The reason why the Lord’s Supper held such a significant place in the early church is because it embodies the major features of the Christian life. The emblems we see, the bread and the wine, at the Lord’s Supper are broken and drunk as a shared experience (Matthew 26:26; 1 Cor. 10:16). The broken bread points us to the humanity of Jesus. The Son of Glory took upon Himself the form of a servant. The Almighty hovered Himself by becoming a man. The bread, being the most basic and lowly of all foods, points to the humanity and availability of our Lord. By taking on our humanity Jesus Christ because accessible to us all, just is the most readily available food for everyone, both rich and poor.
The Breaking of Bread also reminds us of the cross upon which our Lord’s body was broken. Bread is made from crushed wheat and wine is made from the pressed grape; both elements represent suffering and death. Yet, the Breaking of Bread does not only depict the suffering and death of Christ. It also shows forth His resurrection. The grain of wheat has gone into the ground, but it now lives to produce many grains like unto itself (John 12:24). While we eat the representation of His flesh and drink the representation of His blood through the Supper, we obtain His life (John 6:53). This is the principle of resurrection—Life coming out of death.
The revelation of the resurrected Christ is also bound up with the broken bread. When the risen Lord ate with His disciples it was bread that He broke with them (John 21:13). In like manner the resurrected Christ appeared to people on the Emmaus road but their eyes were not opened to recognize Him until He broke the bread (Luke 24:30-32). The Lord’s Supper reveals Christ to us.
The testimony of the oneness of Christ’s Body is also embodied in the Breaking of Bread. Recall that there was only one loaf that the early Christians broke. Paul writes, “Because there is one loaf, we, who are many are one body, for all partake of the one loaf” (1 Cor. 10:17). “There is one Body” …such company thus owns no other membership than that of the one Church, the Body of Christ, to which Christians belong by the operation of the Holy Spirit (Ephesians 1:22-23; 1 Cor. 12:12-13). It is the Lord’s Supper that is the symbol of this unity and the Scriptural observance of this memorial feast is really the expression of Christian unity (John Reid, 1987).
Thus the Lord’s people gather together and bear witness of their oneness of life in Christ and in the Body of which He is the Head. It is in this way that every evidenced believer is welcome to enjoy Christian privilege and fellowship according to Scriptural simplicity and order. When Jesus celebrated the Passover, which was the first Lord’s Supper, He offered the wine cup to His disciples with the word, “This cup is the new covenant in my blood” (Luke 22:20). By this action, the Lord was pointing out this one fact; the Supper was a covenant meal wherein His disciples revisited the common memories they shared and celebrated their new identity in the Messiah.
Today when we celebrate the Lord’s Supper as a meal we are remembering the covenant we have with God in Christ. We are participating in the shared memory of what Jesus has done for us and we are proclaiming our new identity in Him. Water baptism is the Scriptural mode of our initiation into the Christian faith and the Lord’s Supper is a reaffirmation of our initial commitment to Christ. Through it, we reaffirm our faith in Jesus and our identity in Him as part of the new creation. It possesses past, present, and future implications. It is a re-proclamation of the Lord’s sacrificial death for us in the past. It’s a re-declaration of His ever-abiding nearness with us in the present, and it’s a re-pronouncement of the Hope of glory—His coming in the future.
In other words, the Lord’s Supper is a living testimony to the three chief virtues—faith, hope and love. Through the Supper we re-ground ourselves in that glorious salvation that is ours by faith. We express our love for the brethren as we reflect on the one Body, and we rejoice in the hope of our Lord’s soon return. By observing the Supper, we “proclaim (present) the Lord’s death (past) until He returns (future)” (1 Cor. 11:26). Through the Supper, the Holy Spirit reveals the living Christ to our hearts anew and afresh. By it, we reaffirm our faith in Jesus and membership in His Body. Through the Supper we sup with Christ and His people. For these reasons the early Christians made it an important part of their gatherings. Suffice it to say that the Lord Himself instituted the Supper (Matthew 26:26), and His apostles handed it down to us (1 Cor. 11:2). It is a spiritual reality.
For the first followers, the Lord’s Supper was not an end in itself, but means of communing with the triune God. The ties that bind are relationships, nor rules. The “light of the world” is not the message of Jesus. Jesus Himself is the light of the world. In the observance of the Lord’s Supper, the redeemed of the Lord, as His local Body, corporately express Christ. For He is the Message on earth.
Our faith is not a commitment to a course, it is the acceptance of an invitation to join Jesus on His journey and to live life in the mystery of God made flesh. To the believer the contact is the content. When we celebrate the Lord’s Supper, we are indeed celebrating the life of Jesus who is the Good News.
T Cyprian Kia
Thoughts and Meditations
Verse of the Day
Saturday, February 2, 2013
Saturday, January 19, 2013
The Ekklesia
The Greek word for church is ekklesia, and it literally means ‘assembly’. This meshes with the dominant thought in Paul’s letters that the church is Christ in corporate expression (I Cor. 12:1-27; Eph. 1:22-23; 4:1-16). Surprisingly the Bible never defines the church. Instead it presents it through a number of different metaphors.
One of the reasons why the New Testament gives us numerous metaphors to depict the church is because the church is too comprehensive and rich to be captured by a single definition or metaphor. Unfortunately, our tendency is to latch on to one particular metaphor and understand the ekklesia through it alone.
By latching on to just one metaphor—whether it be the body, the army, the temple, the bride, the vineyard or the city—we lose the message that other metaphors convey. The result is that our view of the church will become limited at best or lopsided at worst. Although the New Testament writers depict the church with a variety of different images, their favorite image is that of the family. Familiar terms like ‘new birth,’ ‘children of God,’ ‘sons of God,’ ‘brethren,’ ‘fathers,’ ‘brothers,’ ’sisters,’ and ’household’ saturate the New Testament writing.
For this reason Paul would say: ‘Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all people, especially to those who belong to the family of believers’ ( Gal. 6:10; Rom. 8:29; Eph. 2:19; I Tim. 5:12; 3:15). To this Peter urged: ‘Like newborn babies crave pure spiritual milk, so that by it you may grow up in your salvation’ (I Pet. 2:2). John added to this by saying: ‘I write to you dear children because your sins have been forgiven on account of His name. I write to you fathers, because you have known Him who is from the beginning. I write to you young men, because you have overcome the evil one. I write to you dear children, because you have known the Father’ (I John 2:12-13). These writings of Paul, Peter, and John in particular are punctuated with the language and imagery of family.
These images simply teach us that the church is a living organism rather that an institution. The church we read about in the New Testament was ‘organic’. By that it means it was born from and sustained by spiritual life instead of constructed by human institutions, controlled by human hierarchy, shaped by lifeless rituals and held together by religious programs. An organic church is one that is naturally produced when a group of people have encountered Jesus Christ in reality (external ecclesiastical programs being unnecessary). It is not a theater with scripts; it is a gathered community that lives by divine life. It does not operate on the same organizational principles that run the business corporate world.
Besides, in all of Paul’s letters to the churches he speaks to the ‘brethren’—a term that includes both brothers and sisters in Christ. He uses this familial term more than 130 times in his epistles; so without question the New Testament is filled with the language and images of family. When we stop giving glib assent to the idea that the church is a family and start fleshing out its sober implications, the following characteristics would emerge.
The church as family would take care of their own. Its members would take care of one another, as a true family takes care of its own. A dysfunctional family does not. Members of a dysfunctional family are selfish, individualistic, and profoundly independent. This family is characterized by detachment, and non-connectedness. Nor do they seem to care much for each other (James 2:14-17. Real faith expresses itself in acts of love toward our brothers and sisters in Christ (Eph. 4:28; Rom. 12:5, 13; 2 Cor. 8:12-15; Gal: 6:2; John 15:12-13).
The church, as family, takes time to know one another outside of scheduled meetings. Hence, the Scripture says: ‘They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread in their homes and all together with glad and sincere hearts (Acts 2: 42, 46). This is a functioning family model.
On the other hand when the church family is in a dysfunctional state, members barely know each other and; consequently, are unable to show affection to each other. In a functioning church, members show sincere affection one to another. It is in such atmosphere that growth in the membership is experienced. As a family it will grow. Biologically, growth is natural happening in the family.
A church grows in two ways. One way is through hiving (division) and multiplication. That is, if a church grows too large, it may divide and multiply into two fellowships. Our bodies grow the same way: cells divide and then multiply. Another way is by addition. That is by giving birth to spiritual children. This is the principle of reproduction. If the Lord is at work in a church, it will grow. God gives the increase. It may not be immediate; it may take time, but if the church is alive and healthy, it will grow—both internally (spiritually) and externally (numerically). Churches that live as families grow indeed. Some call this body life.
As a collective and corporate expression, the members share responsibility. In the household of God there are spiritual fathers and mothers. These are the older men and women in the faith with maturity and experience. Their role and responsibility before God is to give guidance and provide mentoring to the younger brothers and sisters in the faith.
This does not mean holding an office or title in the church such as elder, or pastor. These mature ones are aware of their spiritual gifts and are exercising them as believer/priests in the church. In a functioning church family they also contribute their wisdom to the church. They are not obstructed by those who consider themselves as oversight, leaders who are therefore, threatened by it. These ministry activities are organic, and they operate by spiritual life (I John 2:13-14). Every member functions in the church meetings.
Members also function outside in the community life. The spiritual fathers and mothers are very active in mentoring the young and provide wisdom during crises. The mothers teach the young women how to be wise and how to function as wives and mothers (Titus 2:3-4).
The men bring excitement and strength to the church, but they need the stability of the older ones to temper them. The spiritual children inject newfound zeal into the believing community, but they need maturing. They need the older ones to feed them, check up on them, change their diapers, and teach them how to walk with the Lord. This is what it takes to mentor others. It is not about setting up a formal classroom instruction format. Neither is it about playing pastorship in the name of eldership or commended workers.
The Godhead lives in everlasting reciprocity with its members. For this reason, the church is called to be a reciprocal community above everything else, or in other words, a family. It is functioning as a family that the church reflects the triune God in their relationship. Within the triune God one discovers mutual love, mutual fellowship, mutual dependence, mutual honor, mutual submission and mutual dwellings
In the Godhead there exists, therefore, an eternal complimentary, and reciprocal interchange of divine love, and divine fellowship. When the church reflects the personhood of the Godhead, we experience interdependence, wholeness instead of fragmentation, participation, connectedness, solidarity instead of individualism, spontaneity, relationship instead of program, servitude instead of dominance, enrichment, and freedom instead of bondage, community and bonding instead of detachment.
This church is true to the nature of God and functions fully to the intent of the New Testament, a living ekklesia. Here titles such as elders, deacons, officers are not about power and dominance but servitude under the people with the sole intent to lift them up and build them to their full potential. This gathering of believers has one pursuit, one obsession, one goal and one grand purpose: to know and love the Lord Jesus Christ. The healthy church is nonsectarian, nonelitist and nonexclusive. It meets on the ground of Christ. It is a church in living color-ekklesia.
In the words of Stanley Grenz: ‘Only in our spirit-produced corporatness do we truly reflect to all creation the grand dynamic that lies at the heart of the triune God. Our fellowship is nothing more than our communion between the Father and the Son mediated by the Holy Spirit.’ The ekklesia is the family of God.
T. Cyprian Kia
One of the reasons why the New Testament gives us numerous metaphors to depict the church is because the church is too comprehensive and rich to be captured by a single definition or metaphor. Unfortunately, our tendency is to latch on to one particular metaphor and understand the ekklesia through it alone.
By latching on to just one metaphor—whether it be the body, the army, the temple, the bride, the vineyard or the city—we lose the message that other metaphors convey. The result is that our view of the church will become limited at best or lopsided at worst. Although the New Testament writers depict the church with a variety of different images, their favorite image is that of the family. Familiar terms like ‘new birth,’ ‘children of God,’ ‘sons of God,’ ‘brethren,’ ‘fathers,’ ‘brothers,’ ’sisters,’ and ’household’ saturate the New Testament writing.
For this reason Paul would say: ‘Therefore, as we have opportunity, let us do good to all people, especially to those who belong to the family of believers’ ( Gal. 6:10; Rom. 8:29; Eph. 2:19; I Tim. 5:12; 3:15). To this Peter urged: ‘Like newborn babies crave pure spiritual milk, so that by it you may grow up in your salvation’ (I Pet. 2:2). John added to this by saying: ‘I write to you dear children because your sins have been forgiven on account of His name. I write to you fathers, because you have known Him who is from the beginning. I write to you young men, because you have overcome the evil one. I write to you dear children, because you have known the Father’ (I John 2:12-13). These writings of Paul, Peter, and John in particular are punctuated with the language and imagery of family.
These images simply teach us that the church is a living organism rather that an institution. The church we read about in the New Testament was ‘organic’. By that it means it was born from and sustained by spiritual life instead of constructed by human institutions, controlled by human hierarchy, shaped by lifeless rituals and held together by religious programs. An organic church is one that is naturally produced when a group of people have encountered Jesus Christ in reality (external ecclesiastical programs being unnecessary). It is not a theater with scripts; it is a gathered community that lives by divine life. It does not operate on the same organizational principles that run the business corporate world.
Besides, in all of Paul’s letters to the churches he speaks to the ‘brethren’—a term that includes both brothers and sisters in Christ. He uses this familial term more than 130 times in his epistles; so without question the New Testament is filled with the language and images of family. When we stop giving glib assent to the idea that the church is a family and start fleshing out its sober implications, the following characteristics would emerge.
The church as family would take care of their own. Its members would take care of one another, as a true family takes care of its own. A dysfunctional family does not. Members of a dysfunctional family are selfish, individualistic, and profoundly independent. This family is characterized by detachment, and non-connectedness. Nor do they seem to care much for each other (James 2:14-17. Real faith expresses itself in acts of love toward our brothers and sisters in Christ (Eph. 4:28; Rom. 12:5, 13; 2 Cor. 8:12-15; Gal: 6:2; John 15:12-13).
The church, as family, takes time to know one another outside of scheduled meetings. Hence, the Scripture says: ‘They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and the fellowship, to the breaking of bread in their homes and all together with glad and sincere hearts (Acts 2: 42, 46). This is a functioning family model.
On the other hand when the church family is in a dysfunctional state, members barely know each other and; consequently, are unable to show affection to each other. In a functioning church, members show sincere affection one to another. It is in such atmosphere that growth in the membership is experienced. As a family it will grow. Biologically, growth is natural happening in the family.
A church grows in two ways. One way is through hiving (division) and multiplication. That is, if a church grows too large, it may divide and multiply into two fellowships. Our bodies grow the same way: cells divide and then multiply. Another way is by addition. That is by giving birth to spiritual children. This is the principle of reproduction. If the Lord is at work in a church, it will grow. God gives the increase. It may not be immediate; it may take time, but if the church is alive and healthy, it will grow—both internally (spiritually) and externally (numerically). Churches that live as families grow indeed. Some call this body life.
As a collective and corporate expression, the members share responsibility. In the household of God there are spiritual fathers and mothers. These are the older men and women in the faith with maturity and experience. Their role and responsibility before God is to give guidance and provide mentoring to the younger brothers and sisters in the faith.
This does not mean holding an office or title in the church such as elder, or pastor. These mature ones are aware of their spiritual gifts and are exercising them as believer/priests in the church. In a functioning church family they also contribute their wisdom to the church. They are not obstructed by those who consider themselves as oversight, leaders who are therefore, threatened by it. These ministry activities are organic, and they operate by spiritual life (I John 2:13-14). Every member functions in the church meetings.
Members also function outside in the community life. The spiritual fathers and mothers are very active in mentoring the young and provide wisdom during crises. The mothers teach the young women how to be wise and how to function as wives and mothers (Titus 2:3-4).
The men bring excitement and strength to the church, but they need the stability of the older ones to temper them. The spiritual children inject newfound zeal into the believing community, but they need maturing. They need the older ones to feed them, check up on them, change their diapers, and teach them how to walk with the Lord. This is what it takes to mentor others. It is not about setting up a formal classroom instruction format. Neither is it about playing pastorship in the name of eldership or commended workers.
The Godhead lives in everlasting reciprocity with its members. For this reason, the church is called to be a reciprocal community above everything else, or in other words, a family. It is functioning as a family that the church reflects the triune God in their relationship. Within the triune God one discovers mutual love, mutual fellowship, mutual dependence, mutual honor, mutual submission and mutual dwellings
In the Godhead there exists, therefore, an eternal complimentary, and reciprocal interchange of divine love, and divine fellowship. When the church reflects the personhood of the Godhead, we experience interdependence, wholeness instead of fragmentation, participation, connectedness, solidarity instead of individualism, spontaneity, relationship instead of program, servitude instead of dominance, enrichment, and freedom instead of bondage, community and bonding instead of detachment.
This church is true to the nature of God and functions fully to the intent of the New Testament, a living ekklesia. Here titles such as elders, deacons, officers are not about power and dominance but servitude under the people with the sole intent to lift them up and build them to their full potential. This gathering of believers has one pursuit, one obsession, one goal and one grand purpose: to know and love the Lord Jesus Christ. The healthy church is nonsectarian, nonelitist and nonexclusive. It meets on the ground of Christ. It is a church in living color-ekklesia.
In the words of Stanley Grenz: ‘Only in our spirit-produced corporatness do we truly reflect to all creation the grand dynamic that lies at the heart of the triune God. Our fellowship is nothing more than our communion between the Father and the Son mediated by the Holy Spirit.’ The ekklesia is the family of God.
T. Cyprian Kia
Saturday, January 5, 2013
Spiritual Gifts are Divine Investments in You: Be Accountable
There are many things wrong with
the church today just as there have been many things wrong with it throughout
the centuries since Jesus came to establish it.
In some places the churches are not true to the teaching of the Scriptures.
They have imposed their own views of God’s program, will, and nature on the
Bible. They pick and choose the part they want to believe and cast aside the
others.
In other places, the churches have
lost their vision for mission and evangelism. All their energies are expended in caring for
their own members. Their horizon reaches
only to the back pews of their own buildings. They behave as though Jesus had
died only for them, or as though men and women are going to heaven regard less
of what they believe.
The others things visibly hurting
the church are divisions that stem from racial bigotry, heresies that grow out
of Biblical ignorance, personality cults that celebrate human achievement,
compromise with pagan valves in sexual and marital matters. All these give the
church a clinical rating that ranks with some of the sickest persons in an
intensive care ward. These problems
weaken the church’s mission, but what debilitates the church more is the
neglect of spiritual gifts in the body of Christ. The situation in thousands of
assemblies and gatherings is literally tragic. It is sad, despite Christ’s
strong warning. Matthew 25:14-30 speak
specifically to the tragedy that God’s people suffer when they do not make the
most of the gifts that God has given them. The story is in the parable of the
talents whose familiar theme is found in the text;
1)
the tragedy of abused accountability;
2)
the tragedy of missed opportunity; and
3)
the tragedy of lost joy.
No account of the discovery and
cultivation of our spiritual gifts can be complete if we fail to note the
damage done when those gifts are neglected.
The people in the parable are one key to its message: a master and three
servants. That relationship speaks of accountability. Servants must answer to
their master in all details of their life and work. We make a great mistake when
we mix our role with God’s; He sets the term of our work. He is in all things
the Master, our task is not to make the rules, but to obey by saying “yes” to
the rules He has already made.
Jesus began His parable thus: “For
it will be as when a man going on a journey called his servants and entrusted
to them his property to one he gave five talents, to another two to another
one, to each according to his ability. Then he went away. “(Matt. 25:14-15). Who decides who would get the five, the two
and the one? The master, of course, only he knew that servants well enough to
determine how much property each of them had ability to handle. There was no
squabble among them, no elbowing each other for the largest share, no
badgering the master for an extra talent. They recognized his right to decide.
They had no property of their own, nor any power to acquire it. Their share was
determined by His grace and by that grace alone. We are accountable to the Master’s
grace.
The master’s grace placed them
under obligation to make the best possible response. What they had not earned
or deserved had been put in their trust, their only acceptable answer was to
use it well. The Master of the Church gives these gifts of the Spirit to the Body
as expressions of His grace. We do not chose which gifts we receive or how
many. These matters are up to Him. Most importantly, we cannot chose not to use
what He has given us.
There is a purpose why He lavished
His grace upon us. This fact is made clear in the master’s rebuke of the
servants who had hid his own talent (matt 25:276-27). It tells us that God’s
grace in our lives is counted as an investment. It is not just to be conserved.
That was the wretched servant’s mistake. He did not realize that grace is a
seed to be planted for further growth. He did not understand that God’s
blessings are not for hoarding, but for multiplying as we put them to work in
the lives of others.
That servant could not plead
ignorance. He knew precisely how demanding the master was. But he misapplied
the knowledge that he had. He was defensive, not aggressive. He took no risks
in using the master’s grace and, in so doing, took the greatest risk of all; he
neglected his accountability to the master’s purpose.
The gifts of God’s, Holy Spirit
are precious and true. And the Lord of the Church demandingly wants them
treated as such. They are not like gold to be stored in Fort Knox, nor like
Rembrandts’ paintings to be hung in a well-guarded museum. They are fuel to be
converted into spiritual power, they are ore to be refined into useful tools,
and they are seedlings which will grow into fruitful trees.
The grace of God granted this
servant was an opportunity to expand and grow as a person; he missed all that
because he was fearful and unduly cautious. God gives more, when we use well what
we have. Part of the servant’s tragedy
was that he missed his opportunity for greater blessings. The Master’s command
was harsh; “Take the talent” he said “from him, and give it him who has will
more be given, and he will have abundance, but from him who has not, even what
he has will be taken away” (Matt 25:28-29).
The greatest responsibilities, the
larger privilege, the expanded service, the enhanced growth, all of these
chances were missed because the servant misread his master’s instructions. Sadly
he lost the chance he had; so his single talent had to be forfeited. Unused gifts may lead to disqualification
from God’s service. Who dare take lightly any spiritual gift bestowed upon us
by the risen Lord Jesus. He is Lord of
all. Wisdom demands that we discover what gifts God has given us and to diligently
use them in full submission to Him. It is not about doing things for God or
being active, busy and involved. Rather
it is about letting God do things through us. Let us not cripple the Church and
turn the body of Christ into losers because the Holy Spirit gifts have not been
put to work for God’s purpose. Joy follows when we purposefully use our
spiritual gifts in service for Him. Let us therefore, walk humbly before our
God and be accountable to Him for the spiritual gifts we have received so far.
Monday, December 31, 2012
Reaching For the Life of God in Christ is to Know Him in Depth
To know
Christ in depth and to manifest Him in His fullness in our lives is the goal
for which we should aim. It is the high
price of the calling of God in Christ Jesus. It is not the ultimate of God, but
as we eat of His word, and digest the truth, then He will draw back the veil
and reveal more of the glory and beauty of the Christ. If you are of His fold,
you will hear and recognize His voice, and you will know that you are being
introduced to deeper truth.
Our
pursuit is after Christ, rather than knowledge just for the sake of knowledge. We
seek to know Him in His fullness, reaching for the life of God in His person. It is in Him that every limitation and
impossibility turns into possibility. There have always been men who walked in
a realm beyond the limitations of their time and generation. While most believers
feel that they have to settle for the status quo and even seem satisfied with
whatever is made available to their generation, there are some who are
spiritual pioneers, who reach beyond the general bench mark.
Enoch
was such as man for his generation. The
Bible says: “Enoch walked with God and he was not, for God took him.” (Genesis 5:24) It had been almost a thousand years since Adam
had walked with God in the garden. After the fall humankind had only promise of
death. The earth was filled with violence and the ungodliness of human kind was
a stench that reached to heaven. In the
midst of this, Enoch believed that he could reach beyond the limitations of his
generation and walk with God. Hebrews 11: 5 says that Enoch pleased God. It also
says that he was a man of faith, and by faith he was translated that he should
not see death. This was something unheard of in his generation and since then.
We
learn in Jude 14 that “Enoch prophesied, saying, “Behold, the Lord cometh with
ten thousand of his saints, to execute judgment upon all.” .“ Enoch was only
the seventh generation from Adam and he lived in a day when one can hardly find
half dozen saints, let alone ten thousand. Yet, he looks far beyond his own
day, and saw into the great day of the Lord when the saints of God would
execute a great victory over evil in the earth.
Today
our day is evil. A time of death, war,
famine, and pestilence will take the lives of millions. The outlook is very
dark. Even today those who know their God will do great things and break glass ceilings
sealed of our generation in spiritual exploit.
Noah had never heard Enoch’s prophesy. He had never heard Adam tell of
the wonders of the garden of Eden. He was born at a time when the wickedness of
humankind was so great it was causing God to repent that the He had ever made
them. There seemed no hope for humans. The word of the Lord had been spoken. “I
will destroy man whom I have created from the face of the earth.” Judgment seemed inevitable. Noah had no one
to encourage him in the way of righteousness, nor a five-fold ministry to help
perfect help.
Noah
would not settle for the lot of other humans. Genesis 6:8 says: “But Noah found grace in the
eyes of the Lord “. There have always
been those who stand out from of the world. This man was an outstanding
example. Ezekiel 14:14 lists him as one of the three who could deliver their souls
by their righteousness. Hebrew 11:7 says that Noah was a man of faith, and that
he believed the warning of God concerning things not seen as yet, and became an
heir of the righteousness which is by faith. And it was not only himself he was
interested is saving, but the Bible says that he prepared an ark, “to the
saving of his house” as well as the inhabitants of the beast realm.
Enoch
and Noah heard from God. They found grace
in the eyes of the Lord. They refused to
be held down to this realm of sin and judgment.
They pressed towards the work for the price of the high calling of God
in Christ Jesus. If you cannot receive
such a word, walk where you must, but let the pioneers of faith press on in
God. They cannot stop until, like Noah,
they step out into a new earth, full of the righteousness of God.
Elisha
was a young man, the son of a judge. He
was strong, husky and a hard worker. He
had a good future, and would have been able to have a nice farm and a nice
family. One day while he was plowing
with twelve yokes of oxen, and he with the twelfth, the prophet of God came by where
he was working and cast his mantle over the boy. His life was immediately changed. He had heard the call of God for a higher
calling. He left his oxen and began
reaching far beyond the limitation of humans.
Elijah
was the greatest prophet of that day, but he was very unpopular with the
government. In the natural wisdom it was
not an easy choice for Elisha to make.
But God had chosen wisely. He had
picked a man to succeed Elijah. This was
a large calling and required a man of daring faith. Elisha was that man. His ministry did not start in a blaze of
glory. He began by being a servant to
the man of God. He washed the dishes,
the clothes, and the prophet’s feet. He
carried the wood and built the fire and did all the other necessary, but menial
jobs while Elijah spent time seeking the face of God. This is where many men fail their
calling. When the ministry turns out to
be less than spectacular, they decide to go back together to something
else. But Elisha kept plugging ahead on
his way to the double portion God had for him.
If it took faithfulness, he would pay the price. Whatever it took, he had a spiritual stubbornness
that made him determined to go all the way.
He had heard from God. Nothing
else mattered.
Elisha
received no encouragement in following Elijah.
Everywhere he went the sons of the prophets tried to discourage
him. His answer was: “Hold your peace”. Even Elijah tested him, three times, but his
answer was always, “As the Lord liveth, and as thy soul liveth, I will not
leave thee”. There was none to encourage
him. All he had was his determination to
see this thing through and receive that which he felt belonged to him by virtue
of his calling in God. Finally, they
crossed Jordan. He had just seen a
tremendous miracle by the hand of the prophet.
It was time to get his inheritance.
The question comes: “Ask what I shall do for thee”.
Here
is Elisa, a young man standing with Elijah who had stood before King Ahab and
judged the nation of Israel. He is the
one who had spoken the word that withheld the rain for three and a half years,
and then had stood alone against 400 prophets of Baal and defeated them with a
mighty demonstration of the power of God.
Ask, says the prophet, and in response Elisha cried out, “I want twice
what you have from God”. He received twice
and so much of the life of God that he caused iron to float, poison pots to be
nutritious, the dead to be raised to life again, and the ditches to be filled with
water. He healed the leper, fed a
multitude on a few loaves of bread, and a handful of corn, and caused the widow’s
pot of oil to flow until her debts were paid.
At his word barren women brought forth sons, and he captured an entire
army single handedly. And when he
finally goes to be with the Lord, his body still has so much of the life of God
in it that a dead corpse that is accidently thrown in the grave on top of him
comes to life and goes running off.
Do you
think you can bankrupt heaven? Well,
think again. Think with the mind of the
Spirit, and come up with a heart full of faith.
Rise above your circumstances. Don’t
be bound to the limitations of your generation.
You don’t have to stand and stagnate in the status quo. You can reach into that which God hath prepared
for them that love Him.
To do
so you must pursue after Christ, know Him in His fullness; and every human
limitations will be turned into limitless possibilities. Reach for the life of God in Christ. There lies the double portion Elisha asked
for, and it is all in Christ. Go get it,
the beloved of God.
T
Cyprian Kia
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