd get rid of is the
word "stewardship."
In the New Testament the idea of being a steward meant something very wonderful
... the apostles thought of themselves as stewards of the mysteries of God. But
today when the word stewardship is used in organized Christendom, it means only
one thing ... money. If there is a
stewardship workshop somewhere, that's a training session on how to get more
money. If a man is given a job in the church called "stewardship secretary,"
we know he will be working on ways to motivate people to give more money. When
the pastor gives a stewardship sermon, he starts out talking about how a
Christian should use his time and talents … but he invariably ends his homily
with an emphasis upon treasure. There's nothing wrong with talking about money
in the church ... Jesus talked about it too ... but it's dishonest to try to
soften the approach by using misleading words like "stewardship."
The
second word I'd eliminate is the word "evangelism." It's a perfectly good word coming right
out of the New Testament ... but the New Testament writers wouldn't recognize
the way we use it today. The evangel in the New Testament had to do with giving
people something ... giving them the good news of what God did for the world in
his Son. Today in Christendom the word evangelism simply means getting people. Evangelism committees in our churches are
concerned with how to get members. Until this covetous connotation wears off
the word "evangelism" won't do so much good.
But
if there were only one word that I could strike out of the vocabulary of
organized Christianity, I'd leave "stewardship" and "evangelism"
alone and try to sink the word "layman."
It comes from a good New Testament Greek word,
It's
ingrained in the minds of organized Christians that the
When
the average churchgoer reads his Bible, he has his clergy-laity spectacles on.
He reads about Jesus and the disciples and sees them dressed in clerical robes.
Jesus is the bishop and the disciples are the pastors.
When Jesus takes his disciples apart by themselves to rest a while, that's a
pastor's retreat. When Jesus sends them forth to preach the kingdom and heal
the sick, that's an ordination sermon. Then of course there's the multitude
sitting on the grass listening to Jesus preach. These are the laymen ... the
ordinary Christians sitting in church.
So the clergymen are the disciples ... the fellows who are
really spending their lives in this thing ... the chaps who are really close to
Jesus ... the full‑time Christian servants. And the laymen, why, they're
the multitude. They come and listen, but they're only laymen. They're at this
thing on a leisure‑time basis.
This
is one of the biggest lies the devil has put over on the church. In the
In the city where
I live, it is possible to obtain certain privileges as a "clergyman."
If a policeman pulls a preacher over for exceeding the speed limit, when he
sees the collar he may give him a break ... "After
all, the man's a minister." Or if Pastor Sue goes to certain stores and
fills out a few forms, she may get a "clergy discount." Or when the
preacher walks into the garage the men may stop swearing ... "Sshh….here comes a preacher." But when the pastor stands
before the judgment seat of Jesus Christ, his funny collar won't be worth a
dime ... "But Lord, I'm a man of the
cloth ... I spent my life in your service."
"My service? Did I tell you to
wear the cloth? Did I give you the name Reverend? That backward collar doesn't
mean a thing ...
I'm looking at your life."
With
the religious establishment in
After
all, you're only a layman. But when you stand before the judgment seat of
Christ your layman's cloak won't be worth any more than the preacher's clerical
collar ... "Lord, I was only a layman."
"A
layman? What's that? You listened to my gospel ... you heard my commands ...
did you obey me or didn't you?"
If
what has been said so far is true ... if, in God's sight I'm not a clergyman
and you're not a layman (we're disciples if anything) ... then Jesus' instructions
to the disciples have relevance for us all. When he sends the disciples forth
to proclaim the
In
Christendom today there are churchloads of people
whose minds are stagnant, and whose spirits are dead ... ever learning but
never coming to the knowledge of the truth
because they are afraid to be ministers. They are afraid to go out into
the world and proclaim the
Why
do you think Jesus sent the twelve and commanded them to preach the
In
chapter six of John we see a very simple and beautiful
picture of what it means to be a disciple of Jesus Christ. On one side is a
multitude ... on the other stands Jesus with bread in his hands. Between Jesus
and that multitude, twelve men keep walking back and forth with their arms
loaded with food ... serving the people ... ministering to them ... satisfying
their hunger. That's how you spend your life when you are a disciple of Jesus
Christ.
The
bread in their hands stands for two things: the bread is, first
of all, the spoken word of God.
Read the entire sixth chapter of John and notice how the mystery of the bread
keeps unfolding until Jesus explains quite plainly, "It is the Spirit that quickeneth. The flesh profiteth
nothing. The words that I speak to you, they are Spirit
and they are life." If you are to take the bread from Jesus' hands
and give it to the multitudes out in the world, this means first
of all that you take the gospel of the kingdom that Jesus has been
unfolding to you within the church and proclaim it in the world. "Preach
the gospel to every creature ... make
disciples of all nations." Give to world missions indeed … give with
abandon ... but don't believe that this alone will satisfy God's demands in the
matter of discipling the world. You have to minister
this bread too. You have to tell the people of your
own personal world with your own lips about Jesus Christ. Remember, you're not
a layman you're a disciple.
But
the bread in the hands of the disciples stands for something else, something
which must always attend the spoken word of God ... it stands for power.
This is no ordinary bread ... this is the power of God that gives life to what
is corrupt and makes it pure, just as when Jesus told the woman to "go and
sin no more." This is the power of God that gives life to what is sick and
makes it whole, so that the lame walk and the blind
see and the lepers are cleansed. This is the power of God that gives life to
what is crooked and makes it straight. It can release a woman who has been bent
over with a spirit of infirmity for eighteen years or a man whose mind is
twisted by demons. When this power comes in, the crooks and tangles disappear.
And this power is to attend your ministry to the broken world out there.
When
Jesus tells you to heal the sick he is not ordering
you to run the doctors out of business any more than he did. He is telling you
to take the power of God which gives life and in his name
to bless people with it. Whenever you do, there will be a healing of some kind.
It may be a healing of the body, mind or spirit it may
heal a family or a neighborhood, or a broken friendship or an ailing church. "Heal
the sick that are therein and say to them, 'the
Does
this stagger you? ... the idea that you, weak as you are, have been sent out
into the world to preach the kingdom and heal the sick? What else are you here
for?
The
question is often asked, "What will we be doing in heaven when we get
there?" You can be sure that in heaven we will not be sitting on cushions
of idleness, bored to death. We shall be serving God. And if we ever hope to be
serving God in heaven, we'd better start serving him here. And there is only
one way you can serve God here ... by serving your neighbor. Take the bread
Jesus has put into your hands and give it to your brothers and sisters in the
world before it gets stale ... and before you get stale. This bread is the word
of God, which creates faith. This bread is the power of God to give life.
Opportunities
are coming your way constantly to speak about the living God and to bless men
in the name of his Christ ... use them! What else are you here for but to
preach the gospel and heal the sick?
Very
few of us live transparent lives, open for all to see. Few of us show ourselves
to the world exactly as we are without trying to guard some things from public
view. We are strongly inclined to carry on a continuous "public relations"
program with our fellow men. The good things about us are deliberately placed
out in front while the unpleasant things are buried from sight. If you are an
expert at checkers or if you are skillful with a musical instrument, you don't
mind a bit how widely this is known. If you happen to be a friend of the
congressman from your district or if you're an officer in the union, you don't
object if people mention this once‑in‑a‑while.
But
there are a few things you'd rather people did not know. Perhaps you made a
foolish mistake when you were young ... a mistake you've regretted a thousand
times. The very memory of it makes you feel ashamed. This you keep to yourself.
Or perhaps there is an odd habit that you engage in to quiet your nerves. Your
friends would rock with laughter if they knew. Maybe you chew rubber bands or
suck your thumb when no one is looking. Perhaps you're hysterically afraid of
thunder or dogs or germs or mice. Naturally you're not going to tell the world
about these things.
We let
the public see those things about us which will give us status and importance.
We hide those things which might make us the objects of ridicule or disdain.
The
fact that Peter was a disciple of Jesus was open and public for several years
... Peter was glad to be known as a disciple of Jesus. Who wouldn't be proud to
be associated with the greatest sensation to hit
"Are you really one of the disciples of Jesus?"
"Of course … I've been in this movement from the ground floor."
Peter had never had so much attention. Peter was never so important as
he was during those golden years. But suddenly everything changed. At noon on
one particular day it was still a mark of distinction
to be regarded as a disciple of this Jesus ... by midnight it was a disgrace.
Peter was still a disciple. He did not run away to hide like some of the
others. But now Peter wants to keep the fact that he's a disciple to himself
... he wants it to be a secret.
"Hey, you over there!
Weren't you with Jesus of Nazareth?"
"I don't know what you're talking about."
For
the first time since he began with Jesus it was dangerous to be known as a
disciple ... and Peter does the natural thing ... he denies Jesus. He's afraid
to admit to the world how much he loves that man they have on trial.
We
know what Peter was going through because the world we're living in has no more
time for Jesus Christ than the people in the palace of the high priest did on
that evil night. We too measure the risk. And how many times we do exactly as
Peter did ... we deny that we know Jesus. We act and speak as if we had no
connection with Jesus whatsoever. We're afraid to admit that we love him ...
that we call upon his name day by day ... that we commune with him constantly.
Mind
you, we're not ashamed to admit that we belong to
"Whosoever
therefore shall confess me before men, him will I confess before my Father
which is in heaven. But whosoever shall deny me before men, him will I also
deny before my Father which is in heaven."
Why
are we afraid to speak about Jesus? Why are we afraid to admit that we know
him? Why are we afraid to share the things he has told us? The answer is very
simple ... because what men think of us
means more to us than what God thinks of us.
"Among
the chief rulers also, many believed on him; but because of the Pharisees they
did not confess him, lest they should be put out of the synagogue: for they
loved the praise of men more than the praise of God."
Of course our tongues will never have the courage to confess
Jesus Christ out in the world until we settle this issue ... is our discipleship
to Jesus going to be a secret? Or are we prepared to let it be openly known and
suffer whatever the consequences may be?
Some
time ago I met a friend I hadn't seen since college days. In school he wasn't
exactly a radiant Christian. If he had any relationship with Jesus at that
time one would never have known it. In those days he
looked upon me as the Christian. He would ask questions and we would discuss
Christianity. I was always careful not to offend him... not to give the
impression of being a fanatic. I managed to keep his respect for my intelligence but I never brought him an inch closer to
knowing my Lord. During the intervening years this man came to know Jesus
Christ. And now as we met again, he didn't beat around the bush... he didn't
try to convince me of his sophistication. He talked quite simply and plainly
about the most important treasure of his life ... Jesus. I knew he was paying a price for
talking like that. He was allowing himself to be openly branded as an odd ball
and a fanatic... but this made no difference to him. He confessed without a
trace of affectation or self‑consciousness or shame that he was a
follower of Jesus ... and what a follower he is!
Since
I met this man, again, I've done a lot of thinking. I am convinced that if we
are ever going to find the liberty to speak of Jesus out in the world as we
ought to, there are three things we are going to have to stop:
1. We're going to have to stop being
ashamed.
Whosoever
shall be ashamed of me and of my words in this adulterous and sinful
generation, of him also shall the son of man be ashamed when he cometh in the
glory of his Father with the holy angels.
Why
do we hide our connection with Jesus Christ from the eyes of the world? ...
because we're ashamed. We're ashamed to let our friends and relatives and
enemies and associates know that we've thrown in our lot with Jesus Christ.
Look around you and see the courage of people who have attached themselves to
things far less than Jesus. They take hold of red-hot issues and turn all their
friends against them, but they're not ashamed. People are suffering and dying
for the cause of pacifism, world peace, civil rights, not in the name of God or
of his Son, but simply in the name of justice and decency. Where are the
Christians? ... hiding. They haven't even come out far enough
to admit that they're Jesus' disciples.
We
are utterly useless to God and his kingdom until we get over this hurdle of
being ashamed to acknowledge Jesus Christ before men. May God, by his Spirit,
replace our shame with divine boldness even as he did in the heart of Peter.
2. We're going to have to stop living a
double life.
We
laugh at the ethics professor at the university who inspires his pupils with
every lecture and looks like a saint if there ever was one. But every once‑in‑a‑while
he takes a Saturday train to the big city, forgets all his ethics and really "lives
it up." Is this very different from what we do when we come into our
churches and confess our faith in Jesus and pray our little hearts out... and
then we get lost in the world and act as though we never heard of Jesus Christ?
In many cases the name "Jesus" doesn't cross our lips from the time
we leave the door until we come back inside the following week ... except
perhaps in private prayer. But how can our private prayers be prayed in Jesus'
name if our daily life isn't lived in Jesus' name? If we are open about being
disciples in church God help us to be open about our discipleship in the world.
3. We're going to have to stop worrying
about the consequences.
The
reason we're so shy and secretive about our relationship to Christ is that we're
afraid of what might happen if people find out. Of course
something might happen! Suppose it does. Suppose everything you feared came to
pass. You take the cover off your relationship with Jesus
and you lose friends ... you lose the respect of many people… you become an
object of ridicule. Suppose you even suffer economic loss ... you become
poorer. Suppose you are even killed for being a disciple ... what does it
matter? If Jesus Christ is your Lord, isn't it more important for you to be
faithful to him than to be safe?
The
temptation which came to Peter that night in the palace of the high priest is
the foreshadowing of a temptation which every Christian has
to face. Sooner or later the world will put you in a position where you
will have to give an answer. Are you a disciple or are you not? You will be
tempted to deny it. Too many times we have done exactly what Peter did ... we
have flatly denied that we belong to Jesus Christ by our words, by our actions,
by our silence.
Until
we get over this elementary hurdle ... until we have the courage to say quite
simply and frankly to the world that we are followers of Jesus ... that we do
love him ... that he is our Lord, our Christianity will never amount to
anything more than a coward's game of hide and seek.
May
God through his Spirit supply to us the boldness we so desperately need, that
we may stop being ashamed ... stop living double lives ... quit worrying about
the consequences ... and let our relationship to Jesus be an open, clear,
public fact, never to be concealed from anyone again.
I'm
going to begin this section by making a confession to you. I want to confess an
attitude which is definitely not right and of which I
am ashamed. It's an attitude of annoyance and impatience with people who never
show up around the church except when they want something ... people who use the church and what it offers
but never even take the trouble to come and worship the God who made these
blessings available to them.
I'll
be quite frank with you ... I get annoyed by parents
who send their children to Sunday School but never show their face
themselves... or by couples who come to get married and that's the last we see
of them ... or by folks who ask for counsel when they're in trouble, but when
the trouble is past they don't even offer a prayer of
thanksgiving.
What's
the matter with these people? Don't they have any gratitude in their hearts?
Don't they have the decency to show a little appreciation?
Gradually
as you get older and smarter, you become like the shrewd clerk in a furniture
store. You gain the ability to spot the customer who is going to buy and the
fellow who's just there to waste your time ... and you gauge yourself
accordingly.
You
say to yourself, "I have only so much time ... why should I waste it on
people who are never going to come to church anyway?" You start aiming at
people who appear to be likely prospects and avoiding those who are only after
the free samples.
Now
you may say to me, "What's wrong with that? It's just common sense to
cultivate those who are going to amount to something and to forget the rest."
And indeed it would make sense if our object were to build up a
large, wealthy organization… if all we cared about were more numbers and a bigger
budget. But God forbid that this should ever be our aim.
Now,
indeed, if our churches continue to grow, may God be praised ... if our
congregations should outgrow their buildings, may God be praised ... if multitudes
should come from the east and west to sit down and partake of the blessings of
God in our midst ... God be praised! BUT... our congregations are not here
just to feed themselves and extend themselves and enlarge themselves and exalt
themselves. Congregations are here to
minister the healing grace of Jesus Christ to all men, whether they say "thank
you" or not.
Yes,
Jesus was disappointed with the response he got ... "Were not ten
cleansed? Where are the nine? Are there not found any to return and give glory
to God except this stranger?"
But
suppose the next day our Lord meets ten more lepers who cry, "Jesus,
Master, have mercy on us!" Do you think that now he's going to be more
cautious? Do you think he'll say, "Listen you lepers...
I had a bad experience yesterday. Before I heal you I
want to know how many of you will promise
to return and give thanks. If I heal you, will you be Christians and go to
church?"
You know
very well that Jesus never put strings on his healings or his feedings or his
sermons ... these blessings were free to everybody whether they turned around
and gave thanks or not.
And
Jesus went on through his ministry giving healing and grace to anybody who
asked, knowing full well that nine out of ten in the end would turn around and
crucify him ... yet he loved them ... he blessed them ... he poured out his
life for them. "I came not to call the righteous, but sinners to repentance."
He didn't come to give his blessings to a few good people, but to all.
What
you and I have been trying to do all too often is to find that one grateful
chap of the ten before we do anything. We say to ourselves, "Why waste
time trying to bless all ten lepers when we know very well that only one of
them will ever amount to anything? Let's narrow it down ... let's save our
blessings for the people who look like they're going to come through."
But
in the healing of the ten lepers Jesus shows us that if we are going to follow
in his steps and do his will, we're going to have to get used to one thing ...
we're going to have to get used to the idea that WE HAVE A MINISTRY TO THE
UNGRATEFUL. Nine out of ten people to whom we minister the grace of God won't
even so much as tip their hat. But we minister to them anyway ... and we go on
ministering all our lives, spending ourselves, pouring out our very best, even
if nobody falls
down and gives God glory.
How
many so‑called "Christian workers" become hard and cynical, whining and feeling sorry for themselves because nobody was
grateful. "I gave those people the best years of my life and they never
appreciated it!" Why the surprise? Didn't you learn years ago in your
Bible that the bulk of our ministry is to the ungrateful?
If we serve as
Christians merely to have people appreciate us we won't
be Christians very long because everything God does in this universe is done
on the principle of scattering the seed. Thousands of acorns hit the ground
before one oak tree takes root and grows. Thousands of eggs are produced before
one ever completes the cycle and becomes a butterfly. Look at the vast
multitudes to whom Jesus preached the gospel of the kingdom ... yet when he was
finished he had only a handful with him.
"And
as he entered into a certain village there met him ten men who were lepers, who
stood afar off and lifted up their voices and said, 'Jesus, Master, have mercy
on us!"'
Nine
of those men he's never going to see again ... nine of those ten won't even
look back to say, "Thanks." ... nine may never enter the kingdom of
heaven. But this made no difference to Jesus. He healed all ten. "Go show
yourselves to the priests." And as they went they
were cleansed.
This
is how it must be done to this very hour. The congregation that gathers in your
church building week‑by-week has a ministry ... not just to people with
warm and tender hearts, not just to people who look like they might join, not
just to the leper who is going to say, "Thanks," BUT TO ALL TEN
LEPERS who are standing afar off crying for the grace of God, even though nine
of them will soon forget.
Those
ten lepers ... those people at a distance ... those people who have drifted
away from Christ, or have never known him, or wouldn't be caught dead inside a
church ARE YOUR MINISTRY. As you get to know them where you work or live or go
to school, you find that their hearts are just crying for some
kind of healing. And they're crying out to you.
They
may not come up to you and cry, "Show me the way of salvation!" More often than not their cry is quite the opposite: "What
do you go to church for? ... there is no God!" Or they may point to the
Bible on your table and comment, "Do you really believe that stuff?"
But what they're really trying to say is, "Where is God? ... Does he care
about me? ... How can I find him?"
Once
these people come to you and cry for help in whatever peculiar way they express
it, you have no choice. Even if you know that they'll drop you like a hot
potato when they're out of the mood or out of trouble ... THIS MAKES NO
DIFFERENCE ... go to the ungrateful and minister to them with your best.
Go to
the ungrateful, believing three things:
1. Go
to the ungrateful believing, that you
have been sent by Jesus Christ.
"As the Father hath sent me, even so send I
you."
I don't
know why God sent his Son to bow his sacred head and give his precious blood
for unworthy, ungrateful creatures like you and me. I don't know why, in the
But I
know this ... that the same Jesus who did these things now breathes on you as
you read these words and says to you, "As the Father hath sent me, even so
send I you. Freely ye have received, freely give. Never mind how they respond!
Minister to them the grace which I have given you."
I'm not preaching
because I hope that people will remember me in their wills. I'm preaching
because I believe that Jesus Christ sent me. And when you go out and minister
to others, you're not expecting bouquets and rewards from men ... you're going
because Jesus Christ sent you!
2. Go
to the ungrateful believing that you
have the power to heal their sin.
The awful disease
of leprosy, where the skin turns white and rots and falls off until the victim
dies, is a picture of the sin which besets us all. The leper had to stand at a
distance and say, "Unclean! 'Unclean!" so no one would come near.
So the sinner stands at a distance from God and from all
men. The uncleanness in his heart walls him off in a world of his own no matter
how extroverted he may appear. But if you are a disciple of Jesus Christ you've
been cured. And you have the power that will cure them. The Christ in you can
forgive that sin and remove that guilt and make that leper clean ... believe it!
There
are people who believe they've been sent by Jesus Christ
but they don't believe that they have any power. Friend, Jesus doesn't send you
out without giving you power.
Then
Jesus said to them again, "Peace be unto you. As the Father
hath sent me, even so send I you." And when he had said this, he breathed
on them and said unto them, "Receive ye the Holy Spirit. Whosoever sins
ye remit, they are remitted unto them, and whosoever sins ye retain, they are retained."
To
whom did Jesus speak these blessed words? To preachers alone? Heaven forbid! ... to
every disciple. If you are a disciple, you carry in you the power to
forgive sin in the name of the Master. Jesus expects you to exercise this
healing power. Why do you think he gave it to you? Don't be afraid to proclaim
the fact of forgiveness to every tormented leper whose heart cries out for
mercy to the Christ who lives in you.
3. Go
to the ungrateful believing that
there will always be that one‑out‑of‑ten (or one out of a hundred) who will
turn and throw his life down at Jesus' feet, giving him thanks.
Somewhere among
those ten lepers who will stand at a distance and cry to you tomorrow there is
one ... which one only God knows ... who will surprise you. As you serve all
ten this one person will begin to respond in a different way ... his life will
change ... he will step out from the group and begin to give God glory. But
that one person will never be found until, like our Lord, we minister to all,
whoever they are, whether they say "Thank you" or not.
God,
help us to do this ... God give us eyes to discern those ten lepers who are
already waiting ... God give us the compassion of his Son to minister to them
his healing and his forgiveness, no matter how ungrateful they may be.
The
next time some famous healing evangelist comes to your town go and see what's
happening. You may not enjoy the singing ... you may be unimpressed by the
preaching ... the altar call may seem forced and the
healing line may appear overdone. But look at the sea of faces gathered there;
there may be thousands of them. Ask yourself, "What brought them here? Why
did they come on their crutches and in their wheelchairs with their aches and
pains and worries and fears?"
The
magic word of course is healing
... they want to be healed or they want to
see other people healed.
The
healing evangelist knows, and we know, that most of the people who go limping
up the ramp for the laying-on‑of‑hands are going to go limping down
again. Many of those who praise the Lord that their headache is gone will
find, when the excitement is over, that the pain is still there. Yet the
healing evangelist, and the vast crowds that follow him, and the fantastic sums
of money that flow into his elaborate organization, are living proof of the
deep hunger in the hearts of all men for the healing of Christ.
People
are still looking for the Christ "who went about doing good and healing
all that were oppressed of the devil, for God was with him." People are
looking for men who have God with them and who manifest God's goodness by
healing the sick. And they have a
perfect right to look for this healing Christ ... and to feel cheated when they
are offered an emaciated substitute Christ who never does anything but hang in
a picture frame and look piously upward while studio lights play softly upon
his freshly shampooed tresses.
The
Christ who came from the wilderness into Galilee preaching the
And
he showed me a pure river of water of life, clear as crystal proceeding out of
the throne of God and of the Lamb.
There
is a river, the streams whereof shall make glad the City of
Perhaps
in the age to come this river of life will be a visible, physical thing ... we
may be able to reach down and touch it or drink it or bathe in its waters. But
right now the river of life which flows through the
world is not like the
God
may be pleased to use famous healing evangelists from time to time to answer
the heart‑cries of some poor thirsting souls who have never been shown
the healing side of Christ. But the real healers are not the chaps who blast
away at the devil in front of microphones and video cameras and glaring lights.
The real healers are the disciples who leave the gathered fellowship on Sunday
morning filled with the Holy Spirit and quietly and confidently go back into
the world with power to forgive sins in Jesus' name.
Then said Jesus to them again, "Peace be unto you. As the Father hath sent me, even so send I you." And when he
had said this, he breathed on them and said unto them, "Receive ye the
Holy Spirit. Whosoever sins ye remit, they are remitted unto them, and whosoever
sins ye retain, they are retained."
This
is where the healing stream begins… in this blessed twentieth chapter of John
where Jesus appeared to the disciples alive from the dead and told them four
things:
1. Peace be unto you. (Your sins are forgiven, you have peace
with God.)
2. As the Father hath sent me even so send I you.
3. Receive ye the Holy Spirit.
4. Whosoever sins ye remit they are remitted unto them and whosoever sins
ye retain they are retained.
These
four things are Jesus' "sending forth" message to his disciples
today. With these four statements Jesus transforms them into "a
river, the streams whereof shall make glad the City of
Peace be unto you. Perhaps in the pressure of daily living you often lose
the peace of God ... your mind becomes tense and uneasy ... you get so worked
up about your problems that you forget where you are going. Then Sunday comes
and you gather with fellow believers ... you pray for his peace to return to
you.
At last the Lord begins to speak. As always
his first word is, "Peace." He says it with authority as if he were
addressing the stormy
"Peace I leave with you, my peace I give unto you. Not as the
world giveth give I unto you. Let not your heart be troubled, neither let it be
afraid ... "
Your
sins are forgiven ... God holds nothing against you ... you are safe. And as
that peace begins to sink in you, yourself are healed. Your mind and spirit are
healed and many times your body.
But now that you have this peace, what are you going to do with it? Are
you going to sit down and bask in it? Are you going to lie down and sleep with
it? Or wrap it in a napkin and tuck it in a drawer for safekeeping? Not God's peace. There is only
one way to keep it ... spread it ...
give it to others. "Blessed are the peacemakers for they shall be called the children
of God."
Hence
Jesus' second word to you. As the Father
hath sent me even so send I you. You are the healing stream. "Behold,
I send you forth," says the Lord Jesus.
What
makes your church a church? Certainly not the bells in the tower or the organ
or the preacher or the choir or the altar or the candles. It becomes a church
when the people carry the healing of Jesus Christ to their brothers and sisters
in the world… when they live like men and women who have been sent to heal the
brokenhearted and deliver the captives... when they flow out of the building
Sunday‑by‑Sunday as a river of healing water.
Perhaps
you are saying that you don't feel like a healer. You feel that your own life
is too full of wounds and stains to bring healing to someone else. Then listen
to Jesus' third word to you. Receive ye the Holy
Spirit. There's the power. Not your wisdom or your love or your anything
... God's. The healing water is the
Spirit of God and you are the channel.
But
you have to receive
the Holy Spirit. If someone were to walk up to you today and tell you to
purchase the
I can
remember my reaction the first time someone asked me whether I had ever
received the Holy Spirit."... I was insulted. What do you mean, receive
the Holy Spirit? Don't I have the Holy Spirit? "If any man have not the Spirit of Christ, he is none of his,"
wrote Paul. How could I believe in Christ if I didn't have the Holy
Spirit? And yet, receiving the Holy
Spirit is not a once-and-done thing, as we discover as we read the fourth
chapter of Acts.
Whenever
Jesus sends us forth to heal, he breathes over us again just as he breathed
over the disciples and says, "Receive the Holy Spirit."
Then it is up to us to open our hearts and breathe in what our Lord has
breathed upon us, letting the Spirit possess us wholly ... he must be allowed
to have full control.
Now
you emerge from your church filled with the Holy Spirit. What do you do with
this gift? How do you bring healing to the world? Very simple ... you heal by
making real to those wounded souls out there that God has forgiven their sins. What healing there is in
knowing this forgiveness!
Now,
in what ways can you make this forgiveness real?
1.
You can forgive sins in the Lord Jesus' name through intercession. When people
are sinning against you, pray for them that they may be forgiven. When men put
our Lord on the cross, his first words were, "Father, forgive them for
they know not what they do." When they began to stone Stephen to death, he
cried, "Lord, lay not this sin to their charge." There is a healing
which flows every time you pray for the forgiveness of those who are wronging
you.
You
have many opportunities to impart forgiveness through intercession.
There
are people who hurt you, neglect you, take advantage of you ... pray their
forgiveness and you become their healer under God.
2.
You can forgive sins in Jesus' name by pointing to his cross. When someone
comes to you all tangled up in guilt, driving himself to death on the treadmill
of dead works, you can point to the cross and say, "Look ... see what
Jesus has already done for you ... trust him that the price has already been
paid."
Most
people, even church‑going people, still don't realize that they've been
forgiven. They don't understand what the cross means or how to enter into the forgiveness purchased for them there. So they are driving themselves… or running away from
themselves ... or trying to hide from God.
What healings will occur when you tell those troubled souls that they
are now forgiven if they will only accept the gift. Their sins are now covered
... the war is over ... Christ has conquered.
3.
And after they have told you their burdens, and you have prayed with them, you
can forgive sins (hold on to your seat) by saying directly to this person as if you
were the priest in the confessional ... "In
the name of Jesus Christ, your sins are forgiven."
There
are times when it is impossible to explain the facts of the gospel to a person
when you have to stand up in the name of Jesus and
speak with no "ifs" or "buts" directly to that troubled
conscience, "Be clean! You are forgiven!"
When
some tormented brother comes to you and confesses a sea of filth and ugliness
it is best not to say very much ... it is best just to listen. When he's
finished don't give him a lot of advice ... pray with him and at the end of
your prayer, in the name of Christ, declare him absolved of all the sins he
confessed ... and he will be healed.
"Whosesoever
sins ye remit they are remitted unto them and whosesoever sins ye retain they
are retained." This does not mean that we are to go strutting
through the world arbitrarily marking this man for heaven and that man for
hell. God have mercy on all who play the role of judge, which belongs only to
God. The Lord Jesus simply commands us to impart the forgiveness of the cross
to all who will accept it, leaving those who insist on retaining their sins to
the mercy of God. Jesus gives us authority as his disciples to impart his blood‑bought
forgiveness to any man or woman who will receive it. If a man or woman is
confronted with God's grace and rejects it with their
eyes open then their sins are retained … but this is their choice and never
ours.
Our
task is to make forgiveness real to those around us ... not just to mouth the
words of the gospel. The world is sick of hearing Christian Pharisees telling
them that "Jesus died for your sins," while resentment is written all
over their own faces.
If I'm going to
heal others by imparting the forgiveness of Christ I've
got to practice forgiveness
down to the tip of my toes. It won't do to repress the grudge or squelch the
bitterness or grit my teeth as my enemy passes by. I
must forgive.
You
will make the forgiveness of the cross real to men and women around you by
incarnating that forgiveness yourself ... by being a living embodiment of it …
by letting Christ in you move you to practice forgiveness utterly in your daily
life toward the very people who hurt you and neglect you and take advantage of
you.
Now
the healing stream will begin to flow. The Lord himself will work with you
confirming your words and following it with signs. Through you and all who
follow him, Jesus will continue what he began so long ago ... "to preach
the gospel to the poor ... to heal the brokenhearted ... to preach deliverance
to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind ... to set at liberty them
that are bruised..." This is Vital Christianity.
Remember
that soon ... sooner than you can imagine ... your day in the Vineyard will be
over. A new day will dawn. The kingdom of God which once lived invisibly in
your heart will then burst forth in indescribable glory and you will be, at
last, at your journey's end ... heaven … where;
"…eye
hath not seen nor ear heard, neither have entered into the heart of man the
things which God hath prepared for them that love him."
Maranatha Mirror Messages
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