Thursday, August 14, 2014

Joy Unspeakable!

"Therefore you too now have sorrow; but I will see you again, and your heart will rejoice, and no one takes your joy away from you" (John 16:22)

The phrase "joy unspeakable and full of glory" is the title of a gospel song from 1900 written by Church of God minister Barney Elliott Warren.  His inspiration came from the words of the Apostle Peter about the joy that comes from the gospel of Jesus Christ.

"Whom having not seen, ye love; in whom, though now ye see him not, yet believing, ye rejoice with joy unspeakable and full of glory" (1 Peter 1:8, KJV)

Peter wrote concerning how, though the believer cannot see Jesus right now visibly, still because of our faith in Him and His finished work on the cross, our hearts are filled with joy, a depth of joy that it is absolutely impossible to adequately put into words.  It is truly "joy unspeakable" and it ought to overflow our lives!  It ought to be so infectious that those who are exposed to it when they are in our presence cannot help but notice that something is very, very different about us.  We are not weird but we are joyful!  As Barney Warren put it so well:

"I have found the joy no tongue can tell,
How the waves of glory roll;
It is like a great o'erflowing well,
Springing up within my soul"

It you could have seen the faces and manner of the disciples that final night with Jesus, beloved, you would definitely not have seen "poster children" for the joy of the Lord!  They were anything but joyful, so great was their sorrow over His coming departure from them.  And though He sought to convince them that their hearts would be joyful after a little while of sorrow, they just could not and would not believe it.  It was not until after the outpouring of the Holy Spirit on the day of Pentecost that the true transformation of heart and life began.

How infectious is your joy right now, beloved?  If we are honest with ourselves, each one of us, we must confess that we are not always the most joyful people to be around.  What are we showing to our world that will catch their attention and cause them to want to know what (or who!) has gotten hold of us?  Let me encourage you to ask the Spirit of God to fill you to overflowing with the joy of Jesus Christ.  Ask Him to let your life so flow with the abundance of His joy that it cannot help but wash over those who know you.  It is truly "joy unspeakable" to have a living relationship with Jesus Christ and to be His ambassadors in this world so darkened by sin!  Come on!  Let the waves of glory roll!

Ron     

Friday, August 1, 2014

The Spirit of God at Work!

"And He, when He comes, will convict the world concerning sin, and righteousness, and judgment; concerning sin, because they do not believe in Me; concerning righteousness, because I go to the Father, and concerning judgment, because the ruler of this world has been judged" (John 16:8-11)

To attempt to describe fully the work of the Spirit of God in the world today, beloved, is a formidable task, indeed!  Seminary libraries are filled with thousands of volumes that have been written over generations on this subject alone.  Still Jesus, in His final night on earth with His disciples before going to the cross to pay the price for the sins of mankind, described for them graphically in very few words what the true work of the Spirit of God is in the world today.

In the verses above, note that the first work of the Spirit of God in the world today mentioned by Jesus is that He will "convict the world concerning sin."  The recognition of each person's sinfulness before God is the one great essential if he is ever to know forgiveness and receive eternal life.  That every man has sinned against God and stands under His divine condemnation is the deepest need of the human heart.  It is the work of the Spirit of God to reveal to every person, then, his lost condition spiritually before God and his need of God's gift of salvation through Jesus Christ.

Jesus went on to tell His disciples that the Spirit of God would also "convict the world concerning righteousness."  He told them that the "righteousness" about which He would convince the world can be found only in Jesus Christ Himself.  The evidence that His is the only true righteousness is seen in the fact that the Father received Him to glory following His death, resurrection, and ascension and declared that with His righteousness He was truly "pleased."  Thus, beloved, it is not the righteousness of any man, no matter how lofty his standards or how hardy his efforts to attain it, that God accepts.  He only accepts the righteousness of the sinless Son of God and only in His righteousness can we find acceptance with the Father.

Finally, Jesus revealed to His disciples that the Spirit of God would "convict the world concerning judgment."  Mankind has deluded himself into believing today that no such judgment is forthcoming, that God either cannot or will not judge the sinfulness of man.  Man is only accountable to himself, so says the secular humanist, so there is nothing to fear.  The work of the Spirit of God is to convince the world that this judgment is not only real but that it is inevitable and that no man will escape it.  Jesus pointed to the fact that Satan himself had already been judged and would feel the full measure of God's wrath at the appointed time.  Why, then, would God not judge sinful man when He has not allowed the Father of Lies to escape?

What is so exciting for every true follower of Jesus Christ today, beloved, is the awareness that we are each partners with the Spirit of God in His work in the world today!  It is within us and through us that He seeks to work to let this sinful world know that salvation can be found in Jesus Christ and in Him alone.  Ours is the blessed privilege not only to know Christ personally and to know the assurance of our own salvation, but to tell others about Him as the Spirit of God gives us opportunity.

So the Spirit of God is truly at work in the world today!  The question that remains to be answered is whether or not you are working with Him?

Ron