Below you will find the
next chapter in our journey.
Please read it, forward it to
your friends and invite them to
join us each Tuesday for more
challenging information.
These are the Days of
Jeremiah
Chapter 14
Section Four:
Application Chapter
"How Beautiful are the
Feet..."
Part
Two
He Has the Right to Expect...
Now
that we have identified the
genuine messenger of God and
listed some of the benefits his
supporters can expect, let’s
look at what the Bible says the
man of God can expect from God’s
people.
In 1
Corinthians 9:3-23, Paul is
defending his rights as the
messenger of God and he offers
just such a list of
expectations. As the “Jeremiah
Generation” reads through this
important passage, each of you
should ask yourself, “What can I
do to to ensure that God’s
messengers receive these
benefits from God’s people?”
1. The Man of God Can
Expect
To Take His Family With Him
1
Corinthians 9:3-5
“This is my defense to those who
sit in judgment on me. Don't we
have the right to food and
drink? Don't we have the right
to take a believing wife along
with us, as do the other
apostles and the Lord's brothers
and Cephas?”
For
far too long, the messengers of
God have often been expected to
sacrifice family time
unnecessarily. Evangelists are
often forced to leave their
family behind as they go on long
trips to carry the message to a
dying world. Finances and
inconvenient housing often
hamper their ability to take the
family along. Paul says this
should not be so.
A
corporation spends large amounts
of money to bring in the very
best to stimulate growth within
their company. Why would the
most important work of the
church be given any less
attention? Certainly, Paul is
not suggesting elaborate travel
arrangements or lavished
accommodations. But he most
certainly is suggesting that the
man of God not be expected to
let his children grow up without
him or his spiritual partner
remain behind while he tries to
cope without her.
As
an evangelist who has spent much
of the last two decades on the
road, I can tell you from
first-hand experience, I do a
much better job when my family
comes along. Many years ago,
Cindy and I made the decision to
homeschool our children so that
our family could always travel
together. But our planning and
sacrifice is not enough.
Sometimes we cannot go as a
family because appropriate
arrangements are not made by the
host congregation. Few things
disturb me more than a lack of
vision or lack of professional
planning on behalf of God’s
work.
Every congregation has the right
to expect the best out of God’s
man and God’s man has the right
to expect the best out of God’s
people. Help him take his family
with him. It is a worthwhile
investment, for it brings with
it the blessings of Heaven.
2. The Man of God Can
Expect
Appropriate Financial Support
1
Corinthians 9:7-14
“Who
serves as a soldier at his own
expense? Who plants a vineyard
and does not eat of its grapes?
Who tends a flock and does not
drink of the milk? Do I say this
merely from a human point of
view? Doesn't the Law say the
same thing? For it is written in
the Law of Moses: ‘Do not muzzle
an ox while it is treading out
the grain.’ Is it about oxen
that God is concerned? Surely he
says this for us, doesn't he?
Yes, this was written for us,
because when the plowman plows
and the thresher threshes, they
ought to do so in the hope of
sharing in the harvest. If we
have sown spiritual seed among
you, is it too much if we reap a
material harvest from you? If
others have this right of
support from you, shouldn't we
have it all the more?”
“But
we did not use this right. On
the contrary, we put up with
anything rather than hinder the
gospel of Christ. Don't you know
that those who work in the
temple get their food from the
temple, and those who serve at
the altar share in what is
offered on the altar? In the
same way, the Lord has commanded
that those who preach the gospel
should receive their living from
the gospel.”
That
last phrase of this passage has
always intrigued me. It says
that the preacher of good news
has every right to expect to
share in the results that the
good news brings. Earlier Paul
elaborates by saying, “If we
have sown spiritual seed among
you, is it too much if we reap a
material harvest from you?” (vs
11)
Does
your “material” support of God’s
man match the level of spiritual
good news he presents to the
world? He deserves appropriate
financial support for the work
he is doing. To be the “Jeremiah
Generation”, you need to make
sure he gets it.
3. The Man of God Can
Expect
To Speak Freely the Message
He Has Been Assigned
1
Corinthians 9:16-17
“...when I preach the gospel, I
cannot boast, for I am compelled
to preach. Woe to me if I do not
preach the gospel! If I preach
voluntarily, I have a reward; if
not voluntarily, I am simply
discharging the trust committed
to me.”
Notice the last phrase, “I am
simply discharging the trust
committed to me.” Paul says, the
message of God is entrusted to
the man of God and, as such, he
has no right but to preach it.
Do
you remember Jeremiah’s
experiences with the message of
God? “I am ridiculed all day
long;
everyone mocks me. Whenever I
speak, I cry out
proclaiming violence and
destruction. So the word of the
LORD has brought me insult and
reproach all day long. But if I
say, ‘I will not mention him or
speak any more in his name,’
his word is in my heart like a
fire, a fire shut up in my
bones. I am weary of holding it
in; indeed, I cannot.” (Jeremiah
20:7-9)
A
genuine man of God has the right
and responsibility to present
the message God as He has laid
upon his heart. It is the job of
the “Jeremiah Generation” to
make sure that he gets that
opportunity.
But
before leaving this third
expectation, allow me to point
out one very important
application for the church of
today. Since the Bible is
complete and we have been told
not to expect any differing
revelations (Galatians 1:8-9),
it seems that many in the church
have devalued the work of God’s
messenger today. Without the
fanfare of miracles or the
mystique of a supernatural
revelation, many have concluded
that today’s man of God is less
worthy of respect or authority.
But
I ask you, has the message
changed? Has the authority of
the message changed? It is not
the man of God that demands
these rights, it is the God of
the man who demands them on his
behalf. When God’s Word is
delivered in any form, it should
be cherished, and the one who
presents it should be honored.
This may not be the First
Century but it is no less God’s
century. God expects His
messenger to have full freedom
to speak the messages He has
sanctioned.
4. The Man of God Can
Expect
To Share In the Blessings
1
Corinthians 9:22-23
“To
the weak I became weak, to win
the weak. I have become all
things to all men so that by all
possible means I might save
some. I do all this for the sake
of the gospel, that I may share
in its blessings.”
The
ultimate motive of the genuine
messenger of God is to share in
the blessings that his message
brings. The success of a man of
God should not be measured by
emotional exhaustion or
stressful extremes. The man of
God has the right to enjoy the
joys of God and the peace of
Christ just like any other
member of God’s family.
The
urgent message God places on his
heart often presses him and, if
allowed to do so, it can rob him
of the very joy of which his
message speaks. It is often the
job of the “Jeremiah Generation”
to protect the man of God from
himself. You must make sure that
God’s man is reminded of his
need to stop and smell the
roses, to be still and enjoy
what he so often shares with
others, and to relax in the ams
of God.
Give
God’s man the advantage of
taking his family with him. Be
sure he always receives
appropriate financial support
for the work he does. Allow him
to speak freely the words of God
and defend him when others want
to punish the messenger for the
message. Help him share in the
blessings of his assignment.
How
beautiful are the feet of those
who carry the message of God.