Friday, 27 September 2013

right attitudes for ministry


Right Attitudes for Ministry

I.                 Have Humility In Grace (Romans 12:3-8)
A.   Do Honest Self-Evaluation (v. 3)
(Rom 12:3)  For I say, through the grace given unto me, to every man that is among you, not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think; but to think soberly, according as God hath dealt to every man the measure of faith.

We have been studying the gifts of the Spirit in this quarter.  The gifts are tools of ministry, not meant to be used for selfish purposes.  Being used of God to do supernatural things can go to our heads and convince us of our special place or privilege.  We have no latitude for conceit in our servanthood.  Nothing God uses us to do is deserved or earned by us, therefore we cannot fall into arrogance and pride without damaging our usefulness in the kingdom ministries.  We can be confident in Christ and in His grace and love, but He deserves all the credit.

B.   Respect Fellow Christians (vv. 4, 5)
(Rom 12:4)  For as we have many members in one body, and all members have not the same office:
(Rom 12:5)  So we, being many, are one body in Christ, and every one members one of another.

There are no majors and minors in the body of Christ.  The person at the forefront seemingly garnering fame and repute is no more vital to the working of the Church than the one laboring and praying in seclusion, interceding for those on the front lines of battle.  We must regard all other believers as worthy of respect, no matter the gift, gifts, or apparent lack of gifts they display.  The distribution of the gifts is up to the sovereign will of the Spirit, not our view of the recipients.  Every member of the Body complements the others in ministry.

C.   Serve By Gifts of Grace (vv. 6-8)
(Rom 12:6)  Having then gifts differing according to the grace that is given to us, whether prophecy, let us prophesy according to the proportion of faith;
(Rom 12:7)  Or ministry, let us wait on our ministering: or he that teacheth, on teaching;
(Rom 12:8)  Or he that exhorteth, on exhortation: he that giveth, let him do it with simplicity; he that ruleth, with diligence; he that sheweth mercy, with cheerfulness.

The grace of the Father energizes all ministry.  Whatever we find ourselves anointed with or equipped with, our part of the process is to act in our gifts with eager humility and selfless passion, so that we expend our efforts to minister with the highest possible excellence we are capable of.  God never bestows gifts so we can demonstrate laziness.

II.            Be Willing To Serve (1 Peter 4:7-11)
A.   Use Time Wisely (vv. 7-9)
(1Pe 4:7)  But the end of all things is at hand: be ye therefore sober, and watch unto prayer.
(1Pe 4:8)  And above all things have fervent charity among yourselves: for charity shall cover the multitude of sins.
(1Pe 4:9)  Use hospitality one to another without grudging.

Peter exhorted his listeners to minister to one another in love, remaining aware of the imminence of the end of days and the culmination of God’s plan for mankind.  We do not have forever and we must live and be used of God now without hesitation and distraction.

B.   Be Good Stewards of God’s Grace (v. 10)
(1Pe 4:10)  As every man hath received the gift, even so minister the same one to another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God.

The gift could be any gift of the Spirit, or any innate ability God gave us from birth, or any advantage or wealth we acquire by the grace of God in our living. We don’t own what God graciously pours into our lives.  If we are obedient believers we will also be responsible stewards of God’s things.

C.   Serve God by Ministry to Others (v. 11)
(1Pe 4:11)  If any man speak, let him speak as the oracles of God; if any man minister, let him do it as of the ability which God giveth: that God in all things may be glorified through Jesus Christ, to whom be praise and dominion for ever and ever. Amen.

Expressing anything as from the will and mind of God imposes on the speaker an enormous burden of responsibility to represent God accurately and humbly.  God does not play games with arrogant men who think they can use Him to gain fame or power.  If we want to stand righteously before the throne, we must be faithful witnesses careful to truly represent the Father.

III.        Be Motivated By Love (1 Corinthians 12:31 – 13:13
A.   Love Is Essential (12:31 – 13:3)
(1Co 12:31)  But covet earnestly the best gifts: and yet shew I unto you a more excellent way.
(1Co 13:1)  Though I speak with the tongues of men and of angels, and have not charity, I am become as sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.
(1Co 13:2)  And though I have the gift of prophecy, and understand all mysteries, and all knowledge; and though I have all faith, so that I could remove mountains, and have not charity, I am nothing.
(1Co 13:3)  And though I bestow all my goods to feed the poor, and though I give my body to be burned, and have not charity, it profiteth me nothing.

Paul urgently desired that the Corinthians would embrace the wisdom he set forth in chapter 13.  All their eagerness to be used in the giftings of the Spirit would be futile and worse than useless if they didn’t do all of it in sincere love for those they ministered to.

B.   Be Governed by Love (13:4-7)
(1Co 13:4)  Charity suffereth long, and is kind; charity envieth not; charity vaunteth not itself, is not puffed up,
(1Co 13:5)  Doth not behave itself unseemly, seeketh not her own, is not easily provoked, thinketh no evil;
(1Co 13:6)  Rejoiceth not in iniquity, but rejoiceth in the truth;
(1Co 13:7)  Beareth all things, believeth all things, hopeth all things, endureth all things.

Agape love is sacrificial, selfless love.  Paul listed the ways that such love would manifest in the Corinthians’ walk.  They were mere human beings, not capable reaching he ethereal heights of servanthood in themselves.  The kind of love Paul described in these verses only comes as the Spirit changes us into the likeness of Christ.  We desperately need to love like this also.  The gifts will be powerful and effective when we allow God to use us in them coupled with true love for our brothers and sister and all that we meet in ministry.

C.   Love Goes on Forever (vv. 8-13)
(1Co 13:8)  Charity never faileth: but whether there be prophecies, they shall fail; whether there be tongues, they shall cease; whether there be knowledge, it shall vanish away.
(1Co 13:9)  For we know in part, and we prophesy in part.
(1Co 13:10)  But when that which is perfect is come, then that which is in part shall be done away.
(1Co 13:11)  When I was a child, I spake as a child, I understood as a child, I thought as a child: but when I became a man, I put away childish things.
(1Co 13:12)  For now we see through a glass, darkly; but then face to face: now I know in part; but then shall I know even as also I am known.
(1Co 13:13)  And now abideth faith, hope, charity, these three; but the greatest of these is charity.

Paul understood that the level of love he described would take the Corinthians to a fullness of relationship with Christ and would sustain them in eternity.  When we achieve a more perfect understanding of God and His plan for us, we will also see that everything He is and does stems from the kind of love Paul is describing.  God so loved the world, and His will for us is that we learn to so love also.  All abilities and enablements granted by God to us are good only in as far as they operate in love.

Friday, 6 September 2013

THE REWARD OF DEVOTION TO GOD


Week 5: SHAPED FOR SERVING GOD

Introduction
We began this series by establishing that God made us for a reason. No one here this morning was a mistake or an accident. And because God made us, only He can tell us what we were made for. Our purpose in life revolves around Him. Therefore, the only way for us to find lasting joy and satisfaction is to devote ourselves to God, and dedicate ourselves to fulfilling His purposes for our lives.  

Brief review: Week 1: First purpose – Worship: we were made to love God, and we do that by giving him our attention, and our affections, and our actions.
Week 2: Second Purpose – Fellowship: learning to love God’s family; for each of us to make a commitment to a local church body, and then begin to share our lives, our resources, our homes, our struggles, our burdens, our joys and our sorrows with one another.
Week 3: Last week, third purpose: Discipleship - to become like Christ. God’s goal right now, is to transform you; to take you from wherever you are, and bring you through a lifelong process of change that will result in you becoming more and more like Jesus Christ.

Today we’re continuing our 40 Days of Purpose, and we’re going to look at God’s fourth purpose for your life, there on the top of your outline…you were Shaped to Serve God. 

The Bible says this, let’s read it together in Eph. 2:20, “We are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do”. You were made to make a contribution, not just to consume.  And what matters is not how long you live, but how you live.  We’re all meant to give something back.  We’re commanded to serve God back. 

Now whenever God gives us an assignment to do something, He never gives it to us without equipping us first.  And in the next verse Job says, “Your hands shaped me and made me.” (Job 10:8).  God uses five things to shape you:  Spiritual gifts, Heart, Abilities, Personality, and Experiences.  That spells ‘SHAPE’.  Those five things make you, different from anybody else in the world.  

God made you unique and your uniqueness is not for your benefit.  Look at the next verse. Let’s read it aloud: 1Pet. 4:10, “Each of us should use whatever gift he’s received to Serve others!  Your talents are not for your benefit.  God gave you gifts and talents and abilities and background and experiences and all these things for the benefit of other people, to be used by serving others. 

So write this down, “My fourth purpose in life is to serve God by serving others.”  That’s why you’re alive.   You were put here to serve God and the way you serve God is by serving other people. 

This is called “ministry”.  The word is often misunderstood. Ministry simply means using my shape to help somebody else in the name of God. This means every believer is a minister.  Now, not every believer is a pastor, but every believer is a minister  Any time you use your talents, your abilities, your background, your experiences to help somebody else, you know what that’s called?  Ministering.  And you know what you are?  You’re a minister.   I want you to turn to the person next to you and say “You’re a minister”.  All women are ministers.  All men are ministers.  All little kids, all old people, if we’re believers, we’re all called to serve Jesus Christ.  

Now listen to this, because this is real important.  Your SHAPE (spiritual gifts, heart, abilities, personality, experiences) determines your ministry, but your attitude determines your maturity.  You want to know what God wants you to do with your life?  Look at your spiritual gifts, heart, abilities, personality, and experiences.  But your attitude, your servant heart, determines your maturity.  

Now life is preparation for eternity.  And one of the things you’re going to do in heaven is serve God and serve others.  Now the good news is that God not only created us for service, He gave us a model.  You were created to be like Christ, and what did Christ do while He was here on earth?  He served.  Notice the next verse. Let’s read it aloud together: Matt. 20:28, “Jesus said, ‘Your attitude must be like My own, for I did not come to be served, but to serve’.” 

We’re going to look at what it takes to learn to serve like Jesus. Well it takes three things. 

1. Serving like Jesus means being available.  One day Jesus was walking down to go to Jericho and some blind men start yelling at him.  And the Bible says this (Matt. 20:30-32): “Two blind men shouted ‘Lord, have mercy on us! Jesus stopped and called them.  ‘What do you want me to do for you?’.” 

Notice that Jesus stopped.  If you want to be used by God, you must be willing to be interrupted.  Most of Jesus’ ministry and most of Jesus’ miracles were interruptions.  You think about it.  All the people he healed – the blind man, the lame man, the sick people, etc. – all of them were interruptions.   His first miracle? Interrupted at a wedding.  He second miracle? Interrupted on the way to Galilee.  It says, “Jesus stopped”.  Almost all the ministry He did, He did it because He allowed Himself to be interrupted.  The Bible says this: Prov. 3:28, read it with me, “Never tell your neighbors to wait until tomorrow if you can help them now.”  Servant-hearted people don’t procrastinate.  They’re spontaneous, they’re sensitive, and they say “OK, let’s do it!” 
Here was John Wesley’s motto:
Do all the good you can by all the means you can by all the ways you
          can in all the places you can and at all the times you can to all the people
          you can as long as you ever can.

And that’s what it means to be shaped to serve God.  You must be available.  You must be willing to step out and say “OK, out of my comfort zone, God what do You want me to do?” 

There are three common barriers that keep us from being available:   
1. Self-centeredness.  The Bible says, “Forget yourself long enough to lend a helping hand.” (Phil. 2:4) Any time you encounter someone with a need, it is God is giving you the opportunity to learn to serve, to learn to be like Jesus Christ.  You see the number one enemy of compassion is busyness.  And because I’m so busy, I don’t have time to serve.  I’ve got my agenda, my plans, my dreams, my goals, my ambitions. 
If you really have a servant heart, like Jesus Christ, you don’t mind being interrupted because your agenda is God’s agenda, and you get up in the morning and you say “OK, God, you want to bring somebody in my life today?  Bring them in!  We have this self-centeredness that gets in the way and gets to be a barrier.

2. Perfectionism.  This is wanting every thing to be perfect.  You say to yourself, “When it’s all just right, when things settle down, then I’ll serve.”  Let’s read Eccl. 11:4 together: “If you wait for perfect conditions, you’ll never get anything done.” Would anybody like to give a testimony on that verse?  Real servants, Christ-like servants, do the best they can with what they have for Jesus Christ today.  They don’t wait.  Unfortunately, many people worship excellence, even Christians.  And they say “Well, you know if you can’t do it first class, don’t even try.” 

What is needed is what we call “The Good Enough Principle”.  Which says, it doesn’t have to be perfect for God to bless it.  That’s the truth.  If God only used perfect people, what would he get done in this world?  Nothing!  We’re all a bunch of misfits.  We all have weaknesses/faults/failures/handicaps.  But guess what?  God uses us all.  Why?  Because God doesn’t use perfect people because there aren’t any.  So God says, “Don’t wait for perfect conditions.”  So go ahead and start serving while things are not settled down. 

3. Materialism is the third barrier that keeps us from being available to serve.  Jesus said, “No servant can serve two masters.  You cannot serve both God and money.” (Lk. 16:13).  He didn’t say, “You should not serve both God and money.”  He said, “You cannot serve both God and money.” You’ve got to decide whether you want to be rich or you want to be blessed.  You cannot serve both God and money.  The most important decision you’re going to have to make in life once you become a believer is, “Am I going to be a kingdom-builder or am I going to be a wealth-builder?”  Now if God wants to give you wealth, that’s great.  But it is not the number one goal of your life.  Because you are not going to take your wealth with you to heaven, but your character.  So you need to decide to be a kingdom builder.

2. Serving like Jesus also means being grateful.  To serve like Jesus, we have to serve gratefully, grateful that we get the opportunity to serve.  The Bible tells us a story about Jesus serving in an incredible way.  At the death of Lazarus, He went to the scene to do ministry, to raise Lazarus from the dead.  Now, He prayed to the hearing of all those gathered: The Bible tells us in John 11:41-42, “Jesus looked up and said, ‘Father, I thank You that You heard me.  I know that You always hear Me, but I said this for the benefit of the people standing here.’”    Jesus had an attitude of gratefulness in everything that He did. Now you might think, “I’d be grateful too if I could raise people from the dead.”  However, Jesus was grateful in the tough times.  Jesus was grateful when He was criticized.  Jesus was grateful when things were not easy in ministry. That was the attitude that He led in His ministry.  Ministry and miracles always happened in this attitude of gratefulness.   And the Bible talked about our attitude of gratefulness in Psalm 100:2. Let’s read this verse “gratefully” together: “Serve the Lord with gladness.”

Why do we serve God with gratefulness?  We serve Him with gratefulness because He’s given life to us through Jesus Christ.  And if He never did anything else for us, that is enough to be grateful for the rest of our lives to serve Him.  Look at what the Bible has to say about that over in 2 Tim. 1:9: “It is He who saved us and chose us for His holy work, not because we deserved it, but because that was His plan.”

Now, as human beings, there are some barriers that we allow to get in the way of gratefulness.  The first barrier is:
1. Comparing and Criticizing.  When you compare to others, when you criticize others, that is a barrier that gets in the way for all of us of being grateful.  The Bible tells us over in Rom. 14:4, “Who are you to criticize someone else’s servant?  The Lord will determine whether His servant has been successful.”  We’re all His servants.  And so it’s a matter of His opinion, not my opinion or your opinion of one another.  When you think about it, we’re on the same team.  We have the same goal.  We’re trying to make God look good to the world, let the world see how good He really looks.  And He’s given us different abilities, different tasks.  And to think that somehow we can compare or criticize in that is ridiculous. Comparing and criticizing get in the way of gratefulness.

2. The second barrier is wrong motivations. The Bible talks about this in Matt. 6:1. Jesus said, “When you do good deeds, don’t try to show off.  If you do, you won’t get a reward from your Father in heaven”.  The wrong motivation of showing off.  Self-promotion and servanthood don’t mix, but it’s easy to get them mixed up.  A lot of our service, can be self-serving at times.  We need to be honest with ourselves about that.  We serve to get others to like us.  We serve to be admired.  We serve to achieve our own goals.  We serve as sort of a bargaining chip with God. “God, I’ll serve and You take care of me here.”  All kinds of wrong motivations.  And it’s hard to see the wrong motivations in us.  I have them, you have them.  How do you know if you have a wrong motivation?  Gratitude.  When you lose a sense of gratefulness/gratitude in your life, you can know right away there’s something wrong with my motivation.

3. Serving like Jesus means being faithful.  It means you don’t give up.  You keep on going.  You don’t quit in the middle of your assignment.  At the end of Jesus’ ministry on earth, Jesus said this in John 17:4, He said, “I have brought you glory on earth by completing the work,” circle that “completing the work”, “that You gave me to do.”  I want you to be able to say that when you get to heaven.  You completed the work that God gave you to do.  Jesus was faithful in fulfilling His service.  He didn’t give up.  He didn’t give in.  He was persistent.  And if you’re going to be like Jesus it means you’re going to serve as long as you’re alive.  Now you may retire from your job someday, but you’re never retiring from ministry. 

The Bible says, (1Cor. 4:2) “The one thing required of servants is that they be faithful.”  What motivates us to stay faithful in serving God over the long haul?  By showing gratitude for the past and having faith in the future reward.  Any time you’re serving in Jesus’ name, no matter how small, it matters.  The Bible says this in 1Cor. 15:58, let’s read it aloud, “Throw yourselves into the work of the Master, confident that nothing you do for Him is a waste of time or effort”  Notice “nothing”: that means every little thing counts!

Several years ago two teenage boys tried to come into a church service at night; it was packed out and they couldn’t find any seats.  So they turned around and decided to leave because they couldn’t find a seat.  But one usher said, “Come on, guys.  I’ll find you a seat.”  And that usher personally escorted them down to the center and set them in the middle and found them two seats.  That night both of those boys accepted Christ and became Christians.  One of them was Billy Graham who has now led millions and tens of millions of people to Christ.  Do you think that usher is going to get any credit in heaven?  I’ll say!  We have no idea of the significance of small acts.  So never, belittle the little because it’s all important.  It doesn’t matter if you’re doing something important that is well known or if you’re doing something important that’s not well known.  It’s all important.  Would you write this down?  Don’t mistake anonymous with insignificant or even unnecessary.  Just because it’s not known doesn’t mean it’s unnecessary. 

Have you ever wondered why you’re here at SUCH. I’ll tell you why.  You’re here at SUCH because God knew you had something to give back.  He did not bring you here just to sit and soak and enjoy.  He brought you here to serve.  And He knew that you have something – background, talent, skill, ability, contact, network, or whatever, interest, hobby, whatever. 

How will God use you?  Well let’s just get real practical.  And I want you to right now in the back take out this little form that says, “SHAPED for Serving God”.  Notice it has a place for Talents & Ministry.  What I’d like for you to do is to fill this out in a minute and I want you to turn it in today so that we can know what you’re good at, so that we can know you’re here in the family, you have something, God brought you here, where you could find serving possibilities. 

Now listen, when you boil it all down, you can do two things with your life. You can waste it, or you can invest it.  The best use of life is to invest it in that which is going to outlast it.  It’s going to pay dividends over the long haul.

One day you’re going to stand before God and He’s going to say to you, “What did you do with what I gave you, the talents, the abilities, the background, the experiences, the freedom, the education, the family experiences?  What did you do with your SHAPE?”  Now you may be thinking nobody’s watching you, and nobody’s noticing what you do, but God’s watching.  Look at this verse, Heb. 6:10: “He will not forget how hard you’ve worked for Him and how you’ve shown your love to Him.”  How?  “By caring for other Christians”.  And God keeps His promise.  You know on earth they give awards for 10 years of faithful service?  In heaven you’re going to get eternal rewards.  Look at the next verse (Matt. 25:21). “Well done good and faithful servant!  You have been faithful with a few things so; I will put you in charge of many things.  Come and share your master’s happiness.”  You know, family, more than anything else, I want God to be able to say that about you; that God will look into your eyes and He’ll say to you, “Good job!  Well done!  You did what I put you here on earth to do.  You worshiped me, you fellowshipped with other believers, you grew in character to be like Christ, and you served Me, the way I shaped you.  Come on in and enjoy eternity and all the rewards I’ve planned for you.” 

Question: Is there anything in your schedule where you’re giving back unselfishly, or are you too busy?  Are you waiting for things to slow down?  Or do you have other priorities?  One day Napoleon pointed at a map of China and he said, “There lies a sleeping giant.  If it ever wakes up it will shake the world.”  Every weekend I look at the SUCH family and I say, “There is a sleeping giant.  If everybody who came here served here, what kind of enormous, spiritual, nuclear reaction would we see in Seoul and Korea and the world?”  I make no apology in saying to you that the most important thing you’ll ever do with your life is serving God in ministry.  It’s far more important than your career, it’s far more important than your hobbies, it’s even more important than everything else you can think of because they aren’t going to last.  But this is.  You were put here on earth to practice serving.

Let’s bow our heads.  Would you pray this? 

Father I realize that I was shaped to serve You by serving others.  Forgive me for the times I’ve put a “do not disturb” sign on my heart.  Help me to see the interruptions as opportunities to serve.  Help me to make time for what matters most.  You’ve been so good to me.  I want to give something back.  I want to serve You freely and gratefully and faithfully, and I want to practice before I get to heaven so one day I can hear You say “Well done, good and faithful servant”.  In Your name I pray, Amen.


REWARDS OF EVANGELISM

REWARDS OF EVANGELISM

Do you want to be an evangelist?  A Zealous sharer of the Gospel of Jesus Christ?  Great Benefits!
·         Meet new people – Jail in Phillipi
·         Non-conventional hours – Evangelist needed to preach through midnight.
·         Travel distant lands – Remote Island Seeking Shipwrecked Evangelist – Exp. Vipers
·         Answer the call of the Lord – and other calls all hours of the day and night!

What did the Evangelist and Apostle Paul have to say about Evangelism?  I Cor. 9:19-23

I.                   6 -  Rewards of Evangelism

A.    Personal Growth
1.      Learning new approaches to:
a.       Groups: Mixed audiences, old audiences, teenagers, prisoners, substance abusers.
b.      Individually: Strangers, friends, family, athiests.
c.       Online Forums: Textually.

2.      Encounter Variety Beliefs
a.       Preterism
b.      Indian faiths
c.       Denominational Beliefs
d.      Atheism

3.      Odd Situations
a.       Evangelizing over the phone in another language using online
b.      Baptism in a blizzard
c.       Pulpits taller than the building is deep

B.     Correction in the Church – 2 Tim. 4:1-5, Prov. 3:11-12
1.      Elders – Tough Job – A job of love
2.      Brother or sister – Immoral clothing, temper - Ex. (Afraid to ask questions in class)
3.      Being the recipient after coming down from the pulpit
4.      Song titles like, “Are you ready?”, “In the service of My King”, or “Lord Send Me” (Thanks for singing)
·         Col. 3:16 - Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly; in all wisdom teaching and admonishing one another with psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing with grace in your hearts unto God.
5.      Sometimes at the painful end of a spanking.  (Thank you to my parents) (Children can thank me later)

C.    Conversion of Souls – The Jews of Acts 2, Paul, Phillipian Jailer
·         To see bad men become good, the blasphemer become a man of prayer, old things pass away and all things become new, the life which once they loved they now hate and the life which once they hated they now love; this is a fantastic transformation. 
·         Ex. John Hicks – 30 Years worked on a friend.
·         Ex. Juan Cruz – Prison until the age of 63.
·         Ex. Bob Eber – 30 Years an alcoholic.  God to get a woman.

Paul wrote, "1Th 2:19  For what is our hope, or joy, or crown of rejoicing? Are not even ye in the presence of our Lord Jesus Christ at his coming?  For ye are our glory and joy.”

·         What general from the army, what President from the White House, what Senator or Congressman from the halls of government, what brilliant scientist or what financial wizard from Wall Street can carry his accomplishments or gold up to the judgment seat and say, "These are my joy and crown.”
·         The greatest rewards are those which shine when the sun is no more. Giving up his life, the evangelist finds it again through Christ in lives of those twice born. He “has meat to eat that the world knows not of.”  (John 4:32)

D.    The sense of fellowship with our Lord.
·         Jesus came to seek and to save the lost, the evangelist follows His path. When one is weary in body and in mind and tempted to discouragement, he can recall the life giving message, "If we suffer with Him, we shall also reign with Him."

1.      True Fellowship is hard to find in this World.

a)      Family and FriendsMistake to look for spiritual rewards here. Beyond the approval of conscience, the smile of God, and the rewards of godly living, we are told by the Bible not to look for our reward as servants of God in this life from men.

b)     Mankind The world will hate us if we live in Christ Jesus: (John 15:18)
-          We shall suffer persecution; (2 Tim. 3:12) – “All who desire to live Godly in Christ Jesus will be persecuted.”
-          Men will say all manner of evil against us; (Matt. 5:11)
-          Our good, will be evil spoken of;  (I Cor. 10:30, I Pet. 3:16)
-          We will be strangers and pilgrims on the earth. (Heb. 11:13)
But there is a fellowship of His sufferings.

c)      The Church - The closer we live to God the more we will be misunderstood; even in the church.

·         Having a deeper spiritual experience than others is a mystery to them; has led to the dungeon, stake, and headsman's axe in the past; and it means anything but an easy time in the present.
·         Ex. Persecuted Saints – Wycliffe, (Translated Bible to english) Infuriated Catholics.  Burned and ground his bones to dust after digging up.
·         Today, we must lay down our reputation at the door and consent to be ridiculed by the world, discounted and struck down by many in the church, misunderstood by their own household, and walk a lonely path to Heaven. 

2.      Don’t Fret! True Fellowship is Found In Christ
·         How does it feel to think we are thinking the thoughts of Jesus after Him.
·         We are giving ourselves to the same task which consumed our Lord. – Saving Men!
·         Looking to Jesus, we are not disappointed in the fellowship with Him. Ex. Sometimes Wife disappointed in fellowship with me.

E.     It can bring revival to the Church.
1.      In Worship Settings
·         Converts sinners, reclaims backslider, sanctifies believer
·         Creates joyfulness, activity, and conviction on the part of the church.
·         A revival brings with it responsiveness in worship.
·         Brings warmth and power in prayer.
·         A spirit of love and generosity that it cannot be mistaken.
·         This state happens because of faithful preaching of the word and faithful witnessing.


2.      During Times of Community Crisis
·         Evangelism kicks into gear and revs the church!
Ex. Gulf Coast outcry to aid needy… vs. spread word.  Even Jesus fed spiritually first.
a)      In times of emergency such as wars, earthquakes, floods, storms, people:
·         Forego ordinary comforts.
·         Revise their habits
·         Do things they never would do in ordinary times.

3.      If earthly crisis brings men to unusual sacrifice, how much more should impending judgment day?  This is a community Crisis that demands revival!
·         Go out and win souls for Christ while time lasts!
·         Judging from many christians talk and actions, one would never suspect that Jesus is coming soon His witnesses in the last days.
·         There are cable television salesman with more zeal than most brothers and sisters trying to rescue souls or preach the word.
·         Pray that Evangelism Revives Our Churches!

For what will you give your life? Will you give it to collect money toward a doubtful goal? Will you spend your life in earthly pursuits that have no ultimate value? Will you spend it in selfish ease? Ours is a task that is fashioned for eternity and he that winneth souls wins a reward that will outlast the stars.

F.     Our Greatest Reward will be Standing  in the presence of the King of kings and Lord of lords
·         Hearing Him say, "Well done, good and faithful servant, enter thou into the joys of thy Lord."

·         How can we describe the award of that day?  To read expressions that are dropped here and there in the Bible about thrones, crowns, kingdoms, glorious bodies, is exciting. It is still more astounding when we realize that these wonderful terms are but hints in themselves of the reward which Christ has promised to all who will be faithful to Him unto the end.

Ex. Standing next to own father – knowing he is proud of me.  Just to hear those words.  How much greater coming from God who knows each and every failure and still forgave us.

Poem about Rewards

Though you may blunder 'round like a drunk on a bender If your eyes are tear-filled and your heart is tender, You can win a lot of souls to the Lord. 

If you can preach against sin and stand firm as a tower, If you can contend for the right and not get sour, If you can battle the Devil and still keep sweet And walk in the path of the nail-scarred Feet, Then you'll do a lot of good for the Lord. 

If you can preach the Bible and not compromise, If you can point men and women to a home in the skies, If you can pass through this world and not bow to its toys, If you can preach profoundly and yet win the boys, Then they'll believe you're called of the Lord. 

When they say things about you that are nothing but lies, And your heart is crushed 'til it nearly dies, If you can go on like Jesus with no words of defense, If you can love your enemies without pretense, Then you'll keep your soul for the Lord. 

If you can come down to your old age And not backslide and soil the page, If you can finish your course without disgrace, If you can run with joy to the end of the race, Then you'll go home to be with the Lord.

II.                CLOSING


The Reward of Evangelism
Within twenty-four hours, he knew he would be dead. What would you do during your last day? washed the dirty feet of his disciples. Why did he do that? To impress upon them the fact that “If I then, the Lord and the Teacher, have washed your feet, ye also ought to wash one another’s feet.”  Serve one another.

Christianity is a religion immersed with service and sacrifice.  We serve, because he serves us. We are commanded to serve our brethren in Christ, and even our enemies. This means evangelism.

When we render our sacrifices of service, we help others find their God and their way home.  Perhaps the most ironic thing about the type of service demanded by the religion of Christ is that by serving others, we find our own greatest fulfillment.  Ex. Chinese finger trap – worry and try to get…. have to give to get.

You will never be more contented than when you help someone else improve his station in life or improve his relationship with the Creator through Evangelism.