Showing posts with label relationship. Show all posts
Showing posts with label relationship. Show all posts

Sunday, 8 September 2013

Abiding and Asking: John 15:1-11, John 17, John 14, James 4:3, Matt 6:19-34, Eph 3:20, Is 5:1-7


Shortly before his betrayal and arrest, Jesus talked with his disciples and described Himself as the True Vine. He described his disciples as branches of the Vine, deeply connected to Him. Of their accord and in their own strength they could not be fruitful; their fruitfulness in things of eternal value, represented by His saving mission to the unbelieving world, would depend wholly upon their connection to Him. In this area, some would be found wanting, their profession of faith and their connection to Him not being found genuine but nominal at best (John 15:1-11, Is 5:1-7).
Those who genuinely had a personal saving relationship with Him would be given the privilege of asking anything in His Name and having it granted. “If you abide in me and my words abide in you, ask whatever you wish and it will be done for you,” were Jesus’ words to them.

Many people, Christians included, have misinterpreted this statement to mean that God is a genie who will grant us whatever we pray for. Our prayers therefore often represent our shallow, selfish desires for the temporal things of this world. We pray for bigger houses, flashier cars and all the trimmings and trappings of what we consider prosperity to be, not realising that true success and prosperity is much more than outward appearances. We are sourly disappointed when our prayers are not answered, sometimes for our own good. James 4:3 states that we ask amiss, that we may indulge our selfish lusts. What kind of prayer did Jesus have in mind in John 15 when He said we should ask anything in His Name and He would grant it?
In order to understand what Jesus meant, it is essential to read the chapters of Scripture before and after John 15 where this promise was made. In this way, we can correctly comprehend what Jesus was saying to His disciples and to us today. In John 14, Jesus told His disciples that He would soon be leaving the world to go back to His Father. However, He promised that He would send His Holy Spirit, the Comforter and Helper, who would dwell within every genuine believer. In this way, God would tabernacle with His people, convicting them of sin, comforting them and empowering them for the Great Commission that lay ahead of them. Every believer who asks for the Holy Spirit will have his request granted, for it is God’s Will that His Spirit abide in every believer (Luke 11: 5-13). Jesus then asked His disciples to “abide in Him” just as He abides in His Father. The “abiding in me” is the condition for the fulfilment of the “asking”. This means that our prayers will only be granted if we “abide in Christ.” “Abiding” means to have a close personal, saving relationship with Christ as Lord and Saviour of your life. Now, the question remains. What do the prayers of someone close to Christ look or sound like?

The answer is found in the same chapter of John 15 in Jesus’ expectation of spiritual fruitfulness in His disciples as well as texts like John 17, aptly titled the “The High Priestly Prayer of Christ.” Jesus always prayed for the Father to be glorified. He prayed for His disciples and for later generations of believers. He prayed for the salvation of the world. Throughout His ministry, He prayed for the healing of the sick and those facing temptation. It is clear therefore that the prayers of those who are in a saving relationship with Christ will be prayers that reflect the character of Christ and the desire of Christ i.e. that the whole world come to know and believe in Him and none perish. This, together with adoration, confession, thanksgiving and supplication for our needs [not greed], should be our primary aim in prayer. Even the pleasures that God in His grace grants us in this temporal world are to be for His ultimate glory and the advance of His Kingdom. The hearts of those surrendered to the Saviour beat in tune with His Great Heart, seeking first His Kingdom and His righteousness. God will delight in their prayers and grant them the desires of their hearts, above and beyond what they could ever imagine (Matt 6:19-21, 24-34; Eph 3:20).

 

Sunday, 21 August 2011

Follow the Leader


It is rumoured that Gandhi respected Jesus Christ as a great teacher and often quoted from passages of Scripture like the Sermon on the Mount. However, when asked by a Christian minister why he so adamantly refused to become a Christian, he replied: “I like your Christ. I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike your Christ.”

I remember as a child playing a simple game called “Follow the Leader.” Everyone would have to follow the person chosen as the “leader”, imitating perfectly that person’s actions and following in his or her footsteps. It is the same with the Christian walk. We are called to follow in the footsteps of Christ. Much is at stake if we don’t, including the lives of those who watch our supposedly Christian lives unfold.  Even genuine Christians make mistakes and fall into the trap of sin, but our goal should be to repent, admit our mistakes, seek forgiveness from Christ and not let sin become a repetitive pattern in our lifestyles. (1 Jn 1:9-10)

On the same token, those who choose to reject Christianity merely because of the observed faults of a few Christians are making a grave and perilous mistake. Christ did not call you to follow other Christians, or to judge them. He calls you to follow Him! If you find Christ attractive, follow Him regardless of the unattractiveness of His supposed followers. There are many out there who call themselves Christians, but who are really only taking the Lord’s Name in vain. Jesus Christ left the glories of Heaven to come down to this earth to show us what God’s love looks like and to show us how we should live. We should pattern our lives after His life, and not after the lives of the great evangelists and preachers of our time.

Even the Apostle Paul, a devout Christian leader, told the early Christians to only imitate him as long as he imitated Christ. This clearly meant that the moment he stopped imitating Christ, was the exact same moment that they should stop imitating him! (1 Cor 11:1) Following a Christian is only good when that Christian is following Christ. So I pose the question, why follow Christians in the first place when you can rather just follow Christ?

Jesus often referred to Himself as the Shepherd and His followers as sheep. Sheep are silly creatures which are well known for their tendency to get lost. It is therefore vital that you put your trust in the Shepherd more than another sheep with a penchant for getting lost! Jesus said: “My sheep hear My voice and they follow Me.” It is vital that your Christianity hinge on a relationship with the Shepherd Himself. (Jn 10:11-16, 27-29; Mk 2:14, Mk 8:34)

"I [Jesus speaking] am the good shepherd. The good shepherd giveth his life for the sheep. But he that is an hireling, and not the shepherd, whose own the sheep are not, seeth the wolf coming, and leaveth the sheep, and fleeth, and the wolf catcheth them, and scattereth the sheep. The hireling fleeth, because he is an hireling, and careth not for the sheep. I am the good shepherd, and know my sheep, and am known of mine. As the Father knoweth me, even so know I the Father and I lay down my life for the sheep. And other sheep I have, which are not of this fold; them also I must bring, and they shall hear my voice; and there shall be one fold, and one shepherd."-John 10:11-16 
"My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me. And I give unto them eternal life; and they shall never perish, neither shall any man pluck them out of my hand."-John 10:27-28