During
these end times, our culture of Hollywood celebrity-worship and
mass media has enabled some gifted full-time servants of the Lord
to become very famous world-wide and
financially prosperous. However, the Lord might not mean for
His “unworthy servants” to enjoy excessively opulent
lifestyles that are reserved for the rich and famous of the world.
The kind of mentality that justifies such a lifestyle for a highly
visible, full-time minister of the gospel does not come from following
Scripture. Rather it may be the consequence, among other things,
of being the subject of adulation that is meant for the Lord alone.
Lavish praise upon a human being results in an irresistible temptation
to pride. “Since God has blessed my ministry so much, it’s
alright for me to enjoy living at the same high level. I deserve
it.” Prosperity teaching can become imbalanced in the hearts
and hands of human beings and result in a stumbling block to many.
This
is not quite following in the footsteps of Jesus Christ of Nazareth
who had no place to lay His head.
God’s
blessings upon a ministry do not necessarily indicate His approval
of that ministry, for His gifts and calling are irrevocable. The
miracles that occur in a ministry do not necessarily prove that
God is pleased with that ministry, but may be simply the result
of the evangelist operating in the irrevocable gifting the Lord
has given him. The miracles do not even necessarily indicate that
the evangelist is known by the Lord.
Matthew
7:22 Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we
not prophesy in your name, and in your name drive out demons and
perform many miracles?’ 23 Then I will tell them plainly, ‘I
never knew you. Away from me, you evildoers!’
I believe
the Lord is grieved with such pride of life in a full-time minister
of the gospel. It can be a stumbling block to many both within
and without the Church. And He is doing a new thing in these last
days. Since we human beings are designed neither to give to man
nor to receive from man the praise which is meant for God alone,
He is removing the focus of man’s attention away from individual
superstar ministers and re-focusing it upon the Body of Christ---who
alone is His representative on earth.
The “age” of
the Body of Christ is at hand. God’s promise in John 14:12
is being fulfilled and those who believe in Him will do the works---including
the miracles---that He did. As they preach the gospel to the lost,
believers will lay hands on the sick, and they will recover. Jesus
sent the Twelve and then the Seventy out to proclaim the Kingdom
of God, to heal the sick, and to cast out demons. “So they
set out and went from village to village, preaching the gospel
and healing people everywhere.” (Luke 9:6)
In these
last days as it was in the gospels, those who are sent out to proclaim
the Kingdom of God to the lost have been given this authority.
Who has been sent out as a witness but every believer, the entire
Body of Christ? In such a way, our miracle-working God will be
found in and through His “Temple” on earth, not simply
in the ministries of a handful of world-class evangelists.
We have
witnessed this with our own eyes as by the Lord’s grace we
equip the Body of Christ to do the works of ministry.
How
this is being accomplished: a more complete understanding of
ministering healing
Typically
when we think about healing, the gift of healing as taught in I
Corinthians 12 comes to mind. We desire to see every believer involved
in ministering healing as promised in John 14:12 and Mark 16:18.
However, 1 Corinthians 12:30 tells us clearly that not all have
gifts of healing. We have tried to resolve this by positing that
while not all believers have spectacular gifts of healing, all
believers can minister healing at some time and to some degree.
For example, one can prophesy without being a prophet or having
the gift of prophesy. This is all well and good. It is clear also
from the context of 1 Corinthians 12 and in particular verse 7
that the purpose of the gifts is to build up the body of Christ.
Thus the gifts of healing are primarily for ministering healing
to infirm believers.
There
is another approach which is well-documented in the gospels and
Acts which can complete our understanding of healing. Before the
day of Pentecost and his death and resurrection, Jesus had given
authority to his disciples to heal the sick and cast out demons
as he sent them out to proclaim the Kingdom of God to the lost
(Luke 9 and 10). This authority differed sharply from the gifts
of healing in four different ways:
• Since
it pre-dated the coming of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost,
it was not a gift of the Holy Spirit. (This, however, is not meant
depreciate the importance of the role of the Holy Spirit.)
• It was not for ministering healing to infirm believers inasmuch as the
body of Christ did not yet exist at that time in its present form; it was rather
for confirming the truth of the gospel to the lost as the gospel was being proclaimed.
• It was given to every disciple whom Jesus sent out to proclaim
the gospel; in contrast, not all believers had gifts of healing.
• Unlike gifts of healing, the authority was to be exercised not by prayer
but instead by issuing mountain-moving commands directly to infirmities and demons
under the believer's authority. (In contrast, prayer is asking the One with all
authority to do it directly by Himself.)
With
this understanding we can easily comprehend how all believers have
some measure of this authority since every believer is called and
sent out as a witness of Jesus Christ to the lost. And since the
context of exercising this authority is the proclamation of the
Kingdom of God to the lost, believers are emboldened to step out
from the security of the church to bring the gospel to the world
outside its walls.
This
understanding helps deliver the Church from its unbalanced overemphasis
on ministering healing primarily to infirm believers.
Rather, it is arguable that the Lord’s higher priority is the
fulfillment of the Great Commission. Part of this Commission
is to bring all nations into submission to Christ the King. This
can be accomplished with gospel-resistant Musl__m, Hindu, Buddhist,
and animistic people groups only when the gospel is preached with
irrefutable miraculous signs proving that the LORD is God and that
Jesus Christ is indeed the only way to God. These miracles can
be performed when believers exercise their authority over infirmities
and demons in Christ’s name. This is usually different from
the exercise of gifts of healing.
We have
witnessed this in operation with our own eyes, seeing gospel-resistant
people come to Christ after they hear the gospel preached and see
the miraculous healings done by His disciples in His name. The
restoration of the Church is at hand, not simply for the sake of
having a healthy Church, but to equip her to complete the Great
Commission before the return of Christ, the King of kings.
The
End Time Model of Evangelism
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