Prayer Answered Positively!

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On behalf of my brother and his wife, I would like to say thanks to all who prayed for their soon-to-be-born baby. There was a scare that a test indicated spina bifida, but a follow-up sonogram revealed the baby to be physically whole. A great sigh of relief was heard somewhere in western Cincinnati, believe me.

They also found out it is a boy and are deciding between Gavin, Duncan, and Conner for a name. While those all sound like refugees from the movie The Highlander, they didn’t tell us what to name our son, so I’m butting out on this one! 😉

Rejecting Our Ultimate Reward

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Thumbs downIn keeping with yesterday’s post on joy and having our names written in heaven, I’d like to reference a post over at Swap Blog (HT: Milton @ Transforming Sermons.) At issue there is the ferocity with which some world-class athletes—cyclists Lance Armstrong and Tyler Hamilton in this case—will fight to preserve their reputations and legacies, and how that compares to Christians:

We are asking how personally committed Christians are to defending God, His ways, His teachings, His word, and His people and comparing that commitment to the commitment of the world to defend their way, their word, their reputation, their families, and their future. Would we, as Christians, go this far, willing to give ALL our money and time, to defend Christ, the word of God, God’s lessons or a brother / sister in the body. So many times we as Christians are all rah rah for God, the things of God, and the people of God when there are no problems, but as soon as possible conflict between God and the world arises we go quiet and disappear.

The answer I offer is a disturbing one.

People of the world see their reward in money, sex, fame, and power. They will do anything to get those and to keep them once they’ve been received. Innate in all Mankind, Christian or not, is the desire for reward. We Christians are only as committed as we understand our reward to be.

What then is the Christian’s reward? At the most granular level, three rewards come to the fore:

  • Knowing Jesus Christ
  • Hearing Jesus Himself say to us, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”
  • Heaven

I would suspect that if we scratched the typical American Christian and truly got under his or her spiritual facade, we’d see the following thought processes:

  • About knowing Jesus Christ—”Hey, as long as I’m not going to hell, so what?”
  • Upon hearing Jesus say, “Well done, good and faithful servant.”—”That’s nice.”
  • Upon entering Heaven—”Are we really going to have to praise God for eternity? Isn’t there anything else to do around here?”

Sacrilege?Definitely! But how did we end up in this sorry state?

I will submit here that these three rewards comprise the least preached messages in today’s American Church. And that is the answer to the frustrating question posed at Swap Blog. Because no one preaches on the glory of those rewards anymore, they’ve lost all meaning. When Paul writes in Philippians 3:8, “Indeed, I count everything as loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord.” I can sometimes see the wheels turning in people’s heads and the thought bubble rising up saying, “Is that all that great a thing?”

Honestly, how many people can you say you know right now who absolutely without any uncertainty know Jesus Christ? They may know some tidbits about Him. They may even have memorized great swaths of Scripture about Him. But do they really know Him down deep in their inner man? Pull aside any dozen people in your church and ask them what it means to know Christ. The answers will both shock and dishearten you, I can promise that now.

That your average pastors doesn’t realize how off the answers are to this basic question is even more shocking. If he can’t share from his own life how knowing Christ is its own reward, how will his congregants know? And that’s another problem in itself. Somehow we’ve put far too many folks who don’t really know Christ into our pulpits preaching a message that proves their own ignorance in this regard. You can’t get blood from a turnip, nor can you have a firm finger pointed to Jesus from people who don’t know where to point.

I can belabor this point on Christ’s blessing on faithful servants and the great reward of heaven, but I’m tired of it all. A hundred and fifty years ago, I would suspect that 75% of the messages on Sunday were about knowing Christ, living to hear the “Well done…,” and the hope of Heaven. That’s how the greatest missionary thrust the world has ever known got started and swelled into Africa and Asia. American and British Christians heard those three messages we never hear anymore in today’s churches and they went out with joy to preach the Gospel despite fire, dungeon, and sword.

To the Church of 1855, those truths behind those messages were enough of a reward that nothing else was sought, yet today’s Christians are pissed off if our iPod doesn’t show up overnight like Amazon promised. We spend more time debating the finer points of the TV show Lost then actually ministering Christ to the lost. We’ve become pitiful people because we know longer care to truly know Christ, to hear His blessing on our faithful service, and to live the joy of having a place reserved for us in Heaven. We hear so little of those three rewards anyway that they’re readily obscured by the background moans of a society in its death throes. In the end, we look to the world for our reward just like the hell-bound do, joining along in the moaning.

Pastors, step down if you can’t help people know Christ. Let someone who knows where to point do the job. To the people in the seats, let’s hold our pastor’s feet to the fire if he never preaches on those three truths. And when we’re done roasting him, we better put on the sackcloth and get a fine rain of ashes pouring on our own heads because we’re not exempt from rebuke here.

The Christian’s reward outstrips all others. It’s time we believed that to be true.

Joy

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Though the fig tree should not blossom, nor fruit be on the vines, the produce of the olive fail and the fields yield no food, the flock be cut off from the fold and there be no herd in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the LORD; I will take joy in the God of my salvation. GOD, the Lord, is my strength; he makes my feet like the deer’s; he makes me tread on my high places. To the choirmaster: with stringed instruments.
—Habakkuk 3:17-19 ESV

JoyIf anyone were to ask me the one quality Christians routinely claim to have, but which is actually in short supply, I’d have to say it’s joy.

Ask a non-Christian what the most prevalent Christian trait is and you’re likely hear the word “indignation.” To them, Christians seem to be the perpetually put off, mad about one thing or another, but certainly not joyful.

From within the ranks of church people, some would note that fear is the trait shared by more Christians than anything else. For most of my Christian life the bestseller shelf at Christian bookstores have been packed with apocalyptic works that claim to know who the antichrist is or when the world will end, selling fear and worry. For all our talk of heaven, we sure worry an awful lot.

Some other Christians may say that love is the most common Christian trait, but then the folks answering that question treat love differently. The “tough love” people are those who like to use love like a crowbar, to influence others or even give them a rap on the noggin should they not conform to the Christian ideal. The other love camp consists of those who turn love into acceptance, never asking for more than blue skies, unicorns, and rainbows. Set those two groups of lovers against each other and see how well love holds up in the midst of their sparring over what love truly is.

But I don’t hear too many people offering joy as the end state of true Christian living. Too few Christians actually manifesting real joy may be the reason for joy being left out in the cold, and that is more than just a sad state of affairs; it’s an outright tragedy.

Jesus said to His disciples after they returned from their glorious time of ministry in their Master’s name:

Behold, I have given you authority to tread on serpents and scorpions, and over all the power of the enemy, and nothing shall hurt you. Nevertheless, do not rejoice in this, that the spirits are subject to you, but rejoice that your names are written in heaven.”
—Luke 10:19-20 ESV

Do we rejoice that our names are written in heaven? Or does our rejoicing come from accumulating money, sex, power, or the adulation of men?

I’ve heard many Christians say that the reason the Church in America is powerless is that too many Christians are satisfied with being saved and leave discipleship at that. We have a church geared to fire insurance only. But if this were the case, why the lack of Christians rejoicing that their names are written in heaven? Why so little talk of heaven at all? Does heaven hold no joy for us now?

From the pits of his heart, David speaks:

Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me. Cast me not away from your presence, and take not your Holy Spirit from me. Restore to me the joy of your salvation, and uphold me with a willing spirit.
—Psalms 51:10-12 ESV

David asks for nothing more be restored to him than the joy of salvation and a willingness to obey God. In the wallow of sin he created for himself, he desires the joy of his salvation over all other things. His humiliation was public, but he did not ask for his reputation back. Nor did he ask for the resurrection of his dead child. He wanted a deeper joy.

The sad truth of American Christianity is that our joy is found in the wrong things. Our material possessions count for more and create more joy in us than possessing Christ. Yet the prophet Habakkuk might stare at desolate fields, dead livestock, the slow wasting of his friends and family, and the loss of all he holds dear and say, “I am filled with the joy of the Lord. His joy makes me carry on.”

Joy has been relegated to a low position today in the hearts of too many Christians. We’ve confused it for happiness, one of the reasons we chase after things—for the temporary happiness they bring. But joy does not burn up in house fires, nor on the pyres that claimed more than one martyr for Jesus Christ. You can’t manufacture it or pretend you have it. It’s either present or it’s not.

In the midst of the fear that many are feeling today, do you have joy? Do you know the joy of your salvation? Does that joy trump all worry, fear, and anxiety?

We have to have the right priorities now. How well we will function in the days that are coming is a measure of the joy that is within us. It should be infectious. It should draw people to Jesus. It should strengthen us. If that’s not you, what better time than now to ask the Lord for an irrepressible joy in your life that cannot be altered by shifting circumstances out of your control?

Lord Jesus, make my joy full today, no matter my circumstance, that people may see your joy in my life and ask me about its source. Make me the fount of joy that pours Your joy into the life of others, that my joy be full and overflowing. When barrenness surrounds me, Jesus, let there be your abundant joy. Let me continue to look to eternity and see my name written in your Book of Life, the reason for my joy today. When all around me are filled with worry, may my joy be complete in you. For your glory always, I pray this in your name. Amen.