THE
CHURCH IN THIS CITY
Chapter 6
OUR WORK OR HIS?
There is more to following Jesus than getting saved, joining a
church, and living a “good clean Christian life” until the trumpet
blows.
The call to follow Jesus is always a call to work.
“Go work in my vineyard...Here, trade with
this money until I return...Lift up your
eyes and see the fields ready for harvesting...
I
will make you fishers of men.”
In man’s order we have “religion” where the work is done by
missionaries and preachers while the rest of us provide a few painless
dollars. In God’s order the work is done by the entire Body. There
are no professionals. Everybody works. Everybody gives. Everybody
prays. Everybody rejoices as the harvest comes in.
But as we begin to catch on to the truth that we all share in
the actual work of proclaiming the gospel and gathering men
into the
kingdom, another danger arises: the danger that we get involved with
a work indeed, but a work which is not our Lord’s at all. We may be
busy with our work, excited about the progress we’ve been making and
planning for even greater things when suddenly the Lord is at the door.
“Let’s see what you’ve been doing.
“Of’ course, Lord. Look at all the members we
got for our church. Look at the reputation
I’ve built up among the saints. Look at the
sick I healed. Look at the signs I performed.
Look
at all the misguided believers I straightened
out with my pure doctrine.“
And he will answer;
“But where are the men and women of God I sent
you to bring to birth? And look at the condition
of the church in this city! While you were busy
building up your fellowship and your reputation,
the church in your city was floundering. While
you
were busy correcting all the saints on their
shoddy doctrines, their hearts were crying out
for encouragement. Your door was being stormed
by desperate souls looking for me, and you went
on building your own kingdom.“
We need to make sure that the work in which we are engaged as
fellowships of believers is really his work.
Are we harvesting men
for the kingdom or for our own cause? Are we edifying the church, or
enriching our own club?
Jesus told Peter to let down his net. The net came up full be-
ginning to break. Notice that Peter beckoned to his partners in the
other boat to come and help. Peter did not insist that the fish were
his since they came up in his net. He knew that he had no claim on
those fish. Peter didn’t draw those fish into his net. The power that
drew the fish into Peter’s net was not magic. Nor was it Jesus’
“charisma.” Nor was it the fact that Jesus was the Son of God, so
that
he can make those fish do anything he wants them to.
The Power That Draws
The power that drew the fish into Peter’s net was the same power
that drew people to Jesus, caused the bread to multiply in Jesus’
hands, made the water solidify under Jesus’ feet that stormy night on
Galilee. Jesus was moving toward a goal that was going to change the
destiny of this planet and everything on it. Although Jesus wasn’t
there yet, the heat of this baptism of fire which was soon to consume
him was already moving out upon his body and mind. Jesus knew well
why demons shouted his name, why those Greeks came looking for him at
his last passover, why children sang his praises. They were being
drawn to him by the power of his coming crucifixion. Somehow, by the
Father’s mercy, these people, and even the winds and waves and rocks
and trees, were being made to know that Jesus’ cross was their only
hope.
“And I, when I am lifted up from the earth,
(on
the cross), will draw all men to myself.”
What was it that attracted the multitudes to Jesus to hear the word
of God and be healed, but the power of the cross that was already burn-
ing in his heart? What drew that woman to the house of Simon the
Pharisee to wash Jesus’ feet with her tears and wipe them with her
hair?
It was the power of the cross which her tormented conscience could al-
ready see resting upon him in all its weight. What made Zacchaeus climb
the tree to get a look at him or drew that tortured demon-bound man out
of the tombs to cry to Jesus, or guided those mothers to bring their
little ones to Jesus to have him put his hands on them? It was as if
somehow they could already see the cleansing blood and were drawn by its
power.
When people who have even an ounce of integrity left in them see
the Lamb of God laying down his life to atone for their sins, when they
see holy, divine, self-emptying love doing the ultimate this love can
do: dying....they cannot help but be drawn. At Calvary they stood at
a distance, but the memory of that thing was something they could never again erase from their minds. It drew them.
You wonder why the ministry of the apostolic believers was so
effective in those early years after Pentecost? The answer is simple:
they relied on nothing but the word of the cross. Read the sermons in
Acts. Every one of them revolves around the cross. Peter’s sermon on
Pentecost:
“This Jesus, delivered up according to the
definite plan
and foreknowledge of God, you
crucified and killed by the hands of lawless
men. But God raised him up.
Or Peter’s sermon after healing the lame man:
“But you
denied the holy and righteous one
and asked for a murderer to be granted to you
and killed the author of life whom God raised
from the dead.”
This relentless testimony to the death and resurrection of Jesus
Christ
and the healing and the forgiveness that flowed from it drew men like a
magnet, not into some “church” but into the kingdom of God, the real
church.
Paul ministered on the same basis:
“For Christ did not send me to baptize, but to
preach the gospel, and not with eloquent wisdom,
lest the cross be emptied of its power. For
the
word of the cross is folly to those who are
perishing, but to us who are being saved, it is
the power of God.....
When I came to you brethren, I did not come
proclaiming
to you the testimony of God in
lofty words of wisdom. For I decided to know
nothing among you except Jesus Christ and him
crucified, and I was with you in weakness and
in much fear and trembling, and my speech and
my message were not, in plausible words of wis-
dom, but in the demonstration of the Spirit
and power, that your faith might not rest in
the wisdom of men, but in the power of God.”
To this day people wearing every conceivable front are inwardly beside
themselves trying to figure out what to do with this burden of guilt that
weighs on them. They know that the gimmicks they try for relief never
work. But when they see Jesus, not as the greatest man who ever lived,
nor as the prophet of all prophets, but as the Lamb of God who takes away
the sin of the world, they come.
If we draw men into our net by any other name or any other power than
by Jesus Christ and him crucified, we are doing our own work. And even
if we coat our ministries with Christian jargon, quote the Bible, say
prayers and pretend that we’re busy saving souls, these people
haven’t
been drawn to Jesus! They have been drawn to us. They start looking to
us for things that only Jesus can give and soon they’re disillusioned.
When someone else’s net comes up with a beautiful load, we’re
jealous.
When souls that came into our net decide to leave our boat and go to
another, we’re angry. And when the Master comes to try our work by fire
it all goes up in smoke.
Only if we draw men into our net by the power of the cross of Jesus
are we doing his work.. .or those who come into our net by the power of
the cross haven’t come to us at all. They’ve come to him, We have no
claim on. them. They are his exactly as we are his. And they will serve
him even as we serve him. And they will serve Jesus wherever Jesus
chooses to have them serve him. They may come into our net today. Six
months from today they may be serving Jesus in Windsor, Atlanta, Dallas,
Shanghai, or New York, praise God. They may come into our net today.
A year from today they may be working on the other side of town bearing
a hundred times more fruit than we, praise God! Then we are drawing
men and women into our net by the power of the cross, and our brother’s
net a mile away comes up five times heavier than ours, we rejoice with
him without a tinge of envy. For the work is the Lord’s and the glory
is his, and the only thing that matters is that human souls are drawn
to him and see him as he is.
Can we honestly say that in the place where God has put us to work
we have been relying on the power of Jesus Christ and him crucified?
That we are determined to know nothing else? To add nothing to the cross
If it is Jesus only and him crucified, then we are going to be working
in harmony with all who love
him, patient with those who consider us
doctrinally unsound, compassionate toward those who intentional1y twist
what they see or hear us do. We will go on working, for it is not our
work. We do not have to defend it. It is his work and it will be done
and it will bear fruit. -
May God help us remember that the power to draw people into the
kingdom has nothing to do with how well we can speak or how fine we
look or whether we have a heavy reputation. The power to draw men to -
the kingdom is in Jesus and him crucified.
“I will draw all men to myself. Let down your net.
And remember, - the work- is not yours, but mine.
And you will see things happen you never dreamed of.”
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