What
The Church Needs: Example of the
Old Testament Saints
There are many examples in
Scripture of godly men fulfilling their call and glorifying God.
They serve as models; albeit, they are imperfect ones. However, they
can teach us many truths both by their positive and even their
negative actions. We look to these men only in an effort to project
their emulative characteristics back onto us, realizing all the time
that they are mere men, and sinful men at that (except, of course,
Christ Jesus). We can learn; we must learn from those who have gone
before. We look at these men and examples of the past in order to
reform the present. Ultimately, however, we must look to Christ. We
know looking back throughout the Bible that Christ was active within
his people. As we look back on them, we are actually focused on
Christ and his work then to better our now. So, what do we need?
Old
Testament saints (Hebrews 11:33-38)
We
need a saint-like ambition, faithfulness, obedience, strength, and,
if necessary, the willingness to suffer and die. The
Old Testament saints, what a group were they. The author of Hebrews
presented these men in a heroic light attributing their success and
victories to the God of their faith. They, actually, were just
regular men. God made them remarkable and did great things through
them, but they had faith in God. Let God be magnified.
We
love the stories in the Old Testament. The author highlights some of
our favorites. Men were made mighty by an almighty God and conquered
the enemy. They faced lions, raised the dead, fought for justice,
and remained faithful among the faithless. They obeyed God rather
than man, even when it did not make sense. These were ordinary men
doing extraordinary things because of an awesome God.
Not
only did these saints do great things, some of them suffered and were
killed. They were abused, mocked, hated, imprisoned, beaten, cut in
half, and afflicted. All of this was for the glory and cause of God.
The world did not deserve these men, but God raised them up and used
them. These saints had faults; they were sinners, and yet the
strength demonstrated and willingness to suffer and die far
outweighed any weaknesses. They knew God and desired to obey him,
even to the point of death. They trusted God and believed his
promises. They looked ahead to another land; they viewed a greater
place. Their faith caused them to keep their gaze on God and not on
this earth.
We
need these characteristics. The modern (American) church is too
comfortable. We are not willing to suffer or die for God. We do not
have the faintest idea what suffering really is. We are pampered,
weak, fearful, unmotivated, unloving, lacking passion and zeal, and
selfish. God help us! The only thing that may wake the American
church from its slumber is persecution. That is a frightful thing to
say, but it is the truth. Only when we suffer loss or real
affliction will the church grow, mature, trust God, and flourish.
If
history teaches us anything, it is that the persecuted church is
sustained by God, made effective, used mightily, blossoms and matures
in Christ, ceases to be worldly and self-absorbed, and glorifies God
on earth. When the wheat is separated from the chaff, then the
church resembles the true body of Christ. That may be what it takes
to rid the church of counterfeits and nominal “Christians.” A
little mistreatment will divide asunder those who truly love Christ
from those who honor him with their lips, yet deny him with their
hearts.
When
all is said and done; at the end of the day, we need God and grace!
The grace of God and his holy and abiding presence is our greatest
exigency. We trust that God is on his throne; we trust that
everything is being worked out perfectly according to his divine
will. However, we also have a responsibility to pray for grace and
enter into his presence with thanksgiving. His will is being done on
earth as it is in heaven, yet he has also ordained our prayers as
means to achieve his ends. We seek him and his will, and we obey.
We ask again and continue to search. It is realized that we need God
and his grace, so we pray and seek more. We ask and thank him for
his generosity.
What
do we ask for? We ask our great God for fresh manna. May God be
gracious and feed us from heaven. May he raise up shepherds that
will feed us (Jer. 3:15). We also ask for the Spirit to convict and
transform us (Jn. 16:8; 2 Cor. 3:18; Col. 3:10). Believers ought to
ask God to revive and energize his church (Ps. 51:12, 85:6; Eph.
3:16; Col. 1:9-12). Christians must ask God to do a mighty work (1
Thess. 2:13; Eph. 1:16-19). Pray for revival. Pray for reformation.
Pray that God increase your faith. Pray that God be glorified,
Christ be preeminent, and the Spirit be given in greater measure.