Friday, January 17, 2025

Learning From the Little Ones

 


This coming Sunday we will continue our study of Luke 18 at Grace Point Church. The passage we are looking at is a beautiful teaching moment Jesus has with His disciples. Some parents were bringing their children to be blessed by Jesus, but His disciples stopped them from coming, thinking they would be bothering the Master. But Jesus corrects them and tells them, “Let the children come to me. Don’t stop them! For the Kingdom of God belongs to those who are like these children." (v.16). And then He makes this powerful statement, "I tell you the truth, anyone who doesn’t receive the Kingdom of God like a child will never enter it.” (v.17)

Wow, that is a pretty significant statement: Unless you receive the Kingdom of God like a child, you aren't getting in. What is it about children that would cause Jesus to make a statement like that? What is He wanting us to learn from the little ones? 

In thinking about this passage, I think there are Four Childlike Characteristics that are important to Jesus, and He wants us to know: 

1. Total Dependence - The word that is used in v.15 for "children" is "brephos" and refers to a very young child, typically an infant or newborn. It can also refer to a pre-born baby in it's mother's womb. Luke uses the term for Elizabeth's unborn baby that leaps within her womb when the expecting Mary comes to her. In the Greco-Roman world, infants were often seen as the most vulnerable members of society, dependent entirely on their parents or guardians for survival. 

The point here is that entrance into God's Kingdom means that we are totally dependent on Him for our salvation. As Paul writes in Ephesians, "God saved you by his grace when you believed. And you can’t take credit for this; it is a gift from God. Salvation is not a reward for the good things we have done, so none of us can boast about it." (Ephesians 2:8-9).

B. Fearless Faith - Scientist tell us that we are all born with only two fears - the fear of falling, and the fear of loud noises. All other fears are learned as we grow, and sometimes the learning comes from hard experiences. Kids seem to have a fearless faith that they can do anything their minds imagine - anything from flying by jumping off a rooftop, or running across the road before the car can hit them. Parents have to teach kids safe boundaries, but in doing so, sometimes we instill a fear of failure or adventure into their lives. 

It is interesting that when Jesus called His first disciples, He didn't call them to develop a systematic theology, or a Robert's Rules of Order for obedience. He didn't even ask them to believe in Him in the beginning. He just said, "Come, follow Me ..." By nature, faith requires risk, and following Jesus implies movement. As Henry Blackaby says in his book Experiencing God, “You cannot stay the way you are and go with God.” We are called to follow Jesus with fearless faith. 

C. Innocent Optimism - I've never met a kid who was afraid to ask for what he/she really wanted. Infants have a way of letting their parents know when they need something even before they can talk. And once they start talking, they have no fear in asking for anything and everything. It comes natural to them. As they grow, they learn they can't have everything on the toy aisle, or everything in the commercials on TV and that life is hard and sometimes (most times) things don't go the way we think they should. It is easy to become jaded and lose our optimism. 

But Jesus tells us that our hope is not in the things of this world, but in Him. Jesus once told His disciples that it is hard for a rich person to get into heaven and His disciples were amazed and said, "Who then can be saved?" Jesus replied, “What is impossible for people is possible with God.” (Luke 18:27) We worship and serve the God who can do anything, therefore we shouldn't be afraid to trust Him to do great things. As William Carey said, "Attempt great things for God, expect great things from God."

D. Infectious Enthusiasm - This may be what I love most about kids - when something catches their attention, they act like it is the greatest thing in the world. I love Christmas because I get to see the wonder and amazement on the faces of my kids and grandkids. My grandkids are excited about their presents and gifts, and my kids are excited that their children are excited, and that excites me. It's infectious. When I see my grandkids playing enthusiastically with their toys, I want to join them (even if I don't understand the game, lol). 

Jesus tells His followers in Matthew 5:16, "Let your light shine before others, so they may see your good works and glorify your Heavenly Father." Letting our light shine means serving God with enthusiasm and joy, so that others can see God in us. Perhaps the worst witness for the Lord in world is a "Christian" who has lost his/her enthusiasm for the Lord and for His Kingdom. 

I'm sure there are more characteristics of children Jesus had in mind when He was teaching His disciples. These are just the ones that He brought to my mind. Feel free to share yours in the comments section below. 





Tuesday, January 14, 2025

Successful in Prayer

 


I just finished reading Roger Steer's book, "George Muller: Delighted in God," the biography of one of histories greatest men. I have read this book numerous times over the years because it is so inspirational (and convicting) to me.

George Muller (1805-1898) was a German pastor who moved to Bristol, England and founded the Ashley Down Orphanage as way to glorify God and show the world that God still answers prayer. In the life of his ministry, Muller asked only God for provision and supplies for the ministry and for his own personal life (he never took a regular salary from the church he pastored, or from the orphanage.) During his 70+ years of ministry, he provided care for more than 10,000 orphans, and stewarded what would today be more than 10 million dollars. That alone would be remarkable, but Muller also started the Scriptural Knowledge Institute (SKI) that established 117 schools worldwide which offered Christian education to more than 120,000 kids. SKI also provided financial and material support to many missionaries including Hudson Taylor and the China Inland Mission. AND in the later years of his life, at the age of 71 Muller and his wife began traveling for evangelistic preaching. In 17 years of evangelism, they traveled more than 200,000 miles and visited more than 20 countries preaching the gospel. All the funds needed for these ministries and more came in answer to prayer. (BTW, his ministry is still active today, you can learn more at georgemuller.org) 

His name has become a by-word for prayer and faith throughout the world, but Muller insisted that he was just an ordinary man who believed God answered prayer. And he believed that anyone could experience the same as he, if they would just pray as the Bible teaches us to pray. At the funeral of his friend Henry Moorhouse, George Müller outlined four conditions of successful prayer. 

1. We must pray in accordance with God's will. 

This is the confidence we have in approaching God: that if we ask anything according to his will, he hears us. 1 John 5:14 NIV Muller taught that if you were uncertain if a matter was according to God's will, you must pray about it until you are sure of God's will, and then pray according to God's will on the matter. 

2. We must not pray and ask on our own goodness and merit, but "in the name of the Lord Jesus Christ." 

And I will do whatever you ask in my name, so that the Father may be glorified in the Son. 14 You may ask me for anything in my name, and I will do it. John 14:13-14 NIV. We must not ask because we “deserve” it or have “earned” it. At this point, Müller emphasized the importance of regular confession of sin and repentance. Psalm 66:18 says, “If I had cherished sin in my heart, the Lord would not have listened.” “‘That is,’ he said, ‘if I live in sin, and go on in a course hateful to God, I may not expect my prayers to be answered.'”

3. We must ask in faith of God's power and His willingness to answer our prayers. 

"This is deeply important," Müller said. "In Mark 11:24 we read, 'Whatever you ask for in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours.' … I have found invariably that in the fifty-four years and nine months during which I have been a believer, that if I only believed I was sure to get, in God’s time, the thing I asked for." Müller offers proof of God’s power and love in the cross and resurrection of Jesus Christ.

4. Persevere! "We have to continue patiently waiting on God till the blessing we seek is granted." 

Müller said, “For observe, nothing is said in the text as to the time in which, or the circumstances under which, the prayer is to be answered. ‘Ask, and you will receive.'” We must keep asking, seeking, and knocking until we receive from the Lord the blessing He has promised. 

In his life, Muller recorded more than 50,000 answers to specific prayers in his prayer journal. More than 30,000 were answered within the hour or day in which they were asked, others weren't answered until after his death. But Muller believed God would and did answer all of his prayers. 

May we do the same!