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« on: July 08, 2019, 04:42:08 AM » |
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_______________________________________________ More Minutes With The Bible From The Berean Bible Society
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Our Greatest Drawback -- And How to Overcome It by Pastor Cornelius R. Stam
Years ago I had the pleasure of a rather intimate acquaintance with a First Mate on an ocean liner, a distinguished and vigorous man who had spent many years sailing the high seas. One day he intimated that he would very much enjoy going out in a common row boat, so we made arrangements to hire a small boat for a day of fishing on New Jersey’s beautiful Greenwood Lake. It was a lovely summer’s morning as we got into our boat and I rowed him out to a spot some distance from shore.
I have since forgotten how well we did at fishing, but I do recall that when it was time to return, my friend insisted that since I had done the rowing so far he would row us back to shore.
He had been working the oars for some considerable time when he remarked that distances are deceiving on the water, whether from a row boat or an ocean liner. With all his rowing we were still far from shore.
Since he was not as accustomed to rowing as I, I suggested that he let me row the rest of the way back. He seemed willing enough, so we changed seats again and I pulled in the anchor and rowed back to shore!
He was a First Mate on an ocean liner but had failed to make headway in a small row boat because he had forgotten to take in the anchor! I can still hear him “ho-ho-ing” over it!
This incident came back to me recently as I asked myself what, above all else, is the greatest drawback to Christian service. What, more than anything else, keeps us from constantly and consistently living for Christ and striving to make Him known to others?
After considering the many and varied hindrances to Christian service referred to in the Word, I thought of “our beloved brother Paul,” who, above all other men could say: “…I…labor, striving according to His working, which worketh in me mightily” (Col. 1:29).
I recalled how the magistrates at Philippi, yielding to the mob, had maltreated him and Silas, tearing the clothes off their backs, beating them with many stripes and then casting them into prison, where the jailor threw them into a dungeon and made their feet fast in stocks (Acts 16:22-24).
And then I recalled what the apostle and his companion had done after leaving Philippi. They had gone straight to Thessalonica where again they boldly proclaimed the gospel in the face of bitter opposition. Paul writes of it in I Thessalonians 2:2:
“But even after we had suffered before, and were shamefully entreated, as ye know, at Philippi, we were bold in our God to speak unto you the gospel of God with much contention.”
We read in II Corinthians 11:23-29 the long list of sufferings he had already then endured for Christ, and hear him conclude: “Who is weak, and I am not weak? Who is offended, and I burn not?” and we ask ourselves what kept him pressing persistently on in the face of so much opposition, persecution, and disappointment.
The answer, we believe, is found in one short phrase from his pen recorded in II Corinthians 5:14: “For the love of Christ constraineth us,” or, more literally: “The love of Christ bears us along.” (The same original word is used in Luke 8:45, where we read that the multitude “thronged” our Lord.) He doubtless had greater reason to be discouraged than we will ever have, but he couldn’t quit, for a sense of the infinite love of Christ--to him and to a lost world--bore him along as resistlessly as an ocean tide.
And this continued year after year after year until, on his last journey to Jerusalem, surrounded by dangers and confronted with “bonds and afflictions,” he still found the grace to say:
“But none of these things move me, neither count I my life dear unto myself, so that I might finish my course with joy, and the ministry which I have received of the Lord Jesus, to testify the gospel of the grace of God” (Acts 20:24).
Nor, years later, after still more unreasonable persecution and imprisonment, did he regret the course he had taken, for among his very last recorded words we find this triumphant declaration:
“For I am now ready to be offered, and the time of my departure is at hand.
“I have fought a good fight, I have finished my course, I have kept the faith” (II Tim. 4:6,7).
Without in any way disparaging the twelve or their ministry for Christ, it is still a fact that, compared with the twelve apostles, Paul seems like a blazing torch next to twelve candles, and this is not strange, for to him, the chief of sinners, was given the greatest revelation of the love of Christ.
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