NO LONGER CHILDREN
Jesus tells us that unless we
turn and become like children
we
will never enter the Kingdom of Heaven. But notice
in
what connection he says this. Jesus says this to the
disciples
and to us,
- because we are forever worried
about our
own greatness,
- because we compare ourselves
with one another,
- because our hearts become
anxious over the fact
that others aren’t showing us the
proper respect.
A little child doesn’t worry
about its greatness,
is not ashamed to be dependent on its
parents,
does not live behind a mask,
is
satisfied to be what it is.
A little child is open and teachable. In this
sense,
and
only in this sense, we are to be children all our
days. Children of the heavenly Father - open,
teachable,
dependent on Him.
But in every other respect
we are to grow up. We
are
to grow up into Christ, to be like Jesus.
Not Jesus in the manger.
But Jesus the man,
Jesus the Son who did the Father's will.
Jesus who accomplished the work lie was sent
here to do.
The tragedy is, that in the one
sense, Jesus commands
us to be children, we try to be
men - big shots, heavies.
And where Jesus calls us to function as mature men and
women of God, we insist on remaining babies.
- We want to be big shots when
it comes to
our relationship with God; and there we
should be children.
- We want to be big shots in
the sight of
other men; and there we should be as children.
But when it comes to the
warfare we have been put here
to live through - and win - we insist on remaining
infantile.
We want to go through our whole
lives -
excusing
our willfulness,
our stupidity,
our pettiness,
our
unreliable ways,
by saying, "But Lord, you know
me. I've never been
able to grow up."
But that's exactly what we're
called to do. We are
called to grow up.
Brethren, be not children in
understanding:
howbeit in malice be ye children, but in
understanding be men.
Until we all attain to the
unity of the faith
and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to
mature manhood, to the measure of the stature
of the fullness of Christ; so that we may no
longer be children, tossed to and fro and
carried about with every wind of doctrine, by
the cunning of men, by their craftiness in
deceitful wiles. Rather, speaking the
truth
in love, we are to grow up in every way into
him who is the head, into Christ.
1. A person who has grown up into Christ is no longer
gullible -
tossed to and fro and carried about by
every wind of doctrine.
When a man is a spiritual baby
it's understandable if he
is at times misled and talked into believing and doing
ridiculous things. God's angels have a
way of watching
over spiritual babes. And there will
come a time when
any man who has caused a spiritual babe to stumble will
pay an awful price.
But I see people who have been
following Jesus long
enough to know better - still letting themselves get
sucked into every new gust of wind that comes along.
Either they're running around solving problems they have
neither the power or the wisdom to cope with, or they're
forever delving into some new doctrine or pursuing some
new mystical experience or finding some new "New Testa-
ment Church" that claims to be the only one.
What's really happening is that
they're letting themselves
get corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.
- They're getting away from
Jesus Himself
into experiences, doctrinal positions,
exotic ministries.
- They're drifting farther and
farther from
the Cross and the Blood and the living Word
which
Jesus still speaks to their hearts if
they'd only listen.
The message of the Spirit to
such people is,
"Make up your mind.
Do you want to grow up
into Christ and be a man or woman of God, or
do you want to spend the rest of your life
as
a gullible babe tossed around by the winds
of the hour?"
2. A person who has grown up
into Christ has emerged
from the world of fantasy into the real.
A child's imaginary world is
wonderful.
- It can picture beauty in the
midst of
squalor.
- It can see enemies
lurking behind every tree.
- It can hear music that isn't there.
But when the child grows up and
becomes a man,
- he
no longer allows his imagination to
turn his life into a dream or a nightmare.
- He no longer retreats into
the world of
fantasy to escape his problems.
And as we pass from spiritual
infancy into manhood and
womanhood, the same thing must happen.
Shortly after we were reborn,
many of us entertained
fantastic
ideas about ourselves and what we could do.
We thought of ourselves as
budding healers,
prophets,
gifted problem solvers,
heavy teachers,
evangelists that were
going to set the world on fire. Our
imagination was at
work in us the way it's at work in any child.
Perhaps alone in our room,
kneeling in prayer, we
pictured ourselves casting out demons all over the place,
raising the dead by the dozen, and with the intuition
of
children, we managed to evade putting these fantastic
ideas about ourselves to the test, kept the pretend game
going (and many of us are still at it).
But the time comes when we have
to drop the fantasy and
face reality, and admit that we are living in a world
where nothing is that simple. Nothing
is simple but our
relationship with Jesus Christ.
And we have to accept the fact
that God didn't send us
to go charging around doing dramatic things - at
least
not yet. God sent us to work in His
vineyard in simple
down-to-earth ways.
- If we haven't even learned how to handle
money faithfully, how are we going to
be
safe with the power to heal?
- If we haven't learned to open
our eyes
wide
enough to see the world as it is,
how
are we going to bring the gospel to
bear
upon that world.
Behold, I send you as lambs
among wolves,
Be wise as serpents and
innocent
as doves.
3. A person who has grown up
into Jesus Christ is no
longer governed by moods.
How pitiful to see believers
who have been walking with
Jesus for some time,
- still
indulging in tantrums, spending days
on end in a pout, nursing grudges,
- still
jumping up and down in their favorite
mud puddle of self-pity,
- still
seeing how miserable they can make the
people who have to live with them.
Babies waddling from one
infantile mood to another when
we should long since have grown
up. People who have
fantastic insight and marvelous gifts destroying their
own effectiveness by insisting on dragging their childhood
emotional
behavior
right along with them.
God puts up with it for a while.
Then He says,
"Either grow up into my Son, or
baby yourself
to Hell."
4. A person who has grown up
into Christ keeps commitments.
Whenever scripture talks about
self control, that's
what it means. Self control is
not merely restraining
yourself from murder, rape, gluttony
and booze.
- It's making yourself do
what you're
committed to do.
- It's controlling yourself
right to where
you're supposed to be.
Self and flesh do not control
you, rather you, in the
power of the living Christ, control self and make it
obey.
Believers who are forever late,
missing work because
they have a headache, breaking appointments they make
with others because "something else came up" or because
"they don't have a peace about it", are still babies.
How could God possibly entrust
them with responsibility?
Some of us seem to be baffled
by the fact that we never
last in any one place very long. We
wonder why, within
a couple of years, our effectiveness seems to be gone.
Nobody takes what we say seriously any more.
Ask yourself before the Lord,
- Are you keeping your
commitments?
- Are you where you say you're
going to be
when you say you'll be there.
- Do you return what you
borrow?
- When you do a job, is it done
right, or
does
someone have to come behind you
and straighten it out?
Or, does it take you three days to do a day's work because
you're forever getting side-tracted into "spiritual talk"
or
spiritual meditation when you should be working?
5. A person who has grown up
into Christ no longer quits
when the going gets hard.
"Lord, I want to be baptized
with the Holy
Ghost and with fire!"
But as soon as the little fires
start coming;
little trials,
little hurts and disappointments,
minor danger, they're gone!
"Giving
all diligence to....add to self control
steadfastness."
Nobody expects an infant to be
steadfast. But without
steadfastness no man is a man or woman a woman.
To be a man or woman of God you
have to face the fact
that things will get rough. Jesus never
promised that
they'd be smooth.
And don't be looking around
worrying about whether the
Lord is going to lead your brother through a fire as
hot as yours or wondering whether Peter, James and John
didn't have it easier back there in those Technicolor
Bible days. Keep your eye on the road
God gave you to
walk and on the Savior who walks ahead of you, suffering
flames a million times hotter than your,
and keep going.
- In season and
out-of-season.
- When people smile, and when they turn their backs.
- Even when they start throwing rocks
and bottles.
- Even when brothers and sisters
start dropping away,
Lo, I am with you always,
even to the end
of the age.
Have I not commanded thee?
Be strong and
of good courage; be not afraid, neither be
thou dismayed: for the Lord thy God is with
thee wheresoever thou goest.
So that we may no longer be
children, tossed
to and fro and carried about with every wind
of doctrine, by the cunning of men, by their
craftiness in deceitful wiles. Rather,
speaking
the
truth in love, we are to grow up in every way
into
Him who is the head, into Christ.
Many of us have been clinging
to our spiritual infancy
instead of the Cross of Jesus Christ,
We've been trying
to hang on to the security and warmth and leisure, and
excuses that are permissible only to spiritual infants.
But my friends, God will not
allow our spiritual infancy
to extend forever. The Father is
telling many of us
that we now have to make up our minds. Either
grow up
into Jesus Christ and go on with Him where He leads,
or settle for a new babysitter.... whose name is Satan.
Take your choice.