Chapter One
Stationed at the Gates
"Others save with fear, pulling
them out of the fire..."
(Jude 23).
I was dancing around in a living room of people
I hardly knew, because there was no way I could sit still! My ministry was
finished at a mainline denominational church camp, and I was feeling quite
pleased with myself. For the first time in months I didn't feel "wrung
out." Often I would return from weekend meetings absolutely exhausted. Sue,
my wife, would meet me at the airport, drive me home and put me into bed. But
this weekend had been quite different. These people had not been to the Squeeze
the Preacher school, and had let me off with an amazing three meetings in
the whole weekend. Now the camp was over and I was being shown my lodging for
the Sunday night.
After seeing my room I made my way to an upstairs
living room. The view was magnificent. Through the large window I gazed at the
harbor below and watched as the sun seemed to dance on the water. I sat down in
an armchair and took a look around. A footstool, the view, a large television, a
stereo...and now the hostess entered the room with a cup of hot chocolate and a
plate full of fresh home baking. This place was made for Comfort. Ease
consumed me. I reached out to take one of the offered goodies when suddenly,
much to my shock and the surprise of the woman, I jumped out of my seat like a
frog on a blistering hot-plate. I turned around to see a yellow and black bee
crawling around the seat of the armchair. I had been squarely stung on the
hindermost part! I was in too much pain to be overly embarrassed. As I
jumped about the room, my only consolation was the thought, "There's got to
be a sermon in this." Some years before, I had prayed a most dangerous
prayer. I asked the Lord to cause things to happen in my life which I could use
as sermon illustrations. At this point of time I regretted that request.
However, it wasn't long until I saw the application. I
am convinced that God wants the complacent Laodicean Church to rise up on its
feet! For too long we have sat in ease and comfort. We have sat back in
affluence and said, "I am rich, and have need of nothing," and if it
takes the sting of God's chastening hand to cause the Church to stand upright,
may it come quickly. Charles Spurgeon said, "God save us from living in
comfort while sinners are sinking into Hell!" Whitefield said, "The
Christian world is in a deep sleep; nothing but a loud shout can awaken them out
of it!" Catherine Booth, the gentle co-founder of the Salvation Army,
regarding church buildings said, "A barracks is meant to be a place where
real soldiers were to be fed and equipped for war, not a place to settle down in
or as a comfortable snuggery in which to enjoy ourselves. I hope that if ever
they, our soldiers, do settle down God will burn their barracks over their
heads!"
The Withered Hand
In Luke Chapter 6, the religious leaders were seeking
an accusation against Jesus. We pick up the story in verse 6:
"On another Sabbath He went into the
Synagogue and was teaching, and a man was there whose right hand was withered.
The Pharisees and the teachers of the Law were looking for a reason to accuse
Jesus, so they watched Him closely to see if He would heal on the Sabbath. But
Jesus knew what they were thinking and said to the man with the withered hand,
`Get up and stand in front of everyone.' So he got up and stood there. Then
Jesus said to them, `I ask you, which is lawful on the Sabbath: to do good or
to do evil, to save life or to destroy it?'
"He looked around at them all, and then said to
the man, `Stretch out your hand.' He did so and his hand was completely
restored. But they were furious and began to discuss with one another what
they might do to Jesus."
According to the Dallas Morning News (June 11, 1994)
68% of professing Christians outside of the "Bible Belt" don't see
evangelism as being the number one priority of the Church. In the same year, the
Barna Research Group found that among American adults who said they were
"born again," 75% couldn't even define the Great Commission. Think
about that for a moment. A survey in Christianity Today (a major evangelical
magazine), only 1% of their readership said that they had witnessed to someone
"recently." That means that 99% of their readership could say that
they were "hot" or "cold" when it comes to concern for the
fate of the ungodly. They were just "lukewarm." In 1992, over 3,000
churches from a mainline denomination didn't report even one soul saved in that
year.
The "right hand" of the Body of Christ is
withered. The hand, which is supposed to be moved with and by compassion, is
not pulling sinners from the fire, hating even the garments spotted by the flesh
(Jude 22-23). The Church is asleep in the light. we have lost sight of our
commission. The agenda, the plan of attack, the reason for the battle has been
lost under a cloud of apathy. The right hand of the Body of Christ hangs limp at
its side, but I am persuaded that God is saying, "Arise, stand forth in the
midst and stretch forth your hand." When this takes place, all of those who
are truly part of the Body will arise in urgent, militant, bold, zealous
evangelism. When we stand forth in the midst and stretch forth our hand we will
begin to see that glorious, spotless, victorious Church, Jesus is coming back
for. This is the fiery Church we see in the Book of Acts--a far cry from the
what we see in the Church of today.
We have become like a frog in a bowl of water. The
water has slowly been frozen, and the frog not able to detect the drop in
temperature, has remained in the water until it is trapped in ice. The
evangelical Church has become snared in the ice-cold grip of contemporary
traditionalism. It involves itself in everything but the purpose for which it
was established--to reach out to the lost with the Gospel of salvation. It has
neglect the Great Commission. It calls Jesus Lord, but has left Him standing at
its door and is in danger of being spewed out of His mouth. The old tongue in
cheek idiom "God's chosen frozen," may not be doctrinally sound.
Fight the Good Fight of Faith
When Paul wrote to Timothy, he wrote in military
terms--"Fight the good fight of faith," "Endure hardness as a
good soldier," etc. He wanted to remind Timothy that we are involved in a
battle, a conflict. We are a friend of God and therefore an enemy of the world.
It is time for the trumpet to give a certain sound that the Church will prepare
itself for battle. The Lord said to Israel, "And if you go to war in your
land against the enemy that oppresses you, then you shall blow an alarm with the
trumpets; and you shall be remembered before the Lord your God, and you shall be
saved from your enemies" (Numbers 10:9). We must sound the alarm to remind
the Church of the battle. Either we take hold of shield and buckler and fight
with the weapons God has issued, or we wither and die.
I love the structure of the Salvation Army, with its
barracks, soldiers, uniforms and its generals. General Booth formed that army of
fiery believers so that they should never forget that they were involved in
spiritual conflict. Satan has not declared peace with the Church, yet the Church
acts as if he has. Men of God such as C.H. Spurgeon never lost sight of the
spirit of militancy. In reference to inspired preaching he said, "Surely
there is no weapon so powerful as that which is taken from the armory of
inspiration." There will be no peace on this earth until the Prince of
Peace comes in power and great glory at the sound of the last trumpet, blown by
the very cavalry of Calvary. Then, peace will only come after God has judged the
rebels of Adam.
Like A Mighty Tortoise
Over the years, I have been trying to find out how many
within the Body of Christ are involved in personal witnessing, and have come up
with (by the showing of hands), the sad statistic of less than 10 percent. I
have asked, "How many of you can say before God that you have witnessed
verbally to more than 12 people over the past 12 months? That is, at least every
30 days or so somebody who is sitting in the shadow of death has heard the
Gospel of everlasting life from your lips?" I have found that only 8-12
percent will raise their hands. Where is the zeal? Jesus said, "But you
shall receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you shall
be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends
of the earth" (Acts 1:8, italics added). The Holy Spirit wasn't given
without purpose in mind. He was given that we might have power for the purpose
of being witnesses of Christ. So many profess to possess the power, yet where is
the evidence? It would seem that the fear of battle has left many a soldier
cringing in the barracks. They are afraid to let their light shine before men
because they know that men hate the light. Yet, it is a natural principle that
when light shines darkness flees. Darkness cannot overcome light. Try it. Switch
on some darkness and see if the light leaves, then try it the other way around.
"Gross darkness" only covers this earth because the Church has not
obeyed the admonition to "arise and shine."
Some years ago, a traditional church dropped
"Onward Christian Soldiers" from their song index because it made
reference to war. That's understandable for people who have never been born
again. War is that last thing on their minds. They are "peace makers"
meeting in a building which they think is the "church." They are not
born of the Spirit, so they live in a natural world. They are spiritually
insensitive because they are spiritually dead. The world may think there is
peace between man and God, but the Bible makes it clear that unregenerate man is
an enemy of God in his mind through wicked works, that anyone who is a friend of
the world is an enemy of God (Colossians 1:21, Romans 5:10, Romans 8:7 and James
4:4). Yet, many within the Church have lost sight of this important truth,
something evident by their passive lifestyle. We have become like the Dead Sea.
It is dead because it has water flowing into it, but no outlet. The water has
become so salty, a human being can't sink into it. Nothing lives in it, no one
can penetrate it...it seems that God made it as a type of the contemporary
Church.
Useless though it seems, the Dead Sea contains very
valuable minerals, which are waiting to be harvested. So does the modern Church.
It is a field which is white unto harvest, both for souls and for laborers.
Perhaps much of the Evangelical Church needs to consider dropping "Onward
Christian Soldiers" and replacing it with something more appropriate:
Backward Christian soldiers, fleeing from the
fight
With the cross of Jesus nearly out of sight.
Christ our rightful master, stands against the foe
But forward into battle, we are loathe to go.
Like a mighty tortoise moves the Church of God
Brothers we are treading where we've always trod.
We are much divided, many bodies we
Having many doctrines, not much charity.
Crowns and thorns may perish, kingdoms rise and wane,
But the Church of Jesus hidden does remain.
Gates of Hell should never 'gainst the Church prevail
We have Christ's own promise, but think that it will fail.
Sit here then ye people, join our useless throng
Blend with ours your voices in a feeble song.
Blessings, ease and comfort, ask from Christ the King
With our modern thinking, we don't do a thing.
We need to ask ourselves: Are we hot for God?
Could you say that you have witnessed to more than 12 people in the last 12
months? Do we have the testimony "to live means opportunities for
Christ?" Is there a zeal to witness burning in our bones? It doesn't matter
how much we pray, tithe, fellowship ...Jesus said to "Go." Obedience
is better than sacrifice. Sure, those things are essential, but if we are not
witnessing we are not fulfilling our commission. We are like survivors of the
Titanic singing songs and we clean the lifeboat, when there is room for many who
are drowning around us. We are commissioned officers. True Christianity
is not a pleasure-cruiser on its way to Heaven, but a battle-ship stationed at
the very gates of Hell!