
Copyright - Zac Poonen (1995)
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CONTENTS
1.
God calls and prepares His servants
2.
God's strictness with His servants
3.
The Lord rebukes the elders
4.
An example for others to follow
5.
Dependence upon the Holy Spirit
CHAPTER ONE
GOD CALLS AND PREPARES HIS SERVANTS
God needs men to do His work,
because He has made His work on earth to be dependent on man. If the man God
calls is not ready, God’s work is delayed or hindered. However if one man fails
to respond to God’s call, God will call another.
God called Abraham when he was
in Ur, to leave his home and his relatives and to go into an unknown land. If
Abraham had been unwilling to obey, God would not have forced him. God would
have called someone else. And we would never have heard of Abraham.
It is a tremendous privilege
to be called by God to serve Him. But it brings with it a great and awesome
responsibility too.
In God’s perfect plan for the
descendants of Jacob, they were to spend exactly four centuries in Egypt. He
had told Abraham many years earlier that his descendants would be slaves
in a strange land for 400 years (Gen.15:13). But when
God finally delivered the Israelites from Egypt, they had spent 430 years in
Egypt (Exod.12:40).
Why did they have to spend 30
years longer than God’s perfect plan for them?
In all probability, because
Moses was not yet ready to lead them. To deliver the Israelites from Egypt, God
needed a man. But that man had to be prepared by God first to be a spiritual
leader.
God’s Servants Have To Be Broken
When Moses was 40, he was
strong in himself and felt qualified to be the leader of the Israelites. Yet in
God’s eyes he was not ready.
Acts 7:22 says that at the age of 40, “Moses was educated in
all the wisdom of the Egyptians and was powerful in speech and action.”
(Living). When Moses visited his Israeli brethren one day, he saw one of
them being unjustly treated by an Egyptian. He defended the Israelite and
killed the Egyptian. He thought that the Israelites would recognise him thus as
their God-appointed leader. But they did not
Moses still did not understand
what it was to be a servant of God.
And so God took Moses out into
the wilderness to break his confidence in his human strength and wisdom. In
God’s perfect plan, that training was probably scheduled to take only 10
years. But it took 40 years instead, for Moses to be broken.
And so the Israelites had to
wait for 30 more years - for their leader to be ready.
God’s plans can be delayed
when God’s leaders are not broken in time. God has an appointed time-period in
which we must be broken. We cannot shorten that time-period. But we can
lengthen it, if we do not yield to God’s training. If we are hard and
unyielding, we ourselves will lose much. And God’s work also suffers.
We may see ourselves, like
Moses, well-taught in the doctrines of Scripture, knowing the whole counsel of
God, anointed with the Holy Spirit and in our own eyes, as “men of power in
words and deeds” (Acts 7:22). We may even be concerned, as Moses was, about
our defeated and oppressed brothers. And so, we may imagine that we are well-equipped
to serve God. But we are not.
We may be eloquent in our
speech (“mighty in words”) as Moses was. The mere fact that others are
willing to listen to us preach for one hour proves nothing, for people are
willing to listen to political leaders for even two or three hours!! We have to
be careful that we don’t seek to do God’s work with our natural resources.
The more gifted we are, the
more we are in danger of depending on our human abilities to serve God. That’s
why we need to be broken.
The Israelites did not have
confidence in Moses. God also did not have confidence in him to appoint him as
their leader. How can a man lead others when neither God nor man has confidence
in Him?
We may consider ourselves as
fit for God to use as His representatives. But God may not think so. If we are
to do an effective work for the Lord, we must have the attestation of God on
our ministry. And He won’t attest our ministry until we are broken.
Once Moses was broken, the
same man who was once mighty in words, finally said, “Lord, I cannot speak”
(Exod.4:10).
How did God break Moses? He
sent him into the wilderness. There Moses got married and had to live with his
wife’s parents in their home. It is amazing how quickly one can be broken when
he has to live in helpless dependence upon his in-laws!! That was how God broke
Jacob too, many years earlier.
It was in Moses’ home
situation (with his wife and children, and in-laws) and in his work
situation (looking after his father-in-law’s sheep) that God broke him and humbled
him. And that education took 40 years. God was willing to wait. And God’s
people had to wait too - for God’s man to be ready.
God is waiting even today.
There are many places in India where there are needy souls who need to be built
together as the Body of Christ. But God is waiting for men whom He can find,
whom He can break and prepare, to be used as His servants to build that Body.
That is why we need to see our
home and work situations as God’s University. The tense
situations that we face with our in-laws and other family members are all part
of God’s education process whereby He prepares us to be His servants. He is
teaching us something more than doctrine in these situations. He is breaking
us.
But how few God finds who
submit to Him, as clay in the potter’s hand. Most trainees rebel and refuse to
die to themselves - and so God sets them aside.
What Moses learnt in those 40
years was not doctrine. Doctrine can be learnt in a very short time, if one has
a clever mind. But it takes time to be broken. It is not easy to be rooted
and grounded in small thoughts about ourselves at all times.
We may not consider ourselves
as important people when we are in the midst of more mature believers. But when
we go to our own home-churches, there we can begin to think we are quite
important. That’s the danger. God has to break us so thoroughly that we
recognise ourselves as the least of all the saints, everywhere we go.
God Calls Young Men
Jesus called very young people
to be His apostles. Many think that to be an apostle one must be at least 60 or
65 years old. But Jesus chose 30-year-olds to be His first apostles. Jesus
Himself was only 33-1/2 when He died. And the eleven apostles were all younger
than Him - for we know that rabbis among the Jews always chose people younger
than them as their disciples. John may have been only 30 on the day of
Pentecost.
When Jesus called these young
men, He didn’t look at their experience, but at their wholeheartedness. On the
day of Pentecost these young men were anointed with the Holy Spirit and
equipped supernaturally to be apostles of the Lord. Their experience and
maturity came later. Timothy too became an apostle as a very young man (1
Tim.4:12).
God calls young men to His
service even today. But they must remain humble. The main danger that faces any
young man who has been called of God, is spiritual pride.
I have seen many tragic cases
in India, of young men called of God to be His servants, who have fallen from
their calling. In some cases, as soon as God began to use them in some way,
they got puffed up - and God had to set them aside, because they took the glory
to themselves that belonged to God. In some other cases, they sought worldly
comfort, and ended up as paid workers of Western Christian organisations that
paid good salaries. Thus they went astray like Balaam. And in yet other cases,
they were attracted by pretty Delilahs, and lost their anointing like Samson.
Thus these fine young men sacrificed the calling of God and their anointing,
for gaining man’s honour and money or for satisfying their lust for pretty women.
Where are the prophets of
God in India today who speak forth God’s Word fearlessly, and who do not care
for money, or for pretty women or for the approval of men? They are rare to find. Those who were called of God
have mostly fallen by the wayside.
The sacrifices of God are a
broken and contrite spirit. If we are broken and humble, God will always use
us. But the day we think we have become somebody, because of the great
revelations that we have received, or because of the tremendous ministry that
God has given us, we have started backsliding. God will then set us aside.
We may still retain our
position as elders in some church. But we will discover in eternity that we
have wasted our lives.
God Calls “Zeroes”
In 1 Corinthians 3:5,
Paul asks the question “What then is Apollos and what is Paul?”. We
would reply that Paul was a mighty apostle of the Lord, who had raised the
dead, established many churches, and even written Scripture. But he says of
himself, “What is Paul? A SERVANT”. That was his opinion of himself
until the end of his life. No wonder Paul never fell by the wayside.
The moment we begin to think
of ourselves as anything other than servants of others, we have begun to
backslide.
Paul says further, “I
planted, Apollos watered”. Which of the two is greater? The one who plants
- who goes as a pioneer to an unreached area and does a work for God where
nothing existed before? Or the one who comes along later and waters the plant
through the teaching of God’s Word and encouragement, and builds the believers
into a Body? The answer is “Neither”. Both are “nothing” - says
Paul (v.7). Both are zeroes. Only God - Who caused the plant to grow -
is everything.
Paul considered himself a zero
until the end of his life. And so God could use him till the end of his life.
God was everything to Paul.
The Lord needed a donkey once
to speak to Balaam. He needed a donkey at another time to ride into Jerusalem.
And He has need of donkeys even today for His purposes. Who are we then? Just
donkeys whom the Lord has picked up, to speak through, or to ride on.
Wherever brothers are willing
to be nothing so that God might be everything there will never be any
competition among them as to who is considered to be the most spiritual or the
greatest etc.,
Whenever a person tries to
project himself as the leader of a group, God will put him on the shelf. It is
true that every church must have leaders. But the leader is someone whom God
selects.
And if God gives another
brother the grace to be recognised by the others as their leader, we should be
quick to humble ourselves and accept that fact. If however, we become jealous
of his ministry, or covet his position, we will become agents of Satan who
hinder the building of the Body of Christ in our locality.
God in His sovereignty knows
who is the best person to lead any church. And He doesn’t look for the clever
and the intelligent. He chooses those who are weak and broken and those who
realize that they are zeroes.
Have we realized that?
CHAPTER TWO
GOD’S STRICTNESS WITH HIS SERVANTS
The Word of God teaches us one
thing from beginning to end - that God requires much from those to whom He
commits much. God is strict with His servants because He has committed much
to them.
When Moses was on his way to
Egypt, after being commissioned by God at the burning bush, we read that God
tried to kill him (Exod.4:24). That is amazing, considering the fact
that God had just called him to His service. And Moses was the only man on
earth who was fit to fulfil that task. He was the most important person on
earth for the fulfilling of God’s purposes, and God had spent 80 years training
him!! Why then did God want to kill Moses?
Moses’ wife, Zipporah, not
being a Jew, had not believed in circumcising their son. And Moses had
submitted to his wife’s opinion, and disobeyed God. Moses was now going to be
the leader of God’s people. And yet here he was pleasing his wife and
disobeying God in his own home. When Moses was dying, Zipporah knew at once the
reason for her husband’s illness. So she circumcised her son immediately. Only
then did God spare Moses’ life.
There we can see that God does
not tolerate any compromise or disobedience or wife-pleasing in His servants.
If we are to lead God’s people, we must be totally obedient. There is no
partiality with God. He will judge even His most eminent servants if they
disobey Him.
The Importance Of Patience
When Moses was 120 years old,
God punished him again. And this time the punishment was not lifted. God had
told him to speak to the rock for the water to flow. But Moses lost his
temper and hit out at God’s people first and then hit the rock too (Num.20:7-13).
That looks like a small mistake to us. But it was serious in God’s eyes.
Moses spoke angrily to the
people saying, “Listen now, you REBELS...” (Num.20:10). The implication
there was that all the people were rebels, whereas Moses himself was not! But
Moses too was a rebel for he disobeyed God the very next moment. God was not
happy with such speech. God’s Word says that “it went hard with Moses,
because he spoke rashly with his lips” (Psa.106:33).
Do we see the rebellion there,
in the very act of hitting out at God’s people? We often speak, without God
having told us to speak.
The Bible says, “Let
everyone be quick to hear, slow to speak and slow to anger - because the anger
of man does not achieve the righteousness of God” (Jas.1:19,20).
When we see a problem in our
home or our church that needs to be sorted out, what do we do? Do we speak and
act quickly, without waiting on the Lord? If so, then it is no wonder that we
fail and bring confusion into our home and into the church.
It is at such times that we
must remember that our anger cannot achieve the righteousness of God. When we
are not at rest in our hearts, but agitated with another, the best thing we
can do is keep quiet. That way we will at least not do any damage to God’s
work.
It is a serious thing to be a
servant of God. We cannot take such a responsibility lightly. God’s servants
have tremendous authority. But they have to be extremely watchful that they are
obedient to God in the smallest thing - especially in their speech.
Once when Moses’ sister Miriam
had criticized him, he kept quiet and did not reply. The Holy Spirit’s approval
of Moses’ reaction is found in His recording there that Moses “was more
humble than any man who was on the face of the earth” (Num.12:3). On
another occasion, when Korah gathered others in rebellion against Moses and
questioned his authority, again Moses did not get provoked, but fell on his
face and kept quiet (Num.16:4). Why didn’t he keep quiet at Meribah,
when the people rebelled against him? Why did he have to speak rashly towards
the tail-end of his life?
Patience is the primary
mark of a servant of God (2 Tim.2:24) - and of an apostle (2
Cor.12:12). We can be patient for a long time and keep falling on our faces
again and again. But the question is whether we will keep on “entrusting our
cause to Him Who judges righteously” until the end of our lives, or whether
we will begin to justify and defend ourselves, after we have endured for some
years (1 Pet.2:23). God will never allow us to be tried or tested by
anyone at any time, beyond our ability (1 Cor.10:13). But He will allow
us to be tested to the limit of our strength. He will however give us
grace to be patient, if we are willing to die to ourselves, our rights and our
reputation.
May God help us all to be men
who will fall on our faces, when we are insulted and badly treated - today,
tomorrow, next week, next month, next year, and until the end of our lives.
Moses would have entered
Canaan if he had fallen on his face at Meribah. He missed so much by being
careless at just one point towards the end of his life. There have been many
other servants of God like that, who lived in faithfulness for many years, and
then became careless and slipped up towards the end of their lives. Thus they
ruined God’s plan for their lives.
On an earlier occasion, we
read that God had punished the Israelites with the same punishment that He gave
Moses - not being permitted to enter Canaan. But they had rebelled against God TEN
TIMES (Num.14:22). God gave the Israelites ten chances, before
punishing them. But He gave Moses only ONE chance. Why? Because God
expected more from Moses than from the Israelites.
The Israelites had seen only
God’s external actions, but Moses had understood God’s ways,
having spoken with God face to face (Psa.103:6). If we represent God and
preach His word, He will expect ten times more from us than from others in our
church.
God’s servants cannot be
careless in their speech, even when they are provoked. Only when they learn to
eliminate worthless words from their speech, can they become God’s spokesmen (Jer.15:19).
The Importance Of Total Obedience
Saul was another man whom God
chose to lead Israel. Saul never wanted to be a king. It was God Who placed him
on the throne of Israel. And when the Israelites came to make him king, Saul
hid himself, saying, “Who am I to be the king? My family is the least of all
the families of Israel” (1 Sam.10:21,22). What a humble man he was!
But it wasn’t long before Saul
became big in his own eyes and God had to take away the anointing from him.
In 1 Samuel 15, we read
that Saul modified God’s commands and did not kill everything of Amalek,
as God had commanded him to. He followed his own reason, and did what pleased
the people. This is what happens when anyone becomes big in his own eyes. And
here we see two of the greatest snares that every servant of God faces -
the opinion of his own reason and the opinion of other people. Saul lost
his anointing because he allowed himself to be influenced by these two factors.
We have no right to modify any of God’s commands according to our own wisdom.
And if we seek to please men, we “cannot be servants of Christ” (Gal.1:10).
If Saul had remained small in
his own eyes, he would have retained the anointing until the end of his life.
But he began to love his throne. And that is how many another servant of God
has lost his anointing too. Standing repeatedly before people, as God’s
spokesmen, has a way of going to our heads, if we are not watchful.
But Saul did not only cling on
to being king. When he saw an anointed younger brother (David) coming up, and
others having confidence in him, he schemed to suppress him. He was jealous of
David, because David had a faith that Saul did not have. And he wanted to kill
David because the people admired him.
But does God ignore the
actions of such Sauls - who stick to their thrones, even after God has rejected
them? For a long time God may spare them. In Saul’s case, God spared him for 13
years. David was about 17 years old when he killed Goliath. But he became king
only when he was 30. For 13 years after David had been anointed by God, God
allowed Saul to continue to rule as Israel’s king.
What lesson does all of this
have for us?
God may allow us, even after
we have become backsliders, to stay on in a ministry, long after we have
lost the anointing of the Spirit.
Others may not
recognise that we have lost the anointing, because of their lack of
discernment. So they may continue to accept us as servants of God, because they
respect our age or Bible knowledge or experience. But we must not imagine that
such acceptance by the people is sufficient for us to remain as God’s servants.
What is the use of man
accepting us if God Himself has rejected us? It is a terrible tragedy when a
man continues to serve the Lord or to lead a church, even after the anointing
has gone from his life.
Avoiding Hasty Actions
Unfortunately David, when he
became king, also modified God’s commands. And God had to punish him too. There
is no partiality with God. God is strict with all who serve Him.
In 2 Samuel 6, we see
how even good intentions cannot save us from missing God’s will, if we are not
exact with God’s Word. David was taking the ark back to Jerusalem - which was a
good thing. But he didn’t do it the way God had commanded in the Law. God had
commanded the Levites to carry the ark on their shoulders. But David modified
that command and placed the ark on a cart and let the oxen pull the cart. There
he was imitating the Philistines who had adopted that method a few years
earlier (1 Sam.6:8-12).
There are Christian leaders
doing the same thing today. They run their churches according to the management
techniques of worldly businesses rather than according to the teachings of
God’s Word.
As the oxen carried the ark,
they stumbled. When Uzzah saw that, he reached out his hand and held the ark,
to prevent it from falling. And God killed Uzzah, immediately “for his
irreverence” (v.7).
It is sad, but true, that when
God’s shepherds make a mistake, the sheep suffer too. David had made a mistake
and Uzzah suffered for it. And David learnt there that God is very strict with
His servants.
Uzzah had the best of
intentions. Yet “the anger of the Lord burned against Uzzah” (v.7).
Uzzah had been taught from childhood that only the Levites could touch the ark.
But he took God’s commandment lightly in that moment and suffered for it.
The error of Uzzah can be
repeated today. When we see things going wrong in our church, we can reach out
our hands “to steady God’s ark”. And God may smite us, because even
though our intentions may have been good, we went outside our “boundaries”.
We may have done what our reason told us was right. But we did not wait
on the Lord to find out His will. We acted in haste.
Jesus said, “I will
build my Church” (Matt.16:18). Building the church is the Lord’s business,
not ours. He has never delegated that task to any of us. So when we say, “I
am building the church in such-and-such a place”, that is arrogant conceit. If
ever we begin to think that the Body of Christ is our own private business, we
will certainly make the mistake that Uzzah made, one day or the other.
If we see the church shaking,
let us go to God and tell Him, “Lord, YOU are building the church, not
me. Preserve Your church.”
And when we feel that things
are not going as they should, let us ask ourselves whose work it is and who is
in charge of it. Is it the Holy Spirit or we?
At times, we may feel that
something has to be done immediately. But if we act without listening to
the Holy Spirit, we will always act in the flesh. And our actions, even if done
with good intentions, will cause more confusion than if we had done nothing. So
we must say, “Lord, You are in charge here. The government is on Your
shoulders. And I want to listen to You. Tell me what YOU want me to do.”
There are many types of fools
described in the book of Proverbs. But finally, the greatest fool of
all is described thus, “Do you see a man who is HASTY in his words (or
his matters)? There is more hope for a fool than for him” (Prov.29:20).
The one who is hasty - hasty
to say something or to do something - feels absolutely confident that he knows
what is best for any situation. He doesn’t have to consult God at all. He can
act on his own. Such a man is the greatest fool in the world.
It was prophesied about Jesus
that, “He will delight in the fear of the Lord and He will not judge by what
His eyes see or His ears hear” (Isa.11:3). Jesus could not avoid seeing
many things because His eyes were not blind. Neither could He avoid hearing
many things because He was not deaf. But He feared His Father so much that He
would never make a judgment or form an opinion merely on the basis of
what He saw or heard. As He once said of Himself, “The Son can do nothing of
Himself, but what He sees the Father doing” (Jn.5:19).
When the Pharisees came to
Jesus with the woman caught in adultery, Jesus did not reply to their question
for some time. He was waiting to hear from His Father. When He heard, He spoke.
It was just one sentence: “Let him who is without sin cast the first stone”.
That accomplished more than an hour-long sermon would have done!
When someone comes to us with
a complicated problem, if we give him advice based on our cleverness and our
past experience, the problem may only become more complicated. But one word of
wisdom from the Father can work wonders.
And so the next time we see “the
oxen stumbling and the ark about to fall”, let us not be eager to put our
names at the top of the list of fools!! Let us not be quick to judge by what
our eyes see and what our ears hear, and act in irreverence. Instead, let us
put our faces in the dust before the Lord and say, “Lord, I lack wisdom here.
What do You want me to do?”
It is so difficult to
acknowledge that we lack wisdom, especially when we know that the others in the
church are younger and more immature than us. But if we humbly acknowledge our
need, God will give us wisdom in abundance.
Keeping Our Word
We see yet another example of
God’s strictness with His servants in 2 Samuel 21:1. During the days of
David’s kingship, there was a famine in Israel, for three continuous years.
When there is a famine of the prophetic word in our assembly like that, it is
good for us to do what David did. He sought the Lord for an answer. And the
Lord said “This is because, many years ago, Israel broke the promise that she
had made to the Gibeonites”.
Israel had promised the
Gibeonites 300 years earlier, in Joshua’s time, that their descendants would
never be harmed. But Saul had broken that promise and killed some of them, when
he was king. The punishment for that sin caught up with Israel only 30 years
later. God keeps His accounts very carefully. Nothing is forgotten of the
wrongs that we have done, if we have not settled the matters righteously. God
may take 30 years to settle His accounts with us. But they will be settled one
day. God did not remove the famine from Israel until the matter was settled.
All who serve God must be very
careful with the words they speak, not only in the meetings, but also outside
the meetings.
We should not promise to do
something for someone and then forget about it. For example, we should not
promise to pray for people (who ask us to pray for them), and then forget to do
so.
If we are unable to pray for
the many who ask us to pray for them, then we must be honest and tell them, “I
will pray for you when I remember to.” Or alternatively pray for them then and
there. But we should never make promises that we cannot keep.
How can we speak God’s word
solemnly if we make promises to others lightly? If we are unable to do
something that we promised to do, we must go to that person and explain why we
could not keep our word, and ask for his forgiveness. It is serious to break a
promise.
“Every idle word that men
speak they will give an account in the day of judgment” (Matt.12:36).
God takes the promises we make
to others quite seriously. We have no right to break our word, even to
unbelievers or to servants (as the Gibeonites were).
We may imagine that since no
punishment has come upon us for a long time, that God has forgotten about the
unrighteousness we did somewhere, that has remained unsettled. But God never
forgets. God’s judgments may be slow in coming, but they will come finally.
“Therefore let us offer to
God an acceptable service with reverence and awe, for our God is a consuming
fire.” (Heb.12:28,29).
CHAPTER THREE
THE LORD REBUKES THE ELDERS
Revelation chapters 2 and
3, are good chapters for us to read
because they contain the Lord’s messages to the elder brothers (messengers) of
churches. The Lord publicly rebuked the backslidden elders in five of
the seven churches. He did not send “Personal and Confidential”
letters to them through the apostle John, but letters that were to be read out
to all the believers in those churches.
Ephesus - No Devotion To The Lord
The elder in Ephesus was
rebuked, not for falling into some gross sin, but for losing that fervent
devotion for the Lord that he had had in earlier days (Rev.2:1-5).
Perhaps he was now so taken up with preaching sermons every Sunday, that he had
forgotten all about devotion to the Lord in his personal life. This was a
serious error.
Satan always seeks to turn us
away from “simple devotion to Christ” to something secondary (2
Cor.11:3). When our work for the Lord becomes more important to us than the
Lord Himself, we have already started backsliding. All our labours for the Lord
must flow out of our personal relationship with Him. Otherwise they will
have no spiritual value. They will be but dead works and social
service.
Whenever anything
becomes more important to us than the Lord Himself, we can no longer be
servants of the NEW covenant - for the new covenant emphasises A
RELATIONSHIP WITH the Lord, unlike the old covenant that emphasised SERVICE FOR
the Lord. If we have not understood this difference, we can never build the
Body of Christ.
Pergamum - Worldly Teaching Tolerated
The elder in Pergamum was
rebuked for allowing people to teach doctrines that led the church into
worldliness and into a lax attitude towards sin (Rev.2:14,15). He
himself may have been a good man. But he permitted others to teach Balaam’s
doctrine. So he was guilty.
The Lord holds elders
responsible to ensure that no preaching is permitted in the church that leads
people to take sin lightly. There is “a doctrine that leads to godliness”
(to a godly, Christ-like life), and that alone is “hygienic teaching” (1
Tim.6:3 - margin). Every other teaching is unhygienic to a greater or
lesser degree.
Why did this elder permit such
lax teachings in his church? Probably he never corrected the brothers and
sisters for anything, because he wanted a reputation as a humble and gentle
brother. If so, he sought his own honour more than the good of the church.
“Humility” and “gentleness” are virtues that we must
learn from the example of Jesus, as He Himself told us to do (Matt. 11:29).
Otherwise we can get a false understanding of what they mean.
Jesus’ humility and gentleness
did not prevent Him from driving the money changers out of the temple, or from
rebuking Peter with strong words such as, “Get behind me Satan”, when
Peter preached a false doctrine, that Jesus should avoid the cross
(Matt.16:22,23).
Satan can use even a good
brother like Peter to lead the church astray. For that brother may speak in the
meetings in such a way as to dilute the word of the cross. Such
preaching must always be recognised as the voice of Satan - for thus Satan can
turn the church away from the direction that God wants it to take.
One of the greatest
responsibilities we have as elders of churches, is to determine the direction
that our church should take. It must not be the direction of worldliness and
compromise. Neither must it be the direction of Pharisaism and legalism. But
it must be the way of the cross - the direction of the will of God.
Balaam-like preachers usually
have great soul-power and can have an unhealthy influence on people in a
church. Preachers who have a powerful human personality invariably overwhelm
others, and hinder them from being connected to Christ as their Head. They also
influence others in such a way as to lead them away from true spirituality,
into superficial, worldly religiosity
When a preacher has not
understood what it is to put his soul-power to death, he will connect believers
to himself, and not to Christ the Head. The believers will admire and
follow the preacher, but they will never overcome sin or the world in their
lives.
There is a vast difference
between spiritual power and soul-power, and we must be able to
discern between the two. A person may have a lot of Bible-knowledge and a gift
to speak. He may even be very hospitable to the brothers and sisters, and help
them in many practical ways. But if he connects people to himself and
not to Christ, he will be a hindrance to the building of the Body of Christ.
Balaam-like preachers are
happy to receive gifts from others (Num.22:15-17). A gift can blind our
eyes (Prov.17:8), and make us obligated to men, so that we become their
slaves. That can hinder us from speaking the truth of God and correcting our
benefactors.
A servant of God must always
remain free. “You have been bought with a price. Do not become the servants
of men.” (1 Cor.7:23)
The teaching of Balaam
flourished in the church in Pergamum because the elder there had become a slave
of men.
Balaam’s teaching has two
parts to it. Peter mentions both of them in 2 Pet.2:14,15 - covetousness and
adultery.
Jesus said that the one who
loves money HATES GOD, and the one who clings on to money DESPISES GOD (Read
Lk.16:13 carefully).
If we don’t teach that
clearly, the teaching of Balaam will flourish in our church, and the brothers
and sisters will be lovers of money.
But if we are to teach what
Jesus taught, we must first be freed from the grip of money ourselves.
It is easier to be freed from anger and from lusting with the eyes, than to be
freed from the grip of money? Only through constant battle can we overcome this
evil.
Have we seen the love of money
as “a root of all sorts of evil” (1 Tim.6:10)? While anger and lusting
with the eyes are recognised as evils, the love of money is not. And thus many
are enslaved to money, little realising that thereby they hate and despise
God.
The vast majority of so-called
“full-time workers” in India, are enslaved to the love of money, like
Balaam. They visit the homes of rich believers, because they know that they
will get gifts from them. And thus their mouths are shut when these rich and
influential people have to be rebuked for their sins. They travel to preach in
churches where they know they will receive handsome offerings. How can such
preachers ever serve God? That is impossible. They are serving Mammon. Jesus
said that no one could serve two masters.
There are three essential
qualifications for anyone who wants to be a servant of God, under the new
covenant:
(1) He must be freed from
sin in his personal life (Rom.6:22).
(2) He must not seek to
please men (Gal.1:10).
(3) He must hate and
despise money (Lk.16:13).
We must check our lives
constantly in these three areas to see whether we qualify to be servants of the
new covenant or not.
Money and material things must
have NO hold on our lives, if we are to be effective for God.
We must also hate to
receive gifts, for Jesus said that “there is more blessing in GIVING
than in RECEIVING” (Acts 20:35).
If we don’t break free from
the grip of money in our lives, we will never be able to love God or to serve
Him, as we should. And we won’t be able to lead others to love God. And we won’t
be able to deliver them from the teaching of Balaam.
The second aspect of the
teaching of Balaam is immorality. This teaching encourages brothers and
sisters to mingle freely with each other, without any restraint. We read in
Revelation 2:14, that it was Balaam who encouraged the Moabite girls to mingle
freely with the Israeli young men. This led to such immorality among the
Israelites, that God slew 24,000 in a single day (Num.25:1-9)
Only when Phinehas lifted up a
spear and put a stop to it, did God’s anger against Israel cease. When God saw
Phinehas’s action, He was so pleased that he gave him the covenant of an
everlasting priesthood (Num.25:11-13). God always honours those who are
radical against the loose mingling of brothers and sisters in the church.
Here again, as elders, we must
be examples, by our personal conduct. We must be serious in our behaviour with
sisters and avoid all flippant and unnecessary conversation with them.
We must be especially wary of those sisters who always want to speak to us.
If we love to talk to the sisters, we are unfit to lead God’s church. We must NEVER
speak to women alone in a closed room. It is always best to counsel sisters
along with one’s wife, or with another elder brother.
When the disciples saw Jesus
speaking to a woman at the well in Samaria, it is written that “they
marveled that He had been speaking with a woman” (John 4:27) - because
Jesus usually never spoke to a woman alone. He was careful not to do anything
that had even the appearance of evil. Here is the example for all of us
to follow.
Thyatira - A Woman Running The Church
The Lord rebuked the elder at
Thyatira for allowing a woman, Jezebel, (his “wife” - Rev.2:20 margin),
to have such a strong influence in the affairs of the church that many brothers
were being led astray. There are servants of God like that even today, who
cannot restrain their wives and other sisters from interfering in church
matters.
God has not called women to
have any part in the leadership of new-covenant churches. That is taught
clearly in 1 Timothy 2:12. But there are strong sisters everywhere who
would like to have an influence in the running of their churches. All such
women are Jezebels. Sisters are called to be “workers at home” (Tit.2:5).
But if they begin to have a say in church matters, then there will be confusion
in the church. An elder’s wife can influence her husband so powerfully at home
that all that he says in the elders’ meetings will be but an echo of what she
has drummed into his head at home!!
Elders like that are effeminate
and totally unfit to be servants of God. Such elders must be categorised as women,
and are therefore unfit to hold any positions of leadership in the church.
Sardis - Living On One’s Reputation
The Lord rebuked the elder in
Sardis for being a hypocrite. He had a name before people that he was alive,
when in reality, he was spiritually dead. There were a few however in the
assembly in Sardis who were wholehearted and zealous, who had kept their
garments pure. It is indeed a sad state of affairs when other brothers in the
assembly are more God-fearing than the elder.
The elder in Sardis may have
got a name for himself through his preaching and through testifying to the
great things God had done through him. We may experience wonderful miracles in
our ministry. But there is a real danger when we begin to speak about them.
If you look at the example of
Jesus, you will notice that He never spoke about such matters. He never
testified anywhere about the miracles that He had done elsewhere. He preached
God’s Word and never spoke about what the Father had done through Him. All His
righteousness and His works were done in secret before His Father.
Jesus must have had some
amazing experiences with His Father, during the 30 years that He spent in
Nazareth. But He never spoke one word about any of them. He knew that they were
all to be kept secret. He never sought to make a name for Himself before
others. Let us make Jesus our Example in this matter too.
When we give a testimony, it
is very easy for dishonesty and exaggeration to creep in. We may tell others
about someone who was healed through our prayer, for example, but never tell
them about the hundred others whom we prayed for who were not healed. In
such cases, we are not speaking the whole truth.
We must be thoroughly honest
if we are to be the Lord’s servants. Others must never get a better
impression of us than what we actually are. It is far better if they think less
of us.
And those who boast of
spiritual gifts that they don’t really have, are like deceptive clouds that
don’t bring the needed rain (Prov.25:14).
Are you really such a great
man of faith as you have made yourself out to be to others? Consider the times
when you have been anxious. Were you such a great man of faith then? Does your
wife (who knows you better than anyone else) consider you to be a great man of
faith? Most elders who have a name before others do not have much of a name before
their own wives, who know them as they really are!!
Why are we afraid to let
others see us as we really are? Isn’t it because we want to appear superior to
them? And when we do confess our failures, do we confess only “holy sins”
such as the fact that we are not praying enough or not fasting enough etc.?
Such confessions are
hypocritical and are only designed to increase one’s reputation! All
such hypocritical elders need to repent.
We must also remember that we
will always produce children exactly like ourselves. It says about Adam that “he
became the father of a son in HIS OWN LIKENESS” (Gen.5:3). There are
weaknesses in our bloodstream that others are not able to see, except under a
powerful microscope. But we still transmit them to our children.
It is the same spiritually.
There can be areas of failure in our lives that others may never see. But over
a period of time, we will find that our spiritual children have got the same
weaknesses too.
Every church finally becomes
like its leader. That is why the seven letters in Revelation 2 and 3 are
first of all addressed to the messengers of the churches, and then it says, “He
who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says TO THE CHURCHES”.
If we are secretly dishonest,
we will ultimately produce dishonest brothers and sisters. If we are secretly
lustful or miserly, that is how others in our church will finally turn out to
be as well. The only exceptions will be those who have the discernment to see
through our carnality and who do not follow our example.
There were some wholehearted
young believers like that in Sardis, who did not become like their elder,
because they saw through his carnality and did not follow his example.
One of the greatest deceptions
that we can be in, is to imagine that we are building the true church, when we
are motivated by the spirit of Babylon - to make a name for ourselves.
The origin of Babylon (the
false church described in Revelation 17 & 18) is found in the tower
of Babel.
At Babel, the people said to
one another, “Let us build something that will get us a name” (Gen.11:4)
That is the essence of Babylon.
Has God prospered our work?
Have we got a name for ourselves through our work for the Lord? Then there can
come all unconsciously a feeling in our hearts that we have been faithful,
unlike others who have been unfaithful. One of the easiest ways to go down into
spiritual death is through such self-congratulation.
That is how Nebuchadnezzar
fell, and began to behave like an
animal. Read Daniel 4 and meditate on it, for it has a
much-needed message for us all. There Nebuchadnezzar thought within himself, “Is
this not Babylon which I myself have built?” (Dan.4:30). Notice there that
he didn’t say that to anyone. He only had such thoughts in his heart.
But God judged him immediately and made him insane.
That is how many preachers and
elders have fallen from grace through the centuries. He who has ears to hear
let him hear - and let him beware lest the same fate befall him too.
How will God humble a servant
of His who has such high thoughts about himself and about his labours for the
Lord?
He will begin to discover
carnality within his own heart and in his church. He will find himself defeated
in his thought-life, and loving money. There will be friction between some of
the brothers in the church. The family-lives of many in the church will begin
to deteriorate. There will be no spirit of prophecy in the church, even after
many years. The meetings will be dull and boring. No leadership will develop in
the church apart from the lone elder at the top!!
Seeing all this, the elder
will begin to realise that there is not much spiritual content either in him or
in his church. Perhaps his assembly has grown in numbers, but not spiritually.
On the contrary, there is every evidence of spiritual death.
Most elders, when they see
such things, will conceal them from others, and pretend that everything is
all right in the church. And thus they
will degenerate and become exactly like the elder in Sardis.
We don’t have to wait many
years to discover such things. God can give us discernment, so that we see
these things in ourselves and in the church very quickly. But God will give us
discernment only if we seek His honour alone, and don’t care for the honour of
men.
We must remember that God is
not impressed by the numerical growth of a church, if it is not growing spiritually.
Paul told the Christians at
Corinth that God would humble him, through their carnal state (Read 2
Cor.12:20,21). Why should Paul feel humiliated by the carnality of
the Corinthians?
Because Paul was their
spiritual father. And God holds fathers responsible for the spiritual state of
their children.
When we see carnality in our
assembly, God is showing us our own failure as leaders. We are the ones
who should humble ourselves then, instead of blaming the brothers and sisters.
When we see worldliness in our children, God is showing us our failure as
fathers. We must humble ourselves, instead of blaming our children.
If we are hirelings, we will
criticise the brothers and sisters when we see their failings. But if we are
men of God, we will humble ourselves and say, “Lord I have failed. Forgive
me.”
Paul had a great burden that
the heathen whom he had brought to Christ should be “so sanctified that they
could be offered up as pure offering to God” (Rom.15:16).
Under the old covenant, the
priest had to examine every sacrifice that the people brought, to see that it
was without any blemish (Deut.17:1). That was the priest’s
responsibility. He could not offer to God what was maimed in any way. (Read
Malachi 1 and 2 to understand how serious a sin that was in God’s eyes).
Now under the new covenant,
all those whom the Lord calls to His service in the church have the same task.
The people they present to God must be acceptable to Him. That was why
Paul laboured “to present EVERY man perfect in Christ” (Col.1:28).
At the judgment seat of
Christ, everything will become manifest. What profit will it be to us even if
everyone thinks we are doing a great work for God, if in that day it is seen
that all our labours were shallow and carnal? The elder in Sardis was foolish
to be satisfied with man’s honour.
Do we desire to get a name for
ourselves - through our children? Maybe it’s going well with them. Praise
the Lord for that. But do we want others to notice that, so that we get some
glory from it ourselves? Do we want others to know what wonderful fathers we
have been? Are we bringing up our children for our own glory or God’s?
Certainly, we all want to
bring up our children to be wholehearted Christians. But shouldn’t it be enough
if God sees that? And if God has seen it why do we want any man’s
approval?
What does it matter even if
others think our children are worldly? We have to answer to God alone
ultimately.
It is good to have a sober
estimate of ourselves and of our church.
There is a great lust in the
flesh to show others the result of our labours. If we don’t put that lust to
death, Satan will always take advantage of us. Wherever he sees the slightest
desire in any elder’s heart to get a name for himself, Satan will take
advantage of him, and deceive him, even while he is preaching about
discipleship, holiness and the Body of Christ.
Such an elder will build only
another branch-church of Babylon!
It is impossible to build the
Body of Christ, if we are seeking a name for ourselves. The only one who can
build a new covenant church is the one who has no desire for name or fame among
men.
If there are only 3
wholehearted disciples in your church after many years of labour, because you
refused to make the narrow gate any wider than a needle’s eye, you don’t have
to be ashamed of that. God will say to you one day, “Well done, good and
faithful servant”.
It is far better to have 3
disciples in a town who are a pure testimony for Christ, than 3000
compromisers through whom the Name of the Lord is blasphemed.
But when our numbers are
small, we can be tempted strongly to lower our standards, in order to
impress others with better statistics. If we don’t battle that lust, we will
end up like the elder in Sardis.
I want to add a word of
warning here however, to those leaders who may find a false comfort in
these words.
It is possible that your
church is not growing in numbers, because God Himself cannot recommend it to
other needy people.
It is the Lord Who adds to the
church (Acts 2:47). And in the early days, He did add large numbers to
the church (Acts 6:7).
It may be good for you to pray
something like this: “Lord, we are not asking You to increase the numbers in
our church with a multitude of compromisers. But we do pray for ALL those in
this town, who are seeking to live a godly life. Lord, please do one of these
three things: (1) LEAD THEM TO US so that we can help them; or (2) LEAD US TO
THEM; or (3) SHOW US WHY YOU CAN’T RECOMMEND US to them.”
The Lord may then tell you
that He cannot recommend your church to others, because it is so legalistic and
cold and Pharisaical!! He may also tell you that the reason why your church is
like that is because you yourself are like that as an elder!!
Then the only thing for you to
do is to mourn and repent.
If we want to be free from
seeking the honour and approval of men in our ministry, the only way to do that
is by building up a bridal relationship with the Lord. In The Song of
Solomon, the bride speaks of her life and work as a garden that produces
fruit for her Bridegroom alone (Song 4:16b). When our goal is to satisfy
our heavenly Bridegroom alone, then our heart will be at rest, at all times.
We will rest content in
knowing that our Lord has accepted us just as we are, with all our
limitations. We will realise that He does not expect us to have a ministry like
anyone else. Thus we will be free from the spirit of competition that is rife
in Christendom. We will also be free from the lust to report the results of our
work to others.
The Lord has given us the
gifts that are necessary for our unique contribution to the Body
of Christ, and He has given us a specific task to complete. We are to fulfil
that task to the best of our ability, by His grace and power, and we are not to
let anyone else know about what we are doing for Him - just like a bride does
not want anyone else to know the things that she does secretly for her
bridegroom!
So, let us build a bridal
relationship with our Lord, lest we end up like the elder in Sardis.
Laodicea - Not Knowing One’s Wretchedness
The elder in Laodicea was
rebuked strongly by the Lord for a number of reasons.
He felt he was rich and
increased with goods and had need of nothing. Riches are not related
only to money. One can be rich in knowledge, gifts and talents too - and thus
feel self-sufficient.
Those who are intelligent,
eloquent and gifted need to walk with fear, because they are in constant danger
of being proud of these human abilities and of depending more on them than on
the Lord.
The elder here was satisfied
with his Bible-knowledge, his gifts, his achievements, and his position as an
elder. But he was not aware of the fact that in God’s eyes, he was still
spiritually “wretched, miserable, poor, blind and naked” (Rev.3:17). It
is sad indeed when we are ignorant of our true spiritual condition, as God sees
us.
While this elder brother was
totally ignorant of the fact that he was a wretched man, we find a godly
man like the apostle Paul crying out and saying, “O wretched man that I am”
(Rom. 7:24).
How did Paul know his own wretchedness
and the Laodicean elder not know his? Because Paul lived before God’s face,
while the Laodicean elder did not. In God’s light, Paul constantly
realised that his flesh was corrupt (Rom.7:18). Thus Paul remained constantly
poor in spirit, and became a godly man. The Laodicean elder however, not
seeing the wretchedness of his flesh, became carnal and lukewarm.
It is very easy for
self-satisfaction and self-sufficiency to come into the life of a servant of
God, if he does not live before God’s face - for he will not see his own need.
And evidence of this will be seen in the way he speaks and preaches. The
way a needy person speaks is quite different from the way a strong
self-sufficient person speaks.
There are gifted preachers who
can speak well, who are eloquent, and who know the doctrine well. But if you
listen to their spirit when they speak, you will be able to sense an arrogance
there. They speak as experts, and not as those who are poor and needy
themselves.
The Body of Christ cannot be
built by men who have a strong, arrogant spirit, but only by men who have a
humble, gentle spirit.
It is easy for an arrogant
preacher to whip people in his sermons!! Then he becomes like the servant Jesus
spoke of, whose master had appointed him to give others their daily ration of
food. But instead of giving them food, he whipped them (Lk.12:45)!
Unfortunately, there is a lot of whipping that goes on from the pulpit in
Christendom today. Whipping never leads anyone to a godly life, but only to
feelings of condemnation, and to subservience to the preacher who whips him.
Consider how a poor, helpless
beggar speaks to anyone. It is always with meekness and respect -
because he knows that he is a nobody in the world. That is how the Bible tells
us to speak to all human beings, for we too are nobodies in the world (1
Pet.3:15). On the other hand, how does a dictator speak? Always with
arrogance.
Does our speech come from
poverty of spirit or from arrogance?
1 Peter 2:17 commands us to “honour all men”. Is there a
single human being on earth who is excluded from that command? No.
A brother who is not eloquent,
and who does not know much of the Word, but who has a humble, gentle spirit,
will build the Body of Christ far more than an arrogant brother who is gifted
and eloquent.
The gifted brother may look
like a spiritual man here on earth, and others may even consider him to be a
great asset to the church. But at the judgment seat of Christ it will be seen
that it was the humbler brother who actually built the Body of Christ.
It is essential that we
realise that the Body of Christ is built, not by Bible-knowledge and spiritual
gifts primarily, but by our life.
Only the poor in spirit can
build the kingdom of God (Matt.5:3). And there is only one way to remain
poor in spirit (aware of our own spiritual need) constantly, and that is, by
looking at Jesus always.
When we see ourselves in His
light, we will realise how unlike Him we are, even if we are better than others
around us. In His light, we will lose sight of the weaknesses of others, and
see only our own. And we shall spontaneously say, “Oh, wretched man
that I am” (Rom.7:24). We won’t have to be prompted by anyone to say it.
But we must live in that state
always. Otherwise we can easily backslide into the deep pit of lukewarmness,
carnality and arrogant pride that the Laodicean elder was in.
Under the old covenant, the
high-priest could go into the Most Holy Place only once a year. He could see
the glory of God, and his own wretchedness in that glory only once a year. But
now that the new and living way has been opened by Jesus (Heb.10:20), we
can live in the Most Holy Place, in the presence of God all the time - and see
the wretchedness of our flesh all the time, like Paul did.
The old covenant prophets
could see the glory of God only once in a while. When Isaiah saw it, he cried
out saying, “Woe is me, for I am ruined” (Isa.6:5). But now we have the
privilege of getting that revelation continuously. We can constantly cry “Woe
is me”, instead of pronouncing woes on others!! Those who live in the
Spirit will see their need constantly and remain poor in spirit at all times.
Only a man who is poor in
spirit is really spiritually wealthy in God’s eyes. And when such a man speaks
to us, either in personal conversation or in a meeting, we can partake of his
spiritual wealth.
An eloquent preacher who is
not poor in spirit however, can only show us pictures of wealth. He
cannot make us actually wealthy.
We must give the poor in
spirit the most prominent places of ministry in our assembly - and not the most
gifted ones. Gifted brothers, who are not poor in spirit, can destroy the
church.
The church cannot be destroyed
by adulterers and thieves - because these people are such obvious sinners that
everyone can recognise them as such. But the church can be destroyed by
eloquent preachers and gifted teachers who, like the Laodicean elder, have no
sense of their own need, and who yet preach about holiness.
If we are unable to discern
between those who are poor in spirit and those who are arrogant in spirit, the
reason could be that we ourselves are not poor in spirit. As elders, if we
don’t see our own need first, how can we ever help others to see their need?
Oh how we need to pray that
God will give us light on ourselves first, if we are to keep our assemblies
pure for the Lord.
Hearing the Lord Directly
It is sad to note that these
five elders were so deaf that they could not hear the Lord speak to them
directly. The Lord had to rebuke them through the apostle John. Why was that
necessary in the new covenant age? It was only under the old covenant that
people had to hear God’s message through a prophet. If these elder brothers had
been humble and God-fearing, they could have heard God speaking directly to
them, without John having to write to them.
And after these elders got
these letters from John, we don’t know whether they repented or not. We can
only hope they did. I wonder if the elder in Thyatira told his wife to mind her
own business and to keep her nose out of church matters. Or did she tell
her husband not to bother about John’s letter?
If these five elders did
accept the Lord’s rebukes through John, then it must certainly have gone well
with them.
We do know however that
at least one elder in another church did not accept what John wrote.
John writes in 3 John about Diotrephes, who loved his position as an
elder, and who would not accept John’s correction (3 Jn.9).
If we are to serve the Lord,
we must see ourselves at all times as the Lord sees us - and not
as our brothers see us. God’s Word can protect us from every spiritual danger,
if we live before God’s face constantly and listen to the voice of His Spirit -
either when He speaks to us directly or when He speaks to us through another
brother.
Finally, remember that the
Lord never rebukes us to condemn us for our past failures, but always to give
us a better future.
CHAPTER FOUR
AN EXAMPLE FOR OTHERS TO FOLLOW
John the Baptist was the
greatest prophet under the old covenant. But Jesus said that the least one in the
new covenant would be able to rise to greater heights than John (Matt.11:11).
This is an amazing calling indeed - to be greater than John the Baptist.
Ministry under the new
covenant is a vastly higher calling than ministry under the old
covenant. There are many things that we can learn from the lives of
old-covenant servants of God, like Moses, Elijah and John the Baptist. But
while they served God, following commandments, today we are to serve
God, following an Example.
Jesus is now our Example of what
it means to be a servant of God. How did Jesus become our High Priest? Not
through His miraculous ministry, but by His being “made in all things like
unto us, His brethren” (Heb.2:17), and becoming an example for us.
Jesus said that the Father had
given Him “authority over all mankind” (Jn.17:2). Why was that authority
given? In the same verse Jesus tells us that it was in order “to give
eternal life to those whom the Father gave Him”. “Eternal life” does not
mean a life that never ends, but “a life that had no beginning and has no
end”. In other words, it describes the life of God or the Divine nature.
The old covenant servants of
God like Moses, Joshua, Samson, David etc., had authority to rule over Israel
and to overcome their human enemies. But under the new covenant, God’s servants
are given authority to lead others to partake of the Divine nature (eternal
life), and to enable them to overcome the lusts in their flesh.
Our authority in the church is
to lead the brothers and sisters to become like Jesus Who manifested the Divine
nature in every situation in His earthly life. We have no other authority than
that. If we are not exercising our authority to lead others to partake
of the Divine nature, we have to consider ourselves as failures.
Unfortunately many Christian
leaders today are like old covenant servants of God, ruling over the
people. Jesus and the apostles however were servants of all men.
Which covenant are we living
under - the old or the new?
Jesus is called our Forerunner
(Heb.6:20). He went the same way that we have to go, ahead of us. We are
exhorted to “run the race looking unto Jesus...Who also endured the cross”
(Heb.12:1,2). He was “tempted in every point as we are, and did not sin”
(Heb.4:15), so that we might “follow in His steps Who committed no sin”
(1 Pet.2:21,22).
Jesus faced all our
temptations so that He could be an Example for us to follow. That is why His
word is so powerful, when He says, “Follow Me”. Now, as shepherds of
God’s flock, we also have to lead the flock along the same way. We must also be
able to say to others as Paul said, “Be followers of me, just as I follow
Christ.....Follow my example” (1 Cor.11:1; Phil.3:17).
Many preachers say, “Don’t
follow me. Just follow Christ.” That sounds such a humble statement, that we
could be impressed. But it is unScriptural, for none of the apostles
ever made such a statement. They always exhorted others to follow them as they
followed Christ.
Jesus is the Chief Shepherd
and we are under-shepherds of God’s flock. Even so, Jesus is the Forerunner,
and we are called to be mini-forerunners to others in the church. We
have to go the same way as He went. Having become overcomers ourselves, we can
exhort others “to overcome even as we also have overcome” (Rev.3:21).
The Secret Of New-Covenant Ministry
Paul reveals the secret of his
effective ministry in these words: “God strengthens us in all our
afflictions, so that we may be able to strengthen those who are in affliction
WITH THE SAME STRENGTH WITH WHICH WE ARE STRENGTHENED BY GOD” (2 Cor.1:4).
Paul had to go through many
afflictions in order to receive a spiritual education. Only thus could he pass
on to others the strength that he himself had received when he went through
trials. Without such an education, no one can be a servant of the new covenant.
There is a vast difference
between an anointed Samson under the old covenant and an anointed Paul under
the new covenant. Samson had the Spirit’s power to overcome external lions.
Paul however had the Spirit’s power to overcome the lions that dwelt within his
own flesh - which Samson could not overcome.
Under the old covenant, God’s
servants stood in God’s presence, heard what God had to say, and then told
others what they had heard. But that is not sufficient in the new covenant.
Now, God’s servants must go through trials and afflictions and
experience God’s grace helping them to overcome in all those trials, and then
exhort others to follow their own example. That is how new covenant ministry is
far higher than old covenant ministry - and it is far costlier too.
We cannot become servants of
the new covenant by going to a Bible-school. No true apostle or prophet in
the Bible ever came out of a Bible-school. We cannot study the Bible like
we study chemistry, cooped up in a classroom. The Holy Spirit teaches us the
meaning of the Scriptures in the midst of life’s situations. That was how the
apostles learnt it. And that is how God’s servants learn it today as well. Only
thus can we lead others to partake of eternal life. It is by following Jesus
that we become servants of the new covenant.
Under the old covenant it was
not possible for people to press on to perfection. But in the new covenant we
can (See Heb.6:1 with 7:19).
But we cannot lead others to
perfection if we are not pressing on to perfection ourselves. Only if we are “cleansing
OURSELVES from all defilement of flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness in the
fear of God” (2 Cor.7:1), and “purifying OURSELVES even as Jesus is pure” (1
Jn.3:3) can we lead others also to such a life. There is no other way.
We have to be mini-forerunners
for the others. That is why God takes us through varied and trying situations -
more than all the other believers in our churches have to go through. For only
thus can we be true shepherds to them. Otherwise we will be hirelings, seeking
our own gain - either money or man’s honour.
That does not mean that we
have to face all the circumstances that others in our church face. That would
be impossible. Jesus did not become our Forerunner by facing all our
circumstances, but by being tempted with all the temptations that we
face (Heb.4:15). Jesus did not have a drunken father or a nagging wife
or disobedient children, as some of us may be having. Jesus did not have to
wait in long queues outside government offices for a license as we have to wait
today. Yet He was our Forerunner, because He faced all the temptations that
we face today, in different circumstances in His day.
God has to take us through all
the temptations that our brothers and sisters face. But in all those
temptations, we must overcome, if we are to serve them, and lead them to
partake of eternal life. That is how we become servants of the new covenant.
Peter writes to the elders “to
be examples to the flock” (1 Pet.5:3). And Paul writes to Timothy (in 1
Timothy 4:12) that he should be “an example to those who believe - in
speech, love, faith and purity”.
First of all, we must be
examples in our speech. Our speech must always be gentle and gracious.
We must be totally free from gossiping. If someone shares something with us in
confidence, we must be able to keep the matter secret - even from our wives.
We must be examples in love.
Others must see that no matter what they say or do to us, our love to them
never changes.
We must be examples in faith.
In all the trying circumstances that we face, people must see that we never get
into a panic, but always have the perfect confidence that God is able to see us
through.
We must be examples in purity.
We cannot expect purity in the relationships between young brothers and sisters
in our churches, if we ourselves are not first class examples in this area.
A Bondslave Of Christ
Paul called himself a bondslave
of Jesus Christ (Rom.1:1). That is what all the early apostles were. Jesus
is looking today for bondslaves - not servants. There is a difference between a
servant and a slave. A servant works for pay. A slave gets no salary. God has
no servants under the new covenant, only bondslaves.
Jesus never offered any salary
to those whom He called to be His apostles. If we are called to full-time
Christian work, let us ensure that we never work for a salary, or else
we will end up as servants of men. Let us not serve our churches, expecting
people to give us gifts. If they choose to do so, without our expecting
anything from them, that is all right. But we should never expect anything from
anyone.
We must also make it a
principle that we will never receive any money from those whose standard of
living is lower than ours.
The highest way to serve the
Lord in full-time work, however, is the way Paul served the Lord as an apostle
- by having some secular employment, so that we are not dependent on anyone’s
gifts for our needs (1 Cor.9:14-18; 2 Cor.11:7-15; Acts 20:33,34).
We cannot be servants of the
new covenant, if we are working for pay. We must be bondslaves. If we feel that
we have a right to comforts and conveniences, then we are paid servants, not
bondslaves. A bondslave has no right to anything - not even to honour or
reputation.
If God gives us a house to
live in, we are thankful. But we will serve Him, even if we don’t have a house
to live in. The fact that He gives us the privilege to build the Body of Christ
is more than enough for us when we are true bondslaves.
Romans 6:22 speaks of the past present and future of a true
bondslave of God.
(1) In the past - freed
from conscious sin.
(2) In the present - the
fruit of progressive sanctification.
(3) In the future - eternal
life (the fullness of the Divine nature).
First of all, we must be
freed from conscious sin. Many don’t mourn for their secret failures
and that is why they don’t come to a life of victory over sin. We may imagine
that impurity in our thought-life is not important, because others don’t see
that area of our lives. But it is there that God tests us to see whether we
fear Him or not.
Secondly: Increasing sanctification
will be the primary fruit that comes forth from our lives, if we are
true bondslaves of God. Bringing others to Christ and building them up in the
faith will be the secondary fruit. If we are really serving the Lord,
our labour will certainly result in increasing godliness in our personal lives.
Sanctification is a process in
which we get increasing light on the evil that dwells in our flesh, and in
which, as we bear the dying of Jesus in our bodies, we partake more and
more of the life of Jesus in area after area. If we are being
sanctified, we will get light, for example, on the harshness of the tone of our
voice when we speak to our family members, on our lack of love towards those we
disagree with, on our seeking honour in our ministry, on our excessive talking
and foolish jesting, and on the deadness of our preaching etc., etc.,
And finally, the bondslave
looks forward to partaking of God’s nature (eternal life) in all its
fullness. That is the goal towards which every true bondslave of God presses
on.
As slaves of God, we may have
to go through many trials, misunderstandings and false accusations, on earth.
But it will be worth it all when we see Jesus, if we endure in love, until the
end.
Paul reminds us that as
servants of the new covenant, we “must give no cause for offense in
anything, in order that the ministry be not discredited. But in everything,
commending ourselves as bondslaves of God - in much endurance, in afflictions,
in hardships, in distresses, in labours, in sleeplessness, in hunger, in
purity, in patience, in kindness, in genuine love, by glory and dishonour, by evil
report and good report, regarded as deceivers and yet true, as unknown (to men)
yet well-known (to God), as poor yet making many rich, as having nothing yet
possessing all things, with a heart that is opened wide to those whose hearts
are narrow towards us” (2 Cor.6:3-11).
Subduing Our Bodies
In 1 Corinthians 9:27,
Paul tells us one more secret of his life. He “treated his body roughly,
training it TO DO WHAT IT SHOULD, AND NOT WHAT IT WANTS TO” (Living).
Otherwise he feared that after he had preached to others, he would be
disqualified.
It is amazing to see that Paul
had a fear that he might be disqualified even after all that he had done
for the Lord.
There are healthy fears and
there are unhealthy fears: To fear that GOD MIGHT HURT US is an unhealthy
fear. But to fear that WE MIGHT HURT GOD (by something we say or do) is a
healthy fear.
In the same way, to fear that
we might finally be disqualified, is a healthy fear that will keep us
alert and “on our toes” at all times. It will enable us to subdue our bodies
and make them our slaves.
God’s Word tells us to “work
out our own salvation with fear and trembling” (Phil.2:12). That
exhortation is especially necessary for preachers, because every preacher is
in constant danger of becoming a hypocrite. He is in danger of preaching
things that he has not yet practised. He is in danger of giving others an
impression about himself that is not totally true, and he is in danger of
spending more time preparing and perfecting his sermons than in perfecting his
life!!
Paul says in 1 Corinthians
9:26 that he had a very definite aim in what he was doing. He didn’t fight
or run aimlessly. He ran towards a definite goal. He fired at a definite
target.
I remember the days when we
cadets were being taught to shoot with rifles in the military academy. We had
to lie down on the ground, a few feet apart from each other, with rifles in our
hands. Each of us had a target-board some yards in front of us, marked with a
number of concentric circles, with a point in the centre called the “bull’s
eye”.
When we first began shooting,
our aim was highly inaccurate. Some of us would be hitting the next person’s
target, and not our own!! After a while, we learnt to hit our own targets.
That’s how it often is with
many Christians too. They hit other people’s targets and not
their own. They are busybodies in other people’s matters. But if they work out
their own salvation, they will gradually learn to hit their own target and
finally hit the bull’s eye. Then their aim would have become perfect.
Paul’s aim was perfect. He didn’t judge others. He judged himself and
subdued his own body. And so he fought a good fight and finished his
course (2 Tim.4:7).
Our eyes and our tongue
are the two members of our body that we need to discipline the most.
We invite unbelievers to give
their hearts to Christ. But the Lord asks us to give Him our bodies
(Rom.12:1) - and He asks especially for our eyes and our tongues.
If we don’t give Him these, all the time, we cannot expect to be
bondslaves or spokesmen of Christ, or to stand approved by God in the final
day.
If we don’t keep our eyes
under control - at home, in the bus, on the road and in our place of work - we
will find that even if we preach like angels, we will be disqualified by God in
the final day. Many servants of God through the centuries have fallen because
they were not careful with their eyes. They allowed their eyes to wander
and look at pretty girls, and soon one thing led to another, and they fell into
sin. It is not enough to say that we don’t lust after women. The Bible warns us
not even to admire a woman’s BEAUTY, lest it bring us to spiritual
poverty (Prov.6:25,26). How careful we must be then.
We have to be careful in the
same way with our tongues. God will not use the tongue of a man
to preach His Word, if that man allows his tongue to be used by Satan at other
times. The Lord told Jeremiah, “If you separate the precious from the
worthless (in your conversation), then You will become My spokesman” (Jer.15:19).
We must never speak anything
that does not come from a heart of goodness. That’s not easy to do, because we
are so weak in this area. We have to be ruthless if we are to discipline our
tongues.
I am sure there must have been
many young people in our land whom God had called in past days to His service,
whom He had planned to make His prophets in India. But they did not become
prophets, because they were not careful to discipline their eyes and
their tongues. They did not subdue their bodies.
We are called members of the Body
of Christ, because that expresses an intimate, inward
relationship with Christ the Head, just like our bodily members have with our
brains in our physical bodies.
Jesus was faithful to keep
every part of His body available exclusively for His Father (His Head).
It is written in Romans 15:4 that He never pleased Himself. He
never sought His own pleasure in the way he used His eyes or His tongue. He did
not look at what He wanted to. Nor did He speak what he wanted to. He always sought
to do what pleased His Father. Thus He presented His body without any blemish
to His Father and became the perfect spokesman of His Father to the world (Heb.9:14).
That is how we are to live too, as members of His spiritual Body now.
To be a wholehearted
disciple of Jesus is to have a burning desire to present ourselves to God
without any blemish.
If we want to build the church
as the Body of Christ, we must gather together all those who are eager to
present their bodies to God thus, and who are really keen to make their bodies
their slaves.
Each time we miss the bull’s
eye, we must mourn for our failure. We must mourn when our eyes are not
absolutely pure. We must mourn when our tongues have spoken something that was
not spoken in absolute goodness.
In Romans 7:23 Paul
honestly admitted that he kept on seeing (present tense) a law in his
bodily members (which was contrary to the law of Christ), that made him a
prisoner to the law of sin. If Paul had referred to this in the past
tense, as something he had once seen, it would have been a different matter.
But he saw it and kept on seeing it day by day. In other words, he kept on
getting light on the fact that nothing good dwelt in his flesh. And he kept on
cleansing himself from all defilement of flesh and spirit, perfecting holiness
in the fear of God. Thus he kept his body subdued and remained faithful to God
until the end of his life. That is why he was not disqualified, but finished
his course with joy, unlike many preachers in our day.
Godliness - The True And The False
Under the old covenant, people
were exhorted to meditate on “the LAW of the Lord” (Psa.1:2). But under
the new covenant, we are exhorted to meditate on “the GLORY of the Lord” (2
Cor. 3:18).
If we look only at the letter
of God’s Word, we will become Pharisees, and we will build a church of
Pharisees. But if we look at the glory of the life of Jesus, as we see it in
the Word, we will be transformed increasingly into His likeness.
The secret of living a godly
life (the Holy Spirit tells us in 1 Timothy 3:16), lies in seeing the
example of Jesus, Who lived on earth with all the limitations of the flesh,
and Who had no more resources than we can have - the power of the Holy
Spirit, and Who yet lived in perfect purity in His spirit. If He could live
like that, so can we.
“The one who says he abides
in Him, ought himself to walk in the same manner as He walked.” (1 Jn.2:6).
We cannot blame the flesh any
more for our sinning. For there was One Who walked this earth in the flesh and
Who did not sin. He overcame through the power of God’s grace - and so can we.
The measure in which we
ourselves follow Jesus in an overcoming life will determine the measure in
which we can lead our fellow-believers also to walk as Jesus walked.
Immediately after speaking
about the secret of godliness (in 1 Timothy 3:16), the Holy Spirit warns
us about deceiving spirits who will come in the last days seeking to turn
believers away from this way of godliness to a counterfeit way of
becoming holy.
“The Spirit explicitly says
that in the latter times, some will fall away from this faith, paying attention
to deceitful spirits” (1 Tim.4:1).
The primary mark of all deceiving
spirits is that they “do not acknowledge that Jesus Christ has come in
the flesh” (2 Jn.7). They will not acknowledge that Jesus overcame all sin
in the flesh.
Through listening to such
deceiving spirits, believers will finally be led to believe “doctrines of
demons” ( 1Tim.4:2). Two examples of doctrines of demons are mentioned
there : forbidding marriage and forbidding the eating of certain foods.
Celibacy and fasting have
always been regarded among heathen religions as ways to become holy. But these
demonic doctrines will find their way even into Christianity in the last days.
We see that being fulfilled in our day. There are Christian groups today that
teach that we can become more holy if we remain unmarried or if we fast
regularly. Are these doctrines of demons? Yes. Because they turn our attention
away from the secret of godliness to asceticism. Instead of following Jesus in
the power of the Holy Spirit, we then begin to seek after godliness through
monastic self-discipline.
There is nothing wrong with
remaining unmarried or with fasting. But when these are promoted as the secret
of godliness, then the error is serious. In fact any doctrine that leads people
away from “Christ manifest in the flesh as the secret of godliness” - is
a doctrine of a demon. True holiness is attained, not by yoga or meditation or
self-discipline, but by the power of the Holy Spirit.
In Colossians 2:20-23,
Paul says that ascetic practices may have some external value, but they will
not lead us to the Divine nature being manifest in our flesh. Only the Holy
Spirit can produce that.
In the church, we must set
people free from religious asceticism. Otherwise we will be proclaiming only a
Christianized version of yoga.
The Devil is forever seeking
to lead believers either to the one extreme of materialism, or to the
opposite extreme of asceticism.
Materialism is not so
dangerous, because it is obviously worldly even to a carnal believer. But
asceticism is more dangerous, because it appears to be leading to godliness.
Both these are cliffs that stand opposite to each other. But both lead to the
bottom. Irreligious lovers of money and religious, self-disciplined Pharisees
are both headed for hell. And as servants of God we must not forget that.
The Big And The Great In The World’s Eyes
In building the church, we
must remember that “everything that is big in the eyes of men is an
abomination in God’s sight” (Lk.16:15).
We must never therefore bring
human greatness into the church. When we preach God’s Word, we must not seek to
impress people with our cleverness or our knowledge or our polished
language. That would be demonstrating our soul-power in the church.
Our values in the church are
the exact opposite of the values that worldly people have. Worldly people place
a lot of value on money, whereas we place no value on it. Worldly people honour
those who are great and influential in the world, but we don’t care for them at
all. On the other hand, we value those who are humble and God-fearing. The
world places a great value on being intelligent, whereas we care nothing for a
man’s cleverness. The world and the church are not just slightly
different. They are facing in opposite directions.
To show off our cleverness or
our greatness in the church is an abomination to God. It is the equivalent of
offering a pig to God on the altar in the Old Testament. We must live in a
healthy fear of bringing our human abominations into the service of God.
Being Like A Little Child
In Isaiah 11:6, we are
told that during the 1000-year reign of Jesus on earth, when He returns,
everything will be peaceful. There will be no wild animals, and life on earth
will be simply wonderful.
But we have a foretaste of
that life in the church already - because the kingdom of God has already come
in the church. “Wolves” are already lying down with “lambs”, “leopards”
and “goats” are at peace, and “cattle” are safe amidst the “lions”
- in the fellowship of the church. In the world, people with such diverse
personalities as these, cannot get along with each other. But in the church,
they die to their Self-life, and live in glorious peace with each other.
And in this kingdom, Isaiah
says that “a little child will be the leader” (Isa.11:6). Thus we see
who is really fit to lead a church - the one who is most like a little
child.
The real leader in a church is
the one who is guileless and humble like a little child. It is easy to
fellowship with such a brother. People develop confidence in such a brother -
who is himself, who is not trying to impress others with his personality or his
gifts, and who is not trying to imitate some other more mature brother.
In many Christian groups,
leadership is given to those who are smart, talented and humorous, and who are
good musicians and organizers. But in the new-covenant church, God appoints
those who are like little children - for they are the greatest ones in His
kingdom.
If the “wolves” in a
church are tearing up the “lambs”, then the kingdom of God has not yet
come to that church. And that must be because the leader is not like a
child!! So it is the leaders who should judge themselves when things go
wrong in a church.
Jesus told His disciples in Matthew
18:4 to humble themselves like little children, for a child is the greatest
in the kingdom of God.
Now we know that the greatest
person in God’s kingdom is Jesus Himself. So that must mean that Jesus humbled
himself at all times like a little child.
There we have an example for
all Christian leaders to follow.
We read on one occasion that
Jesus healed multitudes of sick people, but told the people not to tell anyone
about it. He didn’t want any publicity for Himself. That was in order to fulfil
a Scripture that said that He “would not make his voice heard in the
streets” (He would not advertise Himself) (Matt.12:15-20).
That Scripture begins with
these words “Behold my Child...” (Matt.12:18 - margin). God is saying
there, “Look carefully at My Child - the One who is the greatest in the
kingdom of heaven - He heals the sick and then disappears as though He has done
nothing.”
In the church, the one with
this spirit is the real leader.
A little child realises that
he is a nobody, and that he knows almost nothing. And it is the realization
that we are nobodies and that we know almost nothing of spiritual matters, that
will keep us as little children always. It is only such a person whom God can
attest as His representative in the church.
Jesus gave us only two
examples to learn humility from: Himself and little children.
In the gospels, we can see how Jesus lived, and learn humility from His
example. Around us, we can see little babies, and learn humility from them.
What are the thoughts that go
through a little baby’s mind when it is lying in its cradle? Does he think how
smart he is or how much others appreciate him etc., No. He has no such thoughts
at all. He has no self consciousness whatsoever. He is just himself - natural,
with no pretense or artificiality. That is our example.
Are we bothered with thoughts
about what others think about us or our ministry? Then we are not like little
children. We must battle these high thoughts until we are converted and become
like little children. Only then will we be fully qualified to lead God’s
people.
Then we will be happy with any
small corner on this earth that God places us in, to do His work. And we won’t
have any ambition to become great in the eyes of men. We will be happy to
fulfil the task that God has entrusted us with in Christ’s Body. And we won’t
be jealous of anyone else’s ministry either.
Praise God that we can
experience as well as proclaim such a wonderful gospel - that we can unlearn
all our corrupt “grown-up ways” and become like little children once
again.
Thus we shall become true
servants of the new covenant.
CHAPTER FIVE
DEPENDENCE UPON THE HOLY SPIRIT
“Cursed is the man who puts
his trust in mortal man, and makes flesh his strength. He will be like a
stunted shrub in the desert. But blessed is the man who trusts in the Lord and
has made the Lord his hope and confidence. He will be like a tree planted along
a riverbank that will go right on producing luscious fruit. (Jer.17:5-8 -
Living)
A servant of the new-covenant
must live and serve God in total and utter dependence on Him for grace and
power for every task. That is why prayer should be a vital part of his life -
for prayer is the expression of our helpless, but confident dependence on his
God.
A self-confident man will not
pray except as a ritual. Christian leaders who do not pray are not dependent on
God, because they are self-sufficient. And invariably they will be like barren
trees, and their assemblies will be like deserts. The river spoken of in the
above verse is the Holy Spirit. One who depends on the Lord alone for help will
earnestly seek to be filled with the Holy Spirit constantly.
The prophet Zechariah was once
given a vision of a golden lampstand - a symbol of the church (Zech.4:2; see
Rev.1:20).
To keep the lamp burning
continuously, the greatest need is a continuous supply of oil (v.3). And for
this, there were two olive trees planted on either side of the lampstand -
symbolising the FRUIT and the GIFTS of the Holy Spirit, through which the
church is built.
The angel then told Zechariah
that God’s work would be done, not by human power, but by the power of the Holy
Spirit, and that every mountain that stood in the way would be flattened
(Zech.4:6,7).
Every Mountain Will Be Flattened
In God’s work, we will face
hindrances and obstacles of many types. We may wonder why God allows us to face
such mountains, when we are wholeheartedly seeking to do His will alone. But
God’s purpose is to exercise our faith, so that we can experience His mighty
power reducing all those mountains to a plain.
We read of an occasion in the
gospels, where Jesus urged His disciples to go across the lake of Galilee. They
did not want to go, but he urged them to go (Mt.14:22). When they obeyed Him,
they ran into a fierce storm. If they had disobeyed Him, and not crossed the
lake, they would not have faced that storm at all. But they would not have
experienced the power of the Lord stilling the storm either. It is only when we
face the storms that we can also know the power of God.
It is the disobedient and
compromising Christian who has an easy way through life. But he never
experiences the power of God either. The disciple of Jesus may go through “many
afflictions”. But he also experiences the Lord “delivering him out of all of
them” (Psa.34:19).
God delights to see His people
trust Him in the midst of gigantic problems that no man can solve. It is in
such situations that we prove that we believe in an almighty God. Far too many
of God’s people believe in a god of their own imagination who is unable to help
them when they face man-made or demon-made storms or mountains. That is not the
God of the Bible, but a god of their own making - an impotent idol of their
imagination, no better than any heathen idol.
Is there any problem too big
for our God? No. Then why do we fear when men or demons raise up mountains in
our way?
When the Israelites heard of
the size of the giants of Canaan, they began to think, “These giants are too
big for OUR god to handle”. Who was their god? Not the God Who had delivered
them from Egypt, but a powerless figment of their own imagination. No wonder
God sentenced them to 38 years of wandering in the wilderness (Deut.2:14).
They were unbelieving - and
their unbelief insulted God and tied His hands, so that He could do nothing for
them. There are Christian leaders today also who tie God’s hands through their
unbelief.
But God is looking for men
like Joshua and Caleb, who will believe and proclaim that there is nothing
impossible for God.
God is always on our side
against Satan. And nothing can prevent Him from working for us, except our
unbelief. Even if all the 5500 million people in the world and all the millions
of Satan’s demons opposed us, they would not be able to hinder God’s purposes
for us - if we trust in God. So we never get discouraged or give up - no matter
what happens. Even if we die, we will die trusting in our Almighty God,
believing that His Name will be glorified through our death!
When God allows us to face
mountains - whether in the form of demons that wrestle with us, or hundreds of
people who oppose us and accuse us - His purpose is that we might thereby
become strong and wealthy. “If God be for us who can be against us” (Rom.8:31).
It is only when we face
mountains and the opposition of demons and men, that Zechariah 4:6,7 becomes
more than just a wall-text hanging in our sitting-room. It gets written into
our bloodstream!
But we have to be wholehearted
and say, “Lord I really want to stand for You here, whatever the cost. Give me
grace to stand for You, even if all my fellow-believers become lukewarm, and
even if my wife opposes me. I am totally Yours. All I have is Yours. I am
willing to spend all my life’s earnings also for Your work” Then we will find
God continually flattening mountains in front of us, everywhere we go.
Let there be any number of
giants in the land. Our God can handle all of them. He will “be an enemy to our
enemies”, and “fight against those who fight with us” (Exod.23:22; Isa.49:25).
God has promised that “no weapon formed against us will prosper”, and that “He
Himself will vindicate us” (Isa.54:17). So we never need to defend ourselves
when falsely accused. We can remain silent, “entrusting our cause to Him Who
judges righteously” (1 Pet.2:23). That is the dignity with which servants of
the new covenant conduct themselves.
We depend on God utterly,
knowing that He will never let us down. What He did for Jesus, Our Forerunner,
He will do for us too.
Our own testimony, as we have
laboured to build the Body of Christ in India, is that we have encountered many
mountains during these past years - the opposition of men and demons, false
accusations, malicious gossip, betrayal by “false brethren” (2 Cor.11:26),
etc., We have never defended ourselves. We have always fallen down before God
and said, “Lord, this is Your work, not ours. We are only Your servants. We
believe that no man or demon can hinder what You are seeking to accomplish in
our land. We command this mountain to be removed out of our way, in Jesus’
Name.”
Today, after 20 years, we can
testify that God has removed EVERY SINGLE mountain that has stood in our way.
He has been an enemy to our enemies and He has vindicated and attested us
Himself. All glory be to His Name. We know He will do the same in the future
too.
Casting Believers On The Lord
As servants of God, we must
also lead believers to be dependent on the Holy Spirit and not on us. When they
are babes, they may need our help in many matters. But once they have known the
Lord for even a few months, we must cast them on the Lord alone for help.
God has ordained that children
should be able to stand on their own legs just one year after they are born. It
must be the same in our churches. Within one year after they are born again,
believers should be learning to walk with the Lord, overcoming sin. By the time
they are two years old, they should be steady on their feet.
God brought the Israelites
also to Kadesh-Barnea just two years after they left Egypt, and told them to
enter the promised land. But they disobeyed the Lord. Their failure is
repeatedly held out in the New Testament as a warning for us (See 1 Cor.10 and
Heb.2).
We should not allow believers
to be dependent on us for finding God’s will for them. We must cast them on the
Lord. Only thus will they grow. Under the new covenant, the promise of God is
that, “they shall not teach everyone his brother saying, `Know the Lord’, for
all shall know Me from the least to the greatest.” (Heb.8:11).
Jesus said that His sheep
would hear His voice. They should not have to hear it always through us. Here
is where most Christian leaders have failed God. They have led believers into
an Old Testament type of life, where they are dependent on their leader to tell
them what to do when they have to take a decision.
A new covenant servant of God
leads believers to have a direct connection with Christ their Head. That is the
only way we can build the church as Christ’s Body.
Concern For Building Christ’s Body
In Zechariah 4:9, we read that
Zerubbabel (a type of the Lord Jesus) who laid the foundation for the temple,
will also finish it. The Lord will not leave His work unfinished.
When the Lord lays hold of two
disciples to build a pure testimony for His Name in a town, then He has already
laid the foundation for His work there, in them. They must then ensure that
there are no cracks in the foundation - no gaps between the two of them.
If they are faithful to build
and preserve their fellowship with each other, the Lord will complete His work.
He will build His church there.
If your heart is set on the
Body of Christ being built in your town, you can be certain that God’s heart is
set on it much more. Your concern for building the church is only a drop in the
ocean compared to His. It is He Who put that burden like a seed into your
heart. It is conceit to imagine that such a burden is your own. You can only
water the seed that God Himself has planted. He will cause it to grow.
If you don’t consider the
building of the church as God’s work first of all, you will wonder when you get
into a tight spot, whether God will help you or not. You will then ask the
Lord, like His disciples, “Do You not care that we are perishing?” (Mk.4:38).
It is pride - the pride that
makes us think that WE are the ones who are building the Body of Christ - that
makes us unbelieving. There is a close connection between pride and unbelief.
In Habakkuk 2:4, we read that
the opposite of the man of faith, is not the man of unbelief, but the man of
pride!! And in John 5:44, Jesus said that it was pride (seeking man’s honour)
that prevented people from having faith. So we see that unbelief comes from
pride. Proud people don’t need to depend on God. So they don’t have faith.
In exactly the same way there
is a close connection between humility and faith. A humble man is one who has
no dependence on himself. He depends on God alone.
No Confidence In Ourselves
Under the old covenant, the
primary mark of an Israelite was circumcision. Anyone who was not circumcised
was to be cut off from God’s people, for he had broken the Divine covenant
(Gen.17:14).
In the new covenant, the
spiritual meaning of circumcision is explained as “having no confidence in ourselves”
(Phil.3:3).
It is the one who has no
confidence in himself whom God upholds and whom God anoints continuously with
His Spirit. There is a prophecy concerning Jesus that states, “Behold My
Servant Whom I uphold....I have put My Spirit upon Him” (Isa.42:1; see
Matt.12:18)
The anointing of the Holy
Spirit is the prime essential for being a new covenant servant of God. And we
see in this verse that God gives that anointing to those who are upheld by Him
- that is, to those who are helplessly dependent on Him.
Faith in God cannot be
exercised until we have become weak in ourselves. Otherwise our faith will be
in the arm of flesh - which could be either our own cleverness, ability and
money, or the resources of other people whom we know and whom we can depend on.
Let me illustrate: If a rich
brother and a poor brother are both faced with a sudden financial need, who
would have to trust in God more? Obviously the poor brother. The rich man has
enough money. So he does not need to pray. But the poor brother, if he has
faith, will cry out to God, and He will not be disappointed. It is when we
don’t have human resources to fall back on that we learn to live by faith.
Even many so-called “full-time
workers”, who claim to be “living by faith”, have fairly reliable human
resources that they can depend on. They have brothers who can be depended on to
send them money every month - just in case God lets them down!!
“Faith comes by hearing”
(Rom.10:17). It is when we hear what God says that faith is born in our hearts.
God speaks to us through the Scriptures and also through His Spirit. So, if we
don’t listen to God, we won’t have faith. Our spiritual antennas must be
attuned to listen to God the whole day, no matter what we are doing.
To listen to God ALWAYS is one
of the most important requirements for a servant of God. Jesus lived every day
listening to, and obeying the promptings of the Holy Spirit (See Isa.50:4).
That proved that He had no confidence in Himself and knew that only the Father
could show Him what things had eternal value and what things didn’t. We waste a
lot of time doing things that have no eternal value, because we are in too much
of a hurry to have time to listen to God.
God wants to teach us how to
live by faith in Him. Four times the Bible says that “the righteous shall live
by faith”. That does not refer to full-time workers, but to all believers. And
so God arranges our circumstances such that we are compelled to turn to Him
again and again for guidance. And if we are seeking for God’s best, He will
gradually take away the human props that we have depended on for so long, and
bring us to the place where we trust Him alone for all our needs - whether
those needs be financial or physical or whatever.
In 2 Chronicles 16:12 , we
read that King Asa of Judah was sick. When a king is sick, he can afford to get
the best physicians to treat him. Yet Asa died. Why? Because “even when his
disease was severe, he did not seek the Lord, but depended on the doctors”
(v.12).
Now if a poor man in Israel
had been sick, he would have had to seek the Lord, and the Lord could have
healed him. It is when we are weak and our human resources are limited that we
seek the Lord.
Faith is such an important
factor in the Christian life that we are told that “without faith, it is
impossible to please God” (Heb.11:6). That means even if we live in purity and
goodness, and never backbite or gossip or cheat or tell lies, and even if we
give all our money for God’s work, if we don’t live by faith (in helpless
dependence on God and with no confidence in ourselves), we still won’t please
Him.
As servants of the new
covenant, it is faith that we are impart to others in the church - not just
Bible-knowledge. We have to teach them from our own experience how to trust the
Lord in all situations.
Soul-Power, Electronic-Power And Money-Power
Another thing that we must
understand, as God’s servants, is the difference between our soul-power and the
Holy Spirit’s power.
Peter once told the Lord, “You
are the Christ the Son of the living God.” Jesus immediately replied saying,
“Flesh and blood did not reveal that to you”. In other words, Peter did not
discover that spiritual truth by his soul-power - his human cleverness or
shrewdness.
Our soul (mind) cannot give us
Divine revelation. If we are intelligent, we can get clever thoughts from the
Bible. And we can share those thoughts with others in the church and impress
the undiscerning. But clever human thoughts and Divine revelation are as
different and as far apart from each other, as earth and heaven.
Paul preached with fear and
trembling, because he was afraid of using his own cleverness in preaching God’s
Word - lest the faith of others rest on his wisdom rather than on God’s power
(1 Cor.2:1-5).
Humanly speaking, Paul was
ideally suited to work among the Jews (since he knew their Scriptures), and
Peter among the Gentiles. Yet God gave them exactly the opposite ministries
(Gal.2:8), so that they would depend on the Holy Spirit and not on their own
abilities.
Clever thoughts are usually
what we think of to preach to others to get their honour. Revelation, on the
other hand, makes us fall on our faces before God. With our cleverness, we can
impress people. But with Divine revelation we can help them.
When Isaiah got a revelation
of God’s glory, he didn’t think of his vision as a point for his next sermon!!
He fell down and worshipped God. The same thing happened to John on Patmos. It
is only after both of them fell down before the Lord, that He told them to take
His message to others. We must worship God before we can serve Him.
Soul-power is also seen in the
ministry of those preachers, who, through hypnotic power, make people fall
down, laugh hysterically and give their money to the preachers. People with
psychosomatic illnesses (illnesses caused by wrong mental attitudes) are also
“healed” at such meetings. All this is done by human soul-power, but using the
Name of Jesus - and so even many believers are deceived. As servants of God we
must be bold to expose these counterfeits.
Soul-power can also be seen in
the way many Christian leaders dominate their followers and overwhelm them by
their personalities. People stand in awe of such leaders and respect them as
“holy men of God”. And these leaders love such admiration from their followers.
Music also has tremendous
soul-power. It can stir our emotions. But we must not be deceived into thinking
that that is the Holy Spirit’s power. We can draw many people to our churches
with good music. But whom will we draw? Not the poor in spirit who are seeking
for help to live a godly life, but the cultured and the sophisticated ones who
are proud of their understanding and their musical tastes.
I remember, one Sunday, when a
musically-gifted couple came to our meeting in Bangalore. They found the music
to be below par, and so never came again. We were thankful for being preserved
from people who were looking for a musical church and not a godly one!!
What we need in the church is
not a good orchestra but the power of the Holy Spirit. Peter did not draw the
crowds on the day of Pentecost with a keyboard and a drum-set, but with the
anointing of God. It is when this anointing is gone, that believers seek to
replace it with fine music, humorous sermons and grand buildings etc.,
Electronic gadgets can also be
a snare. Bible-teaching tapes by anointed servants of God can certainly help us
in our spiritual growth. But we have to be careful that we don’t begin to
depend on such tapes more than on the Holy Spirit, when we want to hear God
speak to us. Even if we had tapes of the apostle Paul with us, we would not be
able to build the Body of Christ with them!
Money is another thing that
has tremendous power in the world. And we can easily lean on it. Almost every
Christian organization today speaks of the need for money, and sends out
newsletters and magazines to rake in the “almighty dollar” from simple and
sincere (but gullible) believers in Western countries.
The apostles on the other
hand, never once asked believers for money for themselves, or for their work.
They urged believers only “to remember the poor” (Gal.2:10) and to help those
who were in need (2 Cor.8 & 9). But alas, what the apostles never spoke of
even once, is spoken of all the time nowadays, in Christian work.
God says, “If I were hungry I
would not tell you, for the world is Mine and all that it contains”
(Psa.50:12).
What about us as servants of
this God? When we are in need - of food or of money - what do we do? Do we tell
our heavenly Father or do we tell men? If we are truly called of God, we will
never have any lack of earthly necessities. God has no lack of money. What He
lacks is broken, humble, faithful and trusting servants.
God is looking for broken,
humble people whom He can empower with His Holy Spirit and use to build the
church.
God is a jealous God. He will
not give His glory to another. He will not build the church with any power
other than His power.
God’s work is done even today,
as in days of old - not by soul-power or by electronic power or by financial
might, but by the power of the Holy Spirit!
The Life And Ministry Of Jesus
Whenever we think of the
Spirit-filled life, we must look at the life and ministry of Jesus, for He is
the clearest Example of a Spirit-filled man.
Which did Jesus have - the
fruit or the gifts of the Spirit? The answer is “Both”. Let us also seek for
both then.
The Holy Spirit will show us
the glory of Jesus in the mirror of God’s Word, and then transform us into His
likeness (2 Cor 3:18).
The Spirit will show us the
life of Jesus first. For example, He will show us His perfect patience - how He
never got irritated when people slapped Him and pulled out the hairs from His
beard and accused Him falsely. The Spirit will show us how Jesus reacted to the
different situations that he faced in His home and in His carpenter-shop. And
if we submit to the Spirit, He will work that nature into us too.
God desires to work in us to
will and do His good pleasure. But we must work out our own salvation with fear
and trembling (Phil.2:12,13). And then we will see a transformation taking
place in our lives gradually.
To partake of God’s nature is
one thing. To try and manufacture it is quite another. We cannot manufacture
God’s nature. When we want to partake of God’s nature, we have to come in
brokenness, recognising our inability to produce it, and humbly receive it from
the Holy Spirit. But alas, it takes a long time for many to realise that they
cannot produce the Divine nature themselves.
If we feel that we have become
patient today, because we were wholehearted and because we disciplined
ourselves, then we are being deceived by Satan. That is how he will seek to
puff us up in order to destroy us. If the patience we have is our own product,
then it is a worthless human virtue - as worthless as human dung.
If on the other hand, we
recognise that we received our patience from God, and that we did not produce
it ourselves, it won’t be difficult for us to give God all the glory for what
He has done in our lives.
So let us allow the Holy
Spirit to show us the glory of Jesus and to transform us into the likeness of
Christ in every area of our lives.
The Holy Spirit will also show
us how Jesus served the Father. Jesus was anointed with the Spirit and equipped
with supernatural gifts. He did not dare to serve the Father without being
anointed first - as multitudes of believers are seeking to do, today.
It is written about Jesus that
“God anointed Him with the Holy Spirit and with power”. What was the result?
“He went about DOING GOOD and HEALING (DELIVERING) ALL WHO WERE OPPRESSED BY
THE DEVIL, for God was with Him.” (Acts 10:38).
The world around us is full of
people who are suffering because Satan has oppressed and harassed and bound
them in some way or the other. When God is with us, we will do what Jesus did -
go around doing good to them and delivering them from Satan’s bondage. It is
impossible to do that without being anointed with the Holy Spirit.
If Jesus Himself could not
fulfil such a ministry without the anointing of the Spirit, how can we?
When we see the baptism and
the gifts of the Spirit in the context of Jesus’ ministry, we can never go
wrong. Jesus not only lived a holy life, He also had a ministry to others. He
preached, healed the sick, cast out demons, and made disciples.
We can never serve God
effectively as His servants in the church if we are not anointed as Jesus was.
There are many who study the
Word carefully and preach it accurately, but they don’t have the anointing of
the Holy Spirit upon them. Therefore their ministry is dry and dead.
As servants of the new
covenant, our preaching must always be in the power of the Spirit. Jesus was
never dull or boring or stale at any time when He preached - because He was
anointed. When we are anointed as He was, we too will never be dull or boring
or stale. Instead, our ministry will be a refreshing blessing to everyone.
When Jesus preached the Word
to the disciples who were walking to Emmaus, they testified that their hearts
“burned within them” (Lk.24:32). That is how a truly anointed ministry is - it
makes people’s hearts burn. And that is how our ministry should be always.
There must never be a time
when we’re not under the anointing of the Spirit. Then we will always have a
word to give to those in need whom we come across, even as Jesus had (See
Isa.50:4)
In Acts 1:1, it says that the
gospel of Luke describes “all that Jesus BEGAN to do and to teach.” So the Acts
of the Apostles is a record of what Jesus CONTINUED to do and teach. In the
gospels, we have the record of what Jesus did with His physical body. In the
Acts we have the record of what He did with His spiritual Body. So the Acts of
the Apostles is actually the acts of Jesus through the apostles.
Jesus is not engaged in some
other ministry on earth today, than what He did when he came to earth 2000
years ago. He is still “going around doing good and delivering all who are
oppressed by the devil” - through the members of His spiritual Body, the
church.
And so it is an awesome
responsibility that we have to be a servant of the Lord in His Body. Let us
never take it lightly. If Jesus Who lived such a perfect life for 30 years
needed to be anointed with the Holy Spirit before He began to serve the Father,
how dare we engage in such a ministry without a similar anointing?
If we have not been anointed
by the Spirit as yet, it must be because we have not sought for it
sufficiently. And if we have not sought for it, it is probably because we have not
valued it sufficiently. And if we have not valued it, it must be because we
have been self-sufficient. Let us repent then of our self-sufficiency - and
allow God to circumcise our hearts of all self-confidence.
The Anointing Of The Holy Spirit
Brothers, let us seek God with
all our hearts for the anointing of the Holy Spirit. We can never serve God or
build the church without it. This is our greatest and our most desperate need.
Let us never be satisfied with anything less than that baptism of fire that
Jesus gave His apostles on the day of Pentecost. And let us mourn whenever this
fire of God departs from our ministry.
The anointing of the Spirit is
always given in relation to the needs of others. Jesus said in Luke 4:18, “The
Spirit of the Lord is upon Me, because He anointed Me to preach the gospel to
THE POOR. He has sent Me to proclaim release to THE CAPTIVES, and recovery of
sight to THE BLIND, to set free THOSE WHO ARE DOWNTRODDEN.”
Notice here that the anointing
of the Spirit is described as only meeting the needs of others - the poor, the
captives, the blind and the downtrodden. It is not for meeting our own need. It
is only when we have a burden and a concern for the poor and the downtrodden
and the captives of Satan in our churches that God will anoint us.
Jesus once told a parable
teaching us how we were to ask for the Holy Spirit’s power (Lk.11:5-13). A man
had a visitor one night and found that he had no food in the house to give him.
So he went to his neighbour’s house and kept on knocking until his neighbour
got up from bed and gave him the food he wanted for his visitor. Jesus then
went on to say that that was how we were to ask our heavenly Father for the
power of the Holy Spirit (v.13).
If we don’t have a concern for
the needy people who come to our house (the church), we will not seek God for
help to bless them and to set them free from their bondages.
When we see a brother being
oppressed by Satan, what do we do? Do we just pray with him and send him away.
Then we are unfit to represent the Lord Who came to set people free from
Satan’s oppression. We should seek God for that which our brother needs. We
should tell the Lord that we don’t have what it takes to help him, and ask Him
for power to set him free. And we must persist in asking until we receive. Then
we will receive. That is the application of the above parable.
None of us can have all the
gifts of the Spirit, as Jesus had - for the Spirit distributes the gifts among
all the members of the Body as He wills. Jesus Himself was the Body of Christ
initially. So naturally He had all the gifts of the Spirit. But today the Body
of Christ consists of many members to whom the gifts are given. The Spirit may
not have given you the gift of teaching or of healing. That does not matter. He
may have given you the gift of encouraging others. If so, exercise that gift
faithfully, and allow others to exercise THEIR gifts.
Don’t attempt to be everything
yourself - for you cannot.
There was only One Person Who
could be everything Himself - and that was Jesus. Today we can be only one part
of His Body. Therefore we can rejoice when we find that God has given younger
brothers certain gifts that we ourselves don’t have. So they can do that part
of the work of the Body better than we can. Praise the Lord!
Once we SEE the Body of
Christ, we will never again be jealous of anyone. Instead, we will rejoice in
the ministry God has given them.
God gives us grace to help
people in one area, and God gives others grace to help them in other areas. So
there will be sincere thankfulness to God in our hearts for every single
brother and sister.
The weakest brothers and
sisters in the church also have an essential ministry. In fact the weaker they
are, the more likely they are to be dependent on the Holy Spirit.
We are effective servants of
God only when we can bring forth the ministries of ALL the brothers and sisters
in our local church. A Christian leader who does everything himself is a
failure as a servant of God. This is unfortunately the condition of many
pastors today.
The Right Balance
We have to be careful that our
life is not a reaction to the extremes that we have seen in other groups in
Christendom.
In the history of Christendom,
there have been many groups that majored on holiness and despised the gifts of
the Spirit - even to the extent of calling them demonic!! They have all failed
to fulfil God’s highest purposes, as Jesus did.
At the opposite extreme, are
groups that have majored on spiritual gifts alone, to such an extent that they
have ignored personal holiness. Such groups have invariably gone astray, being
deceived by religious spirits.
In the same way, there are
some groups that major on an intellectual study of the Word. And at the
opposite extreme are groups that major on emotional exuberance. But both groups
seem to be ignorant of their soulishness. Intellectualism and emotionalism are
both soulish. Neither of them constitutes true spirituality. The Holy Spirit
leads God’s children to a life of obedience to God’s Word.
Whom shall we follow among all
these groups? None of them.
We shall follow the perfect
Example of our Lord, Who had both the fruit and the gifts of the Spirit, and
Who obeyed the Word, instead of just studying it and getting excited over it!
Then we won’t go wrong.
Let us “pursue love and
earnestly desire spiritual gifts”, with all our hearts (1 Cor.14:1), and we
shall then love everyone we meet, and deliver every Satan-oppressed soul who
comes across our path.
Becoming A Blessing
The gifts of the Spirit are
compared in 1 Cor.12 to the organs of the human body - the eye, the ear, the
hands and the feet. We need eyes to see, ears to hear, hands to help others and
feet to take us to different parts of this world. Even so, God has given us
these gifts of the Spirit, so that a needy world around us can be blessed
through them. He wants to give us power to free people from Satan’s grip over
their lives and from their frustrations and their fears.
When God anoints our heads
with His oil, our cups WILL overflow with blessing to others. And if we keep
pouring our oil into the vessels of others, we will find like the widow found
(in Elisha’s time - 2 Kings 4:1-7) that there is enough power and blessing in
the anointing of God to help every single person who comes across our path.
There wasn’t a single vessel that remained unfilled with oil that day in that
poor widow’s house. Her whole neighbourhood was blessed through her. And our
neighbourhood can be blessed in the same way too.
But we have to keep pouring
out into the lives of others. That is a Divine law. If we selfishly keep God’s
blessing for ourselves alone, it will begin to stink like the manna did, even
if our blessing came from heaven (like the manna did) in the first place.
Proverbs 11:25 says that it is
only the one who waters others who will himself also be watered by God.
Jesus became a curse for us on
Calvary’s cross so that we might receive the blessing of Abraham - the promise
of the Spirit (Gal.3:13). The blessing of Abraham is described in Genesis 12:3
as “being a blessing to all the families of the earth”. This is what it means
to be a servant of the new covenant : To be a blessing to EVERY family that we
meet on the face of the earth. That is our birthright in Christ.
So, let us not “despise the
day of small beginnings” (Zech.4:10). Maybe the Spirit will urge us to start by
writing a letter of encouragement to just one person whom God lays on our
hearts.
God may test our eagerness to
serve Him by sending just one needy brother across our path - one hungry
visitor. What will we do? Will we seek God for power to help that brother?
If we are unfaithful in such
matters, we will miss everything that God has planned for us. To live under the
anointing constantly, we must be faithful in the smallest of matters. It is
through small actions that all mighty ministries begin. That is how the rivers
of living water (that Jesus spoke of) began to flow from the sanctuary. It
began as a trickle, but later on became a mighty river (See Ezek.47:1,9).
May God help us all to be
faithful in the little things.
CHAPTER SIX
BEING A FATHER TO OTHERS
Paul said that even if there
were countless teachers, there were not many fathers, in his time (1 Cor.4:15).
This is true even today.
Every servant of God must
strive to have the spirit of a father towards the brothers and sisters in the
church.
It is easy to BECOME a father,
but it is difficult to BE a father. A man can produce ten children without any
difficulty. But to bring up those children to mature manhood is quite another
matter.
It is the same in the church.
To bring people to the new birth is relatively easy. But to present them
perfect in Christ to the Father is far more difficult.
Our ambition should not be to
have a large church but a pure one. It is no use having many people in our
church, if they are not growing up to maturity and perfection.
What is the use boasting that
we have many children if they are all retarded? If all our grown-up sons and
daughters are still not toilet-trained but are still soiling their clothes, and
haven’t learnt to walk, and are still drinking milk from feeding bottles, that
is not something to be proud of.
But many churches are full of
such overgrown babies. They have been believers for over 20 years. But they
still have dirty thoughts, they still cannot walk in victory, and they are
still drinking milk (they only know about the forgiveness of sins). The reason
for such retardation is that their leaders are teachers and not fathers.
Fathers And Teachers
Paul told the Corinthians, as
a spiritual father, “I do not write these things to shame you” (1 Cor.4:14).
Teachers seek to humiliate their failing students and put them to shame
publicly. But fathers are different. They cover every sin that their stumbling
children commit, and continuously encourage them to a higher life.
It is far easier to be a
teacher in an assembly than a father, for it costs a great deal of self-denial
to carry the burdens of others on our hearts. Teachers can never build a
family. They can only build classes. And many churches are schools, and not
homes. Only a father can build a home and a family.
If our church is not like a
family, what is the reason? It must be that we are teachers and not fathers. Do
we look at the brothers and sisters in the church as students who need to be
taught? Then we have the wrong spirit. If we are fathers, we will look at them as
those who have to be borne with, and supported in a loving, caring and
understanding way. It is good for us to judge ourselves and see what we really
are - fathers or teachers.
It is no use blaming the
brothers and sisters in the church saying that they are all carnal. Let us
judge ourselves first.
A true spiritual father will
not seek his own gain in anything, but always the welfare and the good of his
spiritual children. Paul says in 2 Cor 12:14,15 , “I will not be a burden to
you. I do not seek what is yours but you. Children are not responsible to save
up for their parents, but parents for their children. I will most gladly spend
and be expended for your souls”. Those are the words of a true father.
It cost Paul everything to be
a father. He considered all that he had gained in life as rubbish compared to
gaining Christ. He also considered it worth sacrificing everything in order to
be a father to those whom he had brought to Christ.
A teacher works for pay. He
does not seek the good of the students primarily, but his own gain. The gain we
expect may not be money, but honour. Do we want to be respected and recognised
as servants of God by others? Then we are seeking a salary - of honour - from
them. Then we are teachers, not fathers.
Fathers expect nothing in
return for all that they do for their children. Paul did not expect respect or
even submission from others. He only sought their spiritual growth. What about
us? Do we seek the good of the brothers and sisters in everything that we do?
The ‘pastor-system’ that we
find in Christendom today was unheard of in the days of the apostles. It is
this unScriptural system that has given rise to numerous teachers in
Christendom - teachers who have to be paid a salary each month for the classes
they take, and who make their students dependent on them for every major
decision in life - whether it be marriage or employment or whatever.
The brothers and sisters in
such churches never grow up. They remain spiritual babes forever, because this
human system robs them of a direct connection with Christ their Head - which is
their birthright under the new covenant.
How does a father care for his
children? In a poor home, the father and mother will not even eat, if there is
not enough food for the children. They will gladly deny themselves, and they
will not even let their children know that they have not eaten, lest the
children feel bad about it. A father hides his self denial from his children.
Do we have such a spirit - that denies itself for the good of the brothers and
sisters, and will not even let them know about it.
Another characteristic of a
father is that he is eager to see his children advance beyond him in life - in
education and in every other way. There are many fathers who have never studied
beyond high school, who sacrifice so much to give a college-education to their
children. They are happy to deny themselves the comforts of life for this
purpose and they are delighted when their children graduate. No father is ever
jealous to see his son advance beyond his status or his educational level in
life.
That is how a true servant of
God will be too. He will be delighted when younger brothers are wholehearted
and get revelation from the Scriptures and are used by the Lord to be a
blessing to others. He will sincerely long that they should advance beyond him
spiritually, and be more useful in the Lord’s hands than he has ever been.
When we see younger brothers
growing up in the church, without any folly being manifested in their lives,
because of good leadership that protects them, we should rejoice that they can
have such a blessing as we never had when we were young. There will not be even
a shade of jealousy in us, if we are fathers. On the contrary, we will be
delighted. We will rejoice that it is going well with them.
If we are jealous of a younger
brother’s ministry or influence or spiritual advancement, we are certainly
teachers, and not fathers. In a school, if a student can solve a problem that
his teacher cannot solve, the teacher will be so angry and jealous, that he
will seek to humiliate that student ever after in some way or the other. How do
we feel as servants of God when someone points out a mistake in us?
Teachers can only build
Babylon. Only fathers can build the true church - the New Jerusalem. We may
understand and proclaim all the truths of the new covenant, and yet if we do
this with the spirit of a teacher we will still build Babylon.
A teacher is very conscious of
all the labour that he has invested in his students. He thinks of the honour he
will receive if his students do well. He is always thinking of what he will
gain, even when his students do well. A father however is quite different. He
desires only the welfare of his children. He desires nothing for himself.
A teacher will criticise his
students. A father however will encourage his children. If we keep on
criticizing the brothers and sisters, we will accomplish little, even if
everything we say is true. A father will accomplish much more by encouraging
his children.
Only a father can continue to
be kind to ungrateful and evil children. A teacher will give up on ungrateful
students very quickly.
When we have problems with
difficult brothers in the assembly, if we hope that they will leave the
assembly, even if they destroy themselves, then it should be clear to us that
our spirit is that of a teacher. A father can never wish that for any of his
children.
Jesus told us to be merciful
even as our heavenly Father is merciful and kind to ungrateful and evil people
(Lk.6:35,36).
As we pursue righteousness, we
can very easily degenerate into Pharisees and teachers, if we don’t seek to be
constantly and endlessly merciful.
A Father And An Older Brother
From the parable of the
prodigal son, we can learn something of the depth of God’s love for those who
backslide from him and even exploit His goodness towards them. There we learn
so much about the Divine nature - and that is the nature that we are to partake
of.
We see in that parable a
striking contrast between the attitude of that wayward boy’s older brother and
his father. That is the contrast between a teacher and a father too.
The older brother was an
upright person. But he had no love or concern for his younger brother. He only
found fault with him. That is how many Christian leaders are too. They are
quick to lose their temper and to criticise and scold their brothers and
sisters.
But look at the father in that
story. What a different spirit he had. That is a picture of what God is like.
And when we partake of God’s nature, we too will become like that. The older
brother remembers all the evil that his younger brother has done, and delights
in exposing it all. The father however, doesn’t even want to think of it.
To be converted from being an
unbeliever to a believer is one thing. But if we are to be servants of the new
covenant, we need a second conversion - from being “an older brother” to being
“a father”, from being “Pharisee-like” to being “Christ-like”.
Is there a brother who has
rebelled against your authority as a servant of God, and who has spoken a lot
of evil against you, even though you have done him only good for many years?
What is your attitude towards him now? Is it the attitude of a teacher or of a
father?
We are not tested through the
good and wholehearted brothers in the church as much as through the rebellious
ones.
One or two rebellious brothers
can show us our true spiritual condition more than a hundred spiritual brothers
- because those difficult brothers have a way of bringing into the light, the
lusts that are hidden in the nooks and corners of our flesh.
That is why we are exhorted
“to give thanks for ALL men” - and not just for the wholehearted believers (1
Tim. 2:1). Everyone we come across helps towards our sanctification in some way
or the other.
Here you are, living for years
under the deception that you are a spiritual father. And then a difficult
brother arises in your church. And in no time at all you discover, through your
attitude towards him, that you are really a teacher and not a father!
That difficult brother enabled
you to see your true condition in a way that all the wholehearted brothers in
the church could not show you for so many years. Shouldn’t you be thankful for
such a brother who saved you from deceiving yourself forever?
When we find it difficult to
bear with brothers who rub us the wrong way, it is good to recognise that we
ourselves must have caused inconveniences and problems for others in the same
way too, without our even being aware of it. They too must have found it
difficult to bear with us!
None of us are perfect. We all
have a flesh. And everyone who has a flesh has to bear with others who have a
similar flesh. Others who are more mature than us can see un-Christlike areas
in our behaviour, which we, in all sincerity, are unable to see ourselves.
You may imagine that even
though you have a difficult wife, you are still bearing with her and loving her
and having no complaints against her. You may even be secretly congratulating
yourself on your “Christ-like” behaviour. But you may not realise that your
wife probably feels the same way about you! She may be feeling that she has a
difficult husband to live with and bear with!!
And so it is good for us to
dwell in low thoughts about ourselves always. It is good to recognise that we
have faults that we cannot see.
The prodigal son’s behaviour
brought out the goodness of his father’s heart in a remarkable way. If he had
always been a good boy at home, he would never have seen his father’s
tremendous goodness.
Whenever a similar problem
crops up in our assembly (or in our home for that matter), with some brother
(or family-member), we should think of it is an occasion when God wants to
bring out His father-heart through us, towards that erring person - whether
that person be a brother, or wife, or son, or daughter.
How disappointed God is in
such situations, when we manifest the heart of a teacher instead.
Has someone taken your goods,
and gone away, and ruined your name and the good name of your assembly by his
conduct? What will you do, if he comes back repentant, one day? How are you
going to receive him? Will you put him in the servant’s quarters for a few
months on probation, to find out if his repentance is genuine?
Or will you rejoice like the
prodigal’s father and run up to him and embrace him, and give him a warm
welcome home? It all depends on what you are - a father or a teacher. A teacher
may also receive a prodigal back, but it won’t be with a warm heart!
There’s joy in heaven over
every soul who repents. If we cannot share in that joy, something is seriously
wrong with us.
The older brother of the
prodigal had the spirit of a teacher. He said to his father, “See how I’ve
lived all these years. I’ve done nothing wrong. I’ve been wholehearted and
zealous. I’ve been working for you faithfully. But see how this son of yours
has behaved.”
A teacher is always comparing
his own goodness and faithfulness with the failures of the carnal ones in the
church. He is occupied more with the shortcomings of his brothers than with the
riches of God’s grace. That was the primary characteristic of the Pharisees in
Jesus’ day. All those who have the spirit of a teacher are Pharisees.
There was some truth in what
the older brother of the prodigal said - that his younger brother had indeed
“devoured his father’s wealth”. But who told him that the money had been “spent
on harlots”? That was an assumption. And that is characteristic of a teacher.
Whenever he is against anyone, he always assumes the worst and believes the
worst about him. He also delights in exposing the sins of an offender to put
him to shame.
When we accuse another, it is
no use saying that our facts are 100% right? Our spirit can still be 100%
wrong, because it is in fellowship with the Accuser of the brethren
(Rev.12:10).
When Satan accuses God’s
children to Him, you can be certain that his facts are all 100% right. He
wouldn’t dare tell lies to God. But his spirit is still the spirit of
accusation.
That can be true of us too, if
we are not careful. So let us not find any comfort in saying that we have
carefully verified all the facts and found them to be true. Our spirit can
still stink of Hell.
On the other hand, if we are
fathers, we will cover the multitude of sins that a brother has committed, and
rejoice that he has now repented. We will “kill the fattened calf and rejoice”.
This is a great height to attain to. But we must press on until we reach there.
Let us not deceive ourselves imagining that we have attained to it already.
Let us ask God for His grace
to be true fathers to others.
David And Absalom
There was a time in David’s
life, when his son Absalom schemed against him, and won the hearts of many of
the Israelites and drove David from the throne.
But David still had a few
friends who were first-class soldiers who wanted to fight and defend him. David
knew that they were going to fight with Absalom. And so he said to his general
Joab, “Deal gently for my sake with the young man Absalom” (2 Sam 18:5).
We must have those words
written in bold letters in front of our minds whenever we have to deal with
difficult brothers in the church: “DEAL GENTLY WITH THAT PERSON - FOR THE
LORD’S SAKE.”
Later, when David heard that
Absalom had been killed, he wept and said, “O Absalom, I wish I had died in
your place” (2 Sam. 18:33).
David was no teacher! He had a
father-heart towards a rebellious son. No wonder he was called a man after
God’s own heart.
God’s heart has the same
desire: “I wish I could die in your place.” And that was why Jesus died in our
place on Calvary. It is when we enter into fellowship with God’s heart that we
become fathers.
Jesus had the right to rebuke
sin in man, because He was willing to die to deliver man from sin. We have no
right to rebuke sin in another until we are willing to die to deliver him from
sin.
Then only are we true fathers.
Otherwise we are only teachers.
Shepherds And Hirelings
In Ezekiel 34:3-6, the Lord
rebukes the shepherds of Israel.
He rebuked them for eating the
fat of the sheep and clothing themselves with their wool. They had not
strengthened the sickly, nor healed the diseased, nor bound up the wounded
sheep. They had not gone out to bring back the scattered sheep, nor protected
the sheep from wild animals. Instead they had ruled the sheep with force and
severity. They were hirelings and not true shepherds.
Hirelings are like teachers.
They seek their own and work for pay.
In contrast, we see in verses
11-16 how a true shepherd behaves. He cares for his sheep, feeds them, leads
them to rest, seeks the lost sheep, brings back the backslidden ones, and
strengthens the sick ones. A good shepherd even lays down his life for the
sheep.
A spiritual father is such a
shepherd to his flock.
This is our calling as
servants of the new covenant.
We must not think of our
ministry as consisting merely of preaching in the meetings. Maybe there is some
discouraged brother somewhere who needs a visit and a word of encouragement.
Someone else may need deliverance because he is being oppressed by Satan.
We have to look at all such
people as lambs that have been captured by Satan the lion (1 Pet.5:8). Like
David, we must go out against the lion, attack it, and deliver the lambs out of
its mouth (1 Sam.17:34,35). That is how a true shepherd acts. When he comes
across a difficult brother, he fights with Satan, and doesn’t criticise the
brother. Thus he delivers the lamb from the lion’s mouth.
Haven’t we all seen fathers
and mothers sitting up with their sick children, by their bedsides the whole
night, caring for them?
Teachers have no time for such
self-denying care. They will only tell their sick students to come back to
school after they get well.
It is when we have spiritually
sick brothers in our midst, that we discover whether we are actually fathers or
teachers.
If you have a difficult wife,
you will soon discover whether you are a shepherd-husband or a
hireling-husband. If you had a spiritual wife however, you might never have discovered
your true state!
God told the shepherds in
Ezekiel’s time that Israel had gone to Babylon because of the failure of their
shepherds.
Many of God’s people are
dwelling in Babylon today, for the same reason : Their shepherds have failed
them.
1 Timothy 3:1 says that if a
man aspires to be an elder in a church, he is desiring a fine work. Yes, it is
certainly a fine work to be a blessing and a help to others in the church, as a
spiritual father.
May none of us however desire
the title and the honour of being known as elders and servants of God.
May God help us to take this
matter seriously.
CHAPTER SEVEN
BUILDING THE CHURCH
The ultimate purpose of God in
the new covenant is not to produce a number of Christ-like individuals, but to
produce “ONE NEW MAN” - one Body in Christ (Eph.2:15,16).
Under the old covenant, God
raised up a Moses, an Elijah and a John the Baptist. They were all lone men who
stood for God as witnesses in their generation. But the church was a mystery
hidden from them all. Israel could become only a congregation of individuals,
and not a body. In a body, all the members are inter-related, with each having
a personal and inward connection with the head.
When Jesus, the mediator of
the new covenant came, He sent out His disciples two by two. They were no
longer to be lone witnesses unto Him. He also told them that His presence would
be powerfully manifest wherever at least two of His disciples were united in
His Name (Matt.18:18-20) - because where two are united in Jesus’ Name, there
is a representation of the Body of Christ.
As servants of the new
covenant, we must never rest satisfied with individual brothers and sisters
becoming godly. The local assembly itself must be a representation of the Body
of Christ. Otherwise we have failed to fulfil God’s highest purpose.
The Presence Of God
What is the primary mark of a
new-covenant church? Many think that it is having a particular pattern of
church government and a particular form of meeting. But it is neither of these.
The important thing about the church is that it should have Divine life .
When a baby is being formed in
its mother’s womb, in its early weeks it does not even have the shape (pattern)
of a human being. It only has life. The shape (pattern) comes later. It is the
same when a new church is being established anywhere. It will take time for the
proper pattern to emerge. But meanwhile there must be life.
The primary mark of a
new-covenant church is that God is present in its midst. When the church comes
together, and everyone prophesies under the anointing of the Holy Spirit, those
who come to the meeting should be convicted of their sins and acknowledge that
God is present in the meeting (1 Cor.14:24,25). That, and that alone proves
that such a church has the right pattern.
If the presence of God is
absent, we must confess that we have come short of God’s perfect plan - and we
must repent.
Consider the tabernacle that
the Israelites made in the wilderness. Its pattern was written down clearly in
the book of Exodus. The Philistines could easily have made a similar
tabernacle.
But there was one thing that
they could never have reproduced - and that was God’s presence in the Most Holy
Place, manifested as a fiery flame lighting up the tabernacle. That was the
most important part of the tabernacle. It is the same with the church.
You may see a powerful church
somewhere, and imagine that its secret is the pattern it follows in its
meetings, or the doctrines it preaches!! And so you imitate that pattern, and
preach the same doctrines, and imagine that you have a new-covenant church. But
you are deceiving yourself. Without the glory of God being powerfully present
in your midst, there is no new-covenant church there at all.
When God is powerfully present
in our midst as a church, His light will continually show us what is pleasing
to Him and what isn’t. That light will warn us of dangers that lie ahead. It
will not only drive away the darkness, but the prince of darkness as well. The
powers of Hell will never be able to prevail against such a church.
It is no use having only our
doctrines right in the church. What we need more than anything else is the
presence of God.
The Spirit Of Prophecy
When God is present in our
midst, we will hear Him speaking to us powerfully in the meetings. That is the
meaning of prophecy.
In old covenant times,
prophecy was meant for foretelling the future and for guiding people as to what
they should do. But now, in the new covenant, prophecy is for exhortation
(challenging, rebuking and correcting people), consolation (comforting and
encouraging people) and edification (building up the church) (1 Cor.14:3).
Prophecy is the main gift of
the Spirit by which the church is built. The prophetic word is “a lamp shining
in a dark place” (2 Pet.1:19). Without this light constantly burning in the
church, it will be impossible to escape the wiles of the prince of darkness.
The church itself will sink into darkness. The main reason why many Christian
groups that started out well degenerated over a period of time was because the
gift of prophecy gradually disappeared.
Whenever God’s presence
departed from Israel in Old Testament times, one mark of His forsaking them was
that “there was no longer any prophet” among them (Psa.74:1,9).
Israel always degenerated
whenever they did not have a prophet, as in the days of Eli (See 1 Sam.3:1).
But Israel rose into a place of eminence when they had a prophet, as in the
days of Samuel (1 Sam.3:20). It was through Samuel that David was anointed as
the king of Israel. And that began a glorious new era in Israel’s history.
When Samuel prophesied, “the
Lord did not allow any of his words to fall to the ground” (1 Sam.3:19 - KJV).
We too must pray earnestly for
such a powerful ministry of prophecy in the church that every word we speak
goes straight home to people’s hearts like an arrow to its mark.
Through the gift of prophecy,
“the secrets of people’s hearts are disclosed” (1 Cor.14:25). Thus everyone in
the church will get light on the deceitfulness of sin.
We are commanded to “exhort
one another daily (in the church), lest we be hardened through the
DECEITFULNESS of sin” (Heb.3:13). There are sins that are obvious and there are
sins that are subtle and hidden. But the spirit of prophecy will expose both
the deceitfulness of sin as well as the schemes of Satan, so that we are
protected.
We see an illustration of this
in the Old Testament. When the king of Aram was warring against Israel, every
time he and his generals planned in secret to attack Israel at a certain point,
his plans were revealed to the king of Israel by Elisha, through prophecy (2
Kings 6:8-12). Thus the king of Israel knew exactly where to place his army to
defend the country, and saved his nation again and again.
That is how the Lord, through
prophecy in the church-meetings, warns us in advance of the areas where Satan
is going to attack us in the coming days. So we can be on our guard in those
areas.
Paul exhorted Timothy to fight
the good fight (against Satan) by paying attention to the prophecies made
concerning him (1 Tim.1:18).
Again and again, we have found
in the church in Bangalore, that the spirit of prophecy in our meetings has
warned many brothers and sisters in advance of the points at which they were
going to face the enemy’s attacks in the days that followed. Through the
prophetic word, God has given wisdom to everyone of us in the church - wisdom
for our personal life, for our family life, and for our church-life.
Proverbs 24:3,4 says, “By
WISDOM a house is built, and by KNOWLEDGE the rooms are filled with pleasant
and precious riches”.
There is a place for knowledge
in the church - God’s Word taught by anointed teachers. But knowledge is like
the furniture, with which a house is furnished after it has been built by
WISDOM.
So if we only have
Bible-knowledge in our churches, we will be like a family living on an empty
plot of ground with a lot of expensive furniture around us, but with no house -
no walls, no roof and not even a floor!! That’s why we are exhorted in the New
Testament to pursue after WISDOM first of all. “If anyone lacks wisdom let him
ask God who gives liberally to all” (Jas.1:4).
It is through wisdom that the
church is built. And God’s wisdom comes to the church through the gift of
prophecy.
That is why we must “earnestly
seek to prophesy” (1 Cor.14:1,5), in every meeting of the church. Meetings for
Bible-study and evangelism are good. But if we are to build the church as a
pure testimony for Christ, then the gift of prophecy must be given the FIRST
place.
The Pillar And Support Of The Truth
In 1 Timothy 3:15, the church
is called the pillar and support of the truth. God desires all men to come to
the knowledge of the truth (1 Tim.2:4). What is this truth that God wants all
men to know? In John 8:32, Jesus said, “You shall know the truth and the truth
will make you free.” Truth is that which sets people free from sin (Jn.8:34).
All bondage of every sort
arises because we don’t know the truth. Cultists hold their followers in
bondage by keeping them ignorant of the truth. The more we know of the truth,
the more free we will become. The Spirit of the Lord brings liberty (2
Cor.3:17).
In John 16:13, Jesus told His
disciples, “When the Spirit of truth comes, He will guide you into all the
truth.” The Holy Spirit is called “the Spirit of truth”, because He seeks to
lead us into all the truth.
Truth is a vast land like the
land of Canaan. And even as God led the Israelites to possess Canaan little by
little, the Holy Spirit also desires to lead us to possess all of the truth.
The more we know of the truth, the more we will be set free - from sin, from
people’s opinions and from unScriptural religious traditions etc.,
So when the Church is called
“the pillar and support of the truth”, it means that the church must be a place
where people come to hear the truth and are set more and more free. If people
are not being liberated in our churches, we are failing in our ministry.
To set people free, we need
the word of truth (God’s Word) and the Spirit of truth (the Holy Spirit). Jesus
prayed to the Father saying, “Sanctify them in the truth. Thy word is truth”
(Jn.17:17). God’s Word is the truth that sanctifies people. We cannot build the
church if we don’t have God’s Word expounded regularly in the church in the
power of the Holy Spirit. To be true servants of God and of the new covenant,
we must become men of the Word and men of the Spirit.
For the church itself to be
the pillar and support of the truth, there must be anointed brothers and
sisters in the church who have become pillars themselves. In Revelation 3:12,
the Lord tells us that if we overcome, He will make us pillars in His church.
No-one other than Jesus Himself can make us pillars in the church. We can’t
make ourselves pillars, nor can any servant of God appoint us as pillars.
But the Lord makes all
overcomers - brothers and sisters - pillars in His church. Even a sister can be
a pillar, if she is an overcomer.
We mustn’t forget however,
that pillars are built to support a building’s weight. So when the Lord makes
us pillars in His church, it will be to bear the burdens of others. Those who
are selfish and unwilling to bear such burdens do not qualify to become
pillars.
There are many brothers who
not elders, but who are still pillars in the churches. If we are overcomers in
our daily life, we can be pillars, even if we do not hold any position of
leadership. It is God alone Who appoints and attests people as pillars in His
church.
Spiritual Authority
A servant of God must be one
who speaks with spiritual authority. We read that Jesus taught with spiritual
authority, unlike the scribes (Mt.7:29). We cannot build the church if we don’t
have spiritual authority. The scribes knew the doctrine, but they did not have
spiritual authority in their ministry.
We can assert our authority
over others by our age, our education, our Bible knowledge or our soul-power.
But none of these are the basis for spiritual authority. We must be attested by
God.
If we have spiritual
authority, we won’t force our views on others. People will have confidence in
us, because they recognize the authority of God in us. If we impose our
authority on others just because we are in a position of leadership, then we
have not understood spiritual authority at all. Our attitude towards others
should be like that of Elihu who said, “No fear of me should terrify you, nor
should my pressure weigh heavily on you.” (Job 33:7).
Do others feel any pressure
from you in any area? Or do you give them perfect freedom to act according to
their conscience?
When people recognise that we
have Divine authority, they will come to us themselves, for advice. If they
don’t consult us, it proves that they don’t have any confidence in us.
Consider an example: When our
children are small, it is easy for us as fathers to impose our will on them and
to compel them to consult us in their every decision. But when they grow up and
set up their own homes, then we discover whether they really have confidence in
us or not. If they do, they will consult us voluntarily.
That is how we know in the
church also, whether others have confidence in us or not. Do they consult us
voluntarily?
If they feel more free to go
to a younger brother for advice, that would indicate that they have more
confidence in him. There is no need to be jealous of such a brother. We should
rejoice that God has a spiritual man in the church whom people can go to for
help.
In Matthew 18:18, Jesus told
His disciples of the authority that the church has to bind evil Satanic forces,
and to set bound people free. This authority, He said, could never be exercised
by one person, but only by a minimum of two people - and these two must be in
total agreement in their spirits, for only then would the Lord be mightily
present in their midst to give them His authority (Matt.18:19,20).
“Where two or three have
gathered together in My Name, there I am in their midst” (Matt.18:20) is one of
the most misunderstood verses in the New Testament. That verse is not referring
to any two or three people gathering together as Christians. No. It is
referring to the authority of the church (see verses 15-18), exercised by two
or three who have been gathered by the Holy Spirit, and who are united in
spirit, for the glory of the Name of Jesus. Such a Body will have tremendous
authority to bind Satan’s activities and to free God’s people from the grip of
Satan. This is the authority that the elders of every church should be
exercising constantly.
We cannot bind Satan or his
demons themselves - as some ignorant believers seek to do - for God will do
that only when Jesus returns (Rev.20;1,2; See Matt.8:29 also). But we can bind
(restrain) the activities of Satan and his demons (2 Thess.2:7).
Satan knows about this
authority that two or three leaders acting in perfect unison have. And so he
will do his best to prevent the leaders in every church from coming to unity.
If there is no unity at the leadership level, the Body of Christ can never be
built.
It is not serious if two or
three members in a church are not united. That is sad, but not as serious as
the leaders not being one. Every church must have a core of two or three
leaders who are totally one. The Lord is not looking for 200 or 300 who are
united - but for just two or three in the leadership who are really one. There
His authority will be powerfully present.
Warnings - Men Who Sought Their Own
If God sees that we are
building our own kingdom, or running a one-man show, He will just leave us
alone. There are plenty of such one-man shows in Christendom today. They say
they are doing “Christian work”. But it is done for personal profit - either to
gain money or to gain honour. And so they are all building Babylon.
God cannot be fooled. He will
never attest such preachers, even if they gather many followers. They may build
old-covenant congregations, but they will not be able to build the new-covenant
church.
In Acts 5:36, we read of a
Theudas who gathered 400 people to follow him. A church having 400 members can
look quite impressive. But “it came to nothing”. We also read of a Judas who
drew many people after him. “He too perished” (Acts 5:37).
There have always been people
like that in the history of Christendom. But to build the Body of Christ is
quite a different matter. We may gather 400 people in our city. Yet we will be
no better than Theudas, if we are seeking our own. God will never back us up.
Spiritual authority is so tremendously valuable that God won’t give it to
anyone and everyone.
Judas Iscariot must have got
quite a reputation by being part of Jesus’ team! People respected Jesus so
highly. And Judas must have got a share of that honour too. But it did not
change his self-centred nature. He still perished.
In the same way, Demas was a
co-worker of the apostle Paul. It must have been a great honour to be on Paul’s
team. Many believers respected Paul highly, and Demas also got a share of that
honour by being associated with Paul. But inside his heart he did not have
Paul’s self-denying, sacrificial spirit. Demas mingled closely with godly,
selfless brothers like Timothy. But he did not imbibe their spirit.
That happened in Jesus’ time
and in Paul’s time. And it is happening even today. There are brothers who have
got a reputation for themselves, not through their own life or ministry, but
just by their being associated with some other godly brother whom God has
mightily attested to.
If we are like that, our end
can also be like that of Judas Iscariot and Demas. We cannot have Divine
authority merely by being associated with some godly brother. It is when we
have cleansed ourselves from seeking our own gain, our own name, our own comfort,
our own convenience, and everything that is ours, that God will back us up.
Then alone will we have spiritual authority to build the Body of Christ.
Do we seek to build God’s
kingdom or our own kingdom? God sees our hearts. Paul once said that he did not
have a single co-worker with him like Timothy. All were seeking their own, and
not the things of Christ. Timothy alone was genuinely concerned about building
the Body of Christ (Phil.2:19-21).
Sacrificing Everything
We would all like to have the
authority that a man like Paul had. But to have that, we have to give up
everything like he did, and consider it all as worthless rubbish (Phil.3:7-9).
Jesus said to the Father, “All
that is mine is Thine.” And so He could also add, “All that is Thine is Mine”
(Jn.17:10). When all that is ours is freely given to God, then all that God has
will also be freely given to us. In the measure that we give to Him, He gives
to us. This is why many Christian leaders are so poverty-stricken when it comes
to spiritual authority: They have not given their all to God.
In John 2:23-25, we read that
even though many believed in Jesus, yet He did not commit Himself to them. We
may also be among those to whom the Lord doesn’t commit Himself because He sees
what is in us, and what our motives are.
If it comes to a choice
between our profession and building the Body of Christ, which will we choose?
Are we willing to give up advancement in our earthly occupation in order to
have more time to build the church? If not, why should God commit Himself to
us?
Are we willing to open our
homes for the Lord’s people? Or are our convenience and our privacy more
important to us? If we seek our own in any area, we won’t get spiritual
authority from God, even if we fast and pray for it. God cannot be fooled.
Everything - yes everything -
in our life must take second place to the kingdom of God, if we want to build
the Body of Christ. There is no partiality with God. All of us are the same to
Him. What He has done for others he will do for us. Jesus and Paul were
mightily attested by God in their ministries, because they paid a price. God
will do the same for us, if we are willing to pay the same price.
Even our money and our savings
must belong to God if we are to build the church. When God told Noah to build
the ark, Noah did not ask God as to who was going to pay for the expenses
involved in building such a huge ship. If he had asked that question, God would
have told him, “You have to pay for it yourself, Noah. Who else will pay for
it?” But Noah did not need to ask, for he knew that already.
The question is whether we
know it. Noah probably had to sell some of his own property in order to build
the ark. But how many servants of God do we find who are willing to sell their
personal property in order to finance God’s work? Those who do not give their
all to God will discover that God does not give His all to them either.
With most servants of God,
their attitude is that if it is the Lord’s work, the money for it must come
from somewhere else, and not from their own pockets. They are lavish in
spending the money that comes in through the offering-box. But they are not
lavish in giving their own money for the work of God. A servant of God who is
not freed from the grip of money in his life can never have spiritual
authority.
Have we ever said to the Lord,
“Lord, Your work is my work. And my savings are Yours. I won’t make a
distinction between my money and Your money”? If we haven’t said that to the
Lord (and meant it), then we are still under the old covenant, where they
considered 10% of their money as belonging to God and 90% as belonging to
themselves. Once they had given their 10%, their obligation was over.
But Jesus did not come to give
only 10% of His income to the Father. He came to establish a new covenant and
to build a new-covenant church. And so He gave 100% to His Father. And now He
says to us, “Follow Me.” The only one who can have spiritual authority is the
one who has given his ALL to God.
We must be willing to build
the Body of Christ, whatever the cost to us - whether that cost be our money,
our honour, our convenience, our physical energy, our reputation, our job, or
anything else . There should be no limit to what we are willing to sacrifice
for the Lord’s sake. We are not to seek our own convenience or our own comfort
in anything. Everything we do must be related to building the Body of Christ.
Even our earthly occupation must only be a means of earning our living, so that
we don’t become a burden to others in the church for our financial support.
Let us then repent of our
miserly attitude towards God.
May we be rich towards God in
the coming days, so that we can have spiritual authority in our lives and build
the Body of Christ in our land for the glory of our Lord Jesus Christ.
CHAPTER EIGHT
GOD NEEDS MEN
God needs men today -
men who will
stand before His face and hear His voice daily;
men who have
no desire in their heart for anyone or anything other than God Himself;
men who fear
God so greatly that they hate sin in every form and love righteousness and
truth in all their ways;
men who have overcome anger and sexually
sinful thoughts, and who would rather die than sin even in thought or attitude;
men whose daily life-style is one of taking
up the cross and pressing on to perfection, and who are constantly working out
their own salvation with fear and trembling;
men full of
the Holy Spirit, who are so rooted and grounded in love that nothing can ever
move them into an unloving attitude towards another human being, however great
the provocation;
men who are
so rooted and grounded in humility that neither human praise nor spiritual
growth, neither a Divinely-endorsed ministry nor anything else will be able to
make them lose the awareness of their being less than the least of all the
saints;
men who have an understanding of God’s nature
and purposes through His Word, and who tremble at that Word so that they will
not disobey even the smallest commandment or neglect to teach it to others;
men who will proclaim the whole counsel of
God and expose religious harlotry and unScriptural human traditions;
men who have the revelation of the Holy
Spirit on the secret of godliness, on Christ having come in the flesh and
opened a new and living way through the flesh;
men who are diligent and hardworking, but who
also have a sense of humour, and who know how to relax and play with children
and enjoy God’s good gifts in nature;
men who are not ascetics, but who at the same
time live a disciplined life and who are not afraid of hardships;
men who have
no interest in expensive clothing or sight-seeing and who will not waste their
time in unprofitable activities or their money in unnecessary purchases;
men who have mastered their desire for fancy
foods and who are not enslaved to music or sport or any other legitimate
activity;
men who have been disciplined successfully by
God in the fires of affliction, abuse, tribulation, false accusation, physical
sickness, financial hardships and opposition from relatives and religious
leaders;
men full of mercy, who can sympathise with
the worst of sinners and the worst of believers, and have hope for them,
because they consider themselves to be the foremost of all sinners;
men who are so deeply rooted in the security
of the love of their Heavenly Father that they are never anxious about
anything, or afraid of Satan or evil men or difficult situations or anything;
men who have
entered into God’s rest, believing in the sovereign working of God in all
matters for their best and who therefore give thanks always, for all men, for
all things and in all circumstances;
men who find their joy in God alone and who
are therefore full of the joy of the Lord, having overcome all bad moods;
men of living faith, who have no confidence
in themselves or their natural abilities, but complete confidence in God as
their unfailing Helper in all situations;
men who
live, not by the promptings of their own reason, but by the leading of the Holy
Spirit;
men who have been genuinely baptized in the
Holy Spirit and fire by Christ Himself (and not just thrilled by some emotional
counterfeit or convinced by some theological argument);
men who are living constantly under the
anointing of the Holy Spirit, endowed with the supernatural gifts that He has
given them;
men who have revelation on the church as the
Body of Christ (and not a congregation or a denomination), and who give all
their energies, their material wealth and spiritual gifts to build that church
men who have learnt to bridle their tongues
through the help of the Holy Spirit and whose tongues are now aflame with the
Divine Word;
men who have forsaken all, who are not
attached anymore to money or material things, and who desire no gifts from
others;
men who can trust God for all their earthly needs
and who never hint about their material needs or boast about their labours,
either in their conversation or through letters and reports;
men who are
not stubborn, but gentle, and open to criticism and eager for correction from
older and wiser brothers;
men who have no desire to dominate or advise
others (although ready to give advice when asked for), and who have no longing
to be considered as ‘elder’ brothers, or leaders, but who only desire to be
ordinary brothers and servants of all;
men who are easy to get along with, and who
are willing to be inconvenienced and taken advantage of by others;
men who will make no distinction between the
millionaire and the beggar, the white-skinned and the dark-skinned, the
intellectual and the idiot and the cultured and the barbarian, but who will
treat them all alike;
men who can never be influenced by their
wife, children, relatives, friends or other believers to cool off even slightly
in their devotion to Christ or their obedience to God’s commandments;
men who can
never be bribed to compromise, by any reward that Satan may offer (whether
honour or money or whatever);
men who are fearless witnesses for Christ,
fearing neither religious heads nor secular rulers;
men who
desire to please no human being on the face of the earth, and who are willing
to offend all men, if necessary, in order to please God alone;
men for whom God’s glory, God’s will and
God’s kingdom always take priority over mere human need and their own comfort;
men who cannot be pressurised either by
others or by their own reason into doing ‘dead works’ for God, but who are
eager and content to do the revealed will of God for their lives alone;
men who have the discernment of the Spirit to
distinguish between the soulish and the spiritual in Christian work;
men who look at things from a heavenly
viewpoint and not an earthly one;
men who will refuse all earthly honours and
titles offered them for their labours for God;
men who know how to pray without ceasing, and
also how to fast and pray when needed;
men who have learnt to give generously,
cheerfully, secretly and with wisdom;
men who are willing to be all things to all
men, so that by all means they might save some;
men who have a longing to see others not only
saved, but also made disciples of Christ, and brought to a knowledge of the
truth and to obedience to all of God’s commandments;
men who have a longing to see a pure
testimony established for God in every place;
men who have a burning passion to see Christ
glorified in the church;
men who do not seek their own in any matter;
men with spiritual authority and spiritual
dignity;
men who will stand ALONE for God in the
world, if need be;
totally
uncompromising men, like the apostles and prophets of old.
God’s work in the world
suffers today, because such men are few in number.
Determine with all your heart that you will be such a
man for God, in the midst of a sinful and adulterous generation and a
compromising Christendom.
Since there is no partiality with God, it is possible
for you too to be such a man, provided you yourself earnestly desire to be one.
Since God demands commitment and obedience only in the
conscious area of one’s life, it is possible for you to be such a man, even
though the conscious area of your life may be limited. (That area will keep
increasing as you walk in the light and press on to perfection).
There is no excuse then why you cannot be such a man.
Since nothing good dwells in the flesh, we have to
seek for grace from God to have the virtues listed above.
Cry out to God daily then, that He will give you grace
to be such a man in these the closing days of the age.
He who has ears to hear, let him hear.
“Thus says the Lord, `I searched for a man among
them...... who would stand before Me’” (Ezek.22:30).
Copyright -Zac Poonen (1995)
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