Showing posts with label obedience. Show all posts
Showing posts with label obedience. Show all posts

Thursday, May 21, 2015

Spirit-led Evangelism


Recently, I was asked by an international student, whom I was discipling, if I would baptize him and proclaim the Gospel to his gathered family at this special event. I was honored to do so and I praise God for the opportunity. I asked God to lead me to what Bible passage I should highlight and He led me to the following encounter between Philip and the Ethiopian.

Acts 8:26-39 ESV Now an angel of the Lord said to Philip, “Rise and go toward the south to the road that goes down from Jerusalem to Gaza.” This is a desert place. 27 And he rose and went. And there was an Ethiopian, a eunuch, a court official of Candace, queen of the Ethiopians, who was in charge of all her treasure. He had come to Jerusalem to worship 28 and was returning, seated in his chariot, and he was reading the prophet Isaiah. 29 And the Spirit said to Philip, “Go over and join this chariot.” 30 So Philip ran to him and heard him reading Isaiah the prophet and asked, “Do you understand what you are reading?” 31 And he said, “How can I, unless someone guides me?” And he invited Philip to come up and sit with him.
32 Now the passage of the Scripture that he was reading was this: “Like a sheep he was led to the slaughter and like a lamb before its shearer is silent, so he opens not his mouth. 33 In his humiliation justice was denied him. Who can describe his generation? For his life is taken away from the earth.” 34 And the eunuch said to Philip, “About whom, I ask you, does the prophet say this, about himself or about someone else?” 35 Then Philip opened his mouth, and beginning with this Scripture he told him the good news about Jesus. 36 And as they were going along the road they came to some water, and the eunuch said, “See, here is water! What prevents me from being baptized?” 38 And he commanded the chariot to stop, and they both went down into the water, Philip and the eunuch, and he baptized him. 39 And when they came up out of the water, the Spirit of the Lord carried Philip away, and the eunuch saw him no more, and went on his way rejoicing.

This Philip was likely the same man named in Acts 6 as one of a few whom the Apostles set apart, ordained, to assist them in ministry at that time. They were looking for men of good reputation and full of the Holy Spirit and wisdom (see Acts 6:3). Philip was one of these men.

Earlier in Acts 8, we read that Philip was ministering in Samaria to crowds; proclaiming the Gospel and healing people (by the power and name of Jesus Christ).

Then the Angel of the Lord spiritually called Philip to go to a certain deserted pathway. He was not called to a mega-church or stadium crusade. In this instance, Philip was called away from a crowded ministry setting to what probably seemed like the middle of nowhere. But there were some people there. This was a divine appointment.

Philip came near an Ethiopian man whom the Holy Spirit told Philip to approach. In fact, Philip ran to him, probably because the chariot was moving. This man was very important in his Queen’s courts. He also had some level of belief in the Lord God almighty because he had just come from worshiping Him in Jerusalem. On the road, he was reading aloud a Bible scripture by the prophet Isaiah. Philip politely asked if he understood what he was reading, but the man said he needed guidance to understand this passage (as do all when it comes to our salvation and discipleship; Rom. 10:14-17). The man was reading verses from Is. chp53, a passage that points to the coming Messiah, the Savior, we all need.

Here are a couple verses from Isa. 53; 5-6 ESV But he was pierced for our transgressions; he was crushed for our iniquities; upon him was the chastisement that brought us peace, and with his wounds we are healed. 6 All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned—every one—to his own way; and the LORD has laid on him the iniquity of us all.

Just recently in the days of Philip and this Ethiopian, the Son of God, Jesus Christ, fulfilled these prophetic statements written hundreds of years earlier by Isaiah and Philip knew this. Then Philip opened his mouth and told this Ethiopian man the great news, Gospel, of Jesus Christ beginning with Isa. 53.  And since the Ethiopian soon afterwards wanted to stop to be baptized in water, I read between the lines that moments before his baptism he accepted Jesus Christ into his life as Savior and Lord.

Here are four take-aways from this passage I want to highlight:

1) The Importance of the Holy Spirit in Evangelism.

The Holy Spirit knew there was an Ethiopian in seeker mode for salvation (because God drew/pointed him in this direction) and the Holy Spirit knew he had an empowered Spirit-filled Christ-follower, Philip, who “could” go share the Gospel with this Ethiopian.

The Spirit (Holy Spirit) somehow impressed upon Philip to go up to the Ethiopian’s chariot. And after the baptism the Spirit carried Philip away. God directed Philip to the right person at the right time. The Holy Spirit was at work before, during, and after this Gospel encounter between these two men. The Holy Spirit is an essential component to evangelism. We shouldn’t be trying to do evangelism by way of our flesh; what we think we can do in our own efforts.

The Holy Spirit will impress upon a Christ-follower through different means (i.e. thoughts, burdens, convictions, Scripture, people) and we need to ask God to fill us with the Spirit and help us discern His voice and take the next steps.  Being “full of the Holy Spirit” (see Eph. 5:18) means one is “led by” the Holy Spirit (also “walk by”, “live by”; Gal. 5:16-25) and discerning of His leading in your life.

The most effective evangelism will be Spirit-led evangelism. God is at work all around us and He expects His people to be Spirit-led.


2) The Importance of Faithful Obedience to God.

I believe God’s primary evangelism vehicle comes through a human instrument, especially a Christ-follower who is faithful in sharing the Gospel. When I accepted Christ as my Savior and Lord at age 9 it followed many Gospel presentations I had heard from my church Sunday School teachers and Children’s Church leaders and my own mother.

God is not forcing His people to share the Gospel but He has called us to do so and He desires to equip and empower us for this important ministry. Are we willing and faithful, though? Philip was. You may not be uniquely gifted as a professional or large scale evangelist but all Christ-followers are called to be Christ’s witnesses to proclaim the Gospel.

Philip accepted this witnessing commission from Christ. In Acts 8, we notice Philip was faithful and obedient to the leading of God in his life. This is spiritual success in one’s life. God is the One who spiritually draws people unto Himself as their needed Savior. God does the actual saving/salvation. Philip did not save anyone from their sins. God is the One who did great evangelism ministry through Philip who was willing, available, and faithful to serve God in sharing the Gospel with people.

Praise God, Philip was not the common mute Christian witness that is so prevalent today nor was he a vague witness nor an overly aggressive witness. Following God’s prompting, he politely began a conversation with this stranger in a friendly way right where the man was spiritually at that moment (actually reading a Messianic Bible passage).

I remember once in seminary when I was walking from my basement apartment to my car and I chatted with a contractor doing some work on the neighbor’s house. He told me he was very down because of a murder suicide his high school friend was recently part of. The Holy Spirit impressed upon my heart to point this man to the living hope that exists in the resurrected Christ but instead I kept things brief and general with that guy and did not mention what was really eternally significant and needed in that moment. Afterwards, I regretted that missed opportunity for ministry and my lack of obedience to the leading of the Holy Spirit. Praise God though, there have been other times when I sensed the Holy Spirit leading me to go talk to someone and transition the conversation to the person and works of Jesus Christ and I did that. How about you?


3) The Importance of God’s Word in Evangelism.

The Word of God is our major source of Gospel revelation from God to us. Acts 8:35 (ESV Then Philip opened his mouth, and beginning with this Scripture he told him the good news about Jesus.) summarizes a key reason why the Holy Bible was written.

Romans 10:17 ESV So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ.

The Holy Spirit uses the Word of God, especially the truth of the Gospel, to illuminate essential truth and draw people unto the Lord.

Let’s not major on extra-biblical illustrations and personal stories. These have their uses in evangelism but let’s be sure to major on using relevant Holy Scripture to communicate needed divine truth.

Do you and I have a good summary understanding of the Gospel according to God’s Word? Can you and I share the Gospel on a moment’s notice? I believe we should be able to do this and we should practice this and engage in this. If you had the opportunity today to talk with someone several minutes about the Gospel of Christ, which Bible verses might you highlight? Would any be from the Old Testament?

Let’s stay saturated in the Gospel of Christ; in our learning, in our remembering the truth we have learned, in our spiritual growth, in our proclamation of it.


4) The Importance of Cross-cultural Evangelism.

Philip was a Greek name and he was likely a Hellenist; a Jewish Christian who spoke Greek. His roots were possibly Palestinian. The Ethiopian was from another culture and land, Africa, and he was likely a dark skinned man. The point is, Philip did not just speak the Gospel to Jews or even Greeks. He spoke the Gospel to an African man (and to mixed-race Samaritans; earlier in Acts 8).

The Gospel is for people of all nations and tribes and Christ-followers are called to proclaim the Gospel to the whole creation (Mk. 16:15, Mt. 28:19). God created me Caucasian and I was born in Florida and my recent ancestors are Caucasian and were born in the US. This Gospel of Jesus Christ is not a US thing though, or a Caucasian thing, or just for or primarily for Caucasians and people who live in the US. This Gospel of Jesus Christ is the greatest news in all of creation and intended to bless everyone. It is a cross-cultural Gospel. The eternal Son of God became flesh. God came to us, the Jews first, then to non-Jews.

I’ve been outside the US to share the Gospel with people from another land and I’ve been down the street to share the Gospel with people from another culture or the same culture. Recently, I was blessed with the opportunity to proclaim the Gospel to a room of people who were from multiple continents and cultures and I spoke of this Acts 8 passage. In your circle of influence, are there people from other cultures (or you culture) you can speak to about Christ? Are we praying for such opportunities? Are we engaging in such ministry for the glory of God?

There are many people who would consider themselves religious and may even worship Jehovah/Yahweh but do they know Jesus Christ as Savior and the Lord of their lives by God’s grace through faith in Christ? And do you?

What are your thoughts about this encounter between Philip and the Ethiopian recorded in Acts 8 and what I’ve written here?



Mike

Tuesday, November 25, 2014

Thanking God for Everything

We are to thank God even in difficult times.

Matthew Henry, a famous Bible Scholar of 250 years ago was robbed one day of all his money he had in the world. He wrote this in his diary afterwards, “What reason have I to be thankful to God, that having travelled so much, yet I was never robbed before now."Life of the Rev. Matthew Henry", in Christian Biography (1799), p.66

Helen Keller, a blind and deaf Christian, wrote, “I thank God for my handicaps. Through them I have found myself, my work and my God.” The Preacher’s Commentary: Luke; Bruce Larson; Thomas Nelson Publishers

Those are examples of having an God-honoring attitude of gratitude through a difficult experience.

At a minimum level of thanking God we are to do so out of obligation to thank Him as our Creator and the source of blessings.

Ps. 107:1 Oh give thanks to the Lord, for he is good, for his steadfast love endures forever!

Heb. 13:15 Through him then let us continually offer up a sacrifice of praise to God, that is, the fruit of lips that acknowledge his name.

Psalm 150:6 Let everything that has breath praise the LORD! Praise the LORD!

God is worthy and deserving of our praise and thanksgiving.

As we mature in thanking God we thank Him regardless of our circumstances.

1 Thess. 5:18 give thanks in all circumstances; for this is the will of God in Christ Jesus for you.

At this level, in every situation, we can always find something to be thankful for. We can look away from what is negative or wrong and focus on what’s right and give thanks. When the glass is half empty remember to be thankful for the half full part.

At our most mature level of thanking God we can thank Him for everything.

Ephesians 5:18b, 20 ..be filled with the Spirit, 20 giving thanks always and for everything to God the Father in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ,

At this level we are being thankful to God in all things. This is when you trust God knowing that God knows best and He cares about you, loves you, and ultimately provides for His people. What seems bad to you, you still thank God for it, even things you would not chose for yourself to experience like a health crisis, great sorrow, or huge need. We acknowledge to God that this is the very thing right now He is using according to His will even if we don’t understand it all but we know He loves His redeemed and we trust Him and thank Him even for this thing that seems so negative.

We are to have an ongoing attitude of gratitude that honors God. I want to point out three biblical principles related to gratitude based on an encounter Jesus had with ten lepers.

Luke 17:11-14 ESV On the way to Jerusalem he was passing along between Samaria and Galilee. 12 And as he entered a village, he was met by ten lepers, who stood at a distance
13 and lifted up their voices, saying, “Jesus, Master, have mercy on us.” 14 When he saw them he said to them, “Go and show yourselves to the priests.” And as they went they were cleansed.

1) Jesus is Merciful and Gracious to People.  

Some lepers noticed Jesus walking by and they cried out to Him for mercy, for compassion toward them, for they were in great need. Jesus saw them and told them to go get checked out by the priests. It was the task of the Jewish Priests to examine people to determine whether they were lepers or not. Infected people were isolated and could not return to normal society unless declared cleansed.

Jesus told these men to go show themselves to the priest and on the way they were healed. I’m not sure about the faith of all these lepers (the faith of one of them is highlighted by Jesus later in this passage) but they did what Jesus told them to do. When they started in the direction of the priests they were physically healed of their skin disease. Wow! They each received an incredible grace gift from God. The healing was not something earned or paid for. Jesus healed them according to His grace.

Luke 17:15-16 Then one of them, when he saw that he was healed, turned back, praising God with a loud voice; 16 and he fell on his face at Jesus’ feet, giving him thanks. Now he was a Samaritan.

One of the ten healed lepers was pumped up with genuine gratitude toward God, toward Jesus. And notice this man’s humility, returning back to and presenting himself at the feet of Jesus. And this man was a Samaritan, as well. Jews and Samaritans mostly hated each other, yet this foreigner was the one who thanked Jesus, a Jew, in person.

Many people don’t realize that God’s common grace is blessing everyone; things like sunshine, gravity, oxygen, food supplies, a beating heart, etc…And then there are moments like in this passage, when God extends His special grace. We have much to thank God about on a regular basis and we don’t need to wait for some sort of sensational miracle to take place to do so but when such a thing does occur we should give some serious shout out praise and thanks to the Lord God Almighty!

Only when we acknowledge God as the merciful and gracious provider of blessings in our lives, do we begin to comprehend our need for God in a more personal way and begin to express a greater living faith in Him and deeper gratitude toward Him.

Paul basically wrote in Romans 1 that God created the universe and within the heart of every human is a basic awareness of the reality of God and apart from thankfulness awareness of God will be suppressed. In vs21, Paul wrote….they did not honor him as God or give thanks to him, but they became futile in their thinking, and their foolish hearts were darkened.

At the heart of those who reject God is a resolute unwillingness to thank Him. May we not reject God and may we not be unthankful to God. We have so much to thank God for. Jesus is merciful and gracious to people.


2) Jesus Notices Ingratitude

Luke 17:17-18 Then Jesus answered, “Were not ten cleansed? Where are the nine?
18 Was no one found to return and give praise to God except this foreigner?”

These questions were rhetorical. Jesus knew the answers and He didn’t like the truth that nine of the ten healed men showed no gratitude toward Him. That was outrageous considering Jesus just gave them amazing grace, dramatic healing.

The life of a leper back then was horrible. These lepers were outcasts with painful disease in which the Bible implies was incurable in Bible times without a miracle. You would have expected all ten men to run to Jesus and thank Him for a fresh new start to life, but only one did and he was not even a Jew.

“How grateful the men should have been for the providence of God that brought Jesus into their area, for the love that caused Him to pay attention to them and their need, and for the grace and power of God that brought about their healing.” Warren Wiersbe
The Bible Exposition Commentary; New Testament, Volume 1, Matthew-Galatians; Warren Wiersbe, David C. Cook Publ., p244

These healed men should have jumped up and down and formed an impromptu men’s chorus and sung some Psalms of thanksgiving and praise.

Thanklessness is all too common among people. Ingratitude is the way of sin, the way of the world, but God-honoring gratitude is the way of God’s people.

Before we look down on these ungrateful healed lepers, what about our attitude of gratitude toward God? How often do we take our blessings for granted and fail to thank the Lord? Too often we are content to enjoy the gift but we forget the Giver. We are quick to pray for help but slow to praise the Helper. Let’s not be ungrateful. Let’s thank the Lord.

Jesus is merciful and gracious to people.  Jesus notices ingratitude. And


3) Christ-centered Gratitude Goes Well with Saving Faith

Something additional happened to this one grateful healed man.

Luke 17:19 And he said to him, “Rise and go your way; your faith has made you well.”

All ten lepers were physically healed but only the one who returned to thank Christ had Jesus say “your faith has made you well.” The literal translation here in the Greek is “your faith has saved you.”

He was made well in a deeper way, I believe, a spiritual way. There is more going on here with this man than physical healing. The other nine were declared clean physically by the priest, no doubt, but this one grateful man was declared saved by the Son of God. I don’t believe this was saved from just leprosy suffering or living a shorter life because of leprosy, but saved spiritually.

While it is wonderful to experience the miracle of physical healing, it is even more wonderful to experience the miracle of spiritual healing in Christ. We don’t have all the details in the Bible text, but I believe this grateful man returned to Jesus not just viewing Jesus as the Master physical healer, but also the Master of all Masters, the Master of his salvation, the man’s needed Savior. And so, I think it is worthy to notice here the connection between Christ-centered gratitude and saving faith. Thanking Christ draws us to Him and His people are to thank Him often. Amen!

Having a God-honoring attitude of gratitude is a personal decision you and I have to make moment to moment in life.

Ps. 107:1 Oh give thanks to the Lord, for he is good, for his steadfast love endures forever!

Giving thanks to God is not blind gratitude. There is always much to be thankful for rooted in who He is and what He does. An attitude of gratitude is a life-changing decision. Notice the “Oh” at the beginning of Ps 107:1; something important is to follow. There is passion here. Give thanks to the Lord! Amen!

This grateful healed leper in Luke 17 came back praising God and yet he still had enormous problems. He had been an outcast and he had to integrate back into society, relationships, and routines. He is praising God even in the midst of his unsolved problems. Each of us likely has a problem right now. Let’s think about how we can praise God in that present problem.

Instead of complaining about and worrying about our problems, let’s focus, rather, on the belief that God is bigger than the problem and is present right now in the middle of this difficult thing we’re caught up in. Say, “God, I praise You and thank You. You are bigger than the struggle I’m going through.”

Here are three questions to ask ourselves, to help us develop an attitude of gratitude that is God-honoring.

1) Am I a grateful person, regardless of my circumstances and feelings?

2) Am I seeing the blessings of gratitude in my life? These blessings can be the acknowledgement of and experience of real joy, peace, and contentment in Christ.

3) Am I choosing gratitude over ingratitude and complaining?

Note: I adapted these questions and the three levels of gratitude at the top of the blog from “Lord, Change My Attitude Before It’s Too Late,” James MacDonald; Moody Publ.; Chp2

Let’s ask ourselves these questions now, moment to moment, and day by day. Let’s learn from God’s Word about who God is and what God has done, is doing, and will do and let’s thank Him and praise Him.  Try journaling what you are thanking God for.  Recognize God’s sovereignty in your life and give Him thanks in all circumstances for everything. This is biblical. This is God’s will. This is for the glory of God. Let’s cultivate an attitude of gratitude toward God. It will open our hearts to further blessings and it glorifies and pleases God.

On my office wall is a framed sign that includes the phrase “an attitude of gratitude.” Some Christian friends (the Salvatores) of our family heard me use this phrase so often at church that they thought of me when they came across this sign and wanted me to have it. It is a reminder, to me and others who see it, of the importance of having an attitude of gratitude. What do you have to remind you to have an attitude of gratitude?

And oh, by the way, the greatest thing to be thankful for is salvation in Christ. If you are reading this and you have never given your life over to Christ, there is great news and hope: God loves you with amazing love. He died for your sins to pay the penalty of God’s wrath for your sins to bring you to God. Praise God, the Son of God rose in victory over sin and death and wants you to be in relationship with God now and forever.

Respond to God now from your heart with faith upon Jesus. Give your life over to Jesus as your Savior and keep asking Him daily to help you live for Him as the Lord of your life according to Holy Scripture. If you have never made this life commitment to Christ, then why not right now, right where you are, within your heart, respond to God’s call to you to give your life over to Jesus Christ and live for His glory. Thanks be to God for His amazing gift of salvation in Christ. Here's a summary of the great news of Jesus: http://mikesmorals.blogspot.com/2013/09/great-news-gods-plan-for-true-life.html

And remember, let’s thank God for everything, in Christ, and let’s have an ongoing God-honoring attitude of gratitude.  

What are your thoughts about thanking God for everything and having a consistent God-honoring attitude of gratitude.


Mike