church

  • "we have a knowledge of Jesus problem in America" ~ Dalton Thomas @ Ekballo #3

    In my last two posts Calvinism & missions? Indeed! Ekballo # 1: TULIP & prayer to the Lord of the harvest and "We're not on Christian cruise ships. We are on battleships." David Sitton @ Ekballo # 2," I blogged on the first two plenary talks given at the Ekballo Midwest Conference, held April 19-20, 2013:

    Scott Anderson's talk The Essential Nature of Prayer in the Gospel Mission found here:  http://youtu.be/fuA3p5X32sE

    David Sitton's talk Propel the Church, Harvest the Nations found here:  http://youtu.be/6JBqc29qmkA

    Today, I'd like to present the third and final plenary talk, "Martyrdom and the Eternal Purpose of the Church" given by Dalton Thomas.

    First off, in case you might be tempted to skip over Dalton Thomas' opening prayer, please don't! As you listen, you'll hear the humble and fiery heart and soul of a young man who loves Jesus and is sober-minded and vigilant, single-eyed for Christ, zealous for God's name, and seeking to bring glory to God. Thomas is 27 years old, and given that I'm over 50, I am supremely blessed and encouraged whenever I see God raising up such men and women in the next generation in this era when so many are at ease and complacent in Zion, a day of cheap grace, lukewarmness, and small things here in the West.

    Thomas' main text was Ephesians 3:7-13, but before he gets to the text, he prefaces it with the following words (boldface mine, throughout):

    The call to martyrdom is not the exaltation of death over life. It is the exaltation of Christ over all things... It's not the call to seek death, it's the call to seek Jesus. And the more that we find Him, the more that we find He is more valuable than life, and more valuable than what we lose in death. And so, the more we love Him, the more we love our lives less, and the more the task of global missions becomes very easy to lay hold of. I don't think we have a missions problem in America. I don't think we have an evangelism problem in America. I think we have a knowledge of Jesus problem in America.

    I can't express my delight at hearing these words; they are so very relevant. If you've been reading my blog for any length of time, you've heard the steady drumbeat of our need to be rooted in right doctrine.

    August_Müller_TagebucheintragAs Thomas introduces the main Scripture text, he says:

    This is the text we're gonna look at tonight -- Ephesians chapter 3, which you're probably thinking, "This is not a martyrdom passage." It is.

    . . . I do believe this is the most important statement in the Bible about the nature of the Church. Paul uses a phrase that we're gonna to look at tonight, that I think just needs to be contemplated for a couple decades, which is this phrase:  "the eternal purpose of God."

    Now tonight, before we look at this, you know, it would be interesting, if we passed around a piece of paper to everybody, and a pen, and said, "Write down your definition of the eternal purpose of God. Fold the paper up and send it up here, and we're gonna go through them." Everyone would give good, Biblical answers, Bible verses that stuck. But I found a number of years ago, when the Lord laid hold of me with this passage, I realized is that what I would have written is not even close to what Paul defined as the eternal purpose of God. I think in order for us to rightly reckon and apprehend the call to frontier missions, I think we need to have a perspective on the eternal purpose of God, lest we be disconnected from the center of it all.

     

    As you listen, see how your definition of the eternal purpose of God lines up with the Biblical definition, which the apostle Paul unfolds in Ephesians 3.

    WARNING:  Be prepared to have your head blown up –– but by that I mean blown up in a good way –– more particularly, to have your theology blown up, to have your understanding of God refined and purified and renewed and expanded –– I only say that because I felt like my own head was blowing up (in a good sense) as I first heard Dalton Thomas in person, and once again as I reviewed my notes on his talk a couple months ago, and then once more as I've relistened to the whole talk again over the past few days...

    http://youtu.be/47nP5JAqTxY - Dalton Thomas // Martyrdom and the Eternal Purpose of the Church

    Holy Spirit, You are the Spirit of truth. We confess we have a knowledge of Jesus problem in the Church in America, as well as in our own souls. How can we know God as we ought, how can we love God as we ought, how can we serve God as we ought, how can we live to God as we ought, how can we die for God as we ought, how can we glorify God as we ought –– unless we know the truth about God? Our adversary, the devil, is a deceiver. He is a liar and the father of lies. He transforms himself into an angel of light. He wants to keep us from knowing the truth and loving the truth. Holy God, be merciful and gracious to us, and pour out Your Holy Spirit to lead us into all truth. Apart from Your opening our eyes, we have no genuine spiritual sight of You and of Your truth. Your Word is right and pure and true. As we read, listen to, meditate upon, and study Your Word, sanctify and cleanse us. Blow up any false, incorrect, impure, and faulty theological understandings we might be clinging to. Blow up any false, incorrect, impure, and faulty theological underpinnings we may be building upon. Lead us into all truth for the sake of Your blessed name, so we might be a delight and a joy to You, and bring praise, honor and glory to You throughout all the earth. Amen.

    ecclesia reformata semper reformanda secundum verbum Dei

    [the church reformed, always being reformed, according to the word of God]


     

    Photo credits:

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  • with one accord in prayer & supplication: "No other course has been prescribed" ~ George Smeaton


    Luke 24:49  And, behold, I send the promise of my Father upon you: but tarry ye in the city of Jerusalem, until ye be endued with power from on high...

    Acts 1:4  And, being assembled together with them, commanded them that they should not depart from Jerusalem, but wait for the promise of the Father, which, saith he, ye have heard of me. 5  For John truly baptized with water; but ye shall be baptized with the Holy Ghost not many days hence.

    Today is the celebration of Pentecost Sunday, the day on which the Lord Jesus Christ fulfilled His word to send the promise of the Father –– the day when He baptized His people with the Holy Spirit and with fire. Though the Church's understanding was lacking and deficient in some ways at that time, e.g. - her query to Jesus as to whether He was going to restore the Kingdom to Israel at that time (Acts 1:6) –– (and it's all too tempting for us to point fingers at them, isn't it?) –– yet these first century saints had a knowledge that many of us lack today... they were fully persuaded that without power from above, they could do nothing!

    The early Church had been clearly impressed with the vital necessity to tarry in Jerusalem just as Jesus commanded. They had been humbled; they had been brought to see and to own their total insufficiency, and accordingly their need to receive the gift of the promised Holy Spirit. For those ten days between Jesus' Ascension and Pentecost, the 120 were in one accord in prayer and supplication:  the Bride of Christ was "leaning upon her Beloved!"

    Even though some of these disciples had had intimate fellowship with Jesus, even though many of them had walked with Jesus and learned from Him and of Him for a period of three years, yet each and every one of them had come to understand they were ill-equipped for the commission Christ had given them – to go and make disciples of all nations. Therefore, they fully obeyed Jesus' command to wait:  they did tarry in Jerusalem, and they did continue in prayer (imagine a ten-day round-the-clock prayer meeting at your church?!) –– until the blessing was poured out –– until they were baptized with the blessed Holy Spirit.

    O! that we in the Church today might have a Spirit-imparted sense of our total insufficiency and our poverty and our need to receive the outpouring of the Spirit as did they, so we might persevere with one accord in prayer and supplication as did they!  Luke 11:13 "If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will the heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him!"

    Martyn Lloyd-Jones reminds us:

     

    "There is only one sense in which what happened on the day of Pentecost cannot be repeated and that is simply that it did happen to be the first of a series. And, of course, you cannot repeat the first. But the fact that you cannot repeat the first does not mean for a moment that what happened on the first occasion cannot happen again. And every revival of religion, I say, is really a repetition of what happened on the day of Pentecost. It is really almost incredible that people should go on saying that what happened at Pentecost was once and for all."

    ~ from Chapter 16 (What Happens in Revival) in "Revival" (Wheaton: Crossway, 1987), 199-200.

     

    The following is an excerpt from George Smeaton's "The Doctrine of the Holy Spirit" (orig. published 1882, second edition 1889; Fourth Banner of Truth Trust reprint 1997), pages 287-290...

    As to the peculiar mode of praying, we may say that in every season of general awakening the Christian community waits just as they waited for the effusion of the Spirit, with one accord in prayer and supplication, in the interval between the Ascension and Pentecost. No other course has been prescribed; and the Church of the present has all the warrant she ever had to wait, expect, and, pray. The first disciples waited in the youthfulness of simple hope, not for a spirit which they had not, but for more of the Spirit which they had; and Christianity has not outlived itself.  Ten days they waited with one accord in prayer, when of a sudden the Spirit came to give them spiritual eyes to apprehend divine things as they never knew them before, and to impart a joy which no man could take from them. It was prayer IN THE SPIRIT (Eph. vi. 18), and prayer FOR THE SPIRIT, the great promise of the Father. But the prayer which brought down the Holy Ghost was not that style of petition which ceases if it is not heard at once or if the heart is out of tune. The prayer which prevails with Him who gives the Spirit is that which will not let go without the blessing. When the spirit of extraordinary supplication is poured out from on high,––when an ardent desire is cherished for the Holy Ghost,––when the Church asks according to God’s riches in glory, and expects such great things as God’s promises warrant and Christ’s merits can procure, the time to favour Zion, the set time, is come (Ps. cii. 16-18).  When we look at the prayers in Scripture, we find that God’s glory, the Church’s growth and welfare, her holiness and progress, were ever higher in the thoughts and breathings of the saints than personal considerations (Ps. lxvii. 1-7). And if we are animated with any other frame of mind, it is not prayer taught by the Spirit, nor offered up in the name of Christ (Isa. lxii. 1-7).

    The praying attitude of the Church in the first days after the Ascension, when the disciples waited for the Spirit, should be the Church's attitude still. I need not refer to the copious references of the apostles to the urgent duty of praying in the Spirit and praying for the Spirit, nor shall I refer at large to the habits of all true labourers, such as Luther, Welsh, Whitefield, and others, in proof of the great truth that prayer is the main work of a ministry.  And no more mischievous and misleading theory could be propounded, nor any one more dishonouring to the Holy Spirit, than the principle adopted by the Plymouth Brethren, that because the Spirit was poured out at Pentecost, the Church has no need, and no warrant, to pray any more for the effusion of the Spirit of God. On the contrary, the more the Church asks the Spirit ¹ and waits for His communication, the more she receives. ²  The prayer of faith in one incessant cry comes up from the earth in support of the efforts put forth for the conversion of a people ready to perish. This prayer goes before and follows after all the calls to repentance. The company of labourers associated together in such work, come to feel as they proceed that they are encircled with a mighty power, and have an authority not their own. The interest taken in the work of advancing the Redeemer’s Kingdom thus has much of a personal concern, and is far elevated above the vague and pointless efforts of mere official routine.

    The apostles, in their various Epistles, when referring to their own unceasing exercise of prayer, hold up the mirror to others; and never do men more realize than in a time of revival that in all their previous career they have been scarcely half-awake. In such a time the conviction is borne home upon them that no fitful exercise of prayer will avail to obtain the blessing. And their purpose, as they seek to take the kingdom by force, is to do violence to the lethargy and disinclination of nature, and to act as the Lord's remembrancers, who keep not silence and give Him no rest, till He establish Jerusalem and make her a praise in the earth.

    ____________

    ¹ As I do not deem it proper to exceed the limits of the required six lectures; I would take occasion to direct attention to the great work of [John] OWEN, The Work of the Holy Ghost in Prayer, and also to [William] GURNALL'S discussion of the same theme in The Christian in Complete Armour.

    ² A remarkable passage on prayer, and on working by the power of prayer, occurs in [John] Foster's essay on the application of the epithet “Romantic:" [in Essays in a Series of Letters, published in 1826] “I am convinced,” says he, “that every man who, amidst his serious projects, is apprised of his dependence on God, as completely as that dependence is a fact, will be impelled to prey, and anxious to induce his serious friends to pray, almost every hour. He will as little without it promise himself any noble success, as a mariner would expect to reach a distant coast by having his sails spread in a stagnation of air. I have intimated my fear that it is visionary to expect any unusual success in the human administration of religion unless there are unusual omens; now a most emphatical spirit of prayer would be such an omen; and the individual who should solemnly determine to try its last possible efficacy, might probably find himself becoming a much more prevailing agent in his little sphere. And  if the whole, or the greater number of the disciples of Christianity were, with an earnest, unalterable determination of each to combine that heaven should not withhold one single influence, which the very utmost of conspiring and persevering supplication would obtain, it would be the sign that a revolution of the world was at hand."

    * * *

    Instead of following the latest worldly trends, instead of implementing 21st century solutions, and instead of leaning upon our own power, let us give due glory and honor to the Godhead by returning to the Scripture, by returning to the apostolic doctrine, and by returning to the apostolic practice of full reliance upon the Holy Spirit of God by prevailing in prayer and not letting go until we receive the blessing of the Holy Spirit pouring down from on high in reviving fire!

    Let us repent and return to the Lord with weeping, and seek the Lord of hosts and entreat the Lord, and wrestle with Him in unceasing prayer and wait for our God, that He might pour down His favor upon us –– to pour out His Holy Spirit upon us –– just as He did for the saints of old... because, as George Smeaton reminds us, "no other course has been prescribed."

    The mirror is being held up to us today, my brothers and sisters... May God have mercy upon us, and may the Spirit give us an ear to hear what these examples in the Bible and throughout Church history have to say to us today, so we might be found faithful in prayer along with the great cloud of remembrancers... for we have the warrant "to wait, expect, and, pray" for more of the Holy Spirit.

    Luke 18:1  And he spake a parable unto them to this end, that men ought always to pray, and not to faint; 2  Saying, There was in a city a judge, which feared not God, neither regarded man: 3  And there was a widow in that city; and she came unto him, saying, Avenge me of mine adversary. 4  And he would not for a while: but afterward he said within himself, Though I fear not God, nor regard man; 5  Yet because this widow troubleth me, I will avenge her, lest by her continual coming she weary me. 6  And the Lord said, Hear what the unjust judge saith. 7  And shall not God avenge his own elect, which cry day and night unto him, though he bear long with them? 8  I tell you that he will avenge them speedily. Nevertheless when the Son of man cometh, shall he find faith on the earth?

    I Corinthians 10:11  Now all these things happened unto them for ensamples: and they are written for our admonition, upon whom the ends of the world are come. 12  Wherefore let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.

    Hosea 12
    3  In the womb he [Jacob] took his brother by the heel,
    and in his manhood he strove with God.
    4  He strove with the angel and prevailed;
    he wept and sought his favor.
    He met God at Bethel,
    and there God spoke with us—
    5  the LORD, the God of hosts,
    the LORD is his memorial name:
    6  “So you, by the help of your God, return,
    hold fast to love and justice,
    and wait continually for your God.”
    (ESV)

    Acts 1
    14  These all continued with one accord in prayer and supplication,
    with the women, and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brethren...

    Acts 2
    1  And when the day of Pentecost was fully come,
    they were all with one accord in one place.
    2  And suddenly there came a sound from heaven
    as of a rushing mighty wind,
    and it filled all the house where they were sitting.
    3  And there appeared unto them cloven tongues like as of fire,
    and it sat upon each of them.
    4  And they were all filled with the Holy Ghost,
    and began to speak with other tongues,
    as the Spirit gave them utterance.


    Related posts...



    Scripture quotations unless otherwise indicated are taken from the King James Version of the Holy Bible.

    Scripture quotations marked ESV are taken from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version. Copyright ©2001 by Crossway Bibles, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved. Emphasis mine.

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  • Phinehas's wife: the mother who opened her mouth with wisdom

    I Samuel 4:19 Now his [Eli's] daughter-in-law, Phinehas’s wife, was with child, due to be delivered; and when she heard the news that the ark of God was captured, and that her father-in-law and her husband were dead, she bowed herself and gave birth, for her labor pains came upon her. 20 And about the time of her death the women who stood by her said to her, “Do not fear, for you have borne a son.” But she did not answer, nor did she regard it. 21 Then she named the child Ichabod, saying, “The glory has departed from Israel!” because the ark of God had been captured and because of her father-in-law and her husband. 22 And she said, “The glory has departed from Israel, for the ark of God has been captured.”

    (Before moving on, a little note here regarding Phinehas's wife's words: "The glory has departed from Israel..." If we look at the behavior of the Israel and the leaders of Israel prior to the Philistines capturing the ark, we can't help but see that the glory of God had already begun to depart from Israel prior to that time (e.g. - Eli was the high priest and he had not restrained his sons, Hophni and Phinehas. We read In I Samuel 2:12 they were "corrupt" –– the literal rendering there is "sons of Belial." Both men burned with fleshly appetites for food, for power, and for sex ~ see I Samuel 2:12-17, 22-36; 3:11-17).)

    Phinehas's wife grieved the loss of her husband and her father-in-law, and yet what loss did she most grieve?

    “The glory has departed from Israel!”

    We certainly would expect Phinehas's wife to find some degree of comfort in the gift of her newborn child, particularly since it was a son, and male children were prized highly in Jewish culture. If you've been privileged to give birth to a child, you know that it's almost imaginable that she gave no response whatsoever to the women who reported the birth. It's wasn't that she had no words to say at all at the time, mind you. But what words were on her lips that day? What burden was pressing so strongly on her heart that day that she took no consolation in the birth of her son?

    “The glory has departed from Israel!”

    In Luke 6, the Lord Jesus Christ reminds us:

    43 “For a good tree does not bear bad fruit, nor does a bad tree bear good fruit. 44 For every tree is known by its own fruit. For men do not gather figs from thorns, nor do they gather grapes from a bramble bush. 45 A good man out of the good treasure of his heart brings forth good; and an evil man out of the evil treasure of his heart brings forth evil. For out of the abundance of the heart his mouth speaks.

    "I-chabod!" - She opened her mouth with wisdom

    Phinehas's wife's heart indeed overflowed with her burden for the glory of God to be made manifest once again in Israel. She cried out "Ichabod!" ~ literally meaning "no glory" or "inglorious." We lose something by not looking at the King James Version rendering of it:  "I-chabod." Most of you are familiar with the Hebrew word for glory, "kabod," well, there we have it:  the prefix iy ("not") and the root word kabowd ("glory"). These Biblical terms mean something. God forbid we traipse through the Word of God in a lazy and slipshod manner! Isaiah 66:2. John Piper reminds us, we need get gnawing and put our noses down into the Book and to linger, linger, linger there. How else will we be wise, complete and thoroughly equipped for every good work (II Tim. 3:15-17)?

    Matthew Henry rightly expounds Phinehas's wife's cry of "I-chabod" as: "Where is the glory? Or, Alas for the glory! or, There is no glory."  Christian, is this your heart's burden today? Have you looked around at the Church of God, or have you ever looked at your own life –– and seen that the glory of God has departed? Have you ever cried out: "Where is the glory?" Or, "Alas for the glory!" or, "There is no glory!" What regularly burdens you and fills up your heart? What sort of fruit is flowing out of the abundance of your heart in your conversation and in your prayers? When was the last time you wept over the current low state of the Church and your own pygmy state as you see the great lack in comparison with the saints in the book of Acts and the saints throughout Church history – and cried out with Oswald Chambers: "... if what I had was all the Christianity there was, the thing was a fraud," and then pleaded with importunity for the Church and for yourself... along with the Lord Jesus Christ who always lives to make intercession for the saints?

    When we come around to Mother's Day, Proverbs 31 is often cited as presenting to us the image of the godly woman... I'd say that verse 26a describes Phinehas's wife:

    She opens her mouth with wisdom...

    Phinehas's wife had received wisdom and insight from above (flesh and blood had not revealed it to her...). Though the circumstances weren't identical, her response reminded me of the the Shulamite woman who had become lovesick at the prospect of the Beloved withdrawing Himself. Phinehas's wife grieved that the glory of the LORD had departed and that the LORD was no longer shining His face but rather was turning His back and hiding His face from Israel.

    Song of Solomon 5
    2 I sleep, but my heart is awake;
    It is the voice of my beloved!
    He knocks, saying,
    “Open for me, my sister, my love,
    My dove, my perfect one;
    For my head is covered with dew,
    My locks with the drops of the night.”
    3 I have taken off my robe;
    How can I put it on again?
    I have washed my feet;
    How can I defile them?
    4 My beloved put his hand
    By the latch of the door,
    And my heart yearned for him.
    5 I arose to open for my beloved,
    And my hands dripped with myrrh,
    My fingers with liquid myrrh,
    On the handles of the lock.

    6 I opened for my beloved,
    But my beloved had turned away and was gone.
    My heart leaped up when he spoke.
    I sought him, but I could not find him;
    I called him, but he gave me no answer.
    7 The watchmen who went about the city found me.
    They struck me, they wounded me;
    The keepers of the walls
    Took my veil away from me.
    8 I charge you, O daughters of Jerusalem,
    If you find my beloved,
    That you tell him I am lovesick!

    9 What is your beloved
    More than another beloved,
    O fairest among women?
    What is your beloved
    More than another beloved,
    That you so charge us?

    Phinehas's wife had begun to know and to treasure the Beloved more than any other beloved (including her own family members), so she mourned that the glory of the LORD had departed, and she sought the presence and the blessing of the Beloved above all things –– even above her own family –– above the loss of her father-in-law and husband, and above the gain of her dear newborn son! –– Hence we hear her repeated heart's cry as she neared death:

    “The glory has departed from Israel!”

    Since her soul's ultimate happiness was bundled up in the return of God's shining face upon Israel, because God's glory had departed from Israel, how could she do anything less than cry out that...

    “The glory has departed from Israel!”

    It's not clear who else was mourning along with Phinehas's wife during this time, but we don't see all the house of Israel lamenting after the LORD and repenting and returning to the LORD until over twenty years after this time (I Samuel 7:2).

    How many of us Christian mothers have any such concern for the current state of the Christian Church as Phinehas's wife had? What burdens our hearts regularly?

    As we examine the content of our prayers, do we find that we make prayer for Him continually? (Psalm 72) How often do we pray for the the Lord to rend the heavens and come down (Isaiah 64)? How often do we pray for the God of hosts to return and visit this vine and revive us so we will call upon His name? (Psalm 80) How often do we pray for the earth to be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea? (Habakkuk 2) Do we pray for God to be merciful to us and bless us, and cause His face to shine upon us, that His way may be known on earth, and salvation among all nations, that all the peoples might praise Him, and the nations would be glad and sing for joy! (Psalm 67)?

    Or, do we find our prayers are limited and narrow and for the most part insular because we ourselves are mostly insular –– primarily focused on our own needs and our own family's needs –– showing we have little to no real love and desire for Christ and His Church and the cause of Christ throughout the world?

    As we look out at the state of the Church today, ought we not be lamenting after the LORD like Phinehas's wife? Ought we not be weeping like Jeremiah?

    Jeremiah 8:21
    For the hurt of the daughter of my people I am hurt.
    I am mourning;
    Astonishment has taken hold of me.

    If we are Christ's, we have been born again of the Spirit, and our citizenship is in heaven. We're to be renewed in our minds, and we're commanded to set our minds on things above. The content of our prayers shows if our profession of faith is a true profession.... he who is of the earth is earthly and speaks of the earth - John 3:31b. "He that is of the earth is of the earth; he that has his origin of the earth has his food out of the earth, has his converse with earthly things, and his concern is for them..." (Matthew Henry's Complete Commentary on John 3).

    Are we wise – or do we not know the difference between the shining and the hiding of His face?

    Are we wise, or are we like the Laodicean church:  do we not know that we have become lukewarm and complacent with our current state? Do we not know that God is hiding His face today? (More on this below.) Do we not know that as we have relied upon our own abilities and earthly means, we have grieved, quenched, and limited the Holy Spirit of God, so that the glory of God has all but departed from us here in these early days of the 21st century? Do we not know that we are wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and naked? May we have ears to hear! May the Lord grant to us the wisdom, discernment and insight that He gave to Phinehas's wife!

    Revelation 3:14 “And to the angel of the church of the Laodiceans write,

    ‘These things says the Amen, the Faithful and True Witness, the Beginning of the creation of God: 15 “I know your works, that you are neither cold nor hot. I could wish you were cold or hot. 16 So then, because you are lukewarm, and neither cold nor hot, I will vomit you out of My mouth. 17 Because you say, ‘I am rich, have become wealthy, and have need of nothing’—and do not know that you are wretched, miserable, poor, blind, and naked— 18 I counsel you to buy from Me gold refined in the fire, that you may be rich; and white garments, that you may be clothed, that the shame of your nakedness may not be revealed; and anoint your eyes with eye salve, that you may see. 19 As many as I love, I rebuke and chasten. Therefore be zealous and repent. 20 Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears My voice and opens the door, I will come in to him and dine with him, and he with Me. 21 To him who overcomes I will grant to sit with Me on My throne, as I also overcame and sat down with My Father on His throne.

    22 “He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.”

    How dead wrong we can be about our true spiritual condition! We can go along day after day and not know! We can go along year after year and not know! And how easily can the Glory of the Lord and the Presence of God slip away without our knowing! That's a frightening thought, isn't it? But that very same thing happened to Samson...

    Judges 16:19 Then she [Delilah] lulled him to sleep on her knees, and called for a man and had him shave off the seven locks of his head. Then she began to torment him, and his strength left him. 20 And she said, “The Philistines are upon you, Samson!” So he awoke from his sleep, and said, “I will go out as before, at other times, and shake myself free!” But he did not know that the Lord had departed from him.

    The apostle Paul reminds us that these things are examples to us, written for our admonition; "therefore let him who thinks he stands take heed lest he fall"  ... (see I Cor. 10:1-22) ...Let us who think we stand, take heed lest we fall!

    Samson thought himself to be awake, did he not? During the time of Eli, Hophni and Phinehas, Israel thought herself to be awake, did they not? And even in early days of the New Testament Church, the members of the Church of Laodicea thought themselves to be awake, did they not? How each one of us must always be on guard against such deadly, false presumption!

    "If God go, the glory goes, and all good goes. Woe unto us if he depart!"
    (Matthew Henry Complete Commentary on I Samuel 4)

    In his commentary on Judges 16 (Delilah's Treachery & Samson Betrayed), Matthew Henry makes the application to us and gives us these solemn warnings (emphasis mine):

    "See the fatal effects of false security. Satan ruins men by flattering them into a good opinion of their own safety, and so bringing them to mind nothing, and fear nothing; and then he robs them of their strength and honour, and leads them captive at his will. When we sleep our spiritual enemies do not."  (Matthew Henry's Concise Commentary)

    "Note, Many have lost the favourable presence of God and are not aware of it; they have provoked God to withdraw from them, but are not sensible of their loss, nor ever complain of it. Their souls languish and grow weak, their gifts wither, every thing goes cross with them; and yet they impute not this to the right cause: they are not aware that God has departed from them, nor are they in any care to reconcile themselves to him or to recover his favour." (Matthew Henry's Complete Commentary)

    I'd like to leave you with a few excerpts from "John Elias: Life, Letters and Essays" by Edward Morgan (Edinburgh: Banner of Truth, 1973, revised edition published in one volume, emphasis mine)...

    First, here's John Elias (1774-1841) describing the I-chabod and sleeping state of the Church in the 19th century:

    It is a dark night on the Church, the depth of winter, when she is sleepy and ready to die, and the Lord is hiding his face in the ordinances, and when only a few are crying out for his appearance, and those scarcely audible in their call! It is still more awful, if while they are asleep they should think themselves awake, and imagine that they see the sun at midnight. Yet such are the circumstances of the Church generally. Yea, the darkness of night I say, is upon her, and she is slumbering, having lost the presence of her Lord, and so unhappy as not to know the loss she has sustained! (241-242 - please see my post here)

    When I talk with other Christians about God's withdrawals and His hiding His face, many are not at all familiar with that language, and they often look askance at me –– but it is Biblical language, and it is also the language of saints like Matthew Henry and John Elias who labored in prayer to seek the reviving breath of the Holy Spirit to breathe upon the bones that were very many and were very dry! Here's Elias again:

    O brethren, be not easy without his presence! I believe that some of you know the difference between the shining of his countenance and every other thing. I often fear that many are now in the churches that know no difference between the hiding and the shining of his countenance. O be not satisfied with any thing instead of him - fluency, or any gift in prayer, or preaching! His countenance pre-eminently excels all things as to light, strength virtue, fruit and the consequences hereafter. It extracts the heart out of the creature, and draws the soul heavenward. It conveys the affections to the things where Christ sits, it causes the traffic of the soul to be in heaven, seeking a better country than any here below. They are made pilgrims here, their treasure and home being in the heavenly world. (271)

    Like the Psalmists, may we press on and not be satisfied with any thing instead of Him... instead of the Glory!

    Psalm 63
    1 O God, You are my God;
    Early will I seek You;
    My soul thirsts for You;
    My flesh longs for You
    In a dry and thirsty land
    Where there is no water.
    2 So I have looked for You in the sanctuary,
    To see Your power and Your glory.

    Would we even think of praying for reformation and revival if we do not know the difference between the hiding and the shining of God's countenance? If we presume God's face is always shining, if we don't have eyes to see it truly is a dark night on the Church, would we ever cry out with Phinehas's wife: “The glory has departed from Israel!” –– and why would we bother to pray for God's face to shine again, if we think all is bright and God has not withdrawn and He is not hiding His countenance?

    You may be wondering how specifically I might consider that the glory of the Lord has departed in this day and age... I've written previously about that, but I think John Elias describes our current state much better than I could –– even though Elias was born over 200 years ago! As you read this except, I think you'll have to agree that there is nothing new under the sun! Edward Morgan begins...

    ‘Ministers’, says Elias in another letter, ‘seem often satisfied with having freedom to speak, and seeing many hearing them with attention and delight; but alas, without experiencing the effects of the power promised to attend the ministry of the gospel, the power necessary to produce a saving change in the sinner! The people too are content with an eloquent discourse, sweet voice, and melodious accents, or the gifts of the preacher; without experiencing, or seeking to experience, greater things than such as are human through the ministry.’

    It is thought that the influences of the Spirit are not so powerful, and that piety is not so deep in the church now as in former days, though its members are more numerous. It is feared that professors are more light and worldly. Elias, even in his last illness, when writing the outlines of his own life, espied in the [Welsh Calvinistic Methodist] Connexion he so much loved, some evils of this nature, and felt most anxious that they should be removed. Comparing the spiritual state of the Connexion at present, with what it was in former times, he thus expresses the sympathizing emotions of his mind:

    The cause does not appear to be so flourishing as it used to be, in spiritual matters, which is the very life of religion. The light, power and authority formerly experienced under the ministry of the Word, are not known these days. The ministry neither alarms, terrifies, nor disturbs the thousands of ungodly persons who sit under it. A great many of those who attend the religious societies are personally unacquainted with their state before God; nor do the churches know what they are. And what is worse, they are willing to be without knowledge. It is difficult to judge by the fruits of hundreds of professors that they are godly! There are signs of worldly-mindedness in many of the aged. In others there is a lack of principle in doing righteousness. The young people conform to this world, following its ways and foolish fashions. Others delight in wrangling disputes, and foolish and unprofitable questions. Servant-men are high-minded and disobedient, with few ‘doing service as to the Lord’. There is a multitude of mixed people in the army, lusting after the things of Egypt - hankering after the expressions and the baser things of other denominations and religious parties. They delight in swimming in the stream of the spirit of the age in things political and religious. They are unlike our fathers of old. [Daniel] Rowland, [Howell] Harris, and other renowned fathers, and the late Rev T. Charles, would not know or acknowledge them as belonging to their family, nor to the congregations gathered by the Lord through their indefatigable labours in Wales, and in some of the towns in England. No experimental, thoughtful Christian can deny that God has withdrawn himself from us, as to the particular operations of his Spirit and the especial manifestation of his grace. Is not this a proof of it, that thousands of the ungodly hear the Word unconcerned and without trembling? Another proof is that so few that profess godliness have any assurance of hope, and have no experience of the joy of salvation. There is but little thirst for the gracious and powerful visitations of God; and also, the prayers for these blessings are weak and cold! There are many who, in their attitudes, cannot have communion with God whilst they continue in them. If people want God’s presence as the early fathers of the Connexion were blessed with it, let them take care that they be of the same principle, under the guidance of the same Spirit, and walking in the same pathways, ‘seeking not their own things, but the things of Jesus Christ’. Philippians 2.21. My day in this world is near ending; I am almost at my journey’s end. I have been for months confined to my room, under ‘light affliction’. (136-138)

    As Elias's day in this world was near ending, he expressed the very same cry Phinehas's wife did as her day in this world was near ending:

    “The glory has departed from Israel!”

    As many of you know, I love reading Christian biography, and I'd have to say the Elias book is one of my favorites, for in it we find Elias's continued exhortations to the people of God to be seeking the Lord and praying for the Lord to shine His face upon His Church once again. I'd like to close with one of those exhortations:

    Strive in particular, brethren, for much of the Lord’s countenance in the means and ordinances of grace, especially in the church. It is but a dark and dismal night everywhere that is destitute of the light of his countenance. His reconciled face in Christ is our delightful sun. So, when the children of this world are mad for earthly things, and cry out, ‘Who will shew us any good?’ but are disappointed everywhere, we shall be calm and call on the Lord most high in prayer often, saying, ‘Lord, lift up the light of thy countenance upon us, and we shall be whole.’ (270-271)

    May we who are no longer children of this world open our mouths with wisdom, and call on the Lord most high in prayer often, saying, ‘Lord, lift up the light of thy countenance upon us, and we shall be whole.’ Psalm 80.

    For the reviving of Christ's Church, for the joy of all nations, for sake of God's name,
    Karen

     



    Related posts...

    on praying for revival:

    on Mother's Day:

    on family:

    on John Elias:

    Scripture quotations unless otherwise indicated are taken from the New King James Version. Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc. Used by permission. All rights reserved.

    Work found at http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/File:A.Cortina_El_sue%C3%B1o.jpg / {{PD-Art|PD-old-100}}.

     

About me...

Christian hedonist in training. Pressing on to know more and more of the joy of the LORD. Pleading with God to rend the heavens and revive and refresh my own soul, as well as His Church, to His praise, honor and glory.

Thank God. He can make men and women in middle life sing again with a joy that has been chastened by a memory of their past failures. ~ Alan Redpath

My other websites

tent of meeting: Prayer for reformation & revival

(See also Zechariah821. Zechariah821 is a mirror site of tent of meeting, found on WordPress)

deerlifetrumpet: Encouragement for those seeking reformation & revival in the Church

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