THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"Our Tools"
Rev. Carl Haak(e-mail: Rev. Carl Haak) |
Dear
radio friends,
One of the most wonderful words
that a body of believers could ever hear from the ascended Lord Jesus Christ is recorded in Christs words to the church at Pergamos in
Revelation 2:13:
And thou holdest fast my name, and hast not
denied my faith. You have been a
faithful witness of Me. What a wonderful word
from the ascended Lord Jesus Christ to be spoken to the church.
And it is this word that we
desire to be spoken of us. You have
been faithful as My witnesses, saith the Lord.
In our brief series in these
last weeks on personal witnessing we have seen that each believer in the church of Jesus
Christ is called to be a witness in his life and in his words of the gospel of Jesus
Christ. We cannot but speak of the things
that we have seen and heard. We have examined
what motivation must be behind our activity of witnessing the glory of God, the
love of the neighbor, and the experience of the wonder of salvation in our own hearts. Last week we saw from the Scriptures what we
cannot do. We cannot savingly reveal Christ,
we cannot cause a person to know his own sinful ignorance and darkness, we cannot induce
conversion and repentance. We wanted to know
that, in order that we might be shut up to the way of dependence upon God in our
witnessing and dependence upon the means that God has given.
In our last message now today on
personal witnessing, I would like to consider with you some of the tools that God has
given to us that we are to employ in our witness. As
we examine these different tools we must be conscious of the tremendous diversity that
there is among the people of God a diversity consistent with the different gifts
and talents, personalities and opportunities that are given to them. There are no two believers alike. Therefore, we must not absolutize at this point
and say, Well, this is how you do it and thus and thus. No, we must take these principles from the Word of
God and prayerfully apply them to our own life and situation.
But what are some of those
principles that must be before us as we go forth to be a faithful witness of our Lord?
The first is this: Prayer. We
must pray that God will make His Word effective in the hearts of those to whom we give a
witness. Prayer is not only necessary as
preparation for our witness, but it is to be the attitude in our hearts as we give the
witness of the truth.
We
must pray that God will make His Word effective
in
the hearts of those to whom we give a witness.
We read in
I Peter 3:15,
But sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and
be ready always to give an answer to every man that asketh you a reason of the hope that
is in you. To sanctify means to make
holy the Lord God in your heart. Have the
Lord God upon your heart, before your eye. That
is, live prayerfully as you go about your witness. Prayer
is also to be made for those to whom you have testified of Gods Word, that God,
according to His will, might make your witness effective and might give them an
understanding.
We read in
Romans 10:1,
Brethren, my hearts desire and prayer to God for Israel is, that they
might be saved. The word
prayer there is supplication.
It is not a general word for prayer, but it refers to a petition for the
fulfillment of a certain definite need, which is keenly felt, a humble request made in the
light of a situation where God alone can give the help that is needed. Paul speaks as a seasoned missionary. He knows his own heart and the heart of the Jews. He is not a romantic, he is not somebody who
believes in some kind of positive influence to get people to change their thinking. No, he understood the opposition. He understood the hatred that the Jews possessed
toward Jesus Christ. He had been the same
himself. And out of a burden for his own
kinsmen according to the flesh, he raised a supplication that God would furnish, according
to His will, the help that was needed.
In our witness we must
supplicate. We must not simply go forth with
a bubbly attitude and think that by our attractive words people will come running to the
gospel. We must understand that the truth of
God is offensive to man. But in the face of
indifference of friends, of classmates, of relatives, and facing the fact that men are
adverse to the claims of God, that they are lovers of darkness, that they are willfully
ignorant of the truth, we must bring our witness prayerfully: Oh, Lord God, may it please Thee, according
to Thy will, to break down stubborn impenitence and to use Thy Word. Use Thy Word, Lord, as it pleases Thee.
We
must not simply go forth with a bubbly attitude and think that by our attractive words
people
will come running to the gospel.
We read in
Ezekiel 36:37:
Thus saith the Lord God; I will yet for this be inquired of by the
house of Israel, to do it for them; I will increase them with men like a flock. There Ezekiel brings Gods sovereignty and
our prayers together. Repeatedly in that
passage God says, Im going to do this. Im
going to sprinkle you. Im going to
renew the hearts of My children. Yet, I will be inquired of for this. Im going to do it and I want you to pray
for it.
The question then is, Are
we obedient children of God if we do not pray?
God says that you must pray. We are to
desire Him, according to His will, to do even as He has promised. Therefore, we must pray.
But our prayer must be brought
into the realm of the practical. We read in
I Timothy 2:1
and 2, I exhort therefore, that, first of all, supplications, prayers,
intercessions, and giving of thanks, be made for all men; for kings, and for all that are
in authority. Prayer must be made for
all kinds of men. We are to pray that the
roll of Gods elect may be brought out of the earth and may be brought out of all
kinds of men.
We must pray, then, not just in
general. But we must pray specifically for
those near to us, for those to whom we have an opportunity to witness that, if it be
Gods will, our word of witness may be used of God upon their hearts. Each one of us has his own particular circle. We believe in the sovereignty of God, that is, God
orders our life and places us where we are. He
places us in the precise family, the place at work, the home and the dwelling in the
neighborhood. All of this is arranged by the
sovereign and wise God. That is our
stewardship. That is our area of
responsibility. Prayer, then, is to begin in
general: Lord, gather Thy church. Preserve them.
Send forth Thy Word. And then it
is to go to the specific: Lord, as I
stand in this college classroom; as I work in the cubicle next to these other men; as my
neighbors are on this street; Lord, may my life be an example to them, and may my words
(when I am given an opportunity) be effective according to Thy will for their salvation
and their understanding.
You say to me, Well, what
if they are not eternally chosen of God? If
you do not ask that question, it is because you do not take election seriously. So that is a good question. Everyone who believes the truth of the Bible
concerning election will also ask, How am I to pray for the unsaved in the light of
the truth of Gods eternal determination of who will be saved and who will be
damned?
Our
prayers are framed by the precept of God
and
not by His eternal decree.
The apostle Paul believed in eternal predestination.
Romans 9
is the
clearest passage in all of the Bible of Gods unrivaled and eternal sovereignty over
the lump of human clay, to make one vessel to honor and another to dishonor even as it
hath pleased Him, to make vessels of mercy and vessels of wrath fitted for destruction. Read the chapter yourself. We glory in it.
Why are we to pray? Because our prayers are framed by the precept of
God and not by His eternal decree. We do not
know who those elect are. God does. We therefore pray, According to Thy will,
Lord. Lord, let Thy will be done. If it be Thy will, Lord, may it be. Jesus declared in
Matthew 11
that it has pleased
the Father to hide those things that He spoke from the wise and prudent and to reveal them
to the babes. May Thy Word, then,
Father, we pray, always be revealed unto those babes. Gather the elect of God. For we know that that prayer shall surely be
answered.
So we pray as God has commanded
us to pray dependent upon His almighty and eternal grace.
Prayer is not the only tool. Testimony is another. We must speak.
Our testimony can be indirect, that is, our consistent, Christian lifestyle. This is what Peter is talking about in
I Peter 3:15
when he says, Sanctify the Lord God in your hearts: and be ready always to give an answer to every man
that asketh you a reason of the hope that is in you.
He anticipates that people are going to be asking us, What makes you
different? We are then to live as the
people of God in the midst of this world. And
that is the whole Scripture.
The Christian walk must,
therefore, be a walk that produces questions questions to us of what makes us tick. Why do you do what you do? Every Sunday morning at 9:03 you put all those
kids in the van and off you go to church. And
then, in the evening, you do it again! Why do
you do that? You see, when we live in
fellowship with God, when we walk in the light of His Word, then there are going to be
questions that are asked of us. And we must
be ready to furnish an answer. Wherever we
are in the office, the classroom, shopping we have to be ready.
The
Christian walk must, therefore, be a walk
that
produces questions
questions
to us of what makes us tick.
This is a very powerful means. In fact, it is indispensable. For if our words of Christian testimony are not
backed up by a consistent lifestyle, a lifestyle also of repentance, of confessing our
sins also before the world if we have offended them, then our words of witness are
blasphemy. We had best keep our mouth shut. No, our lifestyle must be there.
But then we must also be willing
to speak of the gospel to others. We must be
willing to speak to our acquaintances and to our neighbors of the gospel. That is our calling. We talk, we speak, we witness.
How are we to do that? We have differing gifts. There are some people of God who have a wonderful
gift of engaging people in conversation. There
are other people of God who have a more meager gift along those lines. Perhaps you sit on an airplane and you sit next
to someone. There are certain people who can
get a conversation going and leave a wonderful witness.
They have those skills. There are
others of us for whom that is not so easy. What
is the answer? Are we all supposed to be
something we are not? No. Let us be faithful with the gift that we have. He that is faithful in little, is faithful also in
much. That does not mean that we cannot learn
from each other and improve. But, let us be
diligent to use the gift that we have. If we
do not have that gift whereby we can engage people in conversation easily, there is also
the printed page, the literature that we can leave with someone. There are also taped sermons that we can share and
give to other people to listen to and say, Listen to this. If you have questions about it, I can help you
with them and explain some of the things that are said in this sermon. Perhaps you can give a person your card and say,
Here is my card. If you have a
question, by all means ask me about it.
You see, when it comes to
witnessing, we must be careful that we do not think that there is a pat way, one standard
way, in which it is done. I say again, we can
learn from each other. But we are not all
identical.
Do not be ashamed of Him. Do not be sinfully silent. Then we have to repent. But if you feel that you are inadequate, and you
say, Well, I cant do this, the Lord says, Use the gifts that you
have. Encourage each other in this
calling of witnessing.
There are, of course, no two
people that you are going to meet that are alike. Therefore,
we must walk dependent upon the Holy Scriptures and dependent upon the Holy Spirit. Jesus did not treat people alike. What I am referring to is this, then, that we must
not simply have these pat phrases that we start repeating to people regardless of the
situation or regardless of the person to whom we are talking, as if we really do not care
about them at all. We have just got this
little spiel that we are going to get off and when we are done, we have done our religious
duty. That is not personal witnessing. We must walk dependent upon God, with His Word in
our heart, trusting that He will give us something to say in that situation. It must not be artificial. We must bring the Word.
Do
not be ashamed of Him. Do not be sinfully
silent.
Finally, we must use the tool of
public worship. We said this already in our
beginning message. We must bring men to the
central means of salvation the preaching of the Word of God in the gathered church. Preaching is central.
That is the teaching of the Word of God in
Romans 10:13
and 14: For
whosoever shall call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved. How then shall they call on him in whom they have
not believed? And how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard? And how shall
they hear without a preacher? We must
not become victims of the extreme. Yes, we
believe in the centrality of the gospel. But
that does not mean that we say, Well, the sign is out in front of the church. God had better just bring them in. We dont have any obligation here. No! It
is our calling to be a witness. And our
witness is always this: Come with me to
Gods house to hear the Word preached, where we might have our souls fed to life
eternal.
That is the book of Acts. You read that in this book repeatedly. Always the words of witness were geared in such a
way that these people were brought under the preaching of the gospel the power of
salvation.
I am not going to take the time
right now to explain that to you. But I will
give you a few references. Think about Peter and Cornelius in
Acts 11:13, 14,
also as you read of that in
Acts 10.
We, then, do desire to bring people to the
gathering of worship services under the preaching of the Word of God. That means that when we worship, we must be
praying that that worship service may be blessed by Gods bringing others, the
unlearned and the unbelieving, to worship
with us and that, under the preaching of the Word, they might be convicted of and brought
to faith and repentance.
To do so, we must be prepared in
our own hearts to worship. The entire church
is involved. There must be in our church
services a reverent attitude. There must be
the sense in the worship service that we believe in God in this place and that we have
come with reverence to hear Him. That means
that you do not slouch down in the pew. You
do not show indifference. You do not let the
Psalter hang down and mumble the words. You
do not give the appearance that you are bored. You
do not go to sleep. What kind of witness does
that give, to those who visit, of the God whom we worship?
You see, the whole church is involved here. We
worship the Lord purely because we believe that in such an atmosphere also those who would
come to such a worship service, the Holy Spirit working in their hearts, might come to
know and love the truth. So we sing from our
hearts. We pray. We listen to the Word of God. We greet strangers and new people who come to the
church. We show an interest in them. We talk to them.
We show them kindness. And all in the
hope that God may take something of His truth and give them to know it and embrace it in
their hearts.
Let us be faithful, then. Be faithful in our life. Be faithful in our words. Be faithful in our witness. Let us use the tools prayer, testimony
and always with the goal of bringing others to church with us. And in this way, may God be glorified and the
kingdom of His dear Son expanded until at last He returns on the clouds of heaven. Amen.