An
excerpt from Brother William's book, End Time Evangelism:
the restoration of the spirit and power of Elijah to the Church
In the
West the focus of most believers is on “what God can do for
me.” If we listen to the lyrics of most contemporary Christian
songs, we hear about God saving us, healing us, restoring us, delivering
us from our trials; about God’s mercy and grace upon us in
the time of our need. The same can be said of most of the preaching
that we hear from our pulpits. The focus is on God’s help
and blessings in this life on earth. This is all well and good,
but it should only be for starters.
Much
of the Church, especially in the West, has forgotten that we are “blessed
to be a blessing” (Genesis 12:2-3). We focus on the blessings
of God and how to secure them for ourselves and loved ones. But
we pay mostly lip service to the purpose of God’s blessings
in our lives. In terms of our "being a blessing" we usually
do not go much beyond tithing and for the more serious, doing whatever
we can to help out at church in our spare time. Sadly, this is
not a serious problem for many churches. Our “being a blessing,” however,
must go far beyond simply doing what is convenient for us. It is
said that we are saved to serve.
According
to Scripture the Church is to be the instrument of the fulfilment
of the Great Commission. We are to preach the gospel, heal the
sick, cast out demons, and make disciples of all nations. As an
unstoppable army we are commanded to declare war on the kingdom
of darkness (Matthew 28:18-20). But the Church spends most of its
time learning to secure God’s blessings in this life, whether
material or spiritual. Currently there are positive emphases on
being true worshippers, on intimacy with God, and on restoration.
But these also can dead end in just another self-indulgent spiritual
high for the Church if they do not result in obedience to the command
of God---carrying out the Great Commission. Soldiers do not stay
in boot camp forever; their goal is victory on the battlefield.
When is the Church going to graduate from boot camp and actually
begin to take ground from the enemy? It’s been two thousand
years since we were given our marching orders.
We focus
on having faith in God and receiving blessings from him. This should
only be the beginning. We must then advance to doing the works
that Jesus did. We must exercise our faith and take the battle
for souls to the enemy in the spirit and power of Elijah. It is
better to give than to receive. And by that we are not simply referring
to the giving of our finances, but to giving our bodies as living
sacrifices to the Lord.
“Discipleship” should
not simply be a class that a believer attends. Rather it is equipping
that should ultimately result in the believer not only becoming
like Jesus, but actually doing the works that Jesus did---preaching
the gospel, healing the sick, casting out demons, and making disciples.
The
End Time Model of Evangelism
Other teachings