OUR MIGHTY WEAPONS
2 Corinthians 10:4&5 "The weapons we fight with are not the weapons of the
world. On the contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds. We
demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the
knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to
Christ."
Many of us are more familiar with the language of the Authorised Version
for this fourth verse, alongside which the language of the NIV seems rather
anodyne: "For the weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through
God to the pulling down of strongholds". That martial language ever rings
in our ears. As those words are said one can hear in the distance the sound
of the bugle and the drums. Hark! The guns are firing! Here is a battalion
at battle stations, not on manouvers, and these words are the reveille.
This very day, men and women, we are engaged in a battle which will last
for the remainder of our lives. Are there recruits here who will fight for
King Jesus? Come and join us in the fight of faith! If you follow him it is
to the life of the soldier that he calls you. There can be no escape from
the strife, no truce, no cowardly withdrawal. This is Christian warfare
with a world system which organises itself against the Lord and his Christ.
It is a fight against remaining sin. It is a battle without any quarter
being given on either side against the devil and all his devices. There are
even enemies in our own camp. Remember the apostolic warning: "Even from
your own number men will arise and distort the truth in order to draw away
disciples after them" (Acts 20:30). Did not that happen to Paul?
"Everywhere his rear was threatened by an all-engulfing paganism or by a
perverted Judaism that had missed the real purpose of the Old Testament
law. Read the epistles with care, and you see Paul always in conflict. At
one time he fights paganism in life, the notion that all kinds of conduct
are lawful to the Christian man, a philosophy that makes Christian liberty
a mere aid to pagan license. At another time he fights paganism in thought,
the sublimation of the Christian doctrine of the resurrection of the body
into the pagan doctrine of the immortality of the soul. At still another
time, he fights the effort of human pride to substitute man's merit as the
means of salvation for divine grace; he fights the subtle propaganda of the
Judaizers with its misleading appeal to the Word of God. Everywhere we see
the great apostle in conflict for the preservation of the church. It is as
though a mighty flood were seeking to engulf the church's life; dam the
break at one point in the levee, and another break appears somewhere else.
Everywhere paganism was seeping through; not for one moment did Paul have
peace; always he was called upon to fight" (J.Gresham Machen, "God
Transcendent", "The Good Fight of Faith", Eerdmans, 1949, p.119).
So every Christian is at war, and for this strife God has provided the
weaponry. Paul speaks of "the weapons we fight with" (v.4). He stands in
magnificent solidarity with the believers in Corinth. His words are not,
"the weapons I fight with." His were the common weapons God has always
provided for his whole church. We all fight with the supernatural weapons
of God. You will be aware of the history of weaponry, beginning with the
club, knife, spear, slingshot, bow and arrow, and advancing to the sword
and armour plating. Then along comes the gun, and bomb, and on and on to
all the sophistication of modern weaponry. At each stage it is incumbent on
nations to fight with the latest weapons. What folly to charge a line of
entrenched cannons with cavalry! It becomes the valley of death for those
brave horsemen. Man's weapons are continually being discarded and updated,
and so are the techniques of war.
How different are the weapons God supplies the church. They have come from
the hand of God, perfect for the early church, far superior to anything
that the world could invent. They have needed no modification nor
improvement in the past 2,000 years. They are state of the art weaponry,
designed in the council chambers of eternity, fully equipping the church
for all God intends his people to do. These weapons are in Christ. That is,
they were forged in the heat of Golgotha, that great weapon-making factory
which God planted on this planet. They are given to the church by the risen
Christ. He told the early church to wait in Jerusalem until he had given
them these weapons at Pentecost, and he has never ceased giving them to his
people. These weapons are mighty because they are Spirit and they are life.
Today we are fighting in Wales with the weapons the apostle himself fought
with. We are fighting with the same great sword used by Athanasius and
Augustine, Luther and Calvin, Bunyan and Owen, Whitefield and Edwards,
Spurgeon and M'Cheyne, Lloyd-Jones and Van Til. They all trusted in the
same weaponry, and were mightily used by God. We are not looking for new
weapons. We are not bemoaning the armaments God has given to us. We cannot
plead we've been ill-equipped. Our defeat and failure is not because of any
inadequacy in God's provision. Paul called his weapons his 'sword' and
'shield', 'helmet' and 'breastplate' and the church used them two thousand
years ago to turn the world upside-down. We might give them more
contemporary names, our kalashnikov and Armalite, but we are referring to
the same effectual weapons which God provides every one of his foot
soldiers. Through all the years of Marxist domination of Russia and eastern
Europe the church in those countries had the same weapons that Paul and
Peter themselves had and that is why they flourished. The church in China
today has the same weapons, and that is why it is flourishing. Our lack of
victories cannot be blamed on our antiquated weapons but on our lack of
confidence in and failure to use the weapons God has proved.
1 THE CHRISTIAN IS EQUIPPED WITH WEAPONS THAT CAN DEMOLISH STRONGHOLDS
"The weapons we fight with are not the weapons of the world. On the
contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds" (v.4). These
weapons are not the ones the world uses. They are God's gifts to us, and we
disdain the use of any others. Men without God cannot understand our
weapons. They seem utterly inadequate. Goliath took one look at the sling
and five smooth stones that young David had taken from the brook and he
laughed him to scorn. He had no idea just how effective David's weapons
were going to be. The world patronises us when it says, "Let us explain to
you how it really is. Let us tell you about our 'weapons' - if we have to
use that rather martial word. Our need is for image, and personality, and
atmosphere. There must be hard sell, and humour, and widespread publicity.
Get the famous men and women, the sports stars, the singers, the comedians
and anyone in the media. Ask them to speak. Keep everything short. Have
lots of movement in the meetings. Don't call meetings 'Bible studies', call
them 'parties'. Don't call them churches, call them 'worship centres'.
Don't have 'services', have 'celebrations'. Book the great concert halls
and arenas. Use those weapons."
That is the world's approach - the endless procession of stunts. "No! Not
the weapons of the world," says Paul. We don't use them because we have
something far better. We have the weapons designed by God., and even the
world at times has glimpses of their usefulness. When it wants to
communicate with people eyeball to eyeball to win them it resorts to a
pastiche of our weapons, thus acknowledging that they are the finest. A
friend of mine recently pointed out, "During the 2001 General Election
campaigning I was interested at the way the politicians of the 21st century
got their messages across. They did not use drama, mime, dance or song but
old fashioned preaching, spelling out their policies and urging people to
vote. Despite all the modern sophisticated means of communication, they
were not embarrassed to come to the people and use their voices, either in
personal conversation on the doorstep, in the street and in the workplace,
or to publicly proclaim their messages to the party faithful and the
hostile crowds in platform speeches and in open air soapbox addresses.
He goes on to say, "The church has an amazing and much more important
message to declare from the living God that concerns not only this life but
that which is to come and we are to urge people to respond to it. But who
will go and make it known? Where are the preachers of the gospel in our
land today? There are plenty of performers, but where are the proclaimers?
There are books galore on preaching but where are the men called to preach,
who will be persistent and faithful whether the time is favourable or not?
Where are the Spirit-anointed spokesmen for God? Pray to the Lord of the
harvest; ask him to send out more workers into his fields. Urge him to give
the Holy Spirit in greater measure to his servants and to raise up a new
generation of faithful workers who will pass on the glorious gospel with
passion and power and a heart of love."
When I was a boy in school in 1957 William Sargant's book, "Battle for the
Mind" appeared. How my atheist friend and I discussed it! Sargant was a
psychiatrist who had treated soldiers suffering from shell shock. He
re-enacted the trauma they had passed through bringing them into emotional
release, peace and safety. He saw something similar, he said, in the
preachers of the Great Awakening. Wesley and Edwards would terrify their
congregations with their vivid descriptions of hell and that would produce
a horror which created a reflex which conditioned men and women into
getting peace in religion. Sargant talks much about the 'techniques of
religious conversion.' Dr Martyn Lloyd-Jones answered Sargant in his
booklet, "Conversions, Psychological and Spiritual" and in it he warns
preachers about letting eloquence and imagination run away with them. He
says, "I think we must avoid anything that leads to a suspicion that in
evangelistic activities we are 'conditioning' people in a psychological
manner." He also says that we must never make a direct appeal to the
emotions or to the will but that the truth must first grip men's minds.
That is the great weapon God has given to us - the truth!
In other words Paul is saying that whatever we do we must never lose our
faith in the weapons of God and begin to use others. This great war is only
going to be won if we fight with his weapons, and I am insisting on this
point that all the weapons the early church had we ourselves also have
today, as does the church in Saudi Arabia, and northern Sudan, and in the
heart of Viet Nam. They are not ill-equipped. The church's failure is not a
lack of weapons.
What are these weapons? One would be faith. What subdues kingdoms and
obtains promises and achieves extraordinary works of righteousness? It is
faith. That is the great theme of Hebrews chapter 11. Those men and women
believed in God and so they obeyed him completely. The victory that
overcomes the world is our faith. When God opened the eyes of the servant
of Elisha he could see that the horses and chariots of God were camping
round about his master and himself. Do you understand? By faith we know
that the Lord of hosts is with us and the God of Jacob is our refuge. We
become more than conquerors as we keep trusting God. The most effective
evangelists are those whose faith in God is great. Jack Miller was once
speaking to a dying woman in hospital. She told him that she was not
interested in going to heaven because it was too boring. Jack asked her,
"What was the happiest moment in your life?" She said, "The best and
happiest times of my life came when I was with someone I really loved.!"
Now listen to the voice of faith in Jack's response to her: "That is what
makes heaven so very special. Jesus is my best friend, and the greatest
thing about heaven is being there for ever with your best and truest
friend." That is what he believed. and God gave him grace to say it to her.
It was a powerful word.
Another weapon is prayer. "The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man
availeth much" (James 5:16). When Elijah prayed the fire fell from heaven
and consumed the sacrifice and also the water in the trench around it.
Through prayer Hezekiah's life was lengthened. Through prayer the
Syro-Phoenician woman had her daughter healed. How could the Lord himself
have survived in his own life without often crying to his heavenly Father
for his help? John Nelson heard one comparing John Wesley unfavourably
with a pulpit celebrity of his time. He replied, "But he has not tarried in
the Upper Room as John Wesley has done."
Another weapon is Christ-likeness. Andrew Bonar's wife watched Robert
Murray M'Cheyne for a decade. She said, "I'd have given all the world to be
as he was." He changed the religious life of Dundee. He did it through his
preaching of course, but those sermons came through a man of God. This is
what he said: "Above all things cultivate your own spirit. Your own spirit
is your first and greatest care. Seek advance in personal holiness. It is
not great talents God blesses so much as great likeness to Jesus. A holy
minister is an awful weapon in the hand of God. One word spoken by you when
your conscience is clear and your heart is full of God's Spirit, is worth
ten thousand words spoken in unbelief and sin."
Then again, what a mighty weapon is the truth. Consider the claims the
Bible makes, that the Word of God is like a hammer that breaks an
impregnable rock in pieces, that it is alive and powerful and sharper than
any two-edged sword. How have all of you come to know and love God? It has
been by the power of the Word of God. How have you all gone on to serve and
please God? By the same power. You sit in a church service listening to a
sermon and there is an energy in that word as it comes to you so that you
are strengthened to be poor in spirit, and to mourn for your sins, to turn
the other cheek, to refuse to retaliate, to forgive again, with a gentle
answer quieten someone's anger, and to conquer a sinful attitude, and so
on. By the energy that comes from the word of God you can live as God
requires. The Bible is a transforming book.
I am saying to you that there is no secret whatsoever about the weapons God
which provides. One finds references to them throughout the Bible. Even
references to the Christian armour are not limited to one famous section at
the end of Paul's letter to the Ephesians. They are referred to in the Old
Testament by the prophet Isaiah, "He put on righteousness as his
breastplate, and the helmet of salvation on his head" (Isa. 59:17). They
are referred to by the apostle Paul in other letters. He tells the Romans,
"Let us put aside the deeds of darkness and put on the armour of light"
(Roms 13:12). He tells the Thessalonians, "Since we belong to the day, let
us be self-controlled, putting on faith and love as a breastplate, and the
hope of salvation as a helmet" (I Thess. 5:8). But most well known are
Paul's words to the Ephesian church: "Therefore put on the full armour of
God, so that when the day of evil comes, you may be able to stand your
ground, and after you have done everything to stand," (Eph. 6:13). Then he
goes piece by piece through the armour - the belt of truth, the breastplate
of righteousness, the shield of faith, the helmet of salvation, and the
sword of the Spirit which is the word of God. Let me urge you not to
neglect dipping into William Gurnal's great work, "The Christian in
Complete Armour" (Banner of Truth) and I commend to you also Dr Martyn
Lloyd-Jones' "The Christian Soldier" (Banner of Truth) which is a study of
the weapons we fight with.
I am insisting that today in this church all of us have the most effective
weapons in the whole universe, and we must use them more and more to fight
the good fight. That is where we are being searched. See the phrase Paul
uses here - "The weapons we fight with." Then where is the fighting? There
would be a stir in the school yard and the boys would go running to a
certain spot as a shout went up, "A fight! A fight!" I am asking where is
this stir in the professing church. I hear, "A group! A singer! A
personality! A crowd!" but not a fight. Where is the kingdom of God
suffering violence and violent men are charging into it? "We must be
saved!" These weapons of God are not intended to be put on display in a
church museum behind a glass case. They are not intended to be kept in your
cupboard and only used on red letter days. Some men brag in drama spots,
choreography, comedians and big personalities. These are the top weapons
the church has to use, they're saying. No! The weapons of God must be
constantly used to win the holy war, because the Christian never ceases
fighting.
Put on the full armour of God. You must put it on. Paul insists upon it. He
tells the Ephesians twice to do so. But you don't put it on to look
imposing, but because you're a soldier, and the enemy is lying at your door
ready to pounce. There are different forms of attack which the world and
the evil one can bring against us - hindering, tempting, destroying,
accusing, and the various pieces of armour are provided to defend every
part of yourself and then to counter-attack. The first piece of armour is
the truth of God - "the belt of truth buckled around your waist" (Ephs.
6:14). Then the other pieces have to do with our status in Christ, that our
lives are hid with Christ in God. What morale such weapons provide. No use
sending men into battle with rusty out-moded equipment. How dispirited they
would be. But we take up these divinely honed weapons and remind ourselves
day by day what we are and what is ours in Christ. We rehearse all our
riches in Christ, that we are complete in him. We are talking about the
reality and blessedness and simplicity of little boys and girls who are in
Christ. They are utterly safe in this armour. As they build their lives
upon Christ they are impregnable however mighty the storms may be that hurl
against them. The gates of hell will seek to destroy them but they cannot
but fail. Christ sends them forth as sheep amidst wolves, and every one of
them is safe, because these sheep are armour plated sheep, and
sword-wielding sheep. These sheep can drive away wolves! The devil is like
a roaring lion, but let a sheep resist him and he will flee. Christ's lambs
are protected, and their swords are greater than that mythical sword
'Excalibar'.
Consider the young fisherman Peter son of Jonas, called by Jesus Christ to
be an apostle and promised, "I will make you a fisher of men." See him
stand in Jerusalem on the Day of Pentecost armed with the Word of God. How
he fought with that sword. Peter was not a performer, juggling with a sword
before 3,000 men. He thrust that sword into their hearts again and again.
He told them that they had killed the Prince of life, and now nothing lies
before them but an open-ended encounter with the God who has made this
Jesus - "whom you crucified" - both Lord and Christ. They were cut to their
hearts by what they heard, and they cried, "Brothers, what shall we do?"
"Repent!" cried Peter: "Save yourselves from this corrupt generation!" More
than 3,000 men did. Peter fought with the weapons of God, and how he
prevailed against the kingdom of darkness. Remember Martin Luther's great
Reformation hymn, "A safe stronghold our God is still." It has that
wonderful line about the defeat of Satan, "A word shall quickly slay him."
We have to use the truth to kill Satan and all his works. One reads the
book of Acts and the missionary journeys of the apostle Paul, and it
chronicles his remorseless overthrow of the god of this world. Paul could
have used the weapons of the world but he despised them: "I did not come
with eloquence or superior wisdom as I proclaimed to you the testimony of
God ... my message and my preaching was not with wise and persuasive words,
but with a demonstration of the Spirit's power" (I Cor. 2:1&4). His message
of Christ crucified was a stumbling block to many, but it was God's great
weapon and he was determined not to employ any other, and as he used it he
discovered that Christ crucified was the power of God and the wisdom of
God. That was the word he fought with.
"Nations, the learned and the rude,
Are by these heavenly arms subdued;
While Satan rages at his loss
And hates the doctrine of the cross." (Isaac Watts).
The weapons God gives his church are righteousness, faith, prayer but
especially Scripture. The Spirit's sword is the Word of God, that whole
body of Christian truth, all its promises and warnings, the full revelation
of its glory in Father, Son and Holy Spirit, the whole counsel of God. Dr
Lloyd-Jones says, "There is no part of Christian doctrine that you and I
can afford to ignore. We must study every part of Scripture; and it is good
to read the whole Bible every year. Leave nothing out, read the history,
read everything, take every part and portion of the doctrine. Do not stop
at evangelism, do not stop at justification, do not stop at sanctification;
take in glorification, study prophecy, take the whole doctrine. Nothing
causes such weakness and failure in the Christian Church as a failure on
our part to put on the 'whole armour of God' (D Martyn Lloyd-Jones, "The
Christian Soldier", p.180, Banner of Truth, 1977). That is why the
climactic aspect of our worship is the declaration of God's word. But that
word is not to be used only on Sundays but everywhere we are to be ready to
use it. What David said about Goliath's sword can be applied to this Bible:
"There is none like it." It is the incomparable Book.
A friend of mine began talking to a man about Christianity and their
conversations went on for weeks, and this man seemed to enjoy every
discussion. Nothing was happening at all; they were getting nowhere, and my
friend was convicted that he wasn't fighting, only sparring. He wasn't
using the weapons of God properly, so he went one afternoon to the man's
house. There were some very degraded men sitting in the front room and he
passed through them into the bedroom where that man was lying down. He sat
on the bed and he spoke to him about the gospel. "I really laid it on him,"
he said. "I never spoke to anyone as bluntly as I spoke to him. And after
ten minutes he shouted right back at me, 'Are you telling me I am a
sinner?' I said, 'I've been trying to tell you that for the last six
weeks.' 'Oh!' he said. I'd been juggling with a sword before him all that
time. Now I used the word as the sword of the Spirit and did battle with
him with it." Henry applied the word of God to that man. He was in church
the next Sunday and in the first message he heard Henry preach the theme of
the sermon was keeping the Lord's Day, and Henry said at one place, "Don't
tell me that you have any hunger for God if you fellowship just once on a
Sunday." And he had made a promise to himself that very morning that he
would start coming once a week from then on, and that first Sunday he
learned that it wasn't enough. The weapon Henry used to smite him was the
same sword of the Spirit when he was lying in bed next door to his
disreputable cronies or when he was in church hearing a sermon. Today he is
a saved man, and an officer at his local church. He is seeking to raise a
Christian family. Humanly speaking it is because Henry started to fight
with the weapon. To be bold and courageous without being aggressive - we
will take our whole lifetimes to learn such a lesson. Let us be good
students!
So there are these great weapons which are provided for every Christian by
God, and whenever we use them strongholds are demolished. Consider the
structures of locked-in atheism in our society today. It is found in the
publishing houses, in the media, the TV and Radio, the schools and the
entire education system, the newspapers and the whole world of sport and
entertainment. God is not in people's thoughts. It is like this across all
the British Isles and Europe. What a stronghold! The great and seemingly
impregnable citadel with the Son of God standing outside. It is a world
locked and barred to Jesus Christ, and we seem to be making so little
progress against it, indeed it seems to be growing bigger and stronger as
the years pass by. But what do we read here? Our weapons "have divine power
to demolish strongholds" (v.4).
Let me give you an illustration of this. It's been over 60 years since the
United States was attacked at Pearl Harbor. One soldier who heard about
that event was Sgt. Jacob ("Jake") DeShazer who was on duty at the time at
an Army air base in Oregon. He developed a deep hatred for the Japanese. It
was born that day, and it grew through succeeding events. His off-duty life
was based on drinking and dance halls. A fortnight after the Pearl Harbor
attack he was summoned to report to his captain. A score of his friends
were there. The officer asked how many of them would volunteer for a
dangerous mission and DeShazer immediately volunteered. After training as a
bombardier, he became a crew member of what came to be called 'the
Doolittle Raiders'. Their leader, Lt. Col. James Doolittle, had devised
this scheme. Land-based B-25 bombers capable of flying long distances, with
pilots trained to take off from an aircraft carri
er, would travel by Naval convoy to within 400 miles of Japan. Then, flying
very low to avoid detection, they would bomb Japan and land at friendly
Chinese airfields.
However, the Japanese spotted the task force, and the planes had to take
off a day early, adding hundreds of extra flying miles. After bombing Tokyo
and other cities, they ran out of fuel, abandoned their planes, and
parachuted down. While most of the Doolittle Raiders made it to friendly
Chinese locations, the Japanese Army captured DeShazer's crew and three
others. So began 40 months of imprisonment, 34 of them in solitary
confinement.
The men were taken to Japan and interrogated for days, placed on a
starvation diet, beaten, and tortured. In October 1942, three of the men
were executed, but Emperor Hirohito commuted the sentences of five,
including DeShazer, to life imprisonment. They were sent to Nanking, where
they each spent more than two years in solitary confinement, except for a
few minutes of daily outdoor exercise. During this time one of them died of
malnutrition. For years, they requested books. Finally, in 1944, they were
given some including God's great weapon against man's rejection of Christ,
a copy of the American Standard Version of the Bible. DeShazer read the
entire Bible several times and the Old Testament prophets six times. He
memorized passages like the Sermon on the Mount, 1 Corinthians 13, and much
of 1 John, among others. The Bible's message made its way into his heart.
On June 8, 1944, DeShazer cried to God for mercy, entrusted himself to
Christ, and became a Christian.
Obedience became DeShazer's key word. "Love your enemies" included even the
guards he once hated so bitterly. He began speaking respectfully and kindly
to them. It took time, but eventually they responded in kind. In June 1945,
the prisoners were transferred to a Peking prison used for Japanese
soldiers. Though conditions were worse than ever, DeShazer experienced
moments of deep communion with God. When he learned that the war was over,
he became persuaded that it was God's will for him to return to Japan with
the gospel of Christ.
He prepared himself by getting a degree from Seattle Pacific College, where
he met and married Florence Matheny, and together they sailed for Japan as
Free Methodist missionaries. When they arrived in December 1948, they were
surprised at the large crowd greeting them at the docks. The press had
picked up on his story, and people had come to see what they had been
reading in the papers: a tortured, hate-filled Doolittle bombardier was now
returning to teach his former persecutors the gospel of Christ.
Meanwhile, Gen. Douglas MacArthur had sent a message via his staff chaplain
to the president of the Bible Meditation League (now known as Bible
Literature International). MacArthur asked the league to print something
that might help heal the wounds between Japan and the United States. The
league printed 1 million pamphlets of DeShazer's testimony, 'I Was A
Prisoner of Japan', for distribution throughout the country. One of those
tracts down into a most unlikely hand.
Commander Mitsuo Fuchida was the lead pilot of the 360 planes that attacked
Pearl Harbor. He gave the order to attack, and then shouted the famous
attack signal, 'Tora! Tora! Tora!' (Tiger! Tiger! Tiger!) Fuchida had been
carefully chosen for this task. He was an expert at dive-bombing and
torpedo-launching, and at the age of 39 he had racked up more flying hours
than any other Japanese pilot. He was a national hero, and it earned him an
audience with Emperor Hirohito himself. he had a sense of the importance of
his own destiny and when the battle of Midway began in June 1942, Fuchida
was in a below-deck sickbay on an aircraft carrier, suffering severe pain
from an appendectomy. He disobeyed orders and crawled out of sick-bay to
the flight deck. When American bombs hit the carrier, it exploded. Fuchida,
thrown ten feet into the air, broke both legs as he fell. He barely missed
burning to death, which happened to all who had stayed below deck.
In August 1945, Fuchida was on duty in Hiroshima when a telephone call
summoned him to headquarters. He left the city at 5 p.m. The next day at 8
a.m., the first atom bomb destroyed the city. The next day, he was ordered
back to Hiroshima. He spent three days walking amid the fatally radioactive
rubble. While most officers became seriously ill and died from the
exposure, Fuchida remained perfectly healthy.
Shortly after the war, Fuchida spoke to a friend who had been captured and
then imprisoned in the United States. He was curious to hear how well
Japanese prisoners had been treated, especially by one 18-year-old
volunteer, Peggy Covell. When the prisoners asked her why she had been so
helpful, she replied, "Because Japanese soldiers killed my parents." She
explained that her parents were missionary teachers in Japan at the
beginning of the war. They fled, only to be captured later in the
Philippines. They were judged to be spies and, while kneeling in prayer,
they were beheaded. When Peggy heard about this three years later in the
States (she had been evacuated), she was filled with hate. But she
concluded that her parents must have forgiven their killers, so she too had
to forgive and show it. Peggy fought Japanese unbelief with that powerful
divine weapon, the love of Christ.
This story astounded Fuchida. He had long been pondering a phrase from the
Emperor's surrender broadcast "To pave the way for a grand peace for all
generations to come" and now he began to think that such peace could come
only from a supernatural source. One day in October 1948, while waiting at
a railway station in Tokyo, Fuchida was handed DeShazer's leaflet, 'I Was a
Prisoner of Japan.' He was ready to throw it away, but he noticed that it
was written by a courageous Doolittle flier, so he read it with keen
interest. This prompted him to buy a Bible immediately, but he didn't get
around to reading it for months. When he did, he found that the Bible's
message gripped him, and Christ's prayer from the cross captured him:
"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do" (Luke 23:24). He was
deeply moved and became assured that Jesus had prayed and died for him. It
was in September 1949 that he accepted Christ as his Saviour, and he was
baptized two years later.
There came a time a few years later when these two men met. They had fought
with the weapons of the world bombing and killing, but both had been
overcome by more powerful weapons that are able to change the hearts of
men, making bitter men sweet and violent men gentle. These former enemies
had become brothers in Christ. Over the next years, Fuchida and De-Shazer
spoke together to large crowds of people. Fuchida died in 1976 at the age
of 74, but De-Shazer is still alive and is now aged 88, and with his wife
they live near Salem, Oregon. Two enemies, who through war and the
subsequent peace had good reason not to trust Christ or one another, yet
both did. Both used the great weapons of God, the Bible, love, prayer,
righteousness, forgiveness and faith to great effect.
Here were two men who once had lived by the standards of the world, and had
waged war as the world does with guns and bombs, but they were both
converted reading the Bible, the sword of the Spirit which is the Word of
God. They then put away their hatred and all their worldly weapons and they
used this same powerful weapon which had killed the angry men that they
themselves had once been, and which had made them new men. That weapon is
the sword of the Spirit which is the Word of God. They used it with
courage, but in meekness and gentleness, as did their Lord, and by his
divine power they spent the remainder of their lives demolishing the
strongholds of sin.
2. THE EXTRAORDINARY EFFECT OF THESE WEAPONS.
The apostle tells us of the impact that these weapons have. Firstly, "we
demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the
knowledge of God." Secondly, "we take captive every thought to make it
obedient to Christ" (v.5).
i] GOD'S WEAPONS DESTROY ALL THE SPECULATION AND LOFTY PRETENSION OF MAN.
There are arguments and every kind of pretension that unbelievers use to
replace the knowledge of God, and part of our task is to destroy those
excuses.
i] "I've made up my mind and you won't change me." That's a pretension.
There is nothing so deadly as a closed mind. Look at people trapped in all
sorts of superstitions, refusing to consider that they might be wrong.
There are people who still believe that the Piltdown Skull is the missing
link, that Elvis Presley is still alive, that you must touch a piece of
wood if you say something hopeful. There are people to whom it's a sin to
use motor cars, and telephones. They go around in horse-drawn buggies.
There are people who believe a sign of holiness is a long beard, or that
blood-transfusions are evil. They've made up their minds, and refuse to
change. Prejudice destroys people. Please think again about the Lord Jesus
Christ. That's all we ask.
ii] "There's not enough evidence that Jesus is the Son of God." That's a
pretension. Have you looked at the evidence we have? Have you read about
it? I would guess you know almost nothing about the four gospels, and the
lives of Christians in the last two thousand years. Jesus Christ says that
he is your God. That is a staggering claim, and if it is true it must
change your life, and yet you refuse to check out the facts about him
iii] "I am glad you are happy with your faith, but I have no sense of need
of him." That's a pretension. The issue is not whether you feel you need
something, but is Christianity true? You may feel no need to visit a doctor
but you may be mortally ill and a visit now could save your life. The only
person who can speak about our need is God and he says that we are living
in his creation and have broken his commandments, and he is going to hold
us to account. The question is not whether you feel religious or not but
whether Jesus Christ was speaking the truth when he said, "I am the truth
... no one comes to the Father but by me."
iv] "I've tried it before and it hasn't worked." That's a pretension. Your
first girl-friend or boyfriend finished with you and you were crushed. That
didn't stop you dating and marrying someone else. What would you think of a
man aged 40 who when asked why he never got married told you, "Oh, I had a
sweetheart when I was 15 but she preferred someone else and so I know it
doesn't work"? You wouldn't believe him. You would pity him. So too with
you and Jesus Christ, you might have tried confirmation classes and been
confirmed. You might have gone forward in a high powered religious meeting.
You might have learned how to speak in tongues but now you have fallen away
from all religion. The Lord Jesus speaks about such people. They hear the
word with joy and there is a short spurt of religious life, but once some
difficulties and disappointments arise they fall away. That happens. Don't
dwell on that. Don't try to analyse it. Saul of Tarsus got messed up in a
false religion, that didn't stop him working with all his heart in a new
religion. He didn't give up on God after his first terrible failure. You
had some feelings for God once. Great. You committed your life 'in pencil'
to the Lord once. Ink it over! Now go for the reality. You are older and
your need of his grace is even greater.
v] "I don't want to get involved." That's a pretension. I can understand
people not wanting to get involved with ourselves. We are not a very smart
people, and we don't live as we should. We let one another down and we let
God down too. So there's the possibility that you'll get let down too, but
who are you to speak about such things? Are you above reproach? Doesn't
your conscience convict you? Aren't you glad there have been people who
have kept forgiving you? Are you going to look the other way when a woman
is being attacked? You are a coward and love yourself more than anything
else. Jesus Christ got involved with 12 weaklings who either betrayed him,
or denied him or ran away and left him all alone. He had known that that
was his destiny, but it didn't stop him coming and loving these people, and
making himself vulnerable, and getting hurt. There was a man called Pontius
Pilate who didn't want to get involved in Jesus Christ. He washed his hands
of him and so the Lord was crucified because the Consul refused to get
involved. It's weaklings who don't get involved.
vi] "I believe in evolution." That's pretension. Chances are most people
who say something like that have the haziest notion of what evolution is. I
believe in evolution. Two dogs went into Noah's ark but look at all the
breeds of dogs you have today. Animals change, and scientists can describe
the changes, but description is not explanation. What happened at the
beginning when there was nothing, and then the creation began? If it all
came from chance why is there order and beauty and design and intelligence
everywhere? You would expect some parallels if the same God made all
things. He doesn't spread diversity unnecessarily. If you are sincere about
evolution giving you problems there are men with Ph.D.'s in science in this
congregation who have worked all their lives teaching and working in
genetics and plant breeding, and they don't believe in evolution as the
explanation for everything. They believe that in the beginning God created
the heavens and the earth, and that God has made himself known through
prophets and apostles and through his son Jesus Christ. These scientists
would be happy to speak to you. We are suggest you think more, and speak to
them.
vii] "All roads lead to heaven. It doesn't matter what you believe so long
as you're sincere." That's pretension. It seems to me that it matters very
much what people believe, because they act accordingly. The men who
hijacked those planes and flew them into the Twin Towers were sincere in
what they believed. They killed themselves for what they believed. The
cannibal is sincere in what he believes. Hitler was sincere in what he
believed. Are there millions of ways to God? Is everyone going to God in
his own way - 6,000 million ways to God, one for every person on the
planet, or is there just one way to God, by Jesus Christ? The One who
preached the Sermon on the mount and raised the dead and never sinned
himself, the One who died and rose on the third day said that only by him
do men know God. "He that believeth not the Son shall not see life" he said
(John 3:36).
viii] "I can't believe in a God of love in a world where there is so much
suffering." I would gently and hesitatingly say that that can be a
pretension too even though you may have experienced very severe suffering.
No one suffered as much as Jesus, and God forsook him as he suffered, but
he kept trusting God, and at the end he said, "Father into Thy hands I
commend my Spirit." I am sorry you experienced such pain and loss, but I
would plead with you not to use that suffering as a reason for not obeying
God. Some suffering is through the folly and wickedness of other people.
Some suffering is part of mankind's mortality - we live in a fallen
groaning world. Some suffering is a result of our own excess - man's
cruelties, follies and addictions. For some suffering we have no
explanation at all in this life, but in heaven we shall know the reason for
all things to our eternal satisfaction. If you come to this church, and
hear the morning sermons on Job, or read the sermons on this website, and
keep coming and listening to the Scriptures you will find answers to some
of the problems that suffering brings.
ix] "You Christians are so divided. You seem to disagree about so much."
That is pretension. There are Christians who reject major teaching in the
Bible. They have separated themselves from Christianity in that area. Yet
they want to be called Christians. They have denied heart doctrines of the
faith, and until they believe them again we cannot stand with them. Others
have added many traditions for which there is no place in the Bible and
until they are jettisoned there is no possibility of being united with
them. True Christians are not divided whether they are Baptist,
Presbyterian, Anglican, Reformed or whatever label they choose to use. We
all believe that we deserve eternal death because we are sinners, but Jesus
because he loved us, died in our place, and that we must turn from our sins
and entrust ourselves to him. That is the gospel, and if you talked to
Andrew the minister in the Congregationalist church down the road, or Ian
the vicar in Holy Trinity, or Ifan the pastor of the Welsh Evangelical
Church, or Andy at St. Michael's, then I believe each one of them would
give you the same answer. There is escape into saying that Christians are
divided only if you ask those who believe their own selected bits of the
Bible, and that approach leads to another religion.
Men sometimes say that you can make the Bible teach anything. No you
cannot. That is another pretension. I have preached almost 50 messages on 2
Corinthians and I use about 18 commentaries which I keep on a trolley in
the study. Some of these books were written 400 years ago and some were
written last year. They are written by Lutherans, Anglicans, Presbyterians
and Baptists. What is striking is the utter uniformity of interpretation of
each of them. They are all saying the same thing. Where there are some rare
ambiguities in the text, as there must be in all human language, they weigh
up the different interpretations and generally come down on the same side.
We know what Paul is saying, or Peter, or John, or Matthew, or Mark, or
Luke. The Scriptures give one clear message.
x] "What about those who have never heard the gospel?" That again is
pretension. They know the living God because he has made them, and put a
conscience in their minds, and written the things of his law in their
hearts, and set his glory in the creation, so they are without excuse. They
will be judged according to their knowledge. The problem is that every man
knows more than he practises. Every man is guilty and needs a Saviour. But
you know the gospel and do not respond. Shouldn't that be much more concern
to you than those who have never had a chance to reject the living Jesus
Christ?
There are ten pretensions that set themselves up against the knowledge of
God. There are many more, and if listen to the preaching of the Bible or
read the Scriptures for yourselves you will find them, one by one, also
being demolished. Even if we cannot win you for Christ we can arouse you
from your apathy. I feel at times like that Welsh farmer spotted chasing
his horse round and round the field. "What are you doing, Dai?" his
neighbour asked. "I want to harness this old mare to do some plowing for
me," he replied breathlessly, "but she refuses to get caught. So if she is
staying in this field I am going to make sure she doesn't enjoy a day of
idleness." So it is with me. If I can't convert you to Christ I can disturb
your days of disobedience by demolishing every pretension that sets itself
up against the knowledge of God. But I would do more:
ii] EVERY THOUGHT IS TO BE MADE OBEDIENT TO CHRIST.
What an incredible concept! The human brain is the most astonishing and
mysterious of all complex systems. Inside the brain there are billions of
neurons, and information flows in ways we don't understand. The memory of
learning the catechism with our brothers and sisters sitting on our
mother's knee. Imagination. Consciousness. Scientific knowledge. Capacity
for mathematical generalisations. Questions about the universe. Tenderness
to our children. Our brains are capable of this and much more, and no one
knows how. Every single thought is to be made obedient to Christ! He must
be Lord of all. "Take my intellect and use, Every power as Thou dost
choose." Under his lordship our thoughts and feelings are arranged in
classes (as in the process of polishing or smoothing). Those that rise
towards the honour of God taking precedence over those that drift downwards
towards the gratification of self, and so the great decisions of life are
prepared.. Through Christ's lordship over our thoughts our characters are
molded and our vocations determined.
When Jesus Christ comes into your life he comes as God the Son and the Lord
of glory. He comes as your teacher and he says, "Learn of me for I am meek
and lowly of heart and you shall find rest for your souls." What a
brilliant and effective teacher he is. He will cast light on every part of
your life. The wisdom of the world will tell you that Christ's influence
will be greatly restricting. How can this be when in him are hid all the
treasures of wisdom and knowledge? He is the Creator of everything. He is
the sustainer and interpreter of everything. There is no electrical
activity in our brains which is not powered by him. Was Johann Sebastian
Bach, the father of music, restricted in his creativity by his obedience to
Jesus Christ? Was Vermeer, or Rembrandt? Were the writers Bunyan, or
Cowper, or Spurgeon? Was the scientist Michael Faraday? It is error that
confines. In the world of Islam today there are no creative thinkers, or
poets, or artists, or writers. Theirs is a frightened sterile world. But
Christian education flourishes all over the world.
If there is a thought that says no to Jesus Christ then it is a sinful
thought. If there is an aspiration, a desire or an imagination, which
refuses to bear the scrutiny of the kind but searching eyes of the Lord
then it cannot help you or anyone else. Paul is setting before us here the
goal that every Christian has - submission of his entire being to this
comprehensive Lord. Of course, we never attain it. There has never been a
Christian who took captive every single thought and made it obedient to
Christ, but every one of us desires that. That is what I want with my life,
whether I am working, or at home, playing my sport, out with my fiance,
watching TV, talking to my friends, or whatever. I know how much more
blessed my life would be if that amazing world of my thought life were in
service to Christ.
That is why Paul tells us to put on the helmet of salvation. A mind that is
preoccupied with thoughts of our great salvation is kept safe and intact
from the onslaughts of the enemy. A mind that dwells on the deep riches of
grace and the wealth of the believer's inheritance in Christ finds a refuge
and fortress against which the enemy's attacks beat fruitlessly and in
vain. Put on the helmet of salvation. Protect your mind from the flood of
devilish and worldly thoughts by allowing the things of God to make their
imprint upon you. There was a missionary who had become so deeply depressed
inwardly without any external adequate cause to account for it. He thought
he was losing his mind, but the way he received deliverance was using his
mind to lay hold of facts, and to refuse feelings. His position and status
in Christ, the great promises of God made to him as a sinner who trusted in
Christ - words which never shall be broken - were his food. It was in
rehearsing these that he emerged gradually, step by step, to a full
victorious command of himself, his mind, his spirit, his thoughts, his
body, his circumstances. He brought again every thought back under the
Lordship of his loving and gentle Saviour. That is the strength the
battle-weary soldiers of Christ can expect. They shall run and not be
weary. They shall walk and not faint.
20th January 2002 GEOFF THOMAS
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