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Saturday, December 13, 2014

P3 - God Empowered Living - 1 Timothy 2:7-8


1 Timothy 2:7-8 "For this I was appointed a preacher and an apostle (I am telling the truth, I am not lying) as a teacher of the Gentiles in faith and truth.8 Therefore I want the men in every place to pray, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and dissension."

Introduction and Review:
For the past couple of days we have been interested in understanding and applying the idea of "God-empowered living". Our main point of application in this series of posts has been: God-empowered living, built upon prayer, is the primary call of the Christian. We noticed how such a life is God calling the Christian to specifically desire to:
1). Please God
2). Powerful Testimony
3). Personally Focus on Jesus Christ

Today we will conclude this blog series by considering one more area to which God-empowered living is called, namely...

Profound church-life. 1 Timothy 2:7
We have seen what happens when the power of God is unleashed through plugging into His power through prayer. God's power at work through prayer can lead to a more powerful and effective Christian life, witness and focus on Jesus Christ. What happens when individual believers come together in the setting of the local church. What occurs when a local church body is composed of believers who understand their call to live as God-empowered people for God? 

Paul writes in 1 Timothy 2:7-8  "For this I was appointed a preacher and an apostle (I am telling the truth, I am not lying) as a teacher of the Gentiles in faith and truth. 8 "Therefore I want the men in every place to pray, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and dissension."

In our churches, when prayer is made the priority, much like the individual Christian life, a red-carpet of invitation is opened up to God to come and do as he pleases in the church's ministries. As the Holy Spirit begins to ignite the hearts of certain people to intercede, much like the windows in Noah's Ark, light and fresh air begin to infiltrate the vessel we call the church. What happens when it's not just the preacher or even the Deacons calling people to pray and seek God, but the move becomes an entire body activity? The whole body of Christ becomes as one man - answering the call to God-empowered living that will want to please God, have powerful testimonies, personally focus on Jesus Christ and thus have a profound church life. 

Paul's mention of his calling and preaching to the exhortation to pray in 2:8 suggests firstly that plugging into God's power through prayer will yield power in the pulpit. The apostolic authority that comes through the scriptures will be refreshed and renewed and thus the church will once again be rekindled in its focus on the Word. The fact that Paul mentions teaching reminds us of the importance of the teaching ministries of the church such as Sunday School and Small groups. Then finally, when we plug into God's power through prayer, the people of God will be illuminated to a greater understanding of life-application. 

Too often our feet hit the ground running without any thought of prayer. The true work of the local church are not so much the works themselves, rather the work of the local church is the work of God at work. How else can God work freely and unhindered in our churches lest He be invited to do so through the church body as a whole seeking Him in prayer. 

Closing thoughts:
These past few posts have attempted to flesh out further what we see in 1 Timothy 2:1-8 regarding God-empowered living. We noted in our main point of application: God-empowered living, built upon prayer, is the primary call of the Christian. We noticed how such a life is God calling the Christian to specifically:

1). Please God
2). Powerful Testimony
3). Personally Focus on Jesus Christ
4). Profound Church-life


May God use these posts for His glory!

Friday, December 12, 2014

P2 God-empowered living - 1 Timothy 2:3-6


1 Timothy 2:3-8 "This is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior, 4 who desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth. 5 For there is one God, and one mediator also between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, 6 who gave Himself as a ransom for all, the testimony given at the proper time."

Introduction and Review:
We closed out yesterday's post with this thought: Remember: God-empowered living, built upon prayer, is the primary call of the Christian. Having Biblically defined the God-empowered life, we can now notice how such a life is God calling the Christian to specifically.....

Pleasing God. 1 Timothy 2:3-4
1 Timothy 2:3-4 is one of the most important passages in the New Testament with regards to God's missionary heart. The text reads: "This is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior,4 who desires all men to be saved and to come to the knowledge of the truth." The underlined word "acceptable" could just as easily be translated "pleasing". Before we go any further into this verse, it is worth noting some things about what it means to bring pleasure to God, and how such a desire marks God-empowered living. 

Let me ask a simple question: are you and I interested in bring pleasure to God? The relationship my children and my wife and me have with one another is based upon the fundamental assumption that they have our favor. We are pleased with out children in-so-far as they are our children and we are their parents. However, can children bring pleasure or dis-pleasure to their parents? Certainly. When a child disobeys or does something to hurt another person or themselves, that causes the pleasantness of the relationship to be altered. Does that mean that the parent-child relationship is over? No, because biologically they are our children and we are their parents. However a family is so-much more than being about biological relationships. Their is relationship, communication, closeness, trust and all the factors necessary to ensure stronger bonds. 

Likewise in the Christian's relationship with the Heavenly father, we are related to Him spiritually through Jesus Christ. By the Holy Spirit we are partakers, fellowshippers in the Divine nature and have the very energies of His nature at work in us. (Philippians 2:13; 2 Peter 1:3-4). Remember: God-empowered living, built upon prayer, is the primary call of the Christian. This call for God-empowered living leads to a desire to please God and what will hopefully be..

Powerful testimony. 1 Timothy 2:3-4,8
We must not be content in being spiritual related to God and being "o.k" with getting to heaven. No. The Christian life is to be a God-empowered one that desires to bring pleasure to God. Such a life entails a relationship and fellowship with God that bears witness to others about such a reality. 

When we couple 1 Timothy 2:3-4 and 2:8, we see the clear linkage between prayer and evangelism. Mike Barnett, editor of the book: "Discovering the Mission of God", (IVP Academic, 2012 page 375), notes the importance of prayer and missions: 
"Why pray for God's missions and His missionaries? Because God always has and always will answer prayer. Whom should we pray for? The nations and missionaries. Pray for the nations to hear and understand the good news of Jesus Christ. Pray for missionaries to endure and develop Christlike character as they serve. How should we pray? For God's mission to be accomplished. Don't focus so much on plans, strategies, means and methods, but for God's will to be done - His Kingdom to come. These are the basics of praying strategically for God's mission and missionaries."

I remember years ago hearing someone say that a man is no greater in his public life than he is on His knees in prayer. When we pray for the lost, we not only pray for their salvation and pray for God to send others to the unregenerate. We must necessarily say with Isaiah the prophet in Isaiah 6: "Oh Lord, send me!" When you and I get in order with God's purposes for evangelism, and couple that with prayer, God's effort in creating a testimony in and through out lives will affect people on a very personal level. In-as-much as the scripture are the means by which the Spirit of God affects conversion, it is by the means of consistent Gospel-witness both verbally and practically that such conversions are demonstrated to be true. Again: God-empowered living, built upon prayer, is the primary call of the Christian. The God-empowered life calls the Christian to please God by way of a powerful testimony. Unless God is empowering us, such truths will never be able to be lived out consistently nor in reality. Now notice the third area to which such a life call the Christian, namely....

Personal focus on Jesus. 1 Timothy 2:5-6
How is it that Christians can retain a thorough Christ-centeredness in their lives? It all begins with prayer! It is no accident that Paul would insert in a section on prayer one of the most Jesus' saturated texts in 1 Timothy 2:5-6 "For there is one God, and one mediator also between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, 6 who gave Himself as a ransom for all, the testimony given at the proper time." The symmetry and beauty of these verses is so profound in bringing into focus the miraculous Person of the Son.

Jesus is Divinely able to keep us focused
First, the Mediatorship of Jesus, called by Bible teachers His "Session", has at its heart the purposes and power of prayer. As God, the Son is Divinely able to supply and be the focus of the God-empowered life, since He himself is God! The book of Hebrews is replete with reminders of how Jesus Christ is the Living Mediator who intercedes for us and makes such intercession possible. (Hebrews 7:25; 8:6; 9:15: 12:24). 

Jesus is humanly capable to empathize with us and by the Spirit encourage us to keep focusedSecondly, Jesus Christ as man has something in common with us and at the same time being God can connect us directly to the Father. The power of prayer truly means we are connected to that wondrous fellowship that exists between the Trinity through the ongoing Mediating ministry of the Son - Jesus Christ. 

As both God and man, Jesus is the proper focus Who can turn our duty toward Him into increasing delight
These thoughts are all to say that when the power of God is unleashed in our lives, the goal of being Christ-centered will go from a duty to a delight, being that prayer itself is only possible through Jesus Christ. By focusing on Jesus Christ in the God-empowered life, my attitude towards the things of God as been a "laundry list of have-to's" (church, witnessing, loving my neighbor, my enemies, my in-laws, reading my Bible, prayer) turns into labors of love or "want-to's". 

More tomorrow.....

Thursday, December 11, 2014

P1 God-empowered living - 1 Timothy 2:1-2


1 Timothy 2:8 "Therefore I want the men in every place to pray, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and dissension."

Introduction:
A couple of days ago we considered what it means to unleash God's power through prayer (link: http://pastormahlon.blogspot.com/2014/12/unleashing-power-of-god-through-prayer.html) This author felt it necessary to dig further into 1 Timothy 2:1-8 and to take this post of a couple of days ago and use it as a springboard into discovering the need for God-saturated living. 

As was mentioned in that older post, prayer could be conceived of as rolling out the red carpet for God to come into and do His work. Prayer invites God to work where He wants and how He wants. When Paul writes what he does to Timothy, his chief concern is how one ought to conduct themselves in the household of the living God - the church. (1 Timothy 3:15) We must not think of Paul's 1st Epistle to Timothy as being concerned about behavior, but rather transformed, redeemed lives living out God's purposes together by His power for the glory of Jesus Christ. As the opening verse of today's post urges, men everywhere ought to be lifting up "holy hands" without wrath and dissension. The God-empowered life will have things right in both the vertical direction (God-and-me; God-and-us) and the horizontal direction (you and me direction). 

Point of Application
The point of application for today's post will be: God-empowered living, built upon prayer, is the primary call of the Christian. In the thoughts below we will flesh out from 1 Timothy 2:3-8 what is meant by God-empowered living, and why in its connection to prayer, it stands as the primary call of the Christian. Notice that the call to be God-empowered is a call to...

Biblically defining God-empowered living. 1 Timothy 2:1-2
1 Timothy 2:2 says these words - "for kings and all who are in authority, so that we may lead a tranquil and quiet life in all godliness and dignity." As God's people regularly pray for those in authority, the communities in which they live and the surrounding culture, God's favor works on their behalf. Proverbs 16:7 reminds us: "When a man’s ways are pleasing to the Lord,
He makes even his enemies to be at peace with him." Certainly King Jehosaphat, one of the godliest kings to ever reign in Old Testament Jerusalem, embodied this passage as seen in 2 Chronicles 17:10 "
Now the dread of the Lord was on all the kingdoms of the lands which were around Judah, so that they did not make war against Jehoshaphat." Or how about the early church in the New Testament in Acts 2:46-47 "Day by day continuing with one mind in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, they were taking their meals together with gladness and sincerity of heart, 47 praising God and having favor with all the people. And the Lord was adding to their number day by day those who were being saved."  

Certainly plugging into God's power is done so through prayer. Undoubtedly Christians must put prayers to the feet, intercessions to the hands and entreaties to the plans and purposes of the mind. Yet what Paul is equally affirming in these verses is that feet, hands, plans and purposes need to be practically lived out in light of prayer - i.e "putting feet to our prayers". 
The underlined words above in 1 Timothy 2:3,  "tranquil" and "quiet", speak of a soul that is at rest as a result of improvement of outside circumstances (i.e the word tranquil) and the inward conditions of the heart. (1 Peter 3:4). 

Is God-empowered living going to lead to a life of ease and comfort? Not in the sense of the so-called "American Dream". The type of life which is spoken of here is a life that rests in the fact that God is in control. God-empowered living is a call to live the type of life that is being encouraged as a result of God's power unleashed through the connection of prayer - i.e "life in all godliness and dignity." 

Remember: God-empowered living, built upon prayer, is the primary call of the Christian. This necessarily begins with the foundation of the Christian's call as being empowered by God in their life. 

More tomorrow....

Wednesday, December 10, 2014

Jesus came to bring about changed humanity


Ephesians 4:21-24 "if indeed you have heard Him and have been taught in Him, just as truth is in Jesus, 22 that, in reference to your former manner of life, you lay aside the old self, which is being corrupted in accordance with the lusts of deceit, 23 and that you be renewed in the spirit of your mind, 24 and put on the new self, which in the likeness of God has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth."

Introduction
In yesterday's post we considered why no one can properly define "what man is" apart from Jesus Christ. In today's post I thought we would flesh this out further by considering one of the reason why Jesus came to this world in His first Advent. 


All other attempts to understand "what is man" fail apart from God's revelation in Jesus Christ
When attempting to map out the make-up of human beings, the Christian must necessarily begin with Jesus Christ. Why? In the Person of Jesus Christ the fully-Divine and fully-human natures meet. The Old Testament's answer to the question: "what is man?" could only be answered in light of whether or one was rightly related to God. When we arrive at the New Testament, the answer of the Old Testament is affirmed and taken further, that is to say, a man perfectly related to God would need to be the Savior who is at the same time God if true humanity ever had a chance of being recovered and understood. 

When Adam sinned, he died spiritually (in his human spirit) and thus lost all personal and moral ability to personally relate to and desire to know God. As a living soul, mankind would be born with a dead-inability to know God in his human spirit. As a living soul, man-kind would still bear the imprint or image of being made and design by God with a sense of God being revealed in a general way in creation (Psalm 19:1-6) and the conscience (Romans 2:15). The soul of the man is the "real you" so-to-speak, containing the mind, emotions, will and conscience. Thus the Bible reveals man as a soul, containing a human spirit, living in a physical body. 

When Jesus came and assumed upon himself a human nature, he did not inherit the fallen nature of Old Adam. As the Son ever remained God, He chose to enter into time by the virgin birth. (Matthew 1:21-23; Luke 1:35). Jesus' humanity was untouched by sin as a result of this miracle and thus in his humanity, Jesus' human spirit was filled with the fullness and glory of God's very presence by the Person of the Spirit. 

We know Jesus had a spirit in how he was able to perceive certain things at the deepest level by his inner communion with the Holy Spirit empowering and indwelling His humanity. (Mark 2:8; 8:12; John 11:33) Furthermore, the Gospels reveal Jesus' humanity as being a true living soul, as recorded in passages such as Matthew 26:38. In the Garden of Gethsemane we see Jesus expressing His mind, emotions, will and conscience as a man. Moreover, the scriptures repeatedly affirm that Jesus' humanity included a real, physical body, both in His pre-resurrection (Mk 15:43,45) and post-resurrection (Luke 24:39). 

Hence Jesus Christ in regards to His humanity, is a soul, containing a spirit, residing now in a glorified, resurrected physical body. (compare above scriptures to 1 Thessalonians 5:23-24; Hebrews 4:12) Such a humanity describes Jesus Christ as "The New Adam" and the "Second Adam". (Romans 5:14ff; 1 Corinthians 15:22,44-45)  

When a man, woman or child is by grace united to Jesus Christ in saving faith, the transformational miracle that occurs in bringing about such union describes what takes place instantaneously in the human spirit through what the scriptures call the "new birth" or regeneration. (John 3:3; James 1:18; 1 Peter 1:3-5, 23) The Holy Spirit of God takes the sinner "out of Adam" and place them "in Christ" or "the New Adam". (2 Corinthians 5:17) This instant change of the human spirit from death/darkness to life/light is where salvation begins. However the human soul (mind, emotions, will, conscience, i.e the "real you") is being progressively changed in a process called "sanctification". (Romans 6:7-19; 8:1-10; 1 Corinthians 6:19-20) The physical body of the Christian awaits redemption and will be redeemed and transformed or "raised" from this corruptible to incorruptible form. (1 Thessalonians 4:13-16; 1 Corinthians 15:35-58)

As preachers of old have said for years: "the penalty of sin is removed in regeneration/justification; the power of sin is removed in sanctification and the presence of sin will be removed in glorification or when Christians are in the presence of God in Heaven". I would add to this wonderful summary one more important point: "the physical decay of the body, caused by the curse of sin, will be removed at resurrection".

Transformation is central to Christianity because of what Jesus achieved as both God and man
As we draw this post to a close, we must ever remember that Jesus Christ retained His full-Deity when He came the first time. Unless Jesus Christ has been God, there would had been no way He would have had the power to Divinely change people's lives. With that said, we must also equally assert that Jesus Christ came to this world to take upon himself a fully human nature and retained such following His resurrection and ascension. Remarkably, unless Jesus Christ retained His full-humanity, He would not be capable of directly transforming the human life with whom He came to redeem and whom are united to His humanity by the Holy Spirit at saving faith. (2 Corinthians 12:12-13) The changes that take place and that are available in Jesus Christ are many and would not be possible to list in today's post. However the ability to be changed in one's spirit by the new birth and to experience emotional, physical, relational and societal healing, just to name a few of the many changes, is all made possible by what Jesus achieved as both God and man on the believer's behalf. This is only the beginning when it comes to thinking about how Jesus came to bring about changed humanity. 


Tuesday, December 9, 2014

Why people cannot properly understand themselves apart from Jesus Christ


Ephesians 4:21-24 "if indeed you have heard Him and have been taught in Him, just as truth is in Jesus, 22 that, in reference to your former manner of life, you lay aside the old self, which is being corrupted in accordance with the lusts of deceit, 23 and that you be renewed in the spirit of your mind, 24 and put on the new self, which in the likeness of God has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth."

What is man?
Who are you? Whose are you? These are two questions that are fundamental to grasping one's identity. How people answer these two questions will determine how they understand themselves and for whom they live their lives. God's main aim in Christian growth is to transform a person from the inside to the outside to Christ-likeness.

Understanding "who you are" and "whose you are" entails answering a third related question: "what are you?" Secularists will tell us that people are nothing more than the sum-total of the electrical impulses traveling between the neurons in the brain. In short - man is only a physical, biological machine that has a consciousness emerging out of the sum of the parts. Man lives, dies, and no more.

The Bible itself asks this question "what is man?" in Psalm 8:3-4 "What is man that You take thought of him, And the son of man that You care for him?" The key to understanding how to answer the question "what is man?" is implied in King David's question itself: "You take thought of Him". Scripture uniformly states that mankind cannot understand "what they are" nor "who they are" without identifying themselves in relationship with God. 

Man's true humanity cannot be properly understood apart from Jesus Christ
The goal of salvation is reconciliation with God through faith in Jesus Christ. The marvel of the Gospel is that Jesus Christ, the Eternal Son, came to this earth and took upon himself the nature of those whom needed to be reconciled and transformed. As fully God - Jesus Christ perfectly reveals to us the God with whom we need reconciled and the God Who desires to be reconciled to us. 2 Corinthians 5:18-19 states: "Now all these things are from God, who reconciled us to Himself through Christ and gave us the ministry of reconciliation, 19 namely, that God was in Christ reconciling the world to Himself, not counting their trespasses against them, and He has committed to us the word of reconciliation." 

Simultaneously as God, the Eternal Son is now also man. Therefore in answering the question: "what is man?", the only accurate answer to be given is by looking at the humanity of Jesus Himself. The writer of Hebrews takes the question of Psalm 8:3-4 and casts it in light of Jesus Christ's incarnation in human flesh in Hebrews 2:9 "But we do see Him who was made for a little while lower than the angels, namely, Jesus, because of the suffering of death crowned with glory and honor, so that by the grace of God He might taste death for everyone." 

More tomorrow....

Monday, December 8, 2014

Unleashing the power of God through prayer - 1 Timothy 2:3-8

1 Timothy 2:8 "Therefore I want the men in every place to pray, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and dissension."

Introduction:
Yesterday we considered the importance of plugging into God's power through prayer. Our main point of application was: Plugging into God's power is done through prayer. We surveyed the Bible's teaching on this subject. In 1 Timothy 2:1-8, the Apostle Paul needed to remind Timothy and the church at Ephesus of the need to plug into God's power through prayer. 

Think of prayer as a rolling out the red carpet for God to come into and do His work. Prayer invites God to work where He wants and how He wants. 

So then in seeing what the Bible has to say about this important topic of "plugging into God's power through prayer", what specific areas can be affected when God's power is unleashed through prayer? 

Plugging into God's power through prayer leads to....

Powerful living. 1 Timothy 2:1-2
1 Timothy 2:2 says these words - "for kings and all who are in authority, so that we may lead a tranquil and quiet life in all godliness and dignity." As God's people regularly pray for those in authority, the communities in which they live and the surrounding culture, God's favor works on their behalf. The words "tranquil" and "quiet" speak of a soul that is at rest as a result of improvement of outside circumstances (i.e the word tranquil) and the inward conditions of the heart. (1 Peter 3:4). 

Is Paul saying that plugging into God's power through prayer is going to lead to a life of ease and comfort? Not in the sense of the so-called "American Dream". The type of life which is spoken of here is a life that rests in the fact that God is in control. Notice the type of life that is being encouraged as a result of God's power unleashed through the connection of prayer: "life in all godliness and dignity." 

Powerful witness. 1 Timothy 2:3-4
1 Timothy 2:3-4 is one of the most important passages in the New Testament with regards to God's missionary heart. The text reads: "This is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior,4 who desires all men to be saved and tocome to the knowledge of the truth." When we couple these verses to 1 Timothy 2:1 and 2:8, we see the clear linkage between prayer and evangelism. Mike Barnett, editor of the book: "Discovering the Mission of God", (IVP Academic, 2012 page 375), notes the importance of prayer and missions: 
"Why pray for God's missions and His missionaries? Because God always has and always will answer prayer. Whom should we pray for? The nations and missionaries. Pray for the nations to hear and understand the good news of Jesus Christ. Pray for missionaries to endure and develop Christlike character as they serve. How should we pray? For God's mission to be accomplished. Don't focus so much on plans, strategies, means and methods, but for God's will to be done - His Kingdom to come. These are the basics of praying strategically for God's mission and missionaries."

Powerful focus on Jesus. 1 Timothy 2:5-6
How is it that Christians can retain a thorough Christ-centeredness in their lives? by means of prayer! It is no accident that Paul would insert in a section on prayer one of the most Jesus' saturated texts in 1 Timothy 2:5-6 "For there is one God, and one mediator also between God and men, the man Christ Jesus, 6 who gave Himself as a ransom for all, the testimony given at the proper time." These two verses in and of themselves could easily turn into two or three blog posts, but for now we will confine ourselves to a few thoughts. 

First, Paul's words and thoughts veer into this focus upon Jesus Christ as the Mediator and is at the center of a section that begins and ends with the exhortation to pray. 

Secondly, the Mediatorship of Jesus, called by Bible teachers His "Session", has at its heart the purposes and power of prayer. The book of Hebrews is replete with reminders of how Jesus Christ is the Living Mediator who intercedes for us and makes such intercession possible. (Hebrews 7:25; 8:6; 9:15: 12:24). 

Thirdly, Jesus' role as Mediator means that He is both the source and goal of prayer. Fourthly, Jesus Christ as man has something in common with us and at the same time being God can connect us directly to the Father. The power of prayer truly means we are connected to that wonderous fellowship that exists between the Trinity through the ongoing Mediating ministry of the Son - Jesus Christ. These thoughts are all to say that when the power of God is unleashed in our lives, the goal of being Christ-centered will go from a duty to a delight, being that prayer itself is only possible through Jesus Christ.

Powerful church-life. 1 Timothy 2:7
We have seen what happens when the power of God is unleashed through plugging into His power through prayer. God's power at work through prayer can lead to a more powerful and effective Christian life, witness and focus on Jesus Christ. What happens when individual believers come together in the setting of the local church. What occurs when a local church body is caught up in a powerful prayer movement? Paul writes in 1 Timothy 2:7-8  "For this I was appointed a preacher and an apostle (I am telling the truth, I am not lying) as a teacher of the Gentiles in faith and truth. 8 "Therefore I want the men in every place to pray, lifting up holy hands, without wrath and dissension."

In our churches, when prayer is made the priority, much like the individual Christian life, a red-carpet of invitation is opened up to God to come and do as he pleases in the church's ministries. Paul's mention of his calling and preaching to the exhortation to pray in 2:8 suggests firstly that plugging into God's power through prayer will yield power in the pulpit. The apostolic authority that comes through the scriptures will be refreshed and renewed and thus the church will once again be rekindled in its focus on the Word. The fact that Paul mentions teaching reminds us of the importance of the teaching ministries of the church such as Sunday School and Small groups. Then finally, when we plug into God's power through prayer, the people of God will be illuminated to a greater understanding of life-application. 

Too often our feet hit the ground running without any thought of prayer. The true work of the local church are not so much the works themselves, rather the work of the local church is the work of God at work. How else can God work freely and unhindered in our churches lest He be invited to do so through the church body as a whole seeking Him in prayer. 

Sunday, December 7, 2014

Plugging into God's power through prayer - 1 Timothy 2:1-2



1 Timothy 2:1-2 "First of all, then, I urge that entreaties and prayers, petitions and thanksgivings, be made on behalf of all men, 2 for kings and all who are in authority, so that we may lead a tranquil and quiet life in all godliness and dignity."

Introduction:
Recently our oven at home stopped working. My wife had been preparing to cook supper and when she went to turn on the oven, sparks and flames came from inside the door. Thankfully she was able to get to the breaker box to shut off the power. The oven had cooked its last meal. When I arrived home that evening, I looked at the oven. By and large the oven looked the same as it had when I had used it earlier that morning to make some breakfast. By outward appearance things looked fine and yet, without power, the inside of the oven will remain ineffective and incapable of achieving what it was designed to do. 

When the Apostle Paul is writing to young Timothy who is getting ready to assume pastor leadership, much instruction is given. We discover in 1 Timothy 3:15 the primary intent of the letter: to teach God's people how they ought to conduct themselves in the church of the Living God. As one scans over the first chapter, Paul instructs Timothy about the importance of church membership (1 Timothy 1:1-11); the necessity of thanking Jesus (1 Timothy 1:12-17) and fighting the good fight of faith (1 Timothy 1:18-20). As we prepare to enter into the second chapter of this marvelous book of the Bible, Paul is going to push the urgency of plugging into God's power through prayer.

Point of Application: 
As we consider the significance of prayer in the life of the Christian and the church, we will aim to unpack the following main point of application: "Plugging into God's power occurs through prayer."

Biblical pattern for plugging into God's power through prayer
Plugging into God's power by prayer for daily decisions
Why do we need God's power and why is prayer the way to connect to such power? Paul is urging this church to pray on behalf of others and to seek the face of God. A church and its membership that takes seriously the matter of prayer understands that God's power is needed when making decisions. In prayer the mind and the human spirit are linked together. (1 Corinthians 14:15) The mind that has taken in the words of God from the Bible knows the will of God. (1 Corinthians 2:10-13, 16) The human spirit that is home to the Holy Spirit of God knows the will of God intuitively enough to make decisions that match what God would choose to do in that given situation. All of these linkages are made possible by means of prayer. Remeber: plugging into God's power is done by means of prayer.

Plugging into God's power by prayer feeds the faith
When we deal with the matter of faith, it too requires the child of God plugging into God's power by prayer. Faith by its very definition in Hebrews 11:1 is the substance of things hoped for and the certainty of things not yet seen. Praying in the power of the Spirit is commanded in Jude 1:20  "But you, beloved, building yourselves up on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Spirit." 

Plugging into God's power by prayer to overcome fear
Such praying is how we overcome the fear that so often tries to constrict the Christian's faith. Did you know that the Bible tells us to "fear not" over 200 times. The language of "faith" vs "fear" shows us the contrast between the two, and why powerful prayer is needed to break the yoke of fear. Fear says: "Maybe". Faith says: "God can". Fear says: "I'm not sure". Faith says: "I know He will". Prayer crosses over that invisible boundary between human half-hearted prayers vs Spirit-wrought powerful intercession by what we can call "certainty" and "knowing that we know that we know". Praying with power will lead to living with power, worshipping with power and preaching with power. 

Plugging into God's power by prayer is demonstrated by people in the scripture
In the scriptures we see Abraham praying with power in Genesis 18, resulting in Abraham's walk with God being made closer and closer with Him. In King Solomon's dedication of the Temple in Jersualem in 1 Kings 8, we see the glory cloud of God (The Shekinah) fill the temple, thus bringing God's power to bear on that ministry. Jesus' first words from the cross was a prayer that stayed the hand of God from destroying Jesus' executioners and really all of humanity from being wiped out by God's wrath at that given moment. Jesus was ever in touch with the Father in Heaven. He chose to willingly take upon Himself the wrath that we all deserved. The early church was a church of prayer and the power of God was said to had been so much so in those early meetings that when they prayed, the whole place was shaken. (Acts 4:31) The Bible's teaching about plugging into God's power is plainly taught.