Has God Oversold the Product?

March 16, 2010

“… God is able to make all grace abound toward you, that you, always having all sufficiency in all things, may abound unto every good work.” (2 Corinthians 9:8 KJV)

This is the most superlative and emphatic verse in the New Testament about the grace we need to live in to serve Christ. I once heard Dr. A.W. Tozer preach on this text. After he read the verse with much inflection, he paused, shook his head and said, “Sometimes you cannot help but allow the thought that God has oversold the product in the New Testament!” Of course, he went on to explain that God has not oversold the product. We undersell the product because our access into this grace is flawed.

Think of this with me for a moment. God is able to make all grace, not just some grace, abound toward us, not just trickle in our direction, that we, (he repeats that for emphasis meaning it’s not just for the pastor, or the missionary, but for every believer), always, not just sometimes, may have all sufficiency, not just some sufficiency, in all things, not just some things, may abound, not just go limping, unto every good work, not just the ones we like.

Once you have meditated on this verse ask yourself this question, “True or false?”

If we answer that question as we should by saying it’s true, should that not give us the courage to tackle the things God is leading us to do that we know we cannot do? Are you doing anything that can only be explained by the supernatural reality that He is, only He can, and He did because you found access into this grace?


The Plague of Procrastination

March 12, 2010

“And while they went to buy, the bridegroom came … and the door was shut.” (Matthew 25:10)

The story is told of a farmer who called an insurance agency in the middle of a hurricane and said “Hello, hello I’d like to buy some insurance for my silo—O my Lord there it goes!”

In The Parable of the Wise and Foolish Virgins Jesus teaches that the wise virgins had oil in their lamps when the Bridegroom returned but the foolish virgins did not. Oil is a symbol of the Holy Spirit. When those who had no oil came to those who had oil to get some they were told they had to get oil of their own, but it was too late. The Bridegroom had come and the door was shut! The teaching of Jesus is that there are two kinds of people in this world – spiritual and secular. When He comes the spiritual people will be taken and the secular left – and it will be too late then to become a spiritual person.

When I was a child in Sunday school a teacher put a black velvet tablecloth on a card table. On that cloth she had thousands of straight pins and matchsticks all mixed up together. She then passed a powerful magnet over the table. The straight pins were caught up and stuck to the magnet while the matchsticks were left on the table. This illustrated the teaching that when Jesus returns one will be taken and the other left. I stood in front of that table with big eyes and decided that I was going to be a “straight pin!”

Are you a matchstick or a straight pin? Don’t let the plague of procrastination keep you from being taken when He returns.


The Workmanship of God

March 8, 2010

“For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them.” (Ephesians 2:10)

The founding elder of the first church for which I was the pastor was a home builder. He did beautiful work and when a couple wanted him to build their home he would take them to a beautiful home he had built and say to them “By the grace of God this is by workmanship.” The verse above is saying to all of us who are followers of Christ that our risen living Christ would like to point to each of us and say “This is My workmanship!”

We are all a work of Christ in progress. In addition to that thought this verse is stating that when we came to faith and were saved by grace through the faith our Lord gave us, He created us for good works. In fact we’re told that before He saved us he had already planned that we would do those works for Him.

I don’t know about you but that truth excites and inspires me greatly! We’re so selfish and self-centered that when we come to faith our focus is often on what trusting Christ to be our Savior is going to mean to us. Many followers of Christ have the attitude “What have you done for me lately?” The Apostle Paul had the right vision when he met the risen Christ on the road to Damascus and asked the question, “Lord, what do you want me to do for you?”

As a follower of Christ have you been asking and seeking to know what those works are your Lord and Savior had planned for you when He saved you by grace?


The Job Description of Every Pastor

March 5, 2010

“… And He Himself gave some to be … pastors and teachers, for the equipping of the saints for the work of ministry…” (Ephesians 4:11, 12)

According to these words of Apostle Paul, “the work of the ministry” is not committed to the pastor, or to a staff of professionals, but to the saints. Paul’s nickname for those who are sanctified, or set apart to following Christ was “saints.” In many of our churches today people believe the work of the ministry has ended when the benediction is pronounced. This job description of the pastor declares that the work of the ministry begins when the benediction is pronounced and hundreds, or even thousands of saints are commissioned and equipped to go out and do the work of the ministry. This means that the role of the pastor/teacher is like that of a coach.

Which is more productive? To give an invitation and have half a dozen or more people respond to it, or to equip a sanctuary full of believers to go out and reach people who desperately need to hear the Gospel? Is the church a soul saving station or a base from which a multitude of believers are equipped every Sunday to reach people in the neighborhoods where they live or the marketplaces where they work?

It is not merely because it is more effective but because it is God’s plan that we who are pastors should accept our role and calling to be a coach and not just a player. If we will equip, instruct, encourage, challenge and inspire believers to go out and do the work of the ministry it could wake the sleeping giant of the Church.


Four Spiritual Laws

March 2, 2010

“… For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has made me free from the law of sin and death.” (Romans 8:2)

From about the middle of the seventh to the middle of the eighth chapter of his letter to the Romans the Apostle Paul profiles four spiritual laws. The first is the law of God which is the Word of God. One of the many functions of the Word of God is to reveal the law of sin and death. James describes this when he tells us the Word of God is like a mirror which shows us our imperfections.

These first two laws are the bad news and they get us ready to hear the good news which is quoted above. The third law is the law of the Spirit of life in Christ and it can free us from the law of sin and death. It’s almost as if the law of sin and death is a law of spiritual gravity and the law of the Spirit is a law of spiritual aerodynamics because it can raise us above the law of sin and death. If that is true, why are some believers like a 747, lumbering down the runway for 40 years and never overcoming gravity?

The fourth spiritual law is the law of the mindset. Six or more times according to your translation, Paul writes that those who live in the Spirit have set their minds on the Spirit and those who live in the flesh have set their minds on the flesh.

Athletes and many other professions critically depend on the law of the mindset. What is your spiritual mindset today? It can make all the difference, according to these four spiritual laws of the Apostle Paul.


The Four Kings

February 22, 2010

“…those who receive abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness will reign in life through the One, Jesus Christ.” (Romans 5:17)

In the context of the Scripture quoted above the Apostle Paul is telling us about four kings. Each of these kings enters, abounds and reigns. The first is King Sin. (He sounds like a Chinese king.) When he enters our life he abounds until he reigns. The next is King Death. He is the consequence of sin and he enters, abounds and reigns right behind King Sin. Those two are the bad news but the next two are the good news. King Jesus enters our lives. He wants to abound in our lives until He reigns in us. The fourth king is King You and King Me. The ultimate good news is that we can reign in life through Jesus Christ!

At the beginning of this fifth chapter of his letter to the Romans, the Apostle Paul writes the Good News that we have access by faith into grace that makes it possible for us to stand for Christ in this world and live a life that glorifies God. He then tells us that we should rejoice in our sufferings because they force us to access the grace God has made available to us by faith (vs. 3-5). In the verse above he writes that when we receive an abundance of this grace we will reign in life through Jesus Christ.

Do you understand this profound Good News Paul is sharing with us about these four kings? What sounds like a good hand at poker can give you and me the dynamic we need to stand for Christ, reign in life and live lives that glorify God and exalt Jesus Christ.


The Blessed Man

February 15, 2010

“Blessed is the man who does not walk in the counsel of the wicked …
Stand in the way of sinners, or sit in the seat of mockers.
But his delight is in the law (Word) of the LORD,
And on his law he meditates day and night.
He is like a tree planted by streams of water…”
(Psalm 1: 1-3)

The First Psalm establishes a pattern. The blessings of the blessed man are not a coincidence. They are a banquet of consequences. He is blessed because he is no mocker; he is a believer. This man is blessed because he loves the Word of God and he walks in the counsels of God he finds in the Word of God. This means he knows that the way to convert the Word of God into a power and a force in his life is to obey and apply the Word of God.

This is described metaphorically when we’re told he resembles a tree which has its roots in watery soil. The Scripture is described metaphorically as water and that helps us understand this metaphor. A blessed man has his view of life and his value system firmly planted in the Word of God. He is in the Word and the Word is in him and that explains his blessings.

Perhaps his greatest blessing is that he does not stand in the way of sinners. Over the last 60 plus years I have picked up the pieces with many sinners. That experience has confirmed the teaching of Scripture that the way of the sinner is the pits.

Would you like to be the blessed man or woman? Read, believe and meditate in the Word of God regularly applying to your life what you are reading.


There Must Be Vision Keepers

February 7, 2010

“And the things that you have heard from me among many witnesses, commit these to faithful men who will be able to teach others also.” (2 Timothy 2:2)

The Apostle Paul had a “seminary” in Ephesus for two years. He apparently rented a school that was closed during the hottest hours of the day. There he trained people like Timothy who became the overseer of the church at Ephesus. He also mentored the man who became the pastor of the Church of the Colossians to whom he addressed his letter to that church. This seminary is described in the inspired history book of the Bible:

“He… withdrew the disciples, reasoning daily in the school of Tyrannus. And this continued for two years, so that all who dwelt in Asia heard the word of the Lord Jesus, both Jews and Greeks.” (Acts 19: 9, 10)

In that context he was the vision caster for the men he taught there. He challenged them to be keepers of that vision. He charged Timothy to find other faithful men who in turn would find other faithful men who would be keepers of that vision. One size does not fit all. We must therefore disciple people in one-on-one relationships.

The strategy of Paul worked. It produced churches in Asia like the seven churches mentioned in the book of Revelation. In 1973 I visited the archaeological sites of all those churches in a month long seminar led by my college Bible professor.

Do you have a vision? Have you shared or are you sharing that vision with faithful people in such a way that they will be keepers of the vision God has given you and recruit other faithful people to be vision keepers?


There Must Be a Vision Caster

February 5, 2010

“Only let your conduct be worthy of the gospel of Christ, so that whether I come and see you or am absent, I may hear of your affairs, that you stand fast in one Spirit, with one mind striving together for the faith of the gospel…” (Philippians 1:27)

In these words we have the vision of the Apostle Paul for his best and favorite church, the Church at Philippi. This church was Paul’s sending church because they supported him while he planted the Church of Jesus Christ on the world map. Paul is in prison as he writes and he is not sure that he will ever be physically present with this church again. However, his vision for them is that they would be what he calls a “Fellowship of the Gospel.”

According to Paul a fellowship of the Gospel is a spiritual community in which every member is an authentic disciple of Jesus Christ. Every member is Christ-like and all the members are Christ-like together in ways that convince the world of the truth of the Gospel. When the world observes these people who live and act as if they only have one mind between them because they stand fast in one Spirit, the world believes the Gospel.

In the words quoted above Paul is being the vision caster for the Church in Philippi. His vision for his favorite church should cast a vision for our churches today. Especially those of us who lead churches should aspire and pray to see the churches we lead become and continue to be a fellowship of the Gospel.

Love is not love until it is shared and a vision is not a vision until it is shared by a vision caster.


A Vision Must be Shared

January 31, 2010

“Then He said to them, “Follow Me, and I will make you fishers of men.” They immediately left their nets and followed Him.
(Matthew 4:19, 20)

Our Lord Jesus shared His vision. If Nehemiah had not shared his vision he would have been on the wall by himself and the wall would not have been finished. Since serving Christ is a team sport we must share our vision.

I was greatly blessed to have a pastor who mentored me for thirty years. He had a vision and he always had a plan. His vision was for world missions. Even though I believed this in my head, world missions was not in my heart. On one occasion he scheduled a retreat for the two of us and in the middle of the night he told me with tears that if he could have his heart placed in my chest cavity to give me an authentic burden for missions he would do it!

He planned a seven-week trip for me all around the world visiting missionaries. That experience moved world missions those eighteen critical inches from my head to my heart. He went to be with the Lord a few years later. If he knows what has happened and is happening to me thirty years later I am certain he is a happy camper!

What did it take for Jesus to take four fishermen and give them a vision for catching men rather than fish? Do you share your vision with others, especially those you mentor? Do you do have a plan for them and are you willing to sacrifice for them to the point of a heart transplant to communicate your vision to them?