Hidden

Pergamum was the city where Satan had his throne. It was a city filled with demonic religions where the persecution had been so severe that Christians had been put to death. In his letter, Jesus had affirmed for their faith but had also scolded them for tolerating “believers” who were leading members of the church into idolatry and immorality.   Jesus called the church to endurance and faithfulness with the following promise.

 

He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. To him who overcomes, I will give some of the hidden manna. I will also give him a white stone with a new name written on it, known only to him who receives it. (Rev.2:17)

 

This is a promise not just to believers at Pergamum but to all the churches and to all believers. Being faithful to the end is not always easy. Sometimes it is difficult because persecution comes rushing our way and threatens our lives, our security, or our ability to provide for ourselves or our family. At other times faith falters because life or the enemy has pecked away at our hearts and our hope through an accumulation of disappointments, losses, and loneliness through the years. Sometimes the constant distraction of the cares of the world causes our faith to wither and eventually die. Enduring and overcoming day after day and year and year is not easy.

 

God’s word is filled with promises that tell us that enduring in our faith and guarding our hearts is worth it. Here Jesus promises hidden manna for those who continue to battle and overcome the enemy. Manna, of course, was the supernatural bread that Israel found in the desert every morning. As a symbol it speaks of God’s strength and provision for his people. As the Jews left the wilderness to enter the Promise Land, the manna ceased because they had entered into a land that would sustain them with God’s blessing. But as a reminder of the source of their strength, health, and provision  manna was placed in a golden pot inside the Ark of the Covenant as a reminder of the days when Israel was totally dependent on God’s faithful provision.

 

Jesus promises the “hidden manna” to those who endure.   Jesus tells us that he is both the bread of life and the bread of heaven (See Jn.6:48, 51). This manna is hidden because it is unseen. You can’t walk out in the morning and pick it up off the ground but it comes to you unseen and supernaturally. It is Jesus giving himself to us for strength, health and provision. Like the manna in the wilderness it can’t be stored up but must be collected every day. Manna is daily bread and those who will overcome must receive from him every day. The promise is that when we seek Jesus daily and endure in our faith, he will be there and meet our needs for life in amazing ways seen only by faith.

 

The second promise is a white stone with a new name written on it. In the ancient world, those on trial were found innocent or guilty by the casting of a white stone or a black stone by those sitting in judgment. It is probable that Antipas, the faithful martyr of Pergamum, was found guilty by black stones and executed for his faith. But Jesus will cast the vote for those who are faithful to the end and he will cast it with a white stone. On that stone your new name will be written and known only to you and the one who wrote it – Jesus. A new name represents a greater and more intimate relationship than you have had before. Abram became Abraham, Jacob became Israel, and so forth. As God gave them new names their walk with him deepened and their blessings increased.

 

As we continue to live in faithfulness to God and overcome the enemy day by day, our walk with Jesus will increase, our intimacy with the Father will deepen, and we will have a unique and abiding relationship with him. Those who are extremely close in their relationships share things that no one else knows. Nicknames, shared experiences, and inside jokes are expressions of fondness and familiarity. This promise offers a relationship like that with the Father, the Son and the Spirit – extremely personal and intimate. You will not just be a face in the crowd in heaven but you will have a name and, perhaps, knowledge of God that will not have been revealed to anyone else. Power, provision, intimacy, and eternal innocence is the promise for those who keep their hearts aligned with the Father and who do not step off the track before finishing the race.

To the angel of the church in Smyrna write: These are the words of him who is the First and the Last, who died and came to life again … Be faithful, even to the point of death, and I will give you the crown of life. He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. He who overcomes will not be hurt at all by the second death. (Rev. 2:8-11)

 

Smyrna was the afflicted and impoverished church that was about to undergo even more persecution. Some, Jesus confided, would even be put in prison for their faith. In the midst of that Jesus gave a promise for those who remained aligned with the Father and whose faith endured. The promise was the crown of life. The crown here is the victor’s crown. Paul often compared the Christian life to a race and called on the followers of Jesus to not only finish the race but to run to win. For those who won by being faithful, a great reward awaited them at the end of the race.

 

For those who remain faithful, the King of Kings will grant a victor’s crown. A reward comes with the crown and that reward is eternal life. For those who receive such a crown, the second death or eternal punishment offers no threat. For those who know the Lord, judgment day will be a day when honors are bestowed and rewards given. There will be no threat of hell. The crown signifies favor, status, honor, and a hero’s welcome.

 

The promises of God for those who stay in step with the Father’s heart are amazing and eternal. What confounds me is how quickly and easily we dismiss those promises and rewards for earthly rewards and pleasures that can’t compare. How many of us are willing to trade an incomparable birthright for a bowl of stew like Esau? How many believers trade the promises of heaven for an affair than can never lead anywhere, for an addiction that only takes us deeper into darkness, or for material gain and fame that, like cotton candy, only satisfies for a moment and then disappears. Salvation comes by grace but reward is based on our fruit and our faithfulness and much of heaven’s reward is available now.

 

Even in this life we can experience honor, friendship with the Kings, power and authority in the Spirit, revelation, fellowship with the Father, joy, peace, significance, purpose, angelic encounters, spiritual family, provision, miracles, supernatural gifts, the Father’s approval, influence, love, forgiveness, and life to the full. All these things are available now to those who desire them, seek them and stay aligned with the purposes of God. Even now we can receive those form the hand of our Father in Heaven.

 

What can the world offer that surpasses these heavenly treasures? And yet, believers so easily lay these promises aside to chase after the things of the world and the deceptions of Satan. The devil promises to provide all the things our hearts desire and promises that we can have them without cost and without consequence. Just as he told Eve that she wouldn’t actually die he tells us that our decisions to leave the path of God will truly take us where we want to go. But scripture is clear. “God cannot be mocked. A man reaps what he sows. The one who sows to please his sinful nature, from that nature will reap destruction; the one who sows to please the Spirit, from the Spirit will reap eternal life” (Gal.6:7-8).

 

As we please the flesh, destruction is planted. Eventually we must reap a harvest regardless of what Satan tells us. However, the promise of life that Jesus offers is much greater. A crown of victory and the honor that goes with it is assured because God cannot be mocked. I fully believe that we may experience that crown even in this life as we experience victory after victory over the enemy. But I also believe that Jesus will personally place one on your head as you enter into his presence if you stay faithful to the end. No athlete becomes great without suffering. I’m pretty sure that is true for those who follow Jesus as well. But when we suffer and endure, the crown waiting just on the other side of the finish line will make it all worthwhile. Do not give up or give in. Jesus who ran the race before us is waiting to welcome you

To the angel of the church in Philadelphia write: These are the words of him who is holy and true, who holds the key of David. What he opens no one can shut, and what he shuts no one can open. I know your deeds. See, I have placed before you an open door that no one can shut. I know that you have little strength, yet you have kept my word and have not denied my name. I will make those who are of the synagogue of Satan, who claim to be Jews though they are not, but are liars—I will make them come and fall down at your feet and acknowledge that I have loved you. Since you have kept my command to endure patiently, I will also keep you from the hour of trial that is going to come upon the whole world to test those who live on the earth. I am coming soon. Hold on to what you have, so that no one will take your crown. (Rev. 3:7-11)

 

The church at Philadelphia receives no rebuke from the Lord but only a commendation and a promise. When we are aligned with the Father’s heart we can expect the same. Let’s look to see what they did have. First of all, this church was faithful. Apparently it was not a large church full of resources and influence but it was a church that had continued to serve Jesus with good deeds, they have kept his word and been obedient to his commands, and had not denied his name even in the face of Jewish opposition or criticism. They had endured patiently and that fact caught the Lord’s attention in a big way.

 

Endurance and patience are spiritual qualities of the mature. It is easy to stay passionate and faithful when everything is going your way. When churches are growing and God is prospering his people the kingdom looks bright. When persecution is a short-lived event then people shake it off like a bad storm and move on feeling triumphant because they survived. The hard thing in the kingdom of God is grinding out a life of faith when the persecution keeps coming and you are not seeing massive breakthroughs. It is easy for discouragement to set in when God hasn’t answered the prayer or brought the solution as quickly as you thought he would. It’s even tougher if you see other churches or other believers prospering and having quick victories in their lives while you continue to slog it out.

 

The praise and the promise for Philadelphia came because they had continued to do what they could with little strength or power even in the face of constant discouragement. They were faithful and had endured. Because of that Jesus, determined to open a door for them that no man could close. Because they had endured long he was giving them success that would last long time…an open door for evangelism, ministry, or blessing. Not only that but he was going to protect them from trials that others would soon face because they had already faced their trials. In addition, he would cause those who had persecuted them to come and acknowledge that these believers were true children of God.

 

The principle in this is that those who must wait another season before prayers are answered are given a greater blessing if they endure the season with faith. The question of Job is whether God is worthy of our worship and service regardless of our circumstances or only if we always get what we want. Job answered that he was always worthy and because of that he was blessed more in the end than in the beginning.

 

Some believers wait for healing, others wait for pregnancy, others wait to be release from re-education camps in China, others wait for a child to come home. If they wait in faith and continue to serve and obey God will surely honor that faith when some kind of open door that no man will be able to shut. God declares, “Those who honor me, I will honor” (1 Sam.2:30). Patient endurance and faithfulness honors God. Be sure, he will honor you as he honored those in Philadelphia. Be blessed.

 

To the angel of the church in Smyrna write: These are the words of him who is the First and the Last, who died and came to life again. I know your afflictions and your poverty—yet you are rich! I know the slander of those who say they are Jews and are not, but are a synagogue of Satan. Do not be afraid of what you are about to suffer. I tell you, the devil will put some of you in prison to test you, and you will suffer persecution for ten days. Be faithful, even to the point of death, and I will give you the crown of life. He who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. He who overcomes will not be hurt at all by the second death. (Rev. 2:8-11)

 

In the book of Revelation, Jesus delivers words of warning and encouragement to seven churches in the province of Asia. The second church is the church of Smyrna. This church existed in a wealthy city with a large Jewish population and yet the church is characterized by afflictions and poverty. The sense we get from the letter is that they were suffering persecution that was provoked by Jewish leaders in much the same way that Jesus was persecuted.

 

If we do the things that Jesus did, it is inevitable that we will also be slandered and persecuted in some way. Some of that slander and rejection will come from religious people. Just a few months ago, a prominent west coast preacher and author published a book that was an impassioned attack on all those who claim that God still does miracles through his people and that God still speaks in any way other than through the Bible. Although God is doing amazing things all over the globe there are many who will still declare that any such activity is a lie, a deception, or from the devil. If you walk in the power of the Spirit you will probably hear some of that from your own family members, from friends, or from your church or former church.

 

In the face of that slander or rejection you will be tempted to go underground with your faith and your prayers and to display your faith in Jesus and the power of his Spirit only in the presence of those who believe as you do. And yet, the power of the Spirit is to be displayed before unbelievers so that they might believe and so that they can experience the goodness of God which calls them into the kingdom.

 

The church in Smyrna had it right. Jesus said that though they were poor and afflicted by worldly standards, they were actually rich. The church in that Roman city was laying up treasure in heaven through faith and persistence in doing what God was calling them to do – regardless of the cost. The people that I know who walk most powerfully in the Spirit are those who do what the Spirit prompts them to do regardless of the cost or the risk. That mindset is alignment with Jesus because Jesus did exactly the same thing.

 

In this short statement to the church at Smyrna, Jesus simply told them that a season of persecution was coming and that they must remain faithful in the face of that persecution. Christianity is statistically the most persecuted faith on the planet. Even in America there is a war on Christianity. If we are to stay aligned with the Father, we must simply accept the fact that if we follow Jesus the world will reject us because it rejected him. We do not have to enjoy the fact but we must accept the fact as part of the cost of following Jesus.

 

On the other hand, when you walk in the power of the Spirit you will also be loved by many. Those individuals whose lives God touches through you will love you. Those who share your faith will love you. More importantly, God himself will delight in you. But others will not because they do not know God as they should or at all. If you read Chapters 8 and 9 of the gospel of John you will see what Jesus has to say about that.

 

In his letter to Smyrna, we discover that true alignment with the Father requires the acceptance of some level of persecution and rejection in our lives and the willingness to do the works of the Father regardless. As we become willing to endure that realty from time to time, the power of the Spirit will increase in our lives. For many of us that is a bitter pill to swallow because our greatest desire is to be loved and accepted by every person in our lives. There is nothing wrong with the desire to be loved but we must love Jesus more than any other. To do so will require experiencing the disapproval of those who do not love him or know him as they should. It is how you become rich in heaven and it is one of the qualities that invites a greater measure of the Spirit into our lives which is true wealth even in this world.

 

About a year ago, I attended a community wide gathering of churches that were meeting to pray for a transforming move of God in West Texas. I appreciate the men who have the vision for such an undertaking and it is always exciting to see the body of Christ come together under the same roof. The worship was stirring and the speakers were dynamic. The heart of the gathering was on target.

 

Toward the end a special announcement was made about a young woman from one of the leading churches in our area who was in a hospital in another city with a failing heart. She was on a list for a heart transplant but her own heart seemed to be just hours away from collapse. So as the meeting was winding down those who knew her best offered a special prayer. All who prayed cried out to God to provide a heart transplant for this young woman before she died.

 

It struck me as the prayers were being lifted up that no one was praying for God to heal the heart she had. In essence the prayer required one person, who also had dreams and loved ones, to die so that this young woman who was loved in our city could live. Why not pray for God to make her heart new rather than for a car wreck and a suitable donor? I’m not against heart transplants and I’m not against praying for a heart but it seemed that it never crossed anyone’s mind that God could restore the heart he had given her. With 2000 believers in the room from churches all over the area an amazing opportunity to build faith and launch a significant move of God was handed to us. However, we prayed for her to receive a transplant which any number of people in America received that week without prayer.

 

I get to hear many prayers offered up by man y sincere believers. The majority of the time it seems that we ask God for the ordinary and receive the ordinary. We ask God to help the doctors do their best work and yet I suspect they will probably do so without the intervention of heaven. We pray for a job and after twelve interviews we get a job. So did a number of other people who never prayed. I’m not against those prayers but what I notice is that we often pray for God to do bring about best outcomes in the natural realm that already have a high probability of occurring if God never acts on our request. Because of that, when its over, by faith we may believe that God answered our prayers but unbelievers wouldn’t be convinced at all. In those moment’s God may get our thanks but he doesn’t get much glory and our faith stays where it was – asking God for the ordinary instead of the impossible.

 

The model Jesus gave us was to ask God for the impossible – to ask for things that will absolutely not happened unless he shows up. Healing the sick, casting out demons, cleansing lepers, raising the dead, turning water into wine, feeding 5000 with a box lunch – those are the things Jesus trusted God for and when it was over God was glorified, unbelievers came to faith, the faith of believers multiplied, and the works of the devil were destroyed.

 

We know that asking for the impossible is the biblical model so why don’t we ask? Some of us have been taught that God doesn’t “do that stuff” anymore but I think most of us don’t ask because we are afraid of disappointment. If we ask and we don’t see God move then what does that say about God, our faith, or our prayers? The truth is that we may not always see God do the impossible when we pray. It’s possible that not everyone will be healed. It’s possible that the miracle check won’t come in the mail. It’s possible that the marriage won’t be saved. Faith has to live with the mystery of why God does not always act when and how we asked. Faith bears the disappointment, takes no offense at God, and then asks for the next impossible thing. We may not see God do the impossible every time we ask but when he does move in that moment, God will be glorified, our faith will multiply, unbelievers will come to faith and the works of the devil will be destroyed.

 

Faith also says that God did move in response to our prayer. As we sow into prayer there must be a harvest because God has ordained it. We may not perceive what the harvest is our how God moved but we can be assured that something changed in light of our prayer for the impossible.

 

Sometimes I think God must be offended that we ask so little of him. Our prayers for the ordinary must sometimes seem like us asking a virtuoso pianist to peck out Mary Had a Little Lamb when he is able and willing and wanting to do so much more. I hope as we pray we will begin to ask God to do what is impossible if he doesn’t show up; to ask for more than we can think or imagine; and to draw on the immense power of heaven that is poised to act on behalf of the church. After all, is anything too hard for God? Those who pray for the supernatural moves of God to do the impossible may not see it done every time, but those who don’t pray for the impossible will never see it done.

 

 

 

 

 

“Don’t be afraid!” How many times was that phrase spoken to believers throughout the Bible? Is it just an absence of faith that God is rebuking or is there something more sinister about fear than just not fully trusting in God? I have often thought that people who tried to minister deliverance with some fear about failure or about the demon were setting themselves up for something more than disappointment. We have always heard the expression that wild animals or big snarling dogs can sense your fear and be emboldened to attack. I believe it is the same in the spiritual realm. I like the way Bill Johnson explains the ramifications of fear.

 

Fear is faith in the devil…The devil is called Beelzebub, which means lord of the flies. He and his hosts are attracted to decay….Issues such as bitterness, jealousy, and hatred qualify as the decay of the heart that invites the devil to come and give influence – yes, even to Christians. Remember Paul’s admonition to the church of Ephesus, “Neither give place to the devil.” Fear is also the decay of the heart. It attracts the demonic in the same way as bitterness and hatred. (Bill Johnson, When Heaven Invades Earth, p.50).

 

Fear in the spiritual atmosphere is like drops of blood in the ocean. Some predator will pick up it’s sent and seek its source. So when we are encouraged not to be afraid it is not just the absence of trust in God but it is a substance in the spiritual realm that emboldens the enemy to come against you. Our fear comes either from the uncertainty that God is actually greater than Satan or it comes from the uncertainty that God will protect us from the enemy. Scripture is full of promises that God is, in fact, much greater than the devil and that he will come to our aid if we are under attack. To not believe God’s word is to come into agreement with the enemy and that agreement gives him a place in our life.

 

Someone might say, “Well, doesn’t wisdom teach us to be afraid of grizzly bears because they are much bigger and stronger than us and in the same way shouldn’t we have a healthy fear of demons because the spiritual realm is greater than the natural realm?” The answer is that we should be wise but not afraid and I can be within three feet of a grizzly bear without fear. I can be totally fearless if strong walls protect me or if I am positioned inside an M1 Abrams Tank which is currently the army’s largest battle tank. It is highly armored, weighs 64 tons, and has great speed not to mention tremendous firepower. Surrounded by that kind of power and protection a grizzly bear, even though he is only three feet away, is no threat. In that moment, however, I could be a great threat to the bear.

 

Scripture says that we are in Christ and, therefore, are surrounded by Christ. We are told that the angel of the Lord encamps around those who fear him. If we fear the enemy is it because we are unaware or unconvinced of our position. Should we be cautious not to make ourselves vulnerable to the enemy? Of course, we are not to be presumptuous. We are only vulnerable to the enemy, however, if we have failed to wear our armor or if we have opened a hatch and invited the enemy inside with us. We can correct those mistakes and lay fear aside if it has crept in with the enemy.

 

We are told to fix our eyes on Jesus and often we should meditate on Jesus not just as the Good Shepherd who lays his life down for the sheep but rather as the Commander of the Armies of Heaven riding out on a white horse with his garments dripping with the blood of his enemies – which are also your enemies. Jesus is not always the meek and gentle King he is also the fierce King who will destroy his enemies with the sword of his mouth and crush the devil under his feet. Don’t be afraid. There is no need and it attracts flies.

 

 

 

 

There is an intimate relationship between joy and hope. While optimism makes us live as if someday soon things will go better for us, hope frees us from the need to predict the future and allow us to live in the present, with the deep trust that God will never leave us alone but will fulfill the deepest desires of our heart. Joy in this perspective is the fruit of hope. When I trust deeply that today God is truly with me and holds me safe in a divine embrace, guiding everyone of my steps, I can let go of my anxious need to know how tomorrow will look, or what will happen next month or next year. I can be fully where I am and pay attention to the many signs of God’s love within me and around me. (Henri Nouwen, Here and Now, p.33)

 

I like what Nouwen has said in this paragraph but I also believe his last statement is much broader than joy. We need to look for the evidence of God’s love in the smallest and largest of things because our greatest need is to truly believe we are deeply loved by our Father and our Creator. The thing that keeps nibbling away at my faith and that keeps me from asking for outlandish things is that I’m not sure that he loves me enough to keep me safe and do those things for me.

 

The thing that keeps me from embracing my position in heaven and walking confidently in the gifts of the Spirit is my awareness of my failings and my doubt that God loves me all that much because of those failings. I then live with the sense that if God doesn’t love me all that much he won’t give me the gifts I hunger for nor be there for me when I try to exercise those gifts. I fear he will be an absent or indifferent father to me.

 

The other huge thing my doubt affects is my ability to love. My experience tells me that we can’t love others if we doubt that we ourselves are loved by someone significant to us. Knowing that God loves me is everything. Noticing all the ways he loves me confirms that love in my heart and when I have love I can give love.

 

We can easily become like the older son in the parable of the prodigal who is so caught up in the day to day business of life that he failed to notice how his father loved him and provided for him every day. Then, when he realized he hadn’t been given a big party, he decided that his father didn’t love him at all. So often we ignore the myriad of things God does for us and then decide in one moment that he has never loved us when one disappointment comes our way.

 

Think about the little things. Smell the roses and the coffee. The little prayers that were answered as well as the big ones. They are both from God. Thank him for every little thing and the big things will take care of themselves. When I come to truly believe that the God of Heaven loves me deeply and thinks about me continuously, I will walk across this planet with hope, joy and the confidence of knowing that I am his.

 

One day Peter and John were going up to the temple at the time of prayer—at three in the afternoon. Now a man crippled from birth was being carried to the temple gate called Beautiful, where he was put every day to beg from those going into the temple courts. When he saw Peter and John about to enter, he asked them for money. Peter looked straight at him, as did John. Then Peter said, “Look at us!” So the man gave them his attention, expecting to get something from them.             Then Peter said, “Silver or gold I do not have, but what I have I give you. In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk.” Taking him by the right hand, he helped him up, and instantly the man’s feet and ankles became strong. He jumped to his feet and began to walk. Then he went with them into the temple courts, walking and jumping, and praising God. When all the people saw him walking and praising God, they recognized him as the same man who used to sit begging at the temple gate called Beautiful, and they were filled with wonder and amazement at what had happened to him. (Acts 3:1-10)

 

This account of Peter and John healing a man at the temple gait contains a principal that we need to remember as we minister to the world around us. There are things that we can do for people in our own strength that will satisfy their apparent need but there are things we can do in the power of the Spirit that will go far beyond what they can imagine.

 

This is the story of a man whose vision for life was to accept his disability as inevitable and then to live with his limitations by getting bits and pieces of what the world could offer him. His view of life was that the best he could hope for was enough money to buy food and drink for a day.   He had someone, on whom he was dependent, carry him to the temple gate each day because he believed that his best hope for charity was from those who were going up to worship God. His view of that was correct but his view of what God could or would do for him was limited to the flesh. His hope was simply that God would touch a heart to share a little money for the day. Perhaps, he saw his hope that God would provide his daily bread every day for the rest of his life as faith pleasing to God and, perhaps, it was.   The problem wasn’t the faith it was the vision.

 

That is true for many of us. We have been taught that God will only work through natural means to meet our needs or to advance the kingdom. So we pray for doctors to do their best. We pray for a good job to meet the needs of our families. We pray for rain when the skies are already full of clouds. There is nothing wrong with these prayers except that we are asking God to guarantee what would likely happen in the natural even without his intervention. Sometimes our view of the miraculous is only one shade different from the natural. I don’t deny that God often works in the natural but I also believe he wants us to have a greater vision than that.

 

When Abraham and Sarah were told that they would give birth to a son in their late years they eventually defaulted to pursuing God’s promise in the natural. Growing impatient with God’s timetable, Abraham fathered a child with Hagar, a servant of Sarah’s who was a younger woman. When Ishmael was born, Abraham wanted to call God’s promise good but God rejected Ishmael because he was not the child of promise. In other words, the birth of Ishmael was not beyond the scope of what could happen in the natural. Older men had fathered children before. But what about a woman long past menopause? That would require a miracle and so in God’s timing Abraham fathered a son through Sarah. That was Isaac, the supernatural child of promise.

 

In the story of Peter and John, the man asked for a contribution to the poor. What he got was far beyond his vision of what God would do for him. Instead of a pocket change, he received a new set of legs. Peter and John’s vision of what God was willing to do set the stage for a miracle that brought praise to God because only God could have done what the crowds witnessed with their own eyes. Too many of us serve God in our own strength and ask him to simply bless what we do. That’s not bad but there is something much better. That something is to ask God to do through us what only he can do – something that is impossible for us to do in our own strength and in our own talents.

 

Even the world can do amazing things in its own strength – remember the Tower of Babel. Even atheists and worshippers of false Gods can build great buildings, feed the poor, fund research, and entertain us in amazing ways. Certainly followers of Christ should provide great architecture, feed the poor, and fund research but at the same time we should ask for more and ask God to do things through us that no man can do. That is what separates Jesus from every other name. That is what identifies Jesus as the only name under heaven by which men can be saved. Our view is that silver and gold given to good causes is a good thing but God is willing to go far beyond that when our vision goes far beyond that.

 

Today, lets ask God to not only empower men to do the possible with excellence but let’s ask him to do the impossible so that men will give him praise and the name of Jesus will be exalted.  Today’s word – Expect miracles.

 

We do a lot of equipping in the arena of spiritual warfare. Paul tells us that the church in his day was not unaware of Satan’s schemes. In other words, the mature followers of Christ in Paul’s day had an understanding of how Satan worked and how he laid traps for God’s people. We should have the same awareness, so we equip believers with that knowledge.

 

The downside of that equipping is that some people then begin to see every event in their life as an attack from Satan. A flat tire is an attack. A cold is an attack. Sugar ants in the kitchen become another harassment from the enemy. Let me be clear. I do believe and teach that many things in our lives that others see as simply events in the natural realm have roots in the spiritual realm and that we are targets of the enemy. I believe that in many cases we should look for spiritual causation before addressing causes that might rest in the natural realm. But, as in most theology, balance is important. The truth lies in the center of the road. Muddy ditches lie on either side.

 

The balance is that although Satan is real and that demons show up in many situations, we should not give Satan too much credit nor should we fear him. The New Testament teaching is that we should be wise and cautious regarding the enemy but not afraid. Peter tells us to be self-controlled and alert since the devil prowls around like a roaring lion. He did not say to be afraid but to be alert. And he said to avoid the Devil’s reach by exercising self-control. In other words, don’t get caught up in sin and don’t act in impulsive or foolish ways and the devil is not to be a big concern.

 

God’s word actually portrays Satan as being on the defensive and demonstrates the power of Christ’s authority over the enemy time and time again. Remember that Jesus declared that the gates of Hell would not be able to prevail against his church (see Mt.16:18). The image is the gates of a walled city under siege. The gates of Hell will not be able to withstand the assaults of God’s people. In scripture, gates usually represent power or authority. Jesus clearly says that the power and authority of the kingdom of darkness is no match for the kingdom of light. When Jesus sent out the twelve and the seventy he gave them power and authority over the enemy, disease, and sometimes even death. He has given the same authority to us. John reminded the church that he that is in us (Jesus) is greater than he that is in the world (1 Jn.4:4). Jesus declared that the prince of this world (Satan) had been condemned (see Jn.16:11) and that he would be driven out (see Jn.12:31).

 

When we begin to speak to a person about deliverance it is not unusual for that individual to begin to experience anxiety, fear, or even panic. They are simply sensing what the demonic spirit is experiencing as that spirit knows that he will not be able to withstand the authority of Jesus coming against him for very long….the gates of Hell shall not prevail. Remember the encouragement of James who declares that if we resist the devil he will flee from us (James 4:7).   When a spirit flees he is afraid.

 

When our lives are aligned with Christ and we have removed those things that might give the enemy some temporary authority to harass or afflict us then we need to be alert, we need to be self-controlled, we need to be submitted to God, but we do not need to be afraid. When I stand in the ranks with the Commander of the armies of heaven and pray for his protection over me, then I should expect it and not believe that everything that disrupts my life in a fallen world is demonic. If it is, then Christ can’t or won’t protect me. Christ can and will protect me because his name is above all names and he has all authority in heaven and on earth.

 

I will agree that there may be times when Jesus allows the enemy to harass me but it is so that I can learn to fight…not just for me but for others and, more importantly, so that I can experience the victory that is ours in Christ. In the first part of the book of Judges we are told, “The Lord had allowed those nations to remain; he did not drive them out at once by giving them into the hands of Joshua. These are the nations the Lord left to test all those Israelites who had not experienced any of the wars in Canaan (he did this only to teach warfare to the descendants of the Israelites who had not had previous battle experience): the five rulers of the Philistines, all the Canaanites, the Sidonians, and the Hivites living in the Lebanon mountains from Mount Baal Hermon to Lebo Hamath” (Judges 2:23-3:3).

 

God left battles for the Hebrews not only so they could learn the tactics of war but so that they could be strengthened in their faith. It is in the midst of battle that men learn that a faithful God partners with his people for victory. God can do all things without us but he typically gives the victory through us using our hands, our prayers, and our commands to overcome the enemy. In the process we mature and learn over and over again that he is faithful and that he that is in us is greater than he that is in the world.

 

So there are times when we will have to stand against the enemy while at the same time we must remember that the victory is assured. The enemy has been defeated. We are simply left to enforce and enjoy the victory that has already been won. The enemy loves to cast a large shadow and growl and boast of his power but when we stand against him with the power of heaven he flees.

 

Be wise, be aware, but don’t be afraid and don’t give him too much credit. You are in Christ and Christ is in you. When you know that then the devil is on the run.

 

Jesus left few traces of himself on earth.  He wrote no books or even pamphlets.  A wanderer, he left no home or even belongings that could be enshrined in a museum.  He did not marry, settle down, and begin a dynasty.  We would, in fact, know nothing about him except for the traces he left in human beings.  That was his design. (Philip Yancey, The Jesus I Never Knew, p.228).

 

As I reflect on Yancey’s words, I have to agree.   In fact, it occurs to me that God has operated in much the same way.  There is little left of what God has done that can be put in a museum.  The Ark of the Covenant has not been seen by the crowds since Babylon sacked Jerusalem in 586 B.C.  One short stretch of wall stands in Jerusalem that may have been part of Solomon’s temple.  People claim to have found Noah’s ark but that still is uncertain.  Others claim to have bits and pieces of the cross or the cup from which Christ drank the night of his arrest or the shroud in which he was buried but these are all speculative.

 

As a culture we strive to preserve every artifact we can find related to the birth of our nation, wars we have fought, even tragedies we have experienced.  We catalogue them, put them in history books, and carefully display them in impressive buildings.  But God and Jesus seem to have done just the opposite.  Little, if any, hard-core evidence exists of God’s intervention on earth.  Why has he chosen to camouflage himself in such ways?  I can think of several reasons.

 

First of all, the nature of man seems to seek out objects of worship and even makes the things that should simply remind us of God into little gods themselves.  We’re told that the bronze staff that Moses lifted up in the wilderness to save the people from a plague of serpents was destroyed because Israel was worshipping the staff rather than the God who had empowered the staff.  The cross, in some cases, is worn like a good luck charm rather than a reminder of the one who died for us.  For many the Wailing Wall is Jerusalem is seen as a point of contact with the God of Israel who does not dwell in temples or in walls.  If God had left the relics of his supernatural moves on the earth many would be worshipping them instead of the God who wielded them.

 

Secondly, the absence of such things reminds us that the museums of heaven are worth far more than the museums of earth.  Jesus left little physical evidence of himself because he was not invested in this realm but in the spiritual realm.  He was laying up treasures in heaven rather than building grand pyramids on earth. His concern was the applause of his heavenly Father rather than the crowds who had wanted to make his king one day and cried out to release Barabbas a few days later.

 

More than that, however, is that Jesus chose to leave the evidence of his existence in the hands and hearts of men.  In a sense we are the evidence that he came, died, and ascended. We are his museums that carry the faith and the power of heaven.  We are the temple of God and the evidence of his reality must be passed on from generation to generation.  Augustine said, “You ascended from before our eyes, and we turned back grieving, only to find you in our hearts.”  His church carries the evidence of the reality of Jesus having come to earth, having taught us about heaven and then having died for our sins and being raised again. The compelling evidence is not in our buildings or ancient cathedrals but in the lives of people who wear his name today.

 

It’s not that there is no external evidence that Jesus of Nazareth walked the earth. No serious historian doubts that.  But the questions arise about who Jesus really was…a carpenter, a philosopher, a Rabbi caught up in his own story, or the very Son if God who died for us and now lives in our hearts by his Spirit? Most men will not be convinced by relics in a museum, since they were not even convinced when Jesus raised the dead.  They will be convinced by the quality of life lived out by his followers and the love of Christ displayed through them.

 

I need to remember that and I need to ask myself how much evidence of the reality of Jesus will people see in me today? Will my words and my actions make them more or less convinced of Jesus?  May we all be compelling evidence to the people we encounter today that Jesus does indeed live.