Am I a Soldier of the Cross

"Am I a soldier of the cross, a follower of the Lamb? And shall I fear to own His cause, or blush to speak His name?" Isaac Watts posed these questions to believers almost 350 years ago. The same questions must be asked today. We are in a war. God has called us to fight for the hearts and souls of men. I pray that what is said here will prove to be an encouragement and a challenge to every believer who visits this site. Let our cry be the last verse of the old song. "Sure I must fight if I would reign- increase my courage Lord! I'll bear the toil, endure the pain, supported by Thy Word!"


Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Service and Surrender

This post is brought to you by the mattress...striving to make the world a bedder place.
     All lame jokes aside, I want to share with you some thoughts from the life of a man who dedicated his life to God while lying in his bed at night. His name was Samuel, a young boy who would one day grow to accomplish great and mighty things for the Lord.
     While still young (probably early- to mid-teens), Samuel was dedicated by his mother to service in the temple. One night, while he slept, God called out to him. This event was rare; 1 Samuel 3:1b says that "the word of the Lord was precious in those days; there was no open vision." At this point, God did not directly speak to man, making Samuel's experience unique to his time. Why would God speak to a young boy when He spoke to no other? A couple of verses indicate God's reasons.
     Chapter 2 verse 21 says " the child Samuel grew before the Lord". "Before" in this instance bears the idea of an overshadowing or a close association. Samuel, though at this point he had never heard from the Lord, had grown under the watchful eye of God and had proved himself a faithful servant in the temple.
     The familiar story of Samuel's surrender to God is preceeded by the phrase "...Samuel ministered unto the Lord..."(3:1). God spoke while Samuel was busy serving. God saw in Samuel a boy who was obedient and faithful in service.
     So we see faithful obedience from Samuel prior to God's call. We also see total surrender. When Samuel audibly heard the voice of the Lord, he ran to Eli, thinking it was he who had called. This was repeated three times. Eli, at that point recognizing that it was God who had spoken, told Samuel to answer "Here am I". And when God called for the fourth time, Samuel did. God proceeded to give the boy a foretelling of judgment against the house of Eli. Samuel had a decision to make. Eli was the one who had, for all intents and purposes, raised him. No doubt Samuel felt some reluctance to proclaim God's message. Despite any reluctance he may have initially felt, the next morning, Samuel "told [Eli] every whit, and hid nothing from him" (3:18).
     Samuel not only was used of God that night, but when he answered "Here am I", he surrendered his entire life to God. "And all Israel...knew that Samuel was established to be a prophet of the Lord." (3:20).
     What can we learn from Samuel? The first lesson is to be constantly busy serving God and putting ourselves in a place to hear from and be used by God. The Christians in Antioch put this principle into practice. "As they ministered to the Lord, and fasted, the Holy Ghost said, 'Separate me Barnabas and Saul for the work wherunto I have called them'" (Acts 13:2). If we wish to be greatly used by God, in evangelism or in any other area, we must be busy wherever God has placed us. We must serve where He has put us and, at all times, be constantly nurturing our relationship with Him.
     Second is total surrender. Samuel was given a difficult message to relay. So are we. 1 Peter 2:8 refers to Christ and His words as "a stone of stumbling, and a rock of offence...". 1 Corinthians 1:23 says "we preach Christ crucified, unto the Jews a stumblingblock, and unto the Greeks foolishness:". The message that "all have sinned" and "no man cometh unto the Father but by [Christ]" will offend. You can take that to the bank. Yet we have been given this message to deliver by God Himself. Like Samuel, He has given us the message, but He will also give us strength as we deliver His words. We are merely called to service and surrender.

Monday, January 23, 2012

Power Unseen

Some time ago, I heard a sermon illustration using the following historical event. I decided it also had pertinent application to this area of evangelism.
     Almost 170 years before Christ's birth, a king by the name of Antiochus IV found himself heavily involved in a war of conquest against the king of Egypt. He was nearly victorious; all of Egypt had fallen to his army except for the city of Alexandria. Antiochus placed himself at the head of an army and marched against the city. On the road, however, he was stopped and confronted by a man named Laenas, an aged Roman ambassador. The Roman senate, concerned about Antiochus' growing power, sent the ambassador to give Antiochus' an ultimatum; withdraw from Egypt or face war against Rome. In an attempt to buy himself time, Antiochus told the ambassador that he would discuss the decision with his counselors. The Roman envoy boldly strode forward and drew a circle around the king. The ambassador told Antiochus that if he stepped out of the circle without agreeing to withdraw his armies, Rome would declare war.
     On one side stood a king, backed by a mighty and numerous army. On the other, a solitary old man. What was the result? The king backed down before the ambassador and agreed to withdraw. Why would a sovereign supported by a host of loyal followers surrender his will to that of an aged ambassador? Because Antiochus' feared the power of Rome. He feared the power the ambassador represented.
     The field of evangelism is a very literal battlefield. Ephesians 6:11-12 says "Put on the whole armor of God, that ye may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil. For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places." Christians fight, not in a physical contest, but in a spiritual war for the souls of men. Those redeemed by the blood of the Lamb are arrayed on one side of this field. On the opposing side, marshalled against us are the world, the ungodly culture and unbelievers; the flesh, the inherent sin nature that still resists the work of God in our lives; and the devil, Satan and all his host. With governments, media, and popular feeling turned oftentimes against us, our efforts to reach "lives for whom [Christ] died" seems hopeless indeed...until the force supporting us is revealed.
     "Now then we are ambassadors for Christ..." (2 Cor. 5:20) Such are the words of Paul as he unveils the power by which we fight. We do not fight alone and by our own strength; we are sent as representatives, fully empowered, equipped, and enabled by God to do what He has called us to accomplish. The result? "Ye are of God, little children, and have overcome them: because greater is he that is in you, than he that is in the world." We fight with power unseen, yet so potent that victory is assured.