What
The Church Needs: Jesus
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?
Jesus
(Philippians 2:1-11)
We
need Christlike humility, obedience, submission, and ministry founded
on love, mercy, truth, and sacrifice.
I mean our Lord no disrespect by grouping him with mere men. I am
simply continuing and touching on characteristics drawn from godly
men in an effort to glean truths that may be applied to the church as
a whole today. Jesus was a man, and he is the perfect example. Of
course, I acknowledge that he is not just a man; he is the God Man.
However, he lived life on this earth as a man; therefore, we can and
should learn from him. Paul did not have a problem in alluding to
his flesh and earthly existence. Neither shall we.
In
the passage before us, Paul uses Christ Jesus as an example of
humility. He taught the Philippian believers to have the same mind
as Christ. What was this mindset? What were these believers (and
us) supposed to emulate?
Jesus
humbled himself. He became a servant. King Jesus stepped down from
heaven and served others. That's humility. He, who ought to be
served, ministered to sinful and fallen people. We, on the other
hand, remain prideful and act as if people should serve us. We may
minister, but part of us thinks that we ought to be served by the
people we serve. Some serve and enjoy doing it, but some serve only
to gain. Whether it is financially or numerically; whether it is in
the eyes of the people or in their egos, some serve only to benefit.
That is not humble service and ministry. That is not done
sacrificially and lovingly. That is definitely not Christlike.
Jesus
not only humbled himself, but he was also obedient. Additionally, he
was not just obedient, but he was obedient even to the point of
death. Jesus completely submitted to the will of the Father and
obeyed. His will, being the same as the Father's, was to live
humbly, submissively, and obediently to the law in order to carry out
and fulfill the plan of redemption. He was to live a perfect life
and offer himself as the perfect, final, and complete sacrifice.
Mission accomplished!
We
need ministries founded on the love, mercy, truth, and sacrifice of
Christ. We would do well to seek to be obedient and humble like our
Savior. Should we not serve our people humbly and out of love and
not under compulsion or for gain? Where are our hearts and our
motives? Is our ministry patterned after Christ, or does the world
or corporate America dictate and characterize our ministries? Paul
said that this “mind” was to be among us. This is a mindset. If
it is a mindset, then it should be in our thoughts. We know that
whatever we think makes up who we are (what are our thoughts but the
desires and inclinations of our hearts? What is in the heart
manifests itself in the mind and thoughts). We need to identify what
dominates our thoughts. What has our attention? What are we focused
on? Who or what are we serving?
The
Christian is called to be Christlike. Everything about us
(ministries, work ethic, home, etc.) should also resemble Christ. He
is our perfect standard and example. By God's grace, we are being
conformed into the image of Christ. Things ought to look differently
than they do. Where is the humility? Where is the love? Where is
the putting others first? Where is the joy, affection, and sympathy?
Where indeed.
Christ
needs to be put back in Christianity; he needs to be the primary
focus (Acts 4:12; 1 Tim. 2:5-6). Many who call themselves Christian
and name the name of Christ have very little to do with Christ. They
neither know him nor serve him. Even more frightening is the fact
that he does not know them if they are unregenerate. Oh, that God
would shed his grace on us and send another reformation (Hos. 6:1-3;
Ps. 80:18-19; Rom. 12:2). Pray for God's mercy; may he not give us
what we deserve (Ps. 86:5, 103:8; Mi. 7:18-19). Ask God to dress you
in his armor and train you how to use it (1 Thess. 5:8; Eph.
6:10-19). Finally, pray that God grants you discernment and
awareness; beg for the wherewithal to beware of dangers, snares, and
entrapments (2 Pet. 3:17-18; 1 Pet. 5:8; Phil. 1:9-10; Col. 1:9-10).
The
church needs the grace of God to become more like Christ. That is
the greatest need of the day. Why? To summarize, let us turn to
Jonathan Edwards:
Christ said to his disciples,
'Except your righteousness exceed the righteousness of the scribes
and Pharisees, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of heaven:”
so the Spirit of Christ, in his apostle James, does in effect say,
...Except what you experience in your souls go beyond the experiences
of devils, ye shall in no case enter into the kingdom of God.
(Jonathan Edwards, “True Grace Distinguished From the Experience of
Devils” in The Works of Jonathan
Edwards, 2 vols. (Peabody, Mass.:
Hendrickson, 2004), 2:47)
We
need grace because without it, we are damned. Without the grace of
God, there is no conversion, hope, growth, conviction, truth, faith
and repentance, regeneration, joy, or worship. Without the grace of
God, life would be unbearable and unlivable. The world would be a
barren wasteland not fit to support life. We need grace. Everything
begins and ends with grace—grace permeates throughout the middle.
It's the grace of God that gives us God. It is the grace of God that
gives us Christ and the Spirit. Marvelous and matchless grace!
Pray
for it, desire it, beg God for it, thank God for it, meditate on it,
relish it, cherish it, long for it, live in it and for it. Grace!
God, we need your grace. Drink it, dine on it, breathe it, speak it,
pray it, think it, sing it, love it, anticipate it, grow in it, and
wait for it. It is the grace of God that distinguishes the truth
from falsehoods and the light from darkness. Grace differentiates
devils from angels and saints.
No grace equals all hell. Be warned. Be mindful. Be aware. Be
examining and praying. Be diligent. Be repenting and trusting.
Soli Deo Gloria!
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