Tuesday, May 28, 2019
I will manifest myself to him
The pastor asked a great question Sunday when he was discussing John 14:21 and the phrase, "I will manifest myself to him.” He asked something like, “What do I do when I don't feel the presence of Jesus? How do I assure myself he's with me?”
As I said, a great question! This is a really big question. It is a question of Jesus manifesting himself to us and what if anything we can do to facilitate this, to experience and enjoy this.
First, the verse itself.
He that hath my commandments, and keepeth them, he it is that loveth me: and he that loveth me shall be loved of my Father, and I will love him, and will manifest myself to him.
Jesus is very clear here: The one who keeps his commandments loves him, and Jesus will love this person and will manifest himself to him. The promise is to the one who is consciously seeking to follow Jesus by keeping his commandments. Such a one can expect Jesus to manifest himself to him.
That’s faith. I believe in Jesus, I'm a follower of Jesus. I’m doing my part and I believe him to do his part – manifest himself to me.
But I confess, if I have to be argued into this confidence, either by myself or by another, it's not really worth very much. And thank God I don't have to argue myself into this! Jesus said he would manifest himself. I don't work it up, I don't go looking for it, I don't discover it, I don’t convince myself of this. No. No! NO! He makes himself known to me! Jesus reveals himself to me! So the question then is, How does he manifests himself to me? How does he disclose himself to me? How does he make his presence in my life known to me?
Let me just make a list: There is the gift of the Spirit (baptism/filling of the Spirit); the gifts of the Spirit; the fruit of the Spirit; the witness of the Spirit; the leading of the Spirit; the conviction of the Spirit; the assurance of the Spirit. I can add the reading of His word – as the Holy Spirit witnesses, convicts, assures, enlightens etc. The sacraments, especially the Lord's Supper. Jesus manifests himself to me: makes himself known to me, causes me to be aware of his presence. Amen!
Jesus is well able and has fully promised to manifest himself to me. Him to me. I don't have to work it up, I don't have to argue myself into it, you don't have to argue me into it, Jesus himself manifests himself to me. I can expect it. I can trust him to do just that. This is normal Christian experience.
But enough of my thoughts. Let me add the words of two great men of God . . .
Adam Clarke (from his commentary on Romans 8)
Whereby we cry, Abba, Father - The introduction of the words here shows that the persons in question had the strongest evidence of the excellence of the state in which they stood; they knew that they were thus adopted; and they knew this by the Spirit of God which was given them on their adoption; and let me say, they could know it by no other means. The Father who had adopted them could be seen by no mortal eye; and the transaction being purely of a spiritual nature, and transacted in heaven, can be known only by God's supernatural testimony of it upon earth. It is a matter of such solemn importance to every Christian soul, that God in his mercy has been pleased not to leave it to conjecture, assumption, or inductive reasoning; but attests it by his own Spirit in the soul of the person whom he adopts through Christ Jesus. It is the grand and most observable case in which the intercourse is kept up between heaven and earth; and the genuine believer in Christ Jesus is not left to the quibbles or casuistry of polemic divines or critics, but receives the thing, and the testimony of it, immediately from God himself. And were not the testimony of the state thus given, no man could possibly have any assurance of his salvation which would beget confidence and love. If to any man his acceptance with God be hypothetical, then his confidence must be so too. His love to God must be hypothetical, his gratitude hypothetical, and his obedience also. If God had forgiven me my sins, then I should love him, and I should be grateful, and I should testify this gratitude by obedience. But who does not see that these must necessarily depend on the If in the first case. All this uncertainty, and the perplexities necessarily resulting from it, God has precluded by sending the Spirit of his Son into our hearts, by which we cry, Abba, Father: and thus our adoption into the heavenly family is testified and ascertained to us in the only way in which it can possibly be done, by the direct influence of the Spirit of God. Remove this from Christianity, and it is a dead letter.
A.W. Tozer (The Necessity of an Encounter With God)
We are in tune with the plain teachings of the Bible when we attach great importance to genuine Christian experience. But I will take immediate objection to the charge, "Tozer preaches experience!"
I do not preach experience. I preach Christ. That is my calling, and I will always be faithful to that calling.
Nevertheless, I insist that the effective preaching of Jesus Christ, rightly understood, will produce spiritual experience in Christian believers. Moreover, if Christian preaching does not produce spiritual experience and maturing in the believer, the preaching is not being faithful to the Christ revealed in the Scriptures!
Let me say it again in another way. The Christ of the Bible is not rightly known until there is an experience of Him within the believer, for our Savior and Lord offers Himself to human experience.
Our shortcoming in spiritual experience is our tendency to believe without confirmation. God Himself does not need to confirm anything with His being. But we are not God. We are humans, and in matters of our faith we need confirmation within ourselves.
Why are so many Christian believers ineffective, anemic, disappointed, discouraged? I think the answer is that we need confirmation within ourselves, and we are not getting it.
I have no doubt that God, in love and grace and mercy, awaits to confirm His presence among those who will truly hunger and thirst after righteousness. For a long while I have been on record insisting that true spiritual experience is conscious awareness.
The human personality has a right to be consciously aware of a meeting with God. There will be a spiritual confirmation, an inward knowledge or witness.
I repeat: Experience is conscious awareness.
Conscious awareness of the presence of God! God has given us the Bible for a reason. That reason is so it can lead us to meet God in Jesus Christ in a clear, sharp encounter that will burn on in our hearts forever and ever!
The Spirit of God has compelled me to preach and write much about the believer's conscious union with Christ -- a union that must be felt and experienced. I will never be through talking about the union of the soul with the Savior, the conscious union of the believer's heart with Jesus. Remember, I am not talking about a theological union only. I am speaking also of a conscious union, a union that is felt and experienced.
For men and women who have met God, we may say that the sun -- the Son -- has come up in their hearts, and His warmth and light have given them a distinguishing radiance. They have the inner witness. Perhaps you will agree with me when I say, sadly, that the average evangelical Christian is without this radiance. Instead of an inner witness, he or she too often is found substituting logical conclusions drawn from Bible texts. There is no witness, no encounter with God, no awareness of inner change. The whole point I am trying to make about the fellowship of a person with God is this: where there is a divine act within the soul, there will be a corresponding awareness. This act of God is its own evidence. It addresses itself directly to the spiritual consciousness.
Certainly, we can be sure of this: whenever a person truly meets God in faith and commitment to the gospel, he will have a consciousness and a sharp awareness of the details of that spiritual transaction.
For the complete article go here
So, how do I assure myself he is with me? Actually, I don’t assure myself, he manifests himself to me! I believe his promise, I obey his word, and then trust him to manifest himself to me.
Adam Clarke (1760–1832) was a British Methodist theologian and biblical scholar. As a theologian, he reinforced the teachings of Methodist founder John Wesley.
A.W. Tozer (1897–1963) was a pastor with the Christian & Missionary Alliance for 44 years, serving churches in West Virginia, Chicago, and Toronto
Saturday, May 25, 2019
Redemption is physical
This morning I was reading a commentary on Revelation and the author seemed to struggle with anything being literal or physical in the book. There are many in the church who struggle with a physical or literal understanding not only of the book of Revelation, but also redemption itself. The Book of Revelation presents the climax to the plan of God and the Redemption of the world. And it is very physical.
Let's take a bird's-eye view:
The Creation
The Bible begins with the creation of the world. Very physical. And then there is the creation of man. God first made his body, then breathed into him the breath of life, and man became a living soul. A being with a spirit who can relate to God, who also has a physical body perfectly suited to the physical environment God created for him. When God created woman, he made her from a rib from Adam's side. Now that the human race was male and female, the propagation of the race takes place through two bodies coming together.
The Fall
And what was God's warning to them in the garden? Don't eat from the fruit of the tree of the knowledge of Good and Evil. And what was the consequence of eating that fruit? Death. Physical death. They ate the fruit and death is in the world.
The Old Testament
This is the story of God calling Abraham and creating the nation of Israel. A nation, in a land, with a temple, and priests, and sacrifices.
Many people seem to think that with the coming of the New Covenant everything changes into spiritual mode. Let's see:
The Incarnation
The Son of God became a man and lived among us.
The Cross
This man Jesus was crucified, died, and was buried.
The Resurrection
This Jesus who was crucified was raised from the dead. I mean, His body was raised from the dead.
The Ascension
The Incarnate Son of God, who was crucified, dead, buried, and raised from the dead, ascended bodily into heaven and sits at the right hand of the Father.
The Second Coming
This same Jesus who was crucified, buried, raised, and ascended into heaven, will come again physically, bodily, in glory and Power. His feet shall touch the Earth!
It seems to me that the spiritual reality of Heaven and the physical reality of Earth have been perfectly united in Jesus.
Now of course it's true that the people of God today are no longer restricted to one nation, and that we have promises of forgiveness, justification, adoption, and the sanctification of the Holy Spirit whereby our hearts are transformed - all of which are spiritual in nature. But don't forget, we live, we suffer, we worship, pray, minister (feed the hungry, clothe the naked, pray for the sick) in this body. We also have the promise of the resurrection of the flesh at the second coming of Christ. And that's where the Book of Revelation comes in.
The Book of Revelation tells us of the fulfillment of God's eternal purpose, the plan of redemption. It's true, it is a book full of symbols, but behind all the symbols are physical realities (seems folks sometimes confuse symbol with spiritual). It speaks of a coming period of great conflict - the great tribulation, with the seals, trumpets, bowls (6-17); the Antichrist and his war on Israel and the church (12, 13, 17); the second coming of Christ (19); his one thousand year reign on the earth - the Millennium (20); the resurrection of the dead (20); the great white throne judgment (20); the lake of fire - hell (20); climaxing in a new Heaven and a new Earth, with a New Jerusalem (21-22). This is where the redeemed live forever in their new bodies. How does God describe it? And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain. You may be thinking, "Wait a minute. Do you really believe in a New Jerusalem? and that you will walk streets of gold?" Yes, I do. For he looked for a city which hath foundations, whose builder and maker is God. Amen!
The gospel is a message of redemption. Man is redeemed. The flesh is redeemed. The creation is redeemed. The salvation of God is where spiritual and physical are harmoniously restored to God's original plan.
Redemption is physical.
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