Reading: Acts 12:1-11.
We will not read more for the sake of time, but there
is a word that has been very much on my heart of late which I
feel the Lord would have passed on to you; a very
important message, I feel, for the Lord's children today.
It is with regard to our privilege and responsibility for
the testimony, especially in relation to the ministry in
the testimony of the Lord. Very briefly, what we have in
this chapter
is this.
The Lord was doing things through His
servants, the Word was going forth in power; then, as always is the case, there
is a mighty
reaction of hell to the work of God, and the adversary
stirs up
his
instrument, his emissaries against the
testimony, and Herod is taken hold of and turned against
the testimony of the Lord. And he
slew James and then
proceeded to take Peter also. This whole object of the
enemy is to curtail this testimony and to limit the spread
thereof, and to shut up this ministry. Thus we find as a
result of his second move, Peter in an inner prison with two chains on him and two guards beside him, and within a large number of other limiting things. That
is the position, we may say, of the testimony at the moment. The testimony and its
ministry brought
under very severe limitations, brought under a
captivity,
for the moment checked, under arrest. Then the Lord
reacts to that situation.
It is always very blessed to see
the throne of the Lord coming in and the sovereignty of
the Lord being put into operation: the Lord re-acts to that situation, but He
re-acts along two lines. First of all by the Holy Spirit within His own
people. And that is a very important side of things for us:
and of course that is where our main
emphasis
is placed this morning. The Lord's re-action
through the Holy Spirit within His own
people, within the Church or within the
assembly. And the Holy Spirit constrains
them to prayer, so that here the assembly
is found praying stretched-outedly to God.
The position in effect
is
this. "Lord, this testimony and the ministry of this testimony is being
crippled, is threatened with
limitation, with bondage, with restriction, with curtailment,
even
with an end; and we cannot find it in our hearts to
accept that situation. Rather do we
find it borne in upon
us that this must not be, that this testimony must be
liberated and the ministry in relation thereto set free. We
believe that
is
the registration
of God's will in our hearts and so we are against
this thing, and we are stretched out against
this thing in prayer." And when the Lord,
by His Spirit, gets His people to that position
of
intelligent co-operation with His throne in
relation to the testimony and its ministry, then He acts sovereignly on His
own
part.
The sovereign acts of God do not operate, beloved,
independently of the spiritual exercise of God's people.
We must bear that in mind, for so often in a situation we
sit down and say, "O Lord, do this thing," and in a kind
of folded arms attitude wait for the Lord to act
sovereignly for a deliverance, when the Lord first of all
would energise in us unto stretched-out co-operation
with Him before He would stretch out His hand in
sovereign activity. But then He did act sovereignly by
the angel, but the angel worked in fellowship with the
Holy Spirit Who worked in the people of God. Now,
beloved, the word for us this morning is on that other
side, our privilege and our responsibility. Of course,
there must be a position, a condition in us which
provides the Holy Spirit with a ground of operation in
relation to the Lord's will. I mean that we must have a very
lively concern for the testimony and that necessitates our
having a clear apprehension of
what the testimony is, and of the absolute importance of' that testimony;
how indispensable it is.
I do just wonder how far we are in that
place, that position, that condition which is a lively concern for
the Lord's testimony in an active way. How much we are concerned
for our own testimony, for our own spiritual life and
state, and we circle round ourselves very largely,
spiritually. That may mean
bondage,
that may
mean
depression. There is nothing so strengthening, so emancipating as to be
occupied with the Lord's testimony
at
large;
and there is nothing
so depressing, so paralysing as to be occupied merely with our
own
personal spiritual life. And I think that probably nine out
of every ten of the frowns and
unhappy looks which we carry are because we
are occupied with our own spiritual condition; whereas
if we were emancipated out into the Lord's great world
testimony we should be very much freer and a happier
people.
We want to be delivered from ourselves
spiritually by all the Lord's universal interest. Now are
we
out in
that? Have
we
an intelligent, a lively interest, concern for the Lord's testimony
in the earth; that which the Lord is after
and that by which the Lord
is going to get what
He is after; the end of God and the means to
secure that end? That
is
being in the testimony,
and that specifically at any given time. Are
we in that? Do we recognise what it is the
Lord is seeking, what He is aiming at, what He is after at this time in the history of the world;
this that we call the end time? Has it come to
us? We have heard it a good many times; heard it with the ear, but has it broken
upon us?
Has it come to you, are you livingly in it?
Has what the Lord is after at the end time
gripped you? Are you intelligently in that
thing, spiritually in that? Well, if you are,
that is bound to issue in a real concern that that
testimony and all the ministry in that testimony
shall be absolutely free to go on, and that all
limiting things, all binding things in that realm
shall be broken, and that concern must be to
stretched-out prayer; and, of course, the praying
is the betrayal
of
our concern and intelligent
understanding. You can always tell from how
people pray just how much intelligence they have spiritually, and just how much
really they
are in the thing. You cannot pray really in a
thing if you are not in it. If you are in it you cannot help yourself. That is a test, isn't it?
Well now, in just a very few moments, let us sum this up in a twofold practical proposition.
First of all, from the standpoint of concern for the
Lord's testimony, do we recognise limitations which exist
within the realm of that with which we are associated in
the Lord. Do we see a handicapping within that circle, a
limiting? Do we see that if only certain things were dealt
with how much more could be realised for the Lord? Let
Peter represent any one, or any thing that is of interest to
the Lord. If only it were liberated it would mean that
the testimony would come out and the Lord would be
able to get so much more. Are you alive to the limiting
elements in the testimony with which you are connected
immediately? That is a realm for investigation, for
prayerful contemplation. We must pray intelligently, we
must
pray in a living relation to the situation. We cannot
pray theoretical prayers, abstractions. We
have to recognise
where those things which are crippling need to
be dealt with, and we have
to
come right in
fellowship, stretched out on that. You may
think that
is calling you
again into
laborious work. Believe me, you will find your liberation,
your joy in that. This assembly
here would not believe their prayers were
answered, but do not let us altogether blame
their unbelief, let us give them credit for
something else as well. Credit for the Lord
having done more than they asked or thought.
(Perhaps they asked for or thought of an
acquittal at the trial). And you
know, when
the Lord does things like this you are always
a little incredulous, sometimes you cannot
believe it has happened. Everyone of us has
been there, have prayed with all our might
for the Lord to do a thing,
and when He has done it we have rubbed our eyes! Is it true?
Oh, that the Lord would find Him an adequate company of men who are free in the Lord spiritually,
from every shackle, from every chain of system where
they are free in the Lord with a sovereign work of God
at their back and an open way before them, and who can say, Now I know that the Lord has done this,
no
man
could have done this, the Lord has done it,
brought me out here! We need men and women who stand in that position and say the
Lord has wrought a
great emancipating work for them; and in relation to ministry, whereas
hell rose up to bring an
end to that ministry,
God acted because He had chosen, He stood
and delivered. But remember the sovereign act of God in that direction is in
conjunction with the
Holy Spirit-energised prayer of the assembly.
This is our
ministry, our privilege, our responsibility. What must that
assembly have felt when Peter went on in his ministry and travelled far and wide and wrote his letters to the saints
scattered throughout Pontus. Galatia, Cappadocia, Aria,
and Bithynia. That little assembly could have said, "The
Lord used us to liberate that ministry, to make that ministry
possible: if the Holy Spirit had not led us to pray and we had not been obedient
what a lot would have been lost."
You do not know, beloved, how much the mighty
world ministry of the Apostle Paul and the Apostle Peter,
not only in the days of their flesh (it has gone on ever
since in the 2000 years) is due to the Holy Spirit prayer of the Lord's people. There is a need
along that line today: the liberation of ministry, the
destruction of limitations imposed by the enemy upon
ministry. Do enter into that. Ask the Lord to give you the
privilege of fulfilling a great world ministry along that line
and making possible what hell
is out to make impossible.
First published in "A Witness and A Testimony"
magazine, Jul-Aug 1932, Vol 10-4