"Heart to Heart: Commitment" - January 30, 1994 - podcast episode cover

"Heart to Heart: Commitment" - January 30, 1994

Nov 25, 202438 minSeason 1994Ep. 39
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

Scripture: John 21:15-23

Transcript

Thank you, Paul. I don't know that I've ever sung the words of hymn 568 before. If you got in too late this morning to sing that hymn, you missed something. Wonderful words about God being the King of the ages. We invite you to open your Bible and to turn to Luke chapter 24, as today we think again about the heart-to-heart messages that Jesus was leaving with his disciples as he prepared to go back to heaven.

I'm going to begin reading in verse 45. He opened their minds to understand the Scriptures, and he said to them, Thus it is written, that the Christ should suffer and rise again from the dead on the third day, and that repentance for forgiveness of sins should be proclaimed in his name to all the nations, beginning from Jerusalem. You are witnesses of these things, and behold, I am sending forth the promise of my Father upon you, that you are

to stay in the city until you are clothed with power from on high. And he led them out as far as Bethany, and he lifted up his hands and blessed them. And it came about that while he was blessing them, he parted from them. The eyes of America and the world have been on Southern California this last week. The devastation due to the loss of life, to property damage, and the disruption of community life

has been overwhelming. On Wednesday, the President of the United States visited Southern California. Why did he go? Well, he may have had a number of reasons in going, but I suspect that one of the reasons at the top of his list would be to assure the victims of the concern of their government and their fellow citizens, and to help them lift their eyes off of the

devastation, to focus on the hope for the future. The President came to renew their morale, to instill a sort of vision that the prospect of tomorrow will be better than the hardship of today. Vision is important to individuals, to a community, and I would say as well, to a church. In our text today, the followers of Jesus had been through some kind of an earthquake in their

faith. They had lost their vision when he was crucified and killed. But after his resurrection and during his appearances to them, Jesus went about restoring their faith, their hope, and their sense of purpose. They needed to see tomorrow and to get their eyes off of the day of their shaken faith. Like those disciples, the Church of Jesus Christ today needs a vision and understanding

of what it is to do and to be by the plan of the risen Christ. Its people need to see what it means to be a part of the Church and why commitment to the Church is so worth it. We need to understand why we should be willing to suffer, to sacrifice, and to serve Jesus Christ. To see beyond the sacrifice of today into the possibilities of tomorrow is what vision is all about. Now if you were asked, what is the vision of your church, what would you say? Actually,

all of us should be able to answer that question. We should all be able to articulate in similar words what the vision of our church is about. Now we might say, well, it's about winning souls. It's about equipping the saints. It's about making disciples of all the nations. And all of those answers are fine. The problem is that we've given an answer that better describes the mission of the Church than the vision. You see, the mission of the Church

is a broad concept, like winning people to Christ. It's a general, philosophic kind of statement. We're going to disciple the nations. It's a good place to begin, but that isn't the vision of a church. The vision of a church, or a Christian ministry for that matter, is found in a more specific, narrow description of the niche that that group of Christians plays in the overall mission given to the Church. The vision is specific. It is detailed.

And it's unique to that particular Church's calling. How is it that vision comes about? Well, we see some lessons about vision in our text today. I invite you to notice with me that vision comes from Jesus. Jesus imparts vision to His people, here to His disciples, for the task that He wants us to accomplish together. The vision is the direction that we understand from Him, that we accept from Him, and for which we are willing to commit

ourselves completely. A vision involves not mere intellectual understanding. It involves passion of the heart. It involves buying into that particular strategy, that particular niche that my Church has. It involves ownership. There's great benefit in buying into it. You will notice that after these disciples had been with Jesus, and He parted from them, it says, they returned to Jerusalem with great joy and were continually in the temple praising

God. What had happened? These men not only understood the mission that they had, they understood their part in it from what Jesus had shared with them. Because they had a vision of that, their hearts overflowed with joy. There is joy in the journey for the disciple who understands the vision that God wants to place in his heart. For these disciples and for us, there is a context for vision. It is the same. It is

the Word of God. Notice in verse 45, Jesus opened their minds to understand the Scriptures. They had heard these Scriptures before, but now Jesus gives them greater insight into the writings of the Scriptures. The Word of God must forever be the context of the vision of our lives and of our Church. Vision arises from what God has to say. It provides the context for how we see ourselves, what our values are, and what we believe God wants

us to do. We say, isn't that a given? Well, actually, it's not. It's not even a given for churches, let alone individual Christians. For example, there are some churches today that take their cues not from the context of the Bible, but from the context of our culture. The whole vision that they have for their reason for existence is found in those

cultural issues that concern them in our day. There is a wide variety of them. For the most part, these are churches that are mainline and which would be accurately described as liberal in their theological perspectives. But we need to understand that they have a vision nonetheless. It's a very driving vision, and they're accomplishing what they want. The problem that they have is that the vision that they've created is not from the Word

of God. It's from culture. Sometimes there are those who are studying Scripture who actually find the context for their vision from their leader. There are some churches this way. The whole vision the church has is funneled through the leader. And when the leader goes or dies, the vision of the church evaporates because the context for the vision has not been a shared understanding of the Word of God, but it's been the preacher, the pastor,

the leader. The same can be true of movements. I think the same thing can be said of the cult that a year ago was capturing the attention of the nation down in Texas. They claim to be studying the Word of God, and yet their whole vision was wrapped up not in the Word of God, but in David Koresh, and he led them to disaster. If we're going to have real vision, the kind of vision that God will bless, it must be within the context of our understanding

of the Word of God. Notice that the source of the vision these disciples had, while its context was the Old Testament that Jesus opened to them, the source of it was Jesus himself. He had appeared to them on that first Easter Sunday, and now periodically over 40 days, he abides with them, he teaches them, and out of that communion with the living Christ, they receive this vision for what they're to do. Vision must be built upon relationship

in order to capture passion and commitment. One can be committed to a cause and have no passion, but one cannot be committed to a person without there being passion there. For example, your marriage. Are you and your marriage merely committed to the institution of marriage? You can be that, and you can go through your anniversaries year after year and just be committed to the institution of marriage. The problem is there's no passion

there. But if there's genuine relationship between husband and wife, then there's passion. Beyond the commitment to the institution, there's a passion that arises out of relationship. Suppose you were on a rescue team in Southern California heading into one of those devastated neighborhoods. You would go about that with a great deal of energy, undoubtedly out of concern for people. But let's suppose for the moment you were going into your neighborhood,

to your home, to rescue your family, would there be passion there? Would there be commitment? Of course, because there's relationship with those people who are trapped in that house. My point this morning is that the source of our vision must be Jesus Christ and our relationship with Him. Our vision must come from Him out of a time spent in prayer with Him, listening

to His voice in the context of His Word. When we have communed with the living Christ and received from Him the vision that He has for us, then we will be passionate about that vision because it comes from Him to whom we are committed. I've already mentioned the distinction between mission and vision. The basis of a vision has to be the mission. The mission that is given to the church is very clear. Jesus says

it is this, that repentance for forgiveness of sins should be proclaimed. Notice that He ties the mission of the church, this broad philosophical statement, to His own mission. He said that Christ had to suffer and die and be raised from the dead so that repentance could be proclaimed. In John He puts it this way, as the Father has commissioned me, so I commission you. The mission of the church of Jesus Christ is linked together with His mission. I say

this carefully. His mission is not fulfilled until we have done our part. He has completed the work of salvation on the cross of Calvary, but that is the beginning. The rest of the mission is that His body, you and I, take that message now to the whole world. That is our mission. The vision that you and I have for our lives or for our church has to

be based upon this mission that Jesus gives. God's great purpose of redemption was accomplished by Jesus, but finally it is to be carried out by the church as it proclaims the message of repentance for forgiveness of sins. If you are here today without the forgiveness of sins, here we have the basis for your forgiveness. It is that Jesus Christ suffered and died for you at the cross and paid the penalty

there that God might now be merciful and extend to you forgiveness through His Son. By believing in Jesus Christ, you can find forgiveness for whatever you have done in the past. After laying down the mission in general, Jesus gets more specific. Notice the statement of the vision itself that He wants His disciples to grasp. Verse 48, you are witnesses of these things. You see how He narrows it? He says, here is the broad picture. Repentance has

to be proclaimed so that people might be saved from their sins. Now He looks at His little band and He says, you are witnesses of these things. The word witness would conjure up in their minds all kinds of pictures and ideas that were prevalent in that day. But notice the more specifics that Jesus gave to them. First of all, it involved proclaiming a verbal word. It was not enough for His disciples merely to live like good people. They had

to proclaim the message of repentance. They had to speak it. They had to articulate it. They had to tell it. That's more specific. Then He says that they are to begin in Jerusalem. You see their vision is getting more specific all the time. Jesus says, you begin right here in this city. And then He says, and to the nations of the world. Now Luke captures this just a little differently in his wording when he writes the book of

Acts. He goes back to the same period of time and connects the gospel with the historical book of Acts. On that occasion Jesus says to His disciples, as Luke records it there, you shall receive power after the Holy Spirit has come upon you. You shall be my witnesses, both in Jerusalem, again here, in Judea and Samaria, and to the uttermost parts of the earth. So Jesus laid down the specific vision that He had for this group of people. They

were to proclaim with their mouths the message of Christ. They were to begin in Jerusalem and then work their way out to the uttermost parts of the earth. All cultures, all people groups ultimately are to hear the gospel. The Grace Church of Roseville, I think, has a fine mission statement. I think that we ought to always be looking at it to see how we may want to tweak it here and there, but on the back of your bulletin you'll find that mission statement. It's there every Sunday

in that block that concludes our worship folder. It says that we are a community of believers whose purpose is to worship the Lord Jesus Christ and to prepare itself through biblical instruction, service, and fellowship in order to evangelize the world. That's a broad statement. It's hard to argue against that, isn't it? It's hard to disagree with it because it arises right out of the context of scripture, as it should, and it lays out for us the broad

mission of what our church is about. But Grace Church of Roseville could benefit from a clearer vision of its ministry, a better understanding of that unique role that God wants us to play in this broad vision. Now we've taken a stab at it, insufficiently at this point, but a stab at it, when we have described ourselves as a mission center. Jesus said to his disciples, you are witnesses.

The picture we use of ourselves has been that we're a mission center. Now there are all kinds of ramifications of that that I don't have time to go into this morning, but the fact is that we can elaborate on that and need to. The vision that we as a church have must come from God. It will come through our leaders and then be discussed and agreed upon ultimately and owned by everyone in the church. Vision is not arrived at with a democratic

process. Fourteen ideas of vision aren't put up and everybody lifts his hand for which one of the fourteen he likes. That's not the way it's done. Vision comes from God through leaders to the rest of us. And then we together hone that. We refine it. We work it through, change it here and there until we believe together as a group, yes, this is what God

wants us to be about. Vision is cast by leaders, but it is hammered out by many hands. Right now our leadership at Grace Church is involved in producing a draft of a vision statement for us. This is part of a process we're going through of strategic planning. We begin with the mission. We flow out from there with our objectives, our purposes, our values, and then we arrive at our strategic plan. Out of that comes the vision of what God wants

us to be. You say, well why is this so important? Well, it's important as I've tried to say because it develops passion in us. It helps us to understand and to own what the church is all about. There appear to be a variety of visions within our church as to the unique calling that we have, to our role. When there are three or four or ten visions of what our

church ought to be, then it dissipates our energy and it confuses our direction. Over the upcoming months, between now and about April, we're going to engage in a process that's going to be congregation wide in which we're going to talk about the vision that

God wants to instill in our hearts for this ministry. Now this is important for a second reason because as we have talked about the development of this site over the last year, and by about a 97% vote confirmed that that's what we ought to do last summer to remain here and develop this site. There are some who have fixated on the proposed building thinking that that is the vision. The thing is that we have to understand that that is

not the vision. That may well be a part of our strategy to accomplish the vision, but the building is not an end in itself. It has to be the means to the end. Now to be very candid with you, I wish that a building weren't necessary. I wish we didn't even have to talk about it because talking about it and going through the process of building and making all of that happen consumes a great deal of energy. But I'm willing to do that, believing

that it is part of our means to the end. That if we're going to accomplish the vision that God gives us, most likely we're going to have to build a building here, maybe several phases of building over the coming years. But having said that, let me reiterate that a building is not the vision. A building is a means to accomplishing the vision. Vision is never brick and mortar. Building is people oriented. Vision is seeing individuals who are without

Christ, without hope, without ultimate meaning in life. And it's an understanding of what God wants us to do and to be to reach those people. That's what vision is. Vision is people oriented. Here Jesus says to his disciples, you are witnesses. Begin Jerusalem. Go to all the nations, all the cultures of the world. That is your vision. That could have been overwhelming to them. And as we look at our vision as a church, we may feel at points

overwhelmed. But the fact is that Jesus also gives us the resource for our vision. We see that in the next verse, verse 49. I am sending forth the promise of my Father upon you. Jesus tells us in the first place that our resource for the vision is not in ourselves. Whatever it is that God wants us to be and to do, the resources for that do not rest in us. They rest in Jesus Christ and in the Holy Spirit whom he sends to indwell us. The Holy Spirit

who is the very life of Christ, the Holy Spirit who is the power of God. These people went back to Jerusalem after Jesus left them and they began to pray. Luke tells us about it in Acts chapter 1. It says they devoted themselves every day to praying. It is prayer which releases the energy of the Holy Spirit in the church. How is it that we can unlock the resources of God so that we can accomplish the vision that he will lay upon our hearts? It is through

prayer. When we as a congregation are so passionate and so committed to Christ, to his kingdom, and to the vision that he gives us as a church that we are willing to sacrifice and to pray, to spend time together to pray, then the vision will be realized. Notice that as Jesus was blessing them, he lifted up his hands to bless them and as he was doing that, his feet lifted off that mountain and he began to go up. Now I assume he finished what he wanted to say,

but he was lifted up while blessing them and I believe there is significance to that. It is this that throughout this age, that is the disposition of Jesus Christ, blessing his people. He went away to heaven blessing his followers and still today that is his disposition from heaven to pour blessing upon his people. Our resources come from his blessing as well as from his spirit. How may we know his blessing? How can we be in the position to receive those

blessings and to enjoy them by living our lives in faith and obedience? That is how. As we sang not too long ago, I think last Sunday, trust and obey. There is no other way to be happy in Jesus but to trust and obey. When I am living my life, trusting God, believing him and obeying his word as best I understand it, that I am keeping myself in that place where I can receive the blessing that he is sending. How sad to rob ourselves

of that blessing by living outside of the sphere of faith and obedience. Everything that we need to do what God wants us to do, he will provide if we will trust and obey. We have that assurance. Now it may be that you are saying in your mind, okay I have heard you but I am not still sure what a vision statement sounds like. Let me share with you a sample or two of a vision statement from other local churches in other parts of the

country. What I want you to notice is that they don't refer to the Great Commission. What they say is built on that. That is the mission that all of us have. Here we have a specific vision statement from churches as to how they define who they are and what they are there to be about. I don't know the names of the churches or I would give

them to you but listen to the first one. To provide the greater metropolitan area with a church geared to the needs and lifestyles of baby boomers who are nominal Christians offering a ministry that is sensitive in personality and characterized by loving, forgiving, accepting environment. You see there is a church that has captured a vision that is narrowed down from the general mission exactly who it is after, the kind of values it has, what it

is going to do. Here is an organization to equip professionals in New York City to impact their web of relationships focusing on reaching non-Christians through cell groups and marketplace ministries that address urban needs. You see again how they brought the broad mission down to a vision of exactly what their niche is in it all. I hope that you share the excitement of my heart this morning as we think about what that vision ought to be for us as a church.

The fact is that we can't do all things and be all things for all people. No church has the resources to be able to do that. Jesus has a specific niche for us as a church and together we want to hammer that out so that we understand exactly who we are, what our values are, and what God wants us to do in light of the great commission. So my request of you this morning is to pray with us. We are early in the process. The elders are just

now dealing with this. We'll be coming to the congregation weeks ahead. But would you begin praying now? God, as a church we need to understand more clearly what your vision is. Would you give that to us? Secondly, would you participate in the process when that opportunity comes to you? Will you help us to fashion what that vision ought to be for Grace Church Roosevelt? Third, will you purpose in your heart not only to understand what we ultimately

come to, but to own it as a member of this congregation? To feel passionate about that vision? To be willing to commit yourself to it? Vision comes from the risen Lord, Jesus Christ, in the context of what we know from His word, what it teaches. Out of our ongoing communion with Christ as we pray, we as a congregation will hear His voice, clarifying our vision and unifying our hearts under His Lordship. And the result of our going through

this process is going to be the same as it was for those disciples. It will result in unity and joy in the journey. I like the words that Matt sang earlier. There's wonder and wildness to life and freedom for those who obey. As we think about the church's vision, let me just apply this a bit more specifically to you individually. What is your vision for your life? Of course, I'm going to win souls, I'm going to teach my Sunday school class,

but how do you fit more specifically? How focused can you be? Now I suppose it's possible to be too narrow, but if we say that our own purpose in life is to win everybody to Jesus, that's too broad. I suppose we need to understand our spiritual giftedness and look at our interests. What do we enjoy doing? We need to look at what God has blessed that we've done in the past. Put those things together with a lot of prayer, asking God, and you will eventually

understand what your vision ought to be. Why you are here. It is not just to be a member of the church, it is not just to win souls to Jesus, it is to do this thing. And when you understand what that is, it will create a brand new sense of freedom in your life. There will be joy there. It will liberate you. You will experience new power in serving Christ because you understand what your niche is, where you plug in. As we do that individually

and as we do that together as a congregation, it will transform us. It will transform us because there is power in vision. There is power in vision because it comes from a Lord who has risen from the dead and who is victorious and who chooses to bless our lives for His purpose in the world. Let's bow together. Here I pray today with all of my heart that you will generate in this church an understanding and a passion of what your vision for us as a congregation is. I pray that you will bless

the process that we are entering into. Help us to keep perspective. May we, by trusting and obeying, be in that place where we can hear your voice and understand what you want us to be and to do. And Lord, as you do that for us as a congregation, I want to pray that we individually will benefit from this process too. And understand more precisely what that unique place is that you have for each one of us in a part of this greater vision for

us as a congregation. We will give praise and thanks to you for how you answered this prayer. And we anticipate with excitement what you're going to do as we give ourselves a fresh to you. Amen.

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android