Showing posts with label faith. Show all posts
Showing posts with label faith. Show all posts

Sunday, 27 September 2009

Love one another as I have loved you

By Garold Anderson

Love one another as I have loved you. The world will know that we are Christians by the love that we show to one another. We have a hope and a future in Him.

Kent Hodge

It's been a very nice time. We are starting a school called Christian Faith Academy. It is for the preschool age. They interviewed yesterday and we have chosen two staff. It is great to be a part of what God is doing there.

Esther Hodge

Susie and I are medical students in London and as part of that year we spend a couple of months working in a hospital somewhere else in the world. So we decided to go to Jos. We went to a hospital called Faith Alive Foundation, which is in central Jos, pretty near to where the riots happened last November. It provides free services to Muslims and Christians. It was started by a Nigerian who trained in a prestigious hospital in America, but God told him to go back to Nigeria, and so He obeyed. He started a clinic and offered medicine and counselling for people with HIV. The main work they do there is fighting AIDS. Almost 10% of the population there have HIV. Only 3% of the people who have HIV actually get drugs to fight it and a lot of them are in Nigeria, because of this hospital. He treats people through the support of English churches and an American relief system set up by President Bush to provide AIDS relief for the people in Nigeria.

I used to think of AIDS as a bad disease because I thought it was their fault. But a lot of the people who came there were Muslim girls who were married at very young ages and had got AIDS either from their mothers or their husbands. So, it wasn't really their fault. This doctor is working so hard to help people. Every person he sees he treats as an individual and will pray for them regardless of whether they are a Christian or a Muslim. They treat them with medicine but also holistically.

Every morning at 8 o'clock they have a devotion and someone will preach to them for about half an hour from the Bible and then give a talk on how to stay healthy. One of the biggest problems out there is lack of education. Three ladies came up to me and told me that they couldn't sleep at night and they were really hot. Basically nobody had told them anything.

So first thing in the morning they preach to these people, Christians and Muslims alike. They tell them that God can heal them whether they are Christians or not. So they use the hospital to spread the Gospel as well as to treat people.

The second morning we were there I was sitting in the devotion, and Doctor Chris told me that I had to get up and preach, which I wasn't expecting at all. So I just had to get up and speak to them. I had to do that three times throughout the week. This has really taught me a lot and I am really grateful for the experience. What really struck me was the people because, regardless of what I 'd said, they'd all come up to me and encourage me. They are all so welcoming and friendly. English people I think sometimes tend to be quite judgemental, but the people there are so open and there is so much opportunity to grow there because you can get up and make a fool of yourself and they will still congratulate you afterwards.

Susie Liniker

The hospital started as a clincic. Basically it treats mostly HIV patients but there are also outpatient and pre-natal clinics. They also teach people how HIV is prevented. It was very interesting listening to the counselling sessions because the people don't know anything about their health. In one session I sat in with a lady who couldn't even read. She had the test done and it turned out negative, but the doctor had to explain what negative meant because she didn't understand it. There was another couple who had been tested a few months earlier, and it turned out that the husband was positive and she was negative. But she didn't believe it because there is period in which the virus for HIV cannot be detected. Anyway, the doctor reassured that she was negative, which was such a good thing for here because it meant that she would be able to have children free from HIV.

I haven't done anything with HIV in this country so it was good to see what they do over there. In the anti-natal sessions they encourage the husbands to get involved. They give the wife an invitation to bring the husband along because if you get the husband involved, he will be more interested in the children. The husband is very important over there because the wives actually have to ask their husbands if they can take the medicines given by the doctor. So having the doctors there means that the wives are more likely to take the medicine.

What really interested me was that this was a Christian hospital, but there were Christians there of all denominations, and they all worked together and prayed together. I think it was more a church than a hospital. They were Christians all with different backgrounds with a common goal: they wanted to reach out and help others. They come together, they have devotion and preaching in the morning, then Dr. Chris prays with his patients, then in the afternoon they pray together. So it is a church, they are group of Christians working together to help others.

We had the chance to go to other areas of the hospital, for example they have clinics outside the hospital. On the second week they had a conference for tribal leaders about preventing and treating HIV. This is very helpful because couples go to these leaders to ask if they should get married if the husband is possible, and they also ask them about using condoms. It was really interesting to see how the Christians discussed this issue.

Garold Anderson

Good morning. Well before I begin I would like to say again how wonderful it has been to be with and Laurie and I truly feel a part of this body of believer. So it's just exciting to be back again after so many years and then after our few visits with you in the last year or so.

I just want to make sure that the things I have said recently have been remembered. With the children at school, we looked at the story of the three little pigs and the building blocks of our lives. Because Jesus told a story that was like that with two people who built their houses on two different things.

I'm going to talk about a very strong building block of our lives, a strong foundation. With the Logos group we talked about a strong issue of foundation. I gave the challenge to think about these next months and take some time to pray. One of the ideas was, what is it that convinces us that God is real? And if not, what is standing in our way to be convinced? What is the foundation of our lives?

As I come to the end I will come into prayer. The building blocks of our lives is a part of what I want to talk about. I'm usually a creative person and I create many things. On Friday we did a play by someone else which was a modern day version of Adam and Eve and the breaking down of a relationship. It was a very painful story and it is at this point that I want to begin today.

The testimonies that we had from Nigeria were so fascinating and it's amazing how God really brings everything together for a Sunday service. We cannot do everything but our God can and we can work together with him.

A promise, a prayer and a command.

I want to begin with a simple prayer.

Ish and Isha, in the play that we did on Friday, it was the use of drama to convey the reality of what sin and brokeness really has done.We often read the story of Adam and Eve it often remains a story on the page. In this play, we really brought it painfully to life, with modern day people and circumstances. This is the beauty of knowing God and this is the beauty of Christianity that there is a way forward.

I want to begin with a promise.

I have been praying for this time with you and this is something God placed on my heart for us. And though this promise was spoken to the children of Israel many years agao but it can still play a part in our lives.

Jeremiah 29:11 (show/hide)

Years ago when I was much more wise than I am now, I would think about the words in scripture that were powerful: oo FAITH! And another powerful word would be LOVE. It's a soft word of God but it's love that brought Jesus to the cross. I thought hope was a weak word. I hope I can...

Listen to this, the promise: I know the plans he has for you, not for disaster..to give you a hope.

I have learnt that it is one of the strongest words in scripture.

There are things in life that happen to people; there are times when people find they have a disease in their body called HIV, Aids. And when people face these things, they lose all hope. There are times in relationships that people see no way forward and they lose all hope. There are times even in churches that we face difficulties together and we begin to lose perspective and we lose hope.

Before we can really come to the place of FAITH we've got to have hope. Hope. Ok, I want to a little theatrical exercise with you. I want you to say the word hope with me. I want you to repeat it the way I say it.

We need to know that we have a future. When we find ourselves hitting a wall and in difficult places, how do we know that we have a hope and a future. Because God is our God. God has a plan for your church and for your life. Even if you find that this church is not where you want to stay, there is a hope for me and a hope for everyone here; here is a future. We're not talking about some kind of social club, we're talking about the living body of Crhist. Whether we are here or in Nigeria or in London; the living body of Chrsit. We have a hope and a future. God knows the plans for you, for your welfare and that are not for disaster.

Jeremiah 29:12 (show/hide)

There are many things that are before you. There are many things. There are many decisions before you in the very close future of this church. Many important things that this church needs to decide and do. I think the cameras that you have...the facilities are amazing. That's a sideline. With your life, and with the relatiionshiops tha are here, things need to be accomplished.

You have to begin by asking why and what. God says, you will come and you will pray and I will listen.

Can you imagine if I came here to speak to you, and as I was speaking, my feet began to do what they wanted. You see it doesn't work if the body doesn't work together. Communiciation doesn't work if the body doesn't work together. Paul says such a powerful thing: 'How can the hand say to the foot, 'I don't need you'. Paul says, 'No, this is the beauty and the amazing thing about Christianity: it's a body.' Each part is needed. Each part has a very important thing to bring. You have a very important role and part to play within this body. You. But somehow within it, we've got to find a way to work together. So we begin with knowing that God says we have a future. God has plans for us to give us a hope and a future.

A command.

The thing that is on my heart to deposit here today is foundational. It's just solid rock. I really pray that we are able to take this seed because this is the heart of christinaty. I want you to imagine with me, from the gospel of john...

This takes place at the end of the ministry of Jesus. This is the end of his time with his disciples; those he has been mentorying. As he comes to the end, he's going to say, 'guys just remember brush your teeth everyday'. I think he would say something a bit more serious. 'Ok guys, always keep the other guys guessing.' No. What would you do if this was the last day with your family? You know this is the last moment, you would think real hard and say what is the most important seed thatI can plant into their life. And that's exactly what Jesus does.

We've been through a lot together and now it's coming to the end...

John 13:31-34 (show/hide)

'A new commandment I give unto you, That ye love one another'.That is a very powerful command and then He goes on and adds something else: 'That ye love one another; as I have loved you, that ye also love one another.'

The Bible is really specific. We know love because love has been defined for us. While we were enemies of God, He extended his love through his Son to us. God proved his love in that way. This is how we know love; that Christ died for us. We don't just have some kind of idea of love. We have a real definition and that is the thing that transforms my life, is that I have a real solid definition of love in the one that I am following.

'Love one another, in the same way that I have loved you.' That brings us hopefully to a place that we heard in a song earlier. We can't love others without him. Remain in me and you can do this. Without him we cannot walk in that kind of love.

I want you to understand how important this was when he spoke these words to his disciples.

John 13:35 (show/hide)

He didn't say, 'if you can stop all conflict...' No. Love one another. We are different. We have different parts to play and it is within us, that Jesus gives us the command to love one another, as he has loved us. It is an amazing command and he expects that we can do it.

This is how people will know you are my disciples, if you love one another.

I just want to accent this by looking at John 15.

John 15:9-10 (show/hide)

John 15:12 (show/hide)

John 15:17 (show/hide)

It's a thing he keeps repeating to his disiples and something that needs to reverberate in the depths of our souls. Love one another as I have loved you. He says it again. Here's my command, love one another. And then he says it again.

Be so concenered about one another, even if you disagree. Because this is the power. God IS love. The power on this earth that created all things that are is love. God, the power that can stand against the fiery furnace, is love. Christ is about to go the cross, the absolute example of love, and he's talking to his disiples about love.

I want to leave us with a prayer. A promise that God has a future for us. God has spokem to use because God has plans for us. God loved the world so much that he sent his Son, and his own sons and daughters into the world. But this is how it's all going to happen: Love one another.

God gave his disciples a simple format of a prayer. He said 'Our father, who art in heaven, your name is holy. You are the name above all. You are the God who made all things. Holy is your name.' That's where Jesus begins in the prayer to focus on God. 'May your kingdom and your ways come on earth, just as they happened in heaven. May your ways come into my life, just as it happens in heaven. Jesus bring your love and your possibility of loving and giving into my life, just as your will is accomplished in heaven. Today, give me what I need, the depth of my soul and the strength to do what is before me today. And I ask in my own life, that your forgiveness would come. Forgive me. Have mercy on me. So I also say, forgive those who have done something against me. Give me the hope to be able to forgive. Help me to get past my weakness and to forgive those who have done things against me. And I would ask that you would lead us away from the paths of temptation and from the evil. Deliver us. And give us a hope and a future. For thine is the kingdom of love and forgiveness and hope a future. Thine is the power to accomplish these things in my life. And thine is the glory. And as we follow you, we proclaim that it is you who does these things. Amen.'

Friday, 31 July 2009

God Will Bring You Through

Hebrews 12:1-2

Looking unto Jesus. In that first verse it talks about the witnesses from times past who have exercised faith in God. It’s interesting in verse four that it says that He is the author and finisher of our faith. This means no one here can boast of the faith they have. This also means that God in His love and mercy will fulfil His purposes in us. He is building His church in His way and His time. I want to briefly look at the life of one of those witnesses and we will come back to that verse in Hebrews 12: 2 before we partake of the bread and wine.




In a macro sense we are living at a time which is crucial for you and for me.

Exodus 14:10-13

That last verse God has impressed on my heart particularly of late. It was categorical what God said to them: ‘he Egyptians whom you have seen today, you shall see them again no more forever.’

Exodus 14:29-31

They had reached an impossibility where God, out of nothing, found the way forward for them. In any situation we find ourselves in life, we can choose the way we approach it in our spirit and mind.

Numbers 13:1-2

And so we then have a list of twelve of the tribes, preceded by the nominated persons from each of the tribes:

Numbers 13:4-16

I’m sure those people, when they were called together by Moses, got on well each other. Interestingly, in verse 16, Moses called Oshea, the son of Nun, to Jehoshua. That means that meaning of his name went from ‘he saves’ to ‘the Lord saves’. There came a part in mine and your life where we tried to save ourselves. And then there came a point where God drew close to us and he saved us.

The way God is opening up things for us in our lives is going to be tremendous when we put God first and realise that the faith we have is for Him. There is no pecking order of faith, it is all of Him. Jesus, who exemplified faith, coming to do what Father wanted, was the ultimate sacrifice in fulfilling everything that Father wanted. What we’re going to see through these verses is that the faith God has given us has been given for a reason: to glorify Him in our lives. When you look back on the impossible situation you are in now, you will see how God has got you through it.

Matthew 9:36-38

Do you do that? Do you look upon people and ask God that that person would become someone who goes into the fields so that glory might be brought to God’s name as they harvest in God’s land Or do you look at people and despise them and ensure that you remain above them? When Jesus looked at anybody in these multitudes He had compassion on them. We have to be 100% sold out for God. We are living at a poignant time for everyone here; it is God who is bringing things about.

Numbers 13:17-25

The twelve of them witnessed the same thing. Some went to different areas obviously to ensure that they covered the extent of the Lord. It’s apparent later that Caleb witnessed the people of Anak; the giants.

Numbers 13:26-27

Who sent them into the land? God did. Moses was under instructions from God.

Numbers 13:28-29

So this is the report from all twelve of them.

I just want you to see what was told to the children of Israel, by God, before they got to this stage.

Exodus 3:17-18

If they had really listened to what God had said they would have known that God would deliver the land unto them.

Numbers 13:28-29

It was known that that would be the case. So you can see, from a known number of facts, from a known viewpoint of those facts, it is possible for you to respond to what God is saying to you either the right way or the wrong way. What is it going to be? These twelve witnessed similar things. They all had the same God and knew that what God had promised they were now moving into. They also knew that they simply had to go and occupy the land and God would deliver it unto them.

Numbers 13:30-14:10

I am triple confident that the God whom we serve, that the One who has shined the glorious light of the Gospel into our hearts, is more than able to bring us through the difficulties in our lives. I think that what is now going happen, as we rest on God’s word, He will show us that He is the God of miracles and of faith. We will start going outward to help those in need. Jesus Christ is the answer for you and me. I am excited to know that what God is doing in our midst is something that will be fulfilling His purposes so that His glory will be exemplified and so that there will be others that He will drawn into His Kingdom.

I know that God has been making Himself known to you more than ever before. I think that, as you and I are open to God moving through His word, others will be drawn. Jesus is set down at the right hand of the throne of God because He has perfected God’s purpose. That purpose was that you and I should be people who know that God brought us out of the tyranny of sin. He set our feet upon a rock and has got us to a point in our lives when He is saying ‘let’s go forward together’. At the end of the difficulty you are facing now you will be grateful towards God, because you will be able to see that it was He that provided the way. Caleb knew that they could possess the land. What Jesus Christ did on the cross means that He has opened the way completely for you and for me to fulfil His purposes in our lives. He is a wonderful God.

What is it that the Lord is prompting you to do in His kingdom? Now is the time for it to happen. It is important that you and I approach circumstances with the right spirit.

There were ten people writhing in an attitude of doubt and disbelief. And then there was Caleb and Joshua with a completely different spirit. You have the spirit of Caleb and Joshua. It’s God’s spirit. It’s a miracle that that has happened in your life. What are you doing with it? It is a crucial time and it is a wonderful time as God is moving in our midst. We look, and will always look, unto Jesus and lift up His name.

Sunday, 26 July 2009

The Foolishness of God



By Rev. Trevor Dearing

The foolishness of God is wiser than the wisdom of man. Throughout the Bible God has chosen people who, to the world, appear to be a foolish choice because they are ignorant or despised. But His foolishness is wise because, through these base people, we can see that the works they do and the words they say are from God, not of their own power. We have to flow with the foolishness of the Holy Spirit, but in order to do that we have to become weak and put our faith in the blood of Jesus Christ and the cross.



During my ministry I have preached about everything I know about the nature and attributes of God. When I was praying God said to me: “Trevor, you’ve never preached about my foolishness. So I thought to myself that I couldn’t go in front of a group of Christians here and tell them that God was foolish. But then, my mind went to this passage:

1 Corinthians 1:18-2:5

As I meditated upon this passage I realised that we cannot be saved from our sins unless we flow with God’s foolishness. I began to see that we cannot be used in our ministry or bring others into the kingdom unless we flow with God’s foolishness. So, Abraham was called to go and leave his country and he said in modern English: “Ok Lord God I will go. Where am I going?” God replied: “I will not tell you until you get there.” Abraham set off. Now Abraham didn’t have a natural son and there came a day when God promised him that Sarah would bare a son. Sarah was past it. And Abraham realised that he wasn’t doing too good either. Sarah laughed at the promise, but the baby was gone.

Later on Moses was sent to free the Israelites from the most powerful nation in the world: the Egyptians. Moses told God that he was not very good at speaking, but God told him that He would take care of that. Moses then asked what he should take with him and God replied that he should only take the stick that was in hand.

Joshua was leading the people into the promise land and Jericho, the most fortified city in the world, stood as an unsurpassable obstacle on their journey. The Lord said to Joshua that He would give him the city. So Joshua asked what he should do and the Lord replied that he should get the people to walk around it; so for seven days they walked round it. On the last day God told them to walk round the city seven times and to shout as they did it. So they did it and in the whole of history Jericho is the only city that fell because of shouting.

Gideon was told that he had too many to defeat the army of the Amalachite’s. When he had only a small army left, God said that that was the army He would use to defeat them.
When God chose the prophets He chose some unlikely people. God chose Amos who was a gardener, but was prepared to listen to do the word. Hosea was chosen when his wife was a prostitute and his bakery business had gone bust. This goes on into the New Testament. When Jesus was choosing His disciples He did not go to the universities and to those who had learnt the law. He went to the beach and chose fishermen and tax payers. He said later on that these were ignorant and unlearned men. This is the foolishness of God.

The foolishness of God is wiser than men. What lies at the heart of all this? One thing that lies at the heart of all this is that God chooses the weak things of the world, and the things which are not, so that when the end is accomplished the glory will not go to men but to God. If Moses had set the people free with a great army it would have been said that Moses was a great general. But because he did it with a stick it is recorded that God was a great God. Sarah had a baby when she was weak and old, so the glory went to God. The Lord gave Joshua the city because they simply walked round it. When the prophets and disciples were chosen people knew that their wisdom was of God because they were not learned people. Thus, they knew that their words were the word of the Lord. God’s power is demonstrated through the things which are not. Paul writes that God has chosen the foolish things of the world to shame the wise things and the things which are weak to shame that which is strong.

The second great factor in the foolishness of God is that He has chosen that men and women will know Him and will do works for Him by faith. Because Abraham set out not knowing where he was going, he went by faith. Moses had only God’s word that without an army he would set the Israelites free. So, he acted upon God’s word in faith and the promise was fulfilled. Gideon had only the word of the Lord, Hosea and Amos had only the word of the Lord. Throughout the whole of the scripture, all human beings have had is the promise of God, and when they have obeyed God without understanding but in faith, God’s power has been released.

In the New Testament Jesus came walking on the water and Peter asked Jesus to bid him to walk to Him on the water. So the Lord said ‘come’. Peter then stepped out of the boat and stood on the water. The trouble with many Christians today is that they praise God from the safety of the boat, they are not prepared to walk in faith on the water.

2000 years ago the great God of the universe, who created everything, was going to come into the world. The Holy Spirit had made the whole of the Roman empire alive with the expectation that He was going to send a Saviour. How would He come? The Romans and the Greeks said that the only suitable place for the Saviour to come was in the palace of the Roman emperor. The Jews hated the Romans and they did not believe that God would come to the emperor’s palace. They believed that God would come from the skies. They believed that trumpets would sound and blast throughout all the world to announce His arrival. But, Bethlehem, though that are the least amongst the cities of Judah. A peasant woman, poor and lowly, but holy. Not an emperor’s palace, not even an inn. When God came He lay in a cattle trough and He who created the heavens and the earth suckled for sustenance. They missed Him because they did not understand the foolishness of God.

Then, God is going to redeem mankind, He is going to save individuals within the human race from the power of sin. How would God save the human race? The generals say give us better arms and weapons, and they still say it today, asking for nuclear armaments so that they can save the world. The inventors would ask for better technology. The educationalists would say that they will save the world through education. The politicians ask for new political theories. All human beings since time began have been using their brains and hands to save the human race from total destruction. But how did God save the world? How did He save you? He hung seemingly helpless on a cross with the mockery of a crown of thorns and an inscription: “This is the King of the Jews” above His head. The crowds jeered at him saying that if He was the King of the Jews He would be able to save Himself. But He cried out: “I thirst”. Then the author and giver of life bowed His head and died; that is the foolishness of God.

The word of the cross is to those that are perishing foolishness. God has made foolish the wisdom of the world. God was well pleased through the foolishness of the word to save those who heard it. When you share this word with others and say that it is the cross and His death that will save you, to them it will seem foolishness.

1 Corinthians 2:3-4

What are the qualifications for flowing with the Holy Spirit? There are two things: one is weakness and one is faith. Some years ago I was asked to take a mission at Cambridge. They had set up discussions and forums where students would be able to ask me about theology. I was there for ten days and the discussions made my head ache. And after ten days not one person had given their life to Christ. So, I decided to have a meeting and invited the students to a church. So, I preached about the blood of Jesus and the old rugged cross. I was with them in weakness and in fear and in much trembling but I preached the blood of Jesus. At the end a student came up to me and said that he had come to the meeting to hear something sensible. He said that he was suffering from depression and that he had written a suicide note and that if I couldn’t help him he was going to hang himself. He said that he didn’t want to hear about the blood of Jesus and the old rugged cross. He said that he would only believe if he could see and understand it. But I said that he must believe and put his trust in Jesus. This man was in need, he was weak, he wasn’t proud and arrogant; the first qualification. Then he said: “I believe in Jesus and the cross.” So I laid my hands on him and he fell on him. Then he stood up and declared that his depressions had gone and that he believed in the cross. The other students had seen this and then rushed forward, and scores of students gave the hearts to God that day.

I was in America one day and was talking to an eminent doctor. He said to me one day that he had a magnificent house, a yacht, that he was an eminent man but that he was a drunkard. He had tried to cure the drunkenness with medical science, but the harder he tried the deeper into alcoholism he got. It got to the stage where his wife left him and was considering filing for a divorce. This man was weak. Then one day his wife decided instead of filing for a divorce, to go to a church and pray for her husband. To her astonishment her husband joined her and told her that he was going to put his trust in Jesus. In that instant he was cured of his alcoholism.

God chose me after years of depression and sickness. I had hardly gone to school because I was incurably ill, and was expected to die at the age of 21. But there came one night when I put my trust in the blood of Jesus and the cross. That is why I am here today at the age of 75. When I got baptised in the spirit I began preaching the Gospel with power. I saw thousands of conversions and healings every year. I laid my hands on people and they were healed. But these are not special hands; they are like Moses’ stick.

There is power in weakness. If you want to get you must give. It is all upside down according to the world. Are you weak? Are you in need? There’s only one way to be saved: to put your trust in Jesus. If you think you are a real good Christian, you will be lost. It is a constant sense of need and weakness, it is dependence on Jesus. It is constant faith on what He did at Calvary. You’ve got to become a nobody before you can become a somebody in the kingdom of God.

Sunday, 28 June 2009

Instructions for the Christian life



Dr Thorpe looks at the basic instructions for the Christian walk in Romans 8.

By Dr Sam Thorpe

The Bible gives us instructions so we can know which are the good ways and which are not.

Have any of you ever done anything wrong? Have you ever felt that someone has done something wrong to you? Often we feel guilty not only for what we’ve done wrong, but because someone has done something to us which perhaps we feel we deserved. Well. Look at this ...

Romans 8:1

We are not condemned. That last phrase is not conditional. I want to talk about flesh and spirit. Hebrew writers had a habit of making parallels and contrasts. And Paul is a Hebrew. The way it actually reads is “The ones walking not according to flesh, but spiritually.” The contrast is between fleshly and spiritually. We are not condemned because we are in Christ – since those who do not walk fleshly walk spiritually. We’re there already. It’s not something to which we have to attain. It’s not a separate realm to which we have to get. Walking spiritually doesn’t mean that.

Romans 8:2

The actual wording here is “freed me”. You know how the law of sin and death operates. It’s a downward, destructive thing. People bound by the law of sin and death are bound. They have no choice. It’s a living death. But now we’re freed from that. We’re completely free from that destructive pattern of existence.

Romans 8:3

What’s the purpose of law? Several things. It reveals some aspects of the nature of God – things He likes, things He doesn’t like; things which are good for us and things which are not. Sin is an evil thing. We don’t tend to think of it that way until the law shows us – and then that should generate in us a tremendous amount of gratitude, because we have been freed from the law.

Romans 8:4

“Fulfilled” means to come true. The righteousness of the law comes true in all of our lives as we walk spiritually.

Romans 8:5

On the underground you hear “Mind the gap.” I’ve seen places where there is a sign saying, “Mind your head.” “Mind” here is like that – “pay close attention to; note; keep in your thoughts the things which are spiritual.”

The spiritual things are not in some other realm. The spiritual things are just the things God is interested in – His directions. So we’re not necessarily trying to have some kind of dramatic feeling about things. We’re just supposed to pay attention to the things of God.

Romans 8:6

So as we notice the ways of God, the things He wants, we should have a peaceful life. Holding the hand of God, we are peaceful. It’s recognising the life He has given us and living that way.

If you don’t pay attention to God and His ways, what will you pay attention to?

Romans 8:7

Without faith, it’s impossible to please God. Faith is not wish or hope. It’s not unknown, but what is known. Faith is assurance of the things we hope for, certainty of the things we don’t see. It’s not a leap in the dark. It’s assurance that everything God said will happen, certainty that all we know about God is true even thought we don’t see Him. Faith isn’t a lack of knowledge – it’s a kind of knowledge. “I know you are trustworthy and that you are there.”

God wants that kind of faith relationship of us.

Romans 8:9

Don’t determine to go out to become more spiritual. We’re just supposed to be minding the things of God. We are already spiritual. You are not fleshly. For us to think in a fleshly way is to think contrary to the way we are. We are spiritual, because the spirit of God dwells in us. If you’re a Christian, the Holy Spirit lives in you – fact.

Romans 8:12-13

“Mortify” ... “make of no power, of no effect.” Make of no effect the fleshly practices. The naturally responses we might have to temptations – make them of no effect. Sometimes being a Christian requires mental discipline – here comes a temptation, but we’re not going there. “I’m going the way God wants.”

Young people – you realise why you have parents, beside the fact you can’t cook? We have parents to discipline us. Every human being needs discipline. If a person is not disciplined by parents, then even as Christians they will have difficulties. Without discipline from parents, schools, institutions, younger people are running chaotically.

Do any of you have a strategy for temptations? Has anyone been in the military? Anyone seen a military movie? Once people are inducted and headed off to boot camp, they give them uniforms, they call them soldiers. But they don’t know anything about soldiering, so they send them to learn discipline and how to take orders. You have to learn ahead of time because you don’t have time to look for the manual when you’re under fire. You have to know how to respond – it needs to be a reflex. I had a friend during the Vietnam War who had a friend in the Navy Seals. He had been released from his service, and the two of them were in a restaurant. A waiter came by and dropped some glasses. In those three seconds, the friend had pulled out a weapon and was on the waiter. He didn’t think about it.

What do we do when a temptation comes? Do we have a strategy? When’s the best time to get up – when the alarm goes off? So many of us don’t know what to do when a temptation comes. We need mental discipline – I’m not going in that direction.

When fears come up, what do you do? What should we do? What does God like? He’s freed us from those things, so don’t go there – go here. I’m not going to the fear but to the faith, the assurance, the certainty. The same with worries or with general temptations to do the wrong things. That’s why we need to keep these things in our minds, so that it allows us to do what’s right, to recall that He takes care of us and takes charge of everything. I’m not going to follow the fear, submit to the temptations.

Romans 8:15

We are literally sons and daughters of God. “Abba” means Father – “Abba” is Hebrew, “Pater” Greek. Hold the hand of Father, jump in the lap of Father. It sounds uncomplicated, but that’s what it is.

Romans 8:17

Romans 8:26

We are never alone. We’re not set in a world to have to take care of ourselves. We’re not objects of affliction, not waiting for the devil to attack. He’s always there.

Romans 8:27-28

And we know that to the ones loving God, God makes all things work together for good, according to His purpose. He makes all things work together – you don’t have to try and do it.

Romans 8:29

He called us. He justified us – because of the sacrifice of Christ, He looks at us as though we never sinned ever.

Romans 8:31

“Sin” isn’t much used in the world any more. It’s always bad choices or stupidity. Because sin implies offence against the person of God. But if He is for us, who can be against us?

Romans 8:32-35

No one can separate you from Him.

Romans 8:38-39

Any objections? See how grateful we should be, for all He has done to keep us connected and give us this freedom.

Sunday, 17 May 2009

The Qualifications for an Elder

Pastor Linnecar shows how we can draw out from the life of Timothy details of the qualifications for eldership – and how those qualifications also apply to us as individual believers.

If you’re a Christian, you know that as you live your life, the Lord God, living inside you reaches out through you to those He wants to speak to. Some people have come this morning to have a specific need met. You have come to the right one – not the right place, but the right one – Jesus Christ.



I want to talk about the character of Jesus Christ and what it means to be someone who has Jesus Christ living inside – a new person with Him inside.

We are in the process of sorting things out for the way forward. I’ve been doing a lot of reading to do with leadership and with the character of an individual who wants to be and is being like Jesus Christ. It’s His life inside.

If you’re not a Christian, then today it might be a different slant to realise that Christianity is a relationship with the living God, made possible because God works in an individual’s life. We see many glimpses of the nature of Jesus.

Ephesians 5:25-27

Jesus Christ gave Himself for the church. When we consider what the church is, it’s people, not a building. In the early church, there were no buildings – people met in houses. It wasn’t until a few hundred years later that there were specific buildings. Church was the people, and Jesus Christ gave Himself for the people. He gave Himself for the church, and the result was that over time there will be a glorious church – one fit for glory because He will have sorted everything out, and the people in the church will be ready, as will those who have already died. God is sorting things out in our own lives. We may face various pressures, and these are all to do with Jesus Christ preparing things and getting things ready. A glorious church – no spot or wrinkle. He was holy, pure and without blemish.

When we look at the structure of the church, the nature of Jesus Christ is sacrifice, putting others first before ourselves.

As the church developed, from Jerusalem, to Judea, to the whole world, so they appointed people to oversee the church in each locality. In any locality where people gathered together in His name, so through the Holy Spirit, He Himself was there. And as the church developed, they needed the right kind of people to take responsibility for the church going forward.

Acts 14:23

There was an ordination of elders / pastors / leaders / overseers. They prayed with fasting, because they wanted to get it right. And they commended them to the Lord.

This weekend I want to bring attention to the fact that we want to have a pastoral team. So far, we have a pastor – myself. And the Review Group have met three times, and at this point we’ve accepted we need that team. So over the next meetings, I will be describing from scripture, what the qualifications are of someone who should be part of that team. I cannot do it all. So a team is needed – in the same way as they appointed people in Acts 14.

There is no “thou shalt” in the New Testament as to how you should do this. But there is enough in scripture for us to get it right. We definitely want to make sure that God by His Holy Spirit is able to do what He wants to do here.

It’s all to do with what God wants to do through you, reaching out to those in need. We don’t want to create an empire for ourselves. But we are aiming to glorify the name of Christ in everything we do. We want to lift Him up and to let Him fulfil His purposes in what has happened and as we go forward.

We have various groups (Jam, Logos, Ark, Heritage) and that went well – we studied scripture, and people want to get it right for their lives. Not only want to, but will. God doesn’t play secret squirrel. He doesn’t deprive you of the things you need. When Jesus Christ gave Himself for the church, He gave Himself utterly and completely.

Over the next two meetings, I’ll talk about what it means to be an overseer / elder / pastor. We want to get this right, and in the New Testament people prayerfully considered this. Often they fasted. As far as I’m concerned, I think it would be good to suggest a day when we specifically consider and pray about this matter. It’s an important thing.

I want this morning to consider the life of someone who helped Paul – Timothy. In Timothy we’ll see the character and traits of someone who was an overseer.

Acts 16:1-3

Note: “well reported of by the brethren”. When it comes to thinking about an overseer, or a pastor, it has to be that the report of that individual – by the brethren, not those who aren’t Christians – is a good report. It’s no good getting a report from those who perhaps are having a go at the church. Jesus said blessed are you when all men speak ill of you. You’re bound to get a bad report. But this is from the brethren.

When Paul wrote later, he helped us understand the character of the right kind of person.

1 Timothy 3:7

Make sure there is a good report from those who are close to the person. And he must have a good report from those outside. It’s no good electing an MP on the basis of trust, if you then find he’s been taking money.

1 Timothy 3:2

“Apt to teach” doesn’t mean it has to be someone who teaches like this on a Sunday. You might advise someone in a small group. We’re not saying that people have to be a teacher to a large group, but they have to be apt to teach.

Various verses describe Timothy.

1 Corinthians 4:17

Timothy was faithful in the Lord, and Paul was confident that Timothy would communicate his ways which were in Christ. He had a particular way of talking to people – the character which esteems others better than yourself, which looks for the work of God in a person.

1 Corinthians 16:10

You won’t find Timothy putting things ahead of the work of God. He won’t be besotted with anything but the work of God.

2 Timothy 1:1-5

Timothy was a man of unfeigned faith. If you bore through to the heart of Timothy, there was a faith in God, big time.

2 Timothy 3:14-15

Someone who is overseeing needs to know the scriptures. Someone who is part of the pastoral team needs to understand that this book is the one upon which we are dependent. We are dependent on Jesus Christ – in the beginning was the Word and the Word was in God.

1 Thessalonians 3:1-3

Brother, minister of God ... to establish and comfort. Timothy was concerned for the people of God and for the church. His heart was to care for the people. And when he spoke to someone it was to help that person increase their faith in God, to point out the way God was involved.

In Philippians 2, we get an idea of the nature and spirit of Jesus Christ. He is the senior pastor of His church – He is in control, He is building His church, the bride of Christ.

Philippians 2:1-5

As we go through this, you’ll see ... caring, loving other people. As far as Jesus Christ was concerned, He laid down His life for other people, for the church.

“... being of one accord, of one mind. / Let nothing be done through strife or vainglory” Let’s not have anyone doing anything to score points.
When you think about someone is your immediate thought, “How can I help that person?” or do you think, “That confirms what I thought. I must pass this information on.”

Philippians 2:5-8

“This is about Jesus, but it’s not applicable to me.” But Jesus Christ by His Holy Spirit lives within you. “Though He was God, He did not think of equality with God as something to cling to.” He made Himself of no reputation. But didn’t we say earlier that someone had to be well reported of? What we’re saying is that Jesus Christ set aside His glory. He told the disciples that the greatest among them should be their servant.

The key word in verse 8 is that He became obedient. The character of Jesus and of any individual in a church is that they should be obedient to what God wants, laying down their lives for the brethren.

Philippians 2:9-11

“To the glory of God the Father” Set yourself this coming week to bring glory to His name, to have God live through you, to make you sensitive, to help someone. Someone may be facing particular pressures. God is your Father. He will make provision. Let’s stop thinking about ourselves, but about the ones He wants to reach through us.

Philippians 2:12-13

For those of you who are taking exams, it’s incredible pressure at this time. You can pray to God to organise things in your life, so that in the pressure of it all, God’s peace can rule your heart. It doesn’t mean you sit there and look at the paper dwelling on God’s peace – you do have to write the answers. But it’s God who works in you, even in exam time, to will and to do of His good pleasure. “I want You to help me get the grades I need to fulfil Your purposes for my life.”

Philippians 2:14-17

The character of Jesus Christ – laying down your life for others. And the more Paul talked about the character of Jesus, so Timothy came to his mind again. He was with Paul when he wrote this.

Philippians 2:19-24

An overseer / pastor is someone who naturally by the Spirit of God will care for the people, will have a heart for the people. We can apply that to an overseer, but what about in your life? What would Paul say when it comes down to “All seek their own”? I don’t want to condemn you, but I’m encouraging you to consider what is the priority of your life. What could I point to in my life to say that I’m seeking not my own but the things of Jesus Christ? I’m not filling my head with wrong music just ahead of the meeting; in the week I’m not cramming myself with wrong thoughts, not so bound up with “me” that no one else gets a look in.

Before we are a Christian, it’s all about me and mine. But when Paul thought of Timothy, he knew he was speaking about someone who put God and the people of God first.

You may say that was Timothy’s job. You may say as pastor, it’s my job. But we’re talking about the Holy Spirit of Jesus Christ in you. Let me urge you to think about how you want God number one in your life, how you will prioritise your time appropriately.

Philippians 2:13

God loves you and He wants you to live and be right. And He is the one who is working in you actively, both to will and to do of His good pleasure. He’s not against you.

It is God who works in you both to will and to do of His good pleasure. As we go forward together as brothers and sisters in Christ, so I have complete confidence in God who will outwork His purposes. And I have a continuing sense of how God is so careful to make sure that as there are those whom He would draw to Himself through you, so He will fulfil His purposes here for His glory.

Think about the character of Timothy, and about the nature of who Jesus is. God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself. There was no subordination in the Trinity. God was in Christ.

Friday, 10 April 2009

It’s Still the Cross

In the Old Testament the children of Israel were commanded that if they had been bitten by a serpent, all they had to do was look upon the serpent on the pole and they would be healed. There are clear parallels between this episode and Jesus’ crucifixion. Jesus had to be lifted up onto a cross so that the poison of sin in our lives could be dealt with. We have to come and look upon Him through faith.



Today, traditionally, is the time when we consider the fact that Jesus Christ was crucified. I want to try and ‘demystify’ the reality of what it means for us to realise who Jesus was when He gave up His life on the cross. He Himself talked to gentleman in the New Testament times and referred to an episode which occurs in the scripture we will soon read. The situation was that God had been the provider for the children of Israel. Bread from heaven had come every morning without fail. There came a point when the children of Israel became disappointed with this same provision each day. In Numbers 21 the people began to speak against God.

Numbers 21:4-7

They all routed their communication with God through Moses. There was no communication straight to God like we can have now with our heavenly Father. These serpents whose bite was fatal, represented in parallel, the sin that is within in us; which is also fatal. Sin is that which we know to be wrong. If so be that sin is inside us and we haven’t had it dealt with it is fatal. Here Moses took note of the people:

Numbers 21:8-9

We’re not told how tall this pole was but it must have been pretty tall because anyone who had been bitten had to have sight of the fiery serpent on top of it. There was only one pole. I can imagine the situation, for example in a family where the children had been playing and one of them had been bitten. The panic of the mother or father to make sure that the child could see the serpent on the pole. Making sure that the child looked it; that was all that was needed. They organised themselves so that they knew where it was so that they could look upon it. The provision by God for these people was twenty four hour provision, for male or female, young or old. It was not complicated. Sometimes, if we were to transfer it to the sin in our lives, we can become so complicated as to what a person has to be and what has to happen before they can get saved. There might be some of us that have made things so complicated in your mind. But you’ve heard about the cross and Jesus Christ giving up His life on the cross for you. We’ll see in a minute that Jesus Himself paralleled what happened here with the children of Israel. If you wanted you could make a long list of parallels between this episode here in Numbers and the episode in the New Testament.

I want you to notice that if the serpent had bitten an individual, a remedy had been provided.

Romans 5:12

The poison from the serpent was real. In sin terms it is as if all of us from the beginning of our lives are in a situation where the poison is already inside us; it’s called sin. You can’t play around with this sin that is inside you. It grips what you say and what you do. You get annoyed with yourself because you know that what you think and do is wrong, but somehow you can’t get rid of it. Whatsoever a man sows he shall reap. If you continue to be involved in sin there is an automatic reaping from that sin. There’s no doubt that the poison killed. There’s no doubt that the wages of sin are death.

There was only one serpent of brass on the pole.

1 Timothy 2:5

That’s why Good Friday, when we thinking about Jesus hanging on the cross, is so significant. There is only one way for us to get our lives sorted in God, and that is through Jesus Christ. I don’t think that when something happened from the serpent’s bite they were wishing that there was an easier remedy. All they knew was that the moment they would look upon the serpent they would healed. There is one mediator between God and man: Christ Jesus.

Jesus refers to this in the following passage. At the beginning of this chapter Nicodemus came at night to talk to Jesus. Jesus talked to him about what it means to be a Christian. And then He gets to the point in the conversation when He says:

John 3:14

That is very clear. What are we saying then? Nicodemus was the ruler of the Jews, he knew what was recorded in the Torah. He would have known the story of the serpent on the pole in the Old Testament. Jesus what showing him that in exactly the same way as Moses lifted up the serpent, even so that Son of man must be lifted up.

John 3:15

There was a brass serpent on a pole which is a strange image. In the same way that as the serpent on the pole could deal with the serpents in the camp, Jesus made Himself of no reputation, was made in the likeness of men so that He could identify with you and with me. He became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross. The obedience of Jesus means that I can stand in front of you and tell you that this isn’t complicated. Here Nicodemus was going to see Jesus, in a short period of time, lifted up on the cross.

2 Corinthians 5:7

In the Old Testament the clear thing was the vision. Now we do not have to physically see Jesus standing here now, we have to walk in faith. I want to make it crystal clear that to become a Christian is not complicated. The fact that some of you sitting here tonight know that you need to sort this out is God already talking to you. Jesus isn’t standing behind the door waiting for you to come through so that he can beat you down. He has provided a remedy for everyone. The remedy isn’t a quick prescription.

John 3:16

If any of you have thought about what it meant for Jesus to hang on the cross, it was mind-numbingly torturing. But He did it for us so that we can look by faith.

Sunday, 5 April 2009

An Active Faith

Ours is to be an active faith. And in 1 Peter 3, the writer shows us two vital aspects of this. We are to give the Lord His rightful place in our hearts; and we are to be ready always to give a reason for the hope which is in us.



What I have to share will help all of us in such a way that we are aware more than ever of what God is doing in your life and who He is.

The background to Peter’s thinking in the bit of His letter we will look at this morning comes partly from Psalms 34:

Psalms 34:1-21

Peter’s letter is to do with how to live right in the face of difficulty, how to address circumstances which are contrary and which seemingly don’t make sense. Chapters 1 and 2 looked at the persecution which was coming. Peter was very conscious that he wanted the recipients of the letter to get it right as to how they should live their lives. There are two specific things we can do to prevent fear dominating our hearts and how to avoid terror generating fear.

1 Peter 3:8-9

No cliques – I have brothers and sisters in the Lord. If someone new comes into the church, you’re welcome – you won’t have to fight to get into my group. You need to be courteous and open.

1 Peter 3:10-12

“You don’t need to worry, recipients of this letter” – God hears your prayers, and when pressure comes, the eyes of the Lord are over the righteousness and His ears open to their prayers.

1 Peter 3:13

They needed to be sure of their foundation, to know for sure that God heard their prayers. And now we come to specifics.

1 Peter 3:14-16

There are two things here we need to do.

First, there is the aspect of not being afraid of anything. Often in Peter’s letters you hear echoes of his experiences with the Lord.

Matthew 14:26-30

“It is I; be not afraid.” There are probably five or six occasions in Peter’s life where the words of Christ became indelibly written in his heart. They were afraid, and Jesus’ words came across the water – “It is I, be not afraid.” And now in his letter, he tells them not to be afraid of their terror, nor to be troubled. He knew that when Jesus Christ is involved, there is no fear.

“Yes, but what if I face things I didn’t expect?” “It is I – be not afraid.” And Peter is writing to these people telling them not to be afraid or troubled. At the time it was people saying things to put them in fear, but you can widen it. If you’re a Christian and are afraid, Jesus Christ knows what He is doing in your life. He gave His life for you. Next weekend (Easter) we’ll particularly remember that.

The enemy of our souls thrives on fear, that little comment which comes to your mind – “You see ... do you think He loves you? Why has that happened?” “Be not afraid of their terror, neither be troubled.”

I’m sure Peter recalled when Jesus talked to them intimately.

Now in v15, Peter comes to two active things we need to do.

1 Peter 3:15

What does it mean to sanctify God in our hearts? In one translation, it says, “Sanctify God as lord in your hearts.” This is an active thing we need to do. It’s a similar word to “hallowed” in the Lord’s prayer. When I’m involved, when I’m a Christian, a son of God as a result of what He has done for me, I need to maintain His position in my heart, right in the core. I keep Him in that position, and reverence Him and bow down to Him. He is Lord of my life. And right in the kernel of me is Jesus Christ, recognised as Lord, and I believe everything He says.

“Jesus Christ the habitual thought, the central emotion, the all-dominant impulse.” That’s not just words – it’s us, keeping, actively keeping Jesus Christ in the position of who He is. He is Lord. So when I’m trying to sort things out, looking to the future ... “In my life, I want You to be number one.”

In your life, sanctify the Lord God in your heart. So it does matter each day how much I talk to God, how much I open up my heart to God. That’s not being religious or spiritual. Sanctify the Lord in your hearts. When you get up in the morning, it’s not immediate Radio 4, Radio 2, or whatever. That’s not the way to start a day. Sanctify the Lord God in your hearts. It’s an active things which we can do.

The second things is part two of the verse :-

1 Peter 3:15

Be ready always – not just when you feel like it. It could be anyone at any time. I have to be able to give a reason for the hope that is in me, and I have to do it with meekness and reverence. So what is the reason for the hope which is in me? I need to know what I’m going to share. What are you hoping for? What does it mean?

I’m going to broaden this out. The picture will be a solid ground of our faith which can actively share with another person who asks us. “My personality is not such as to speak,” you may say. But this is for all of us. I’m talking here about the core of you. You’ve sanctified the Lord Jesus Christ in your heart, and now you are ready to give an answer always. You can do this ... and you must do it. It’s part of what we’re about. It’s not an option.

What is our hope? Because when you are facing certain situations, you have to be sure. What is our hope?

Romans 5:1-2

We’re justified by faith through what Jesus Christ has done for us. We have that peace within. We have peace with God, access by faith into this grace. There’s a forward-looking sense of this hope.

Philippians 1:6

The work that God has started, He will complete. That’s my hope. And it’s not something vague – it’s the assurance that that is what is going on. I’m justified by faith and confident in Him.

1 John 3:2

Each month that goes by, God is working on me. I’m justified by faith, and He is working on me, perfecting me, shaping me so that at some point in time, He will call me to Himself, and when I see Him I shall be like Him. That’s the surety, the confidence inside.

1 Corinthians 15:53

At some point will come a time when our time here is up and God has perfected His work in us.

Romans 8:23

We aren’t made into robots, but we’re made free not to sin. Before we’re a Christian we automatically sin, but now He gives us the power to live right. At some point we will leave this body and get a new one.

1 Thessalonians 4:17

2 Corinthians 5:6-8

Hebrews 12:22

2 Corinthians 4:17-18

What is this life? What is the hope inside me? I’ve sanctified the Lord in my heart. Now I’m ready to give a reason for the hope in me.

What does it mean to be a Christian? I’ve been set free from the power of sin, the penalty sin (the penalty has been paid). I used to please myself, and I tried to fill up the vacuum inside me, but there was always an emptiness before I became a Christian. I was lonely. But the hope in me is a faith that God has given me, and I now live a life or a timespan allocated by God, and at some point I will step out of this body and be with the Lord. Death presents no fear. I enjoy life. But I know the progression of my life and the way God is sorting things out serves merely to prove His love for me. Those circumstances are there to prove His love for me, not to do me in.

Philippians 3:20-21

“This world is not my home – I’m just passing through.” That’s the truth. Our home is in heaven. I’m sanctifying the Lord God in my heart, keeping Him in that place with Him as Lord and God. And now I’m ready to share what God has done inside me. I’ll give a person a reason why I’m a Christian. The foundation is as secure as anything you care to mention. I’m totally confident because of what God has done inside me. He’s set me free from my past life and I’m walking each day pleasing Him, knowing that the circumstances of life which I will face ... no matter what they are ... I know my God, I know what He has done inside me and I love Him.

And a time will come when I’ll step out of this body and into His presence.

Titus 2:12-14

We’re looking for that blessed hope.

What is it like in the week if someone out of the blue asks you what it means to be a Christian? Or someone asks your opinion? Peter says there will come people who will ask you, because they will see the difference. When the persecution comes (in the context of this letter), people will see your reaction is different. Always be ready to give a reason for why you react the way you do. Be ready to speak up for the one you have sanctified in your heart. Be ready.

Those are two active things that God is pointing out to you and me this morning. Keeping sanctifying the Lord God in our heart. Keeping the right perspective. Keeping Him central. And secondly being always ready to give an answer.

Proverbs 4:23

There are some here this morning who didn’t know why they were here. Some have been brought here for a reason, and it’s time that reason became true for you. Sanctify the Lord God in your hearts, and always be ready to give an answer for the hope in you.

It’s not a passive life. I’m an open book. I’m open about what God has done in my life. And I can identify with anyone that God has us in the palm of His had. And the whole point of this life is to prepare us so that when we see Him we will be like Him. It’s great because you know that the Author and Finisher of your faith is God… There will come a point when we will step out of this body and be with Him.

Treasure the work of God in your life., If He’s been working in your life to point out to you your need of Him, that’s Him at work.

1 Peter 3:15-16

Friday, 20 March 2009

Do What You Can

By Dr Jerry Horner

Mark 14:3-10

You’ll notice in here, that Jesus was being anointed. We have a way among us of highly esteeming things that God thinks are abominable. We value things totally opposite to how God evaluate things. We think something good is something big, like a big church. We need to look at what Jesus says is good, not what man says is good. That which is abomination to God is that which is highly esteemed unto men.




When this woman broke this alabaster box, it was an extreme sin. She does this thing so out of the ordinary, such a social no-no, so that the people murmured against her. She breaks this bottle and pours the contents on the head of Jesus. They were saying it was such a waste; she could have given the money to the poor. If you think about it, it was a stupid thing to do. Of what use was it? She wasted that costly perfume; it was useless. They were right to criticise her; but what does Jesus says about it.

He says something that we can hardly believe: ‘Let her alone. I think so highly of what she has done, I’m never going to forget it. Wherever the gospel is spoken, this story will be spoken of as a memorial to her.’ This just shows that Jesus is always surprising us.

John 12:1-8

Sometimes I want to ask the Lord, "What did you think about the sermon today?” We may think it was a wonderful message but he might think differently.

The criteria by which our lives are judged, it’s not what you think about it or what others say about it; it’s what Jesus says about it, how he evaluates it? I would like him to say about me “he has done a good work”.

I want to talk to you about how you can have these kind of commendations from God.

What do I have to do to make Jesus say what he said about this woman? How big a sacrifice to I have to make for the Lord to say “I'm pleased for what you’ve done.”

There’s three simple statements that Jesus made and in these, we are told the necessary requirements for having our Lord’s approval and commendation.

1) Do what you can

What is it that constitutes good service? What is a good preacher, church member? Jesus says ‘do what you can’. He was pleased with what this woman did. “She has done a good work in me, leave her alone".

Mark 14:8

She did what she could. That’s all it took! No one else was impressed; they all thought it was a waste of time and money. Jesus said, I do not judge people by how much or what they do, I judge them about the opportunity that is placed in their hands.

It was easy for Martha to express what God had done in her life; she was very efficient. But Mary was the younger sister, her heart filled with love and gratitude just like Martha’s was. She sees Lazarus raised from the dead and the man who did it.

Love has to express itself. Service for the Lord is nothing more than a heart overfilled with gratitude for him. Suddenly Martha remembers the alabaster box. Maybe she was saving it for her marriage or for some financial security. But it’s all she’s got, her treasure. She takes it out and she is commiting a social error but this doesn’t occur to her; she’s totally oblivious. All she sees is Jesus having raised her brother from the dead. Then she anoints Jesus’ hands and feet and he liked this, knowing she did what she could.

All he demanded from her was what he had given her in the first place. He demands nothing more than what he has already given you. I know that in this contemprorary Christianity, we lift up those with many talents. But if we aren’t careful, that will rule the church. The majority of Christians sit in the congregation and think, “But what is there that I could do”. The only thing God expects from you is, “Do what you can.” If you wait to try and do what someone else has achieved, you won’t ever get there.

As it says in 1 Corinthians 12, the body of Christ is made up of all the different parts: the members. Not everyone has the same role to play, but all are just as important.

All Christian service is simply giving back to God what he has already given you. What God has placed in your hands, that’s all that he demands! God will never demand more than he provides. And he will always provide what he demands. You do what you can, even if it may not seem much to you.

2) You do that much

Jesus said, ‘This woman has done what she could’. She had not only done what she could, but ALL that she could. Make sure you do that much. She broke that box. That’s significant. When she broke it, she had to pour it all out. She didn’t come out with a measuring spoon. Love is extravagant. Not a drop left in the alabaster box. I want to ask you, are there any drops left in your alabaster box?

You say, I’ve prayed...but have you done all that you know to do? I am convinced that God judges me on what I could and should have done, not on just what I have done. I believe that the greatest sin is that I have not done all that I can do. It’s easy to settle for just a little bit, as long as the people are satisfied. No that is not enough, if Jesus is not satisfied.

Don’t be content with being mediocre, which is settling for less that the best. The failure to do all that we can do and develop our abilities. A mediocre person is one who has searchlight ability but is shining like a penlight. It’s one who just gets by. Don’t be feeble when you can be strong. Don’t be content with paddling when there is a whole ocean to explore. Do all that you can do. Everyone wants to be successful, but what is success? It’s not a comparison of what we have done to what someone else has done. It’s coming up to the level of our best and making the most of our abilities and possibilities. We don’t compare ourselves with ourselves. Do all that you can.

3) Do it now

Jesus said, “Let her alone, she did what she could.” Then he said, ‘she is come aforehand to anoint my body to the burying.’ Why would he say that when he isn’t even dead yet?

If Mary had not anointed his body a week ahead of time, the body would never have been anointed for burial. Whatever you do, do it now. Next week may be too late.

Mary was surprised at what he said. She didn’t know he was going to die in a week’s time.

It teaches me, that sometimes, if we do what God does asks us to do, we don’t have the complete idea of what we are doing. Mary had no idea of what she doing and yet far beyond that simple act of obedience was a meaning known only to God. And someday when we stand in his presence, we are going to be highly surprised at the significance and thne outcome of the simple things we did.

There may be some things you do in the service of God, that you may never know the results of. Some life that you touched, you don’t even know about it. Something that God uses. Now, you notice that Mark says, that Mary anointed the head of Jesus; John says she anointed his feet. I want you to notice this...John gives another detail: that she wiped his feet with her hair and the place was filled with the scent. What she had poured out on Jesus, came back on her. Whatever you pour on Jesus will always come back on you. You can tell when you are around someone who has poured out their life to Jesus, because there is a certain perfume on their life. Jesus says, ‘you do what you can, do that much and do it right now’.
Amen

Tuesday, 17 February 2009

Acts (Part 2 of 4) - Peter & Pentecost



We’re looking this evening at the Day of Pentecost and the coming of the Holy Spirit.

Last week we did an overview of the book – the type of person Luke was, why he wrote, what theology he touched on. We have time only to look at themes. The key verse was :

Acts 1:8

This was an unconditional promise. Jesus said they would receive power. All they had to do was to go back to Jerusalem and wait until the Holy Ghost was poured out.



This books bridges between the Gospels and the Epistles, providing the historical context for the Epistles. The Gospel was propelled – Jerusalem to Judaea to Samaria to the uttermost parts of the earth. Luke has one aim in view – the transmission of the Gospel from a Jewish centre in Jerusalem to the centre of the civilized world in Rome. In the Gospel of Luke, he starts in Rome (with talk of the taxing) and ends in Jerusalem with the crucifixion. Now we move in the other direction. This Gospel isn’t just for the Jewish nation, but for the people of the world. The Holy Spirit orchestrates everything, directing them in everything they do.

Acts 2:1

God’s timing is always perfect. In Gal 4, Paul refers to the fullness of time. Here again we have a sense of timing. This is a point in history where eternity intersects with time, and God sends for the promised Holy Spirit.

Pentecost means fiftieth. The Passover was the time when Jesus was crucified. Here we are fifty days later, which was when they celebrated the first fruits of harvest.

John 12:23-25

At the death of Jesus, the wheat had fallen into the ground, and now fifty days later we have the firstfruits. God had such a sense of timing. Jesus had done His work, had returned to heaven. In world terms, God had set the stage. At this point in history, we have the Romans in charge. The Greek civilization prior to them had brought a common language – everyone could speak Greek, not just the educated people. Not only that, but the Old Testament scriptures had all been translated into Greek. We have a common language for communication, and the scriptures in that common language. And the Romans enforced peace – the Pax Romana. That meant that communication was easier. They built roads, got rid of the brigands.

We have the Bible available in a language accessible to everyone. We have an area where there is easy communication. And people were fed up with the ethos of life – corruption and cruelty. 90% of people in Rome were slaves. There was hopelessness and despair. People wanted something different. They were ready to hear the Gospel. The whole of history had come together. God had set the stage for the time of harvest.

Martin Lloyd-Jones: It was the outpouring of the spirit on the day of Pentecost, unique but with aspects which were repeatable, which alone explained the survival of the Christian church .

God was at work in His people. The Comforter had come. The Comforter is one who comes to strengthen and equip us in our faith, to enlighten our understanding, to convince the world of sin, righteousness and judgment, to guide us into all truth.

It’s the Holy Spirit who inspires and guides the events which transpire in this book. There’s a sense of purpose, of victory, of achievement, that God is at work.

Acts 1:1-3

By implication, this is still Jesus at work.

John 14:12

Luke is recounting the entire mission of Jesus is directed by the Holy Spirit.
Jesus instructs the apostles through the Holy Ghost Acts 1:2
The waiting disciples are baptised with the Holy Spirit Acts 1:5-8
Believers receive the Holy Spirit at new birth
Believers are described as filled with the Holy Ghost
The spirit is conferred by the laying on of hands, speaks to individuals and leads and guides.

In effect the Holy Spirit brings Jesus back amongst them, but is now unlimited in space and time. Because Jesus came as the second Adam, He came in the form of a man. He related with individuals. He lived and operated and did miracles within a limited geographical area. But now He doesn’t come as a man, but to indwell men, to empower men, to enable them to do what God is asking them to do. It’s the same, but it’s different.

The Spirit, like the Father, we don’t see. His chief work is to reveal the son and guide us into all truth. Although His ministry is unseen, He is revealing the fullness of the Father in each heart.

Primarily we see the Holy Spirit in relation to witness. He comes to reveal the things of Christ in the hearts of individuals, but that revelation is to be communicated to the world – it’s not just for you and me.

John 15:26-28

The revelation isn’t just for us – it’s to be communicated to the world. When you read through the Gospels and the early chapters of Acts, although they had shared intimate moments with Jesus, the disciples really had no understanding of what Jesus had come to do.

They believed in Him as the Son of God, a great prophet, the one who would release them from the Roman yoke. They knew nothing of the new creation, of righteousness, of the ability to stand in the Father’s presence without condemnation ... They had heard Jesus teaching, but did not grasp it. They did not understand John the Baptist’s word concerning Jesus.

They understood John’s baptism, the need to repent and get right with God, but they didn’t understand what God’s purpose was. They didn’t understand that Jesus would take the sins of the whole world, would die and would rise from the dead and return to the Father – and would send forth the Holy Ghost, and that Holy Ghost would come and indwell not only these people in Acts, but you and me today.

They couldn’t grasp this. They saw Jesus as having authority, as walking with God, as someone who would deliver them from Roman rule. But they didn’t really understand why he came.
We can’t grasp what it means until the Holy Spirit comes and shows us. It’s as though He takes the scales from our eyes, and we see, understand, speak in a new way.

MLJ: IF the Gospel was something you and I could understand, it would not be the glorious Gospel of the blessed God. It would be a philosophy.

We can’t persuade people into faith. There is a sense in which we persuade, challenge, convince, but it avails nothing unless the Holy Spirit is at work to convict.

When we examine the early chapters of Acts, one of the clearest things is the change in Peter. Other than Paul, he is the disciple who is described the most – impetuous, foolhardy, full of enthusiasm. He always had to push other people out of the way to make his presence felt. As a man he had a real call. He was the first to be called. He always heads the list. He heads the 12, heads the 3. He was the dominant personality, and became the spokesman for the others. He always opened his mouth before others spoke. He seemed to have real glimpses of revelation. When Jesus challenged them to say who He was, it was Peter who spoke up. And when people turned away, it was Peter who asked to whom else they could go. Peter saw ... and yet he didn’t see. He tried to deflect Jesus from going to Jerusalem, and Jesus had to rebuke him. He understood, but he didn’t understand because he didn’t understand the purpose for which Jesus had come.

But a tremendous change came, and that change was defined by the Day of Pentecost. People say he was a coward because of the denial. He was a man of courage and loyalty. He was ready to fight, but didn’t understand what the fight was to be. Probably the denial was the lowest point of his life. Peter wrote himself off, but Jesus didn’t – after the resurrection, He sent word to Peter.

Three time Jesus told Peter to feed His sheep – mirroring the three denials.
But despite all this, the disciples still wanted to know when He would restore the kingdom to Israel. They still saw Him as meeting their need, but He wasn’t there for that at all.

Peter went back to Jerusalem to wait for the promise. And then Pentecost happened, and the house was filled. God sent out His spirit, with wind and fire. Wind was associated with the spirit in Jewish tradition.

Ezekiel 37:9-15

This Gospel would be preached by men with tongues of fire. It would be preached in such a way that nothing could withstand it.

Stephen was the first one to pay the price for having a tongue of fire. They were all filed with the Holy Ghost, denoting new birth and a new creation, just as Jesus had promised.

I wonder what it was like when suddenly there was a mighty rushing wind and they began to speak. At that moment the church of Jesus Christ was born. These were the first fruits of His sacrifice. And once again, Peter is the first on his feet.

This is a different Peter, a man with authority. All the things he had failed to understand suddenly made sense. All the bits of the jigsaw started to come together, and he was able to communicate that to the people who were watching and listening.

Jesus had said, I am the way, the truth and the life. Peter hadn’t understood why that involved the cross, but now he understood. The truth of redemption was coming alive. The life of Christ was revealed inside him.

“You are the message.” At this time, Peter became the message. He was able to speak, convict because the Holy Spirit was working through him. And his words were tremendously challenging.

Acts 2:22-25

Acts 2:36

Peter didn’t pull any punches. This isn’t the Peter who hid when challenged by the maidservant. This is a man with authority, power and conviction. And they were pricked to their heart. The same mob who called for the crucifixion. Peter tells them they crucified Him. Peter comes in the power of the Holy Spirit, and says, “You did it.” And they ask what they should do, and Peter tells them to repent and be baptised.

This went far beyond the message that John preached, and the people responded to it. Jesus said ye shall know the truth and the truth shall make you free ... And it began on the Day of Pentecost. And the same Holy Spirit who birthed the early church lives and works within us. That power is as real today as then. The reality of the Holy Ghost convicting people of sin and filling them with Himself is as real today as then.

In Acts, the ministry of the Holy Spirit is just the same. Different format but just the same as when Jesus walked the earth.
Martin Lloyd Jones ...

God sent His spirit and hasn’t called Him home. The Holy Spirit is still at work, within individuals, within this church, within His church worldwide.

So we have a changed Peter – a man who is very different from the man we see in the Gospels, who has a sense of purpose and direction, who knows that God has selected him for a purpose, to carry the Gospel to the ends of the earth.

In Acts 3, we have the account of the first miracle. A familiar story – the lame man healed at the Gate Beautiful. It must have been galling for the members of the Sanhedrin. 50 days before they had got rid of Jesus. They knew what they had done was unlawful. It was all wrong. The witnesses didn’t agree. On the cross, they thought they had silenced His voice forever. And here they are weeks later, and it sounds as though the same thing is happening all over again.

Once again they demand that these rebels be dragged before the Sanhedrin. Peter knows he has to give account of the fact that he has a faith, that God is at work, that the law and prophets have been fulfilled .

Acts 4:13

In the natural, Peter and John had little to commend them – no money, no status. Here they were, called before the Sanhedrin to give account. They were unlearned and ignorant. Why did Jesus choose people like that? He wanted to prove that people don’t come into the kingdom of God by natural ability or by what they do, but because something supernatural has been done to them, and they have been transformed.

“Peter had not been reading textbooks ... Something had happened to him. He had been filled with power. Hew was a new man. God’s power gives us power to live. It takes failures and puts backbones into them, making them new men and women so that where formerly they were defeated, they conquer ... That is Christianity, and there is only one explanation. They took knowledge that they had been with Jesus.”
Now by His spirit Jesus was living in them, and the authority and power He had was working through them.

Romans 1:16

Peter and John were convinced of the same truth. They had come to a place where they knew their lives were in God’s hands. All they wanted to do was fulfil what God wanted. He would take the consequences. They just had to proclaim the message.

They’re dragged before the Sanhedrin, which doesn’t baulk at sentencing people to die, and they are told not to teach and preach.

Acts 4:29-31

They didn’t snivel, cry. They didn’t say, “Shut their mouths.” They said, “Open ours.” They didn’t worry about the persecution. They didn’t pray that God would silence the Sanhedrin. Instead they prayed for boldness. I think there’s a lesson here for us. This church has come through turmoil, bit is our prayer that we want those silenced who would speak against us – or is our prayer that God protected this church, and that purpose hasn’t been completed. We need to get on with what God has given us today. We need to forget what people say against us. We have a world to impact and we are going to do it in the power of the Holy Ghost.

Peter and John were not important people. They had no influence. They took on the Sanhedrin. They took on the forces of Rome, the philosophies of the age. But their only source was God, and they asked Him that He would enable them, that they would be able to share all that Jesus had taught them, that they would be able to touch lives with the Word of life, touch bodies that needed healing.

How did this little group of people stand against the might of the Sanhedrin and the power of the Roman Empire and turn the world upside down? It’s been that way all down the ages. Luther stood against the power of the Catholic church with his revelation that salvation is by faith. He turned the world upside down. God could have used other people, but God had a perfect time, and used Luther to turn Christendom upside down and brought back the truth that salvation is by faith through the grace of God.

We look at 18th century England, deplorable moral conditions. Churches were empty. People scoffed at Christianity. It seemed the nation was locked in darkness. “But suddenly a boy called George Whitfield began to preach in a manner which shook church, congregations, England ... He was later followed by the Wesleys, and the whole face of England was changed.”

This is the Holy Spirit – not a suggestion, not a force, but the third person of the blessed Holy Trinity.

In Acts we see particularly the Holy Spirit making it possible for this message to be preached with holy boldness.

Acts 8:4

It took persecution to drive the believers out of Jerusalem. They went everywhere preaching the word. The Greek here is “talking”, not preaching. Every one of us can do that. We can share the word. There are moments when God opens things for you. Someone asks you a question, and you can respond with words you didn’t know you had. If you try it yourself it all goes wrong. But if God opens the way, you can share the reality of what Jesus has done.

And that’s what they did – sharing the Gospel, telling people what had happened to them. It was so different from everything they had ever known.

I can look back to the day God met me. I can only describe it as a light coming on inside me and I understood things in a way I had never done before. I can identify with Peter. There were years when I didn’t understand. But all through that time God was creating a need, showing me I didn’t have what it took. And when God came it was as though a light came on and I saw things differently. It was as though I was walking on air. There was a lightness, a joy, a confidence tat God had done something real. It wasn’t something I did. Something supernatural had been done to me.

Share what you have. You don’t have to have the whole counsel of God. We know only in part, but we can share the part we have, that God loves us, has spoken into our lives. Maybe we aren’t where we want to be, but we can share what we’ve got.

The Holy Spirit enabled them to speak.

1 Thessalonians 1:5

Everything was against Paul in this situation. It was a pagan city, the people had no Jewish background and they were living a life of sin. Paul came and began to speak the word in the Holy Ghost and in much assurance. It wasn’t just his word – the Holy Ghost was speaking through him, and it bore fruit.

The Holy Ghost doesn’t just give us power to share, but also opens our hears to hear. Peter’s sermon at Pentecost was quite straightforward. There was nothing terribly special, but it came with power. The Holy Ghost took his words and planted them in the hearts of his audience and they were pricked in their hearts. They realised their guilt before God, and repented and were baptised and 3000 were added to the church. Later, 2000. Later the Gospel came to the Gentiles, because the Holy Ghost empowered both the speaker and the listener.

You see in this book also the importance of the Word of God. The book is punctuated by “and the Word of God grew and multiplied”. The word always came first. Peter asked for boldness to speak the word. The Holy Spirit and the word go hand in hand. Each of us needs that encounter with God which changes us on the inside. Where things we don’t understand, things we find difficult to believe suddenly become so simple.

The contrast between the Peter of the Gospel, unsteadfast, slow of heart ... and the same apostle as he meets us in Acts, firm, courageous ... is one of the most convincing proofs of the power of Christ’s resurrection.

I find it incredible that that gift is ours today. We can know that same power and authority. We can be part of God’s plan for His kingdom. We can take our place because we have the power of the Holy Spirit working in our lives.
I want to finish where I started.

Acts 2:1

They were all in unity. They didn’t know what to expect, but they were standing together.

Psalms 133:1-4

There the Lord commanded the blessing. We’ve been looking at Nehemiah, which is about a people who stood together, who were prepared to fight for their brethren. Over the last five or six years, I’ve been asking God how we engender in a second generation that pioneer spirit which inhabits an early church. When this church was birthed, there weren’t huge numbers, but there was a common purpose. The school was something huge to us. You see the Queen Mary in sail, and you don’t know what it took to build her.

I asked God how we bring that spirit to a second generation. Because that school was born out of sacrifice. There were tremendous sacrifices on the part of the people. Some of you here are second generation, and I want you to lay hold of it. We can’t take people from where they are now and take them back twenty years and put them in a different situation.

I see that God is going to build another generation of pioneers. There is opposition, financial pressure. People are finding it difficult. And when you find it difficult, you begin to discover where your priorities lie. I want that pioneer spirit to be characteristic of every generation in this church. We have something that God has done in our midst which is precious, and we’re not going to let go. If we have to fight, we’ll fight, because where brethren stand together in unity, God commands the blessing.

God allows pressure because pressure works something in us. We don’t grow when things are easy. We sit down and enjoy it. But when there is pressure we have to draw on resources which are beyond us. We have to be like Peter and John who didn’t have status and power, but had the power of God. We have to stand because we believe this is what God wants.

At some time the baton has to pass. And the first generation of pioneers have to transmit it to the second generation of pioneers, and the ones who will take it are the ones who will not let go, who will go beyond every pressure and say, “I know what God has done, what He wants to do, and I will not let go.”