THE POWER OF FAITH
2 Corinthians 4:13-15 "It is written: 'I believed; therefore I have
spoken.' With that same spirit of faith we also believe and therefore
speak, because we know that the one who raised the Lord Jesus from the dead
will also raise us with Jesus and present us with you in his presence. All
this is for your benefit, so that the grace that is reaching more and more
people may cause thanksgiving to overflow to the glory of God."
The great Corinthian congregation was full of the life of God working away
in its midst. Favoured citizens of Corinth were being regenerated and
baptized by the Spirit into the body of Christ. When strangers came into
the church services some of them actually fell down and cried, "God is
really among you!" There was love, joy and peace in their lives which were
the fruit of the Holy Spirit. There were spiritual gifts given to the
people in order for them to minister to one another and to receive ministry
from one another. The only explanation for these gifts was that they were
the enabling charismata of God the Holy Ghost. When Paul witnessed all this
life it made him more content to die in the service of the Lord Jesus
Christ. He rejoiced that the life of God was seen in those he served. These
are the closing words of the verse immediately before our text: "So then,
death is at work in us, but life is at work in you" (v.12).
Then, notice his very next words. He is speaking of the mighty life of God
in a particular congregation, and see what his mind inevitably turns to -
"It is written"! On earth where will you find the life of heaven? Where
much is made of the Bible, the written word of God. The Scriptures are
God-breathed. The holy men of the Old Testament spoke as they were moved by
the Spirit of God. The sword of the Spirit is the Word of God. So if Paul
thinks of the true life of God at work in a particular congregation he is
certain that the Bible has a central part in those churches, not rituals,
not ceremonies, not choreography, not music but the miraculous Bible. Now
we need to ask this particular question, what characterises the ministry if
the life of God is at work in a church, and look to our text to see what
answers it provides.
1. IT IS A MINISTRY OF CONVICTION.
"It is written: 'I believed; therefore I have spoken.' With that same
spirit of faith we also believe and therefore speak" (v.13). The apostle
quotes from the Old Testament, Psalm 116:10. David is speaking there about
his brush with death, "The cords of death entangled me, the anguish of the
grave came upon me" (v.3), but he called on the Lord and was delivered. He
trusted in God and was not put to shame, so this psalm of deliverance comes
out of an experience of David's personal living faith. When Paul read the
psalm he immediately identified with David. Death was at work in him too,
but the same Lord who delivered King David had been delivering this apostle
Paul and he was also at work in the Corinthians bringing life to them. What
did they all possess? "That same spirit of faith" Paul says (v.13).
For example, we read in the Scriptures the incomparable Ninetieth Psalm. It
is the oldest of the psalms, beginning, "Lord thou hast been our dwelling
place in all generations." It was written by Moses about 3,400 years ago.
Yet it is utterly contemporary, lucid, fervent, God-exalting and most
humble. It is everything that a prayer should be. I believe that on the
very last day, minutes before Christ returns, there will be people in every
corner of the world being saved and sanctified by this psalm which was
written 1,400 years before Christ.
Lord, thou hast been our dwelling place
In generations all,
Before thou ever hadst brought forth
The mountains great or small.
What makes those words timeless and powerful? It is the spirit of faith
that first breathed them forth, which faith king David also had four
hundred years later, and which a thousand years later Paul knew that he
himself had, and which we 21st century Christians also have. In other
words, we are affirming that saving faith, which enables a man to confess
Jesus Christ as his Lord and Saviour, is a gift from God. The Bible makes
that utterly clear: "it is by grace you have been saved, through faith -
and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of God" (Ephs. 2:8). When
some men came to John the Baptist and told him about everyone going away
from them to listen to Jesus whom John had baptized he meekly answered
them, "A man can receive only what is given him from heaven" (John 3:27).
And every virtue we possess,
And every victory won,
And every thought of holiness,
Are his alone.
The spirit of faith, which every believer possesses under the old covenant
or the new, is a gift from God. To what is compared the natural heart of
man? To a stone. What will grow on a pebble? Nothing at all. The granite
heart must be changed before it can breathe with loving faith to Christ.
Will a man with a heart of stone say, "I'm a lost sinner and my only hope
of forgiveness is the death of the blessed Lamb of God for me"? That is
impossible. Then it would not be a heart of stone. That is only what a man
with a new heart, a heart of flesh, can say. God gives the faith which he
demands from us. He gives the same spirit of faith in every single
believer.
We may be standing on a pavement when along come a group of Hare Krishna
followers chanting and beating their drums. We are not blessed at the sight
and sound because we don't have the same spirit of faith which they have.
When the cry goes forth from the minaret summoning the Muslim faithful to
prayer we do not hurry along to join with them because God has not given to
them the same spirit of faith. When men deny the virgin born Jesus, his
substitutionary death, his bodily resurrection, then, though they be
preachers and bishops, they do not display the same spirit of faith that we
have.
Paul read the words of psalm 116 and he knew that that psalmist had the
same faith in the same Lord as himself. He had trusted in God and so he
prayed as he did. Then when Paul studied the content of the psalm, its
spirit of penitence and trust - a God-honouring and self-abasing spirit -
then he knew that he and the psalmist both were possessed by the same
spirit of faith. It was also there in the Corinthian congregation where the
life of God was so evident. Faith begins with what is written in Scripture.
"Faith cometh by hearing and hearing by the word of God" (Roms. 19:17).
Paul and the Corinthian church fed on that Book. Then their faith was
fashioned and moulded by the same Spirit that had breathed out the Bible.
The spirit of faith was in them.
So, this spirit of saving faith, present in Moses, David, Paul, the
Corinthians Christians and in many of us, is a sovereign creation of God.
We are debtors to God for it. In other words, no one can be praised for
having it. I have watched my daughter carry a child for the last months. I
know that she suffered the travail of giving birth to him. I have witnessed
her feeding him and changing him. She will soon be binding up all his
bruises and comforting him in all his sorrows as he grows up. She will care
for him night and day through all his childhood diseases, sitting up late
at night, rising from her bed when he cries and soothing him back to sleep.
After he is grown should she reward him for calling her 'Mother'? Should
she say, "Thank you so much for calling me your mother"? Indeed not!
Anything less would be unforgivable. Having received so much from her hand,
what should possess him to refuse to honour her? Will he not rather say one
day when she is frail and near death, that the greatest privilege he ever
had was of being her son, and being given the privilege of calling her his
mother?
So too when Paul saw the spirit of faith in the Corinthians church or in
any other congregation you never find him saying, "Thank you for believing
in God." Not once. He says, "We always thank God that he gave you faith,
that true genuine saving faith, that Moses and David and the apostles also
had." And if you might hear of some evangelist telling you how to believe
God, and name things, and claim things, bragging to you that 'he believed
for a Mercedes' and for a high paying job, you can be sure that man is an
utter stranger to the spirit of faith, because that spirit excludes any
boasting in any attainments.
What does this spirit of faith do? It makes us speak. You will never find a
modernist on a soap box preaching his universalist message, and a good
thing too. There are no modernist evangelists. Modernism is inarticulate.
Its diagnosis is faulty and so is its cure. But the spirit of faith, taught
by what God has written, makes a proclamation. Of course the
tele-evangelist speaks. Oh, how he speaks, and this discredits testimonies
and thanksgivings. But bad money would never be put in circulation unless
good money was indisputably valuable. It is not the dumb but the confessing
Christian who glorifies God. There is no merit in the secret followers of
Nicodemus who make a merit of their silence, and boast that they have never
by a syllable betrayed their faith. If a thing is worth doing it is worth
doing badly. Faith is betrayed when it is kept secret. Let everyone of us
have the conviction that we are first of all a believer in the Lord who
also happens to be a housewife, or who happens to be a professor, or who
happens to be a student, or who happens to be retired. Our priority is that
we are believers.
Our faith makes us speak. When young Andrew heard from John of the Lamb of
God who would take away the sin of the world "he first found his brother"
(John 1:41), and then he spoke to him, "We have found the Messiah ... and
he brought him to Jesus" (John 1:42). Because Andrew believed he spoke. The
local University Christian Union has an annual mission which is a useful
concerted effort, but it can never take the place of private, personal
encounters. Man to man, one to one, heart to heart, eyes to eyes. This is
the evangelism of the future encouraged by the worship of a local church in
which the words "it is written" are all important.
Consider the phrase 'hand picked fruit.' Nowadays we have machines for
harvesting crops like cotton and potatoes, but to pick eating apples, and
raspberries, and strawberries there are no suitable machines because they
will damage the fruit. Lovingly picked by hand the fruit is less likely to
be harmed. Which thing is a parable. We must discover the art of a hands-on
approach to people who are strangers to the gospel, and to personally
dealing with them. Some people like Ernest C. Reisinger strengthened that
gift in a wonderful manner but every Christian has to say a word for his
Lord. At the end of the day, our speaking must be done with a lisping
stammering tongue. Our living out the life of Jesus day by day in credible
godliness is of course indispensable, but without words it is not enough.
Paul could say to one church that he was gentle among them like a nursing
mother - and nobody hearing that letter read out to them laughed. They knew
it was so. But a life alone without words is not enough. Music won't do it:
it is a cold medium. A sketch or drama spot wont do it: that is a colder
medium. Choreography won't do it: that is the coldest of all. Sooner or
later He must be spoken - his name, his claims, his promises, his warnings,
his overtures, his invitations to men. Words on our lips about him are a
hot medium. My fear is that so many will one day stand before him and have
to show no more than the barren fig-tree could show - nothing but leaves.
"We speak what we do know, and witness to the things we have seen," and
"That which we have seen and heard we proclaim" (John 3:11, 1 John 1:3).
It is because of the great Object of our faith that we will speak. We are
believing in the Blessed One who loved us and gave himself for us and so we
speak of him to others. If our sight of him is dimmed, or been sullied and
spoiled by coldness of heart or by secret backsliding we will be silent. If
we have drawn the line with Jesus we will not speak. Many who once clearly
carried about in their bodies the death of Jesus need today to pick up
crucified Christ and begin to take him with them again. The converted need
to be re-converted, if that does not strain our theology too much. The
amount of faith you have is less important than the clear object of your
faith. If your faith in Christ is as a grain of mustard seed it is enough
for you to do the hard thing you are being asked to do. Not because of the
faith but because of whom the faith is focused upon.
I am saying that our faith in Christ brings us to stand right in front of
the heart's door of a sinner and start to knock on it. For example, one
older teenager picks up hitch-hikers and he greets them by saying, "Hello,
I'm Jack Jones, and I want to share with you that Jesus is alive."
Hitch-hikers confronted in that way rarely give trouble. Another
church-member visits the hospital and he says to a patient, "My reason for
visiting you is to let you know about the love of Jesus, that there is
nothing better in the whole world than knowing him." He has seen a whole
family come to faith through speaking to one member and giving that one a
Bible. That is where it started. We know of two women who have a ministry
to students, and they often say, "May we have a few minutes of your time to
talk to you about Jesus Christ and the new life he gives?" They all seek to
get the truth about the Lord before men in as personal and honest and
loving a manner as possible, not letting the hour of opportunity slip.
Because they trust in Christ they have to speak for him.
It was that sort of faith that the heroes in Hebrews 11 displayed. That was
what enabled them to subdue kingdoms and obtain promises and work
righteously. John White was serving on an aircraft carrier in the War and a
few Christians were meeting for prayer and a Bible study each week on board
that ship. They wanted to advertise their meeting as they were sailing home
from the Far East. John White was delegated to approach the skipper, a
testy irascible professional. "What do you want?" he said curtly as John
stood to attention before him. "Hurry up. I don't have time to waste.
What's this? A Bible study. I read the lesson on this ship and we don't
need Bible studies." John stood and waited. There seemed nothing else to
do. "Well, what are you waiting for?" "I want to put up a notice, Sir ..."
"Didn't you hear what I said? I take the Sunday services on this ship. I
read the prayers. I read the lesson. Nothing more is needed." "Yes, Sir."
Silence. "Why are you still standing there, White? The door is behind you."
I felt sick. "I want to put a notice up, Sir..." "Damn you. Don't I make
sense?" Pause. "Put your idiotic notice up. Put up any notice you like. Get
out!" "Yes Sir - and thank you very much, Sir" (John White, "The Fight",
IVP, 1977, p.104). And through those meetings there were those who came to
trust in the Saviour. It is faith in King Jesus Christ that makes us speak.
There is not a young person whose life has not been given a jolt through
hearing spontaneous words of faith on the lips of a Christian. John Miller
said, "I vividly recall an experience I had as a youthful unbeliever,
steeped in intellectual despisal of the Christian faith. It was August
1945, and the atomic bomb had just been exploded over Hiroshima. As we
commuters boarded our bus, people were shaking their heads and wondering
whether this new weapon would destroy the world. A sailor responded
quietly, 'No, the world won't ever be destroyed by atomic bombs. Jesus
won't let that happen. He's coming back first.' I was completely silenced
by this unquestioning confidence. It was biblical boldness that came from
the Spirit of God" (John Miller, "Evangelism and Your Church", P&R ,1980,
p.35). The sailor believed and therefore he spoke.
It is a sin not to speak when God in his providence gives us the
opportunity. A Londoner was taking some fresh air one evening standing on
the pavement in front of his house, minding his own business. A policeman
came across the street: "Come on. Move along." "I'll not budge," the man
said angrily. "A man has a right to stand in front of his own home." But
the policeman was as stubborn as the loiterer. The case of the man who
stood still landed in the courts. The magistrate had to hand out a fine
because the law against loitering with intent after warning had been
broken. There was an uproar. Was it justice? Surely the police have better
things to do, but have you noticed how often in the Scriptures it is said
to be a crime to stand still? In one of the Lord's parables a man with one
talent appeared before the judge. The accused was not a thief. He just
stood pat. He had done nothing with his talent. Hear the harsh sentence:
"You wicked and slothful servant. Take the talent from him ... Cast him
into outer judgment."
To stand still is to stand condemned. Sometimes silence is golden, but
there is such a thing as a guilty silence. John Stott describes going to
Pembrokeshire on the night sleeper from London and finding himself sharing
the two-berth cabin with a young land agent. "He was occupying the top
bunk. In the morning, while preparing to wash, he accidentally dropped the
contents of his sponge bag on to the floor and vented his annoyance by
taking the name of Christ in vain. I said nothing. Indeed, I was sorely
tempted to remain silent. The usual plausible excuses came crowding into my
head - 'it's none of your business', 'you've no responsibility for him',
'he'll only laugh at you'. But the previous evening I had preached in
church from Ephesians 4:26,27: 'Be angry and do not sin'. I had spoken
about righteous indignation and the facade of sweet reasonableness which
often conceals our moral cowardice and compromise. An inner struggle
followed, as I argued with myself and prayed, and not until ten or fifteen
minutes later did I find the courage to speak. Although his immediate
reaction was unfavourable, I was soon to witness to the Christ he had
blasphemed and to give him an evangelistic booklet" (John Stott, "Our
Guilty Silence," Hodder and Stoughton, 1967, p.14).
It is having faith in Christ in our hearts that shatters our own silences.
It is that same faith that will drive us to serve him with our whole lives.
There was the young Hudson Taylor in Brighton in June 1865, so burdened for
China that he found the self-satisfied, hymn-singing congregation
intolerable. He looked around him, pew upon pew of prosperous bearded
merchants, shopkeepers, visitors; demure wives in bonnets and crinolines,
scrubbed children trained to hide their impatience; the atmosphere of smug
piety sickened him. He seized his hat and left, unable to bear the sight of
a congregation of a thousand unmoved by the plight of the lost. "I wandered
on the sands alone, in great spiritual agony," he wrote, "and prayed for
twenty-four willing skilful labourers." It was his faith in the Saviour of
the world that made him a missionary.
Or think again of Henry Martyn in his late twenties witnessing to the
Muslims of Shiraz and translating the Bible into Persian. He spoke kindly
to them all only disturbed when anyone insulted his Lord. On one occasion
someone said to him, "Prince Abbas Mirza had killed so many Christians that
Christ from the fourth heaven took hold of Mahomet's skirt to entreat him
to desist." It was a dramatic fantasy. Here was Christ kneeling before
Mahommed. How would Martyn react? "I was cut to the soul at this
blaspheny." Seeing his discomfiture, his visitor asked what it was that was
so offensive. Martyn replied: "I could not endure existence if Jesus were
not glorified; it would be hell to me, if he were thus always dishonoured."
His Muslim visitor was astonished and again asked why. Martyn replied, "If
anyone pluck out your eyes, there is no saying why you feel pain. It is
feeling. It is because I am one with Christ that I am thus dreadfully
wounded" It was because of his faith in the glorious pre-eminence of Christ
that Martyn so spoke. Death worked in him. He was only two years in Shiraz
before he died. His longing was that life should come to the Muslims of
that nation by his death as he had carried there in his frail body the
dying of Jesus. Our ministries are ministries of conviction. Because we
believe we cannot help speaking.
2. IT IS A MINISTRY OF HOPE.
"We know that the one who raised the Lord Jesus from the dead will also
raise us with Jesus and present us with you in his presence" (v.14). Paul
has been speaking about his faith, and this was characterised by great
assurance. Hear his words: "We know the one who raised the Lord Jesus," he
says. That assurance made him speak. What did he speak about? That death is
not the end of man's existence. In this 14th verse he is looking in two
directions, backwards and forwards. He looks back to the first Easter
Sunday and "the one who raised the Lord Jesus from the dead." Then he looks
ahead to that same Almighty One who "will also raise us with Jesus and
present us with you in his presence". Paul's theological universe has these
two horizons, the resurrection of Jesus Christ and his own resurrection.
i] The Lord Jesus was raised from the dead. The Lord came from his Father
into the world. He took our nature. He took our frailty. He took our
mortality, and in that mortality he experienced the fact of death, its pain
and taste and its very anguish. Many of you have not seen a dead body. I
will tell you how cold and waxen and utterly unalive it is. You cannot bear
to remain looking at it for very long because you remember what once it
was, and what it can never be again.
Paul is not speaking here of the dying of the Lord Jesus but that Prince of
Life was "dead." The one in whom was life and that life was the light of
men had finally for himself tasted death. That death was witnessed, and it
was official. It was in the records. The grave was sealed, and the body,
covered with spices, was protected from grave-robbers by a squad of
soldiers. The Lord of glory lay in that tomb utterly inert. The voice that
had spoken and the winds and waves had obeyed it was now utterly silent.
The lips could not move. Rigor mortis had set into the body and it was
entirely inactive. There was no teaching, no miracles, no intercession, no
contact or communication between him and the disciples whom he loved.
Then on the first day of the week everything changed. The stone is rolled
away, the grave clothes are there in the position of his head and his body,
but he is not there. The body which no one wanted, neither friend nor foe,
has momentarily vanished from sight. The four men on guard duty lie in the
deepest of sleeps. The disciples drawn to the tomb, women and men, suddenly
are confronted by Christ and talk with him. He is alive. The message is
given, "The Lord is risen indeed." The Messiah who had been so undeniably
dead is now vitally alive. He speaks. He can be touched. He kills some fish
and eats a meal with his apostles. Not one of his disciples says anything
other than, "He is risen." Not one breaks ranks and tells of some fabulous
plot. These simple people will die for this knowledge that they have been
with him, the one they saw baptized three years earlier, they had spent 40
days with him after he rose from the dead. Death is not the ultimate
reality that we face but this Lord Jesus Christ.
The explanation for the empty tomb is straightforward. God has "raised the
Lord Jesus from the dead." That is no absurdity - the God who made the
heavens and the earth, who holds the universe together. The Lord who made
the human eye and human brain - that God raised him. It is not a mere
curiosity, some fact that is stranger than fiction. Rather it is an event
for which the New Testament has a totally adequate explanation, that God
has raised him from the dead, and that is all. God did it, by his finger as
it were, and that is it. The resurrection is impossible and an absurdity
only if it is beyond the power of the God who made the world to raise his
Son from death. The New Testament says that that is exactly what happened.
Paul can ask the kings Agrippa and Festus, "Why should any of you consider
it incredible that God raises the dead?" (Acts 26:8).
This point needs to be brought into sharper focus. It is the God of the Old
Testament who raised Jesus from the dead, not any deity, but a God with a
name, Jehovah or Yahweh. The religion of the Old Testament always believed
in life after death. There was Enoch who walked with God, and then was not
because God took him. He was not annihilated. There was David soberly
saying at the death of his son that his son would not come to him but he
would go to his son. There are the anticipations of the psalmist that in
God's presence is fulness of joy and at his right hand are pleasures for
evermore. But not only is there life after death in the Old Testament there
is resurrection spoken of and also witnessed. Both Elijah and Elisha the
prophets raise children up who have died. The writer to the Hebrews says,
"Women received back their dead" (Hebs. 11:35). That was a foretaste of a
great day to come. Daniel's great hope is that, "Multitudes who sleep in
the dust of the earth shall awake: some
to everlasting life, others to shame and everlasting contempt" (Dan. 12:2).
Abraham was prepared to sacrifice his son Isaac, reasoning that "God could
raise the dead" (Hebs. 11:19). Job declares his hope, "I know that my
Redeemer lives, and that in the end he will stand upon the earth. And after
my skin has been destroyed, yet in my flesh I will see God" (Hebs 19:25).
Belief in the power of God to raise the dead was widespread at the time of
the Lord Jesus so that when he began to preach and do his mighty works some
wondered whether John the Baptist had been raised from the dead. A certain
religious group called 'Sadducees' are judged to be a bit off-centre in the
religious life of Jesus' day for not believing in the resurrection. When
the Lord Jesus told Martha that her brother would rise again, "Of course,
at the great day of resurrection he will rise," she says. So the
resurrection of Christ is an event which has been carefully prepared by God
as steadily, and then with increasing clarity, he reveals this fact even in
the Old Testament.
One more thing needs to be added. This resurrection is not of a nobody! It
is an event in a whole life which is utterly supernatural. Angels mark its
birth. Miracles characterise his entire public ministry. Many are described
in fascinating detail, such as giving sight to a man born blind. There is
not one case of sickness that proves too hard for the Saviour, not one
person in the last stages of a wasting disease is passed by with a sad
shake of Jesus' head. He heals every one. He raises three from the dead. He
opens the jaws of death and takes the prey from the captor. This is the one
who preached the Sermon on the Mount, who gave those glorious discourses in
the upper room to his disciples and the parables to the people - the Good
Samaritan ... the Prodigal Son. Never man spake like this man. Not any
other religious founder, not Mohammed, not Buddha; not the famous supremos
of the 19th century, Marx, Darwin, Freud - how dated and forlorn those
figures now seem. But Christ Jesus ever seems fresh and discontinuous from
all men.
It is he who was raised from the dead, the spotless Saviour who never put a
foot wrong, an utterly blameless man. It is he who was raised by the Father
whose impact on the lives of those who followed him was transformational.
They had been rather petty men, children of their time, squabbling over who
would be top man in the new kingdom, petulant with a village that rejected
their message wanting it to be destroyed with fire from heaven, utterly
depressed at Jesus' death. What a difference were the six weeks he spent
with them. His resurrection made them all very different men, elevated,
ennobled, wiser men. Consider a fisherman like Peter ultimately enabled to
write letters of such high theology and profundity as the two epistles
which he wrote. They became caring sensible men. There is something utterly
awe-inspiring about the apostle Paul as I am constantly drawn back to study
his life and letters. He can take your breath away, and that is possible
only because of the impact the resurrected Jesus on the Damascus Road made
upon him. So he looks back and he says that God "raised the Lord Jesus from
the dead" (v.14).
ii] The apostle also looks forward and thinks of the ramifications of this
fact. That death is not ultimate reality, but Christ is. That our final end
is not a decaying corpse but a resurrection encounter with the living God.
That Christ is more powerful than death. So the same God who raised up
Jesus, "will also raise us up with Jesus, and present us with you in his
presence" (v.14). We too are going to be raised. The apostle stands in
great solidarity with the whole Corinthian congregation. 'Us', he says, to
be raised up. "I and all the believers of Corinth. We shall be changed."
This life will go by like sand trickling through our hands, and soon it
will all be over, and body and soul will part from one another in death.
But the soul will immediately stand before the Creator, and the body waits
decomposing in the grave. If men and women are joined to Christ by saving
faith their souls at death will be made perfect in holiness and will
immediately pass into glory. But that is only the first step in a most
glorious progress. Because he lives they shall live also. As in Adam all
die so in Christ shall all be made alive. The resurrected Christ is the
first fruits of them that sleep. This is the Christian's great hope. Joined
to Christ he must rise too. What single Corinthian believer looked around
Greece and its cultural glories and cried out, "Oh, let me die the death of
a philosopher!"? Or "Let me die the death of an architect!"? Or "Let me die
the death of a warrior!"? Or "Let me die the death of the poet!"? Not one.
All of them rather cried, "Let me die the death of the righteous, and my
last end be like his!"
Imagine an old Christian from the church at Corinth who might have lost all
his family in a fearful pestilence that had swept through Macedonia could
lean on the wall surrounding the plot where they all lay buried and could
think of the indissoluble link that joined these loved ones to his
resurrected Saviour, and that one day he with them would be presented
together in Jesus' presence. Every time he went at spring time and sowed
his brown gnarled seeds into the earth he would think of the change that
would soon take place in them and that what he had sown would come up from
the earth utterly transformed from those kernels that had been placed there
by his hands; sown in weakness, raised in power, sown an earthly body
raised a body filled with the Holy Spirit. What exultation and hope would
be his! "This mortal too," he would say as he slapped his old hands
together and stared at them, "will put on immortality." The certainty and
nearness of the event made him purify himself as the great Resurrector
himself is pure. "I am to be presented to the Lord Jesus. What honour and
glory. I shall prepare by being busy in his service, so that when I see him
he shall say to me, "Well done, good and faithful servant."
But will there not be many presented to Christ in that day who had lived
for travel, and lived for money, and lived for sex, and lived for fame, and
lived for scholarship? Will he not say to them all, "You have your reward"
and condemn them to everlasting destruction, but to those who have served
him and his people, and sought to live that his name might be exalted, will
not Christ cry, "Room! Make room! Make room angels and seraphim! Let this
one come and sit with me in the midst of my throne. He has owned my name
and honoured me on earth. He shall be honoured in heaven through all the
ages of eternity."
What fools we are to lust after the rewards and successes that his world
has to offer. How utterly transient they are. Think of that great idol
called Sport, and how many millions bow before it, young and old, and live
for its heroes. Gareth Edwards, voted the greatest rugby player of the
century, was speaking on the radio this past week of the time he went to
New Zealand with the British Lions and they won a series against the mighty
All Blacks in their back yard. In other words it was a peak of his sporting
career. You would think he might live for the rest of his life on the
glories of that. Yet he spoke of returning to the dressing room after the
final test with Gerald Davies, that brilliant winger, and the sense of
anti-climax the two Welshman immediately had. One of them said, "Do you
know, we have come to New Zealand and won a test series against the All
Blacks?" Then there was a pause and they both said to one another, "So
what?" That is the transitory nature of the rewards of this world, because
we are made for something so much greater, the life of eternity, the
resurrection of the body, the fulness of joy in God's presence for
evermore. So it is a ministry of conviction and also one of hope.
3. IT IS A MINISTRY OF THANKSGIVING.
"All this is for your benefit, so that the grace that is reaching more and
more people may cause thanksgiving to overflow to the glory of God" (v.15).
Paul had this ministry of speaking and suffering. It was given to him by
the grace of God. He embodied that grace, as his Saviour was the very
enfleshment of grace. It was reaching out to more and more people, from
Jerusalem, to Judea and Samaria, and to the uttermost parts of the earth.
It was all for sinners' gain. And when people were changed by God's grace,
then what thanksgiving overflowed in a Philippian jail, or by the side of a
river there, to the glory of God. Greece had been in the grip of false
gods. No thanksgiving. No shouts of Hallelujah. No rejoicing with holy joy.
But then Paul and Silas, bearing about in their bodies the death of Jesus,
spoke to them, and they believed, and their gratitude to the Lord for
sending his own Son, just overflowed to God's glory. All Paul's suffering
was for that end. That is what at midnight he and Silas were singing praise
in a prison cell.
That has been the pattern ever since. Christian workers may paraphrase the
Easter hymn: All the pains that we've endured, men's salvation has secured.
In the way of the cross grace has reached out to benefit the nations. David
Livingstone gave his life to exploring Africa and showing the love of Jesus
Christ to the people there. How he suffered in that work, but Livingstone
didn't see himself as a hero: "I have never ceased to rejoice that God has
appointed me to such an office. People talk of the sacrifice I have made in
spending so much of my life in Africa ... Is that a 'sacrifice' which
brings its own blest reward in healthy activity, the consciousness of doing
good, peace of mind, and a bright hope of a glorious destiny hereafter? It
is emphatically no sacrifice. Say rather it is a privilege." Livingstone
overflowed with thanksgiving to the glory of God. He didn't pretend it was
always easy. "Anxiety, sickness, suffering, or danger, now and then, with a
foregoing of the common conveniences and charities of this life, may make
us pause, and cause the spirit to waver, and the soul to sink; but let this
only be for a moment. All these are nothing compared with the glory which
shall be revealed in and for us. I never made a sacrifice."
Hudson Taylor echoed those very words. When asked about the hardships of
serving God, he said, "I never made a sacrifice. Unspeakable joy all day
long and every day, was my happy experience. God, even my God, was a living
bright reality, and all I had to do was joyful service." Again the result
of his service was thanksgiving that overflowed to the glory of God.
Some of the things that have come into our lives since we became Christians
we would not have chosen if we had had the choice. God hasn't promised us
all that we've wanted. But he has given us life, and a full and complete
salvation, and all we need in order to become what he wants us to be. Helen
Keller was a very remarkable blind and deaf woman who achieved great
things. We'd all rather be able to see and hear than be blind and deaf, yet
in Helen Keller thanksgiving overflowed to the glory of God. She said, "I
thank God for my handicaps. Through them I have found myself, my work and
my God." She had long ceased asking that she might be someone else. God has
purposed Joni Eareckson Tada to glorify him in a wheel-chair just as she
is. When she had taken the gift of suffering from God she could reach out
with it to more and more people who themselves thanked God for her, and all
this overflowed to the glory of God. Not by her healing, you note well, but
by thanksgiving for mighty sustaining grace enabling her to be to the
benefit of others in the service of the suffering Saviour.
The end of it all our lives is thanksgiving. You consider the scenes of the
end in the book of Revelation, of a vast choir from every nation and they
are all filled with doxology. Remember the three great words that present
to us the structure of God's great redemption. Guilt. Grace. Gratitude. We
were sinners. There was none righteous - no not one. God in his grace saved
us, and then we began in this life to display our thankfulness to God, and
increasingly so. Every day will I bless thee and praise thy name for ever
and ever. More perfectly will we express it in the world to come. There are
millions of people all over the world today who have said, "Thank you,
Jesus" but millions more in that bright world above,
4 March 2001 GEOFF THOMAS
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