Human beings naturally seek to benefit ourselves. We are interested in results. If we notice someone has lost weight or is packing on muscle, we are keen to know how. There is often a formulaic approach to action we take or the method we choose because we hope it will work for us as it has worked for others. Personal trainers and nutritionists are employed to aid us in our struggle for fitness. Conferences are attended to learn from professionals how to maximise our net worth. Routine is embraced so we too might have the benefits others boast of. We read books based on the recommendation of friends and take advice from total strangers who post videos or blogs on the internet to help our cause. We imagine there must be a formula to obtain our desired end: if I do the right things, I can have the results I want.
We can do the same thing when it comes to Christian ministry. A true principle of scripture can be distorted into a self-centred formula. Let me preface my observations by saying not all people do this. My aim is to suggest there is a danger we could do this and possibly we currently do this without even recognising it. I know it can be done because I have done it, and may God continue to purify my motives. As we see God in truth - His holiness, righteousness, goodness, grace, and love - in the light of His reality we begin to see we are rotten to the core. We have prayed selfishly. We wanted glory and recognition for ourselves instead of offering God sacrifices of praise and thanksgiving. We have played the hypocrite, saying, "Yes LORD, but let me first..."
It's exciting to read about the Holy Spirit moving through people in the the book of Acts. After the Holy Spirit came upon the believers on Pentecost, their lives were transformed for the better. Through their witness the world was turned upside down and many came to faith in Jesus. What boldness and power they displayed as those believers proclaimed Christ and followed Him rejoicing in the face of trials and persecution. There was unity, generosity, gladness, and thousands were added to the church in a day. But this was no passing fad as the last sentence of Acts 2:47 says: "And the Lord added to the church daily
those who were being saved." That sounds pretty good, right? What genuine follower of Jesus Christ doesn't desire to see people come to faith in Jesus? Then we start looking around and realise in our gatherings there aren't people being saved. Our evangelism efforts seem to lack results. Hopefully this makes us do some soul searching. But most of the time it is easier to point out faults in others or try to find a formula which will give us this result.
It is possible some have found their "formula" in a statement which occurs earlier in Acts 2:42: "And they
continued steadfastly in the apostles' doctrine and fellowship, in the breaking
of bread, and in prayers." We are always looking for something to do so we might benefit. We can think, "It worked for the early church, and this should work for us. If we follow the Acts 2:42 pattern as a lifestyle, we will have the same good results - that the LORD would add daily to the church those who are being saved." Now this is certainly a good pattern of life. But the LORD adding daily to the church was not the effect of continuing in doctrine, fellowship, communion (koinonia), or prayers: it was by the grace of God for His glory. This pattern of fellowship was the effect - not of a four-step plan - but because of the indwelling Holy Spirit in God's people. The Holy Spirit was the cause of spiritual regeneration in believers and He consequently empowered them to live for God in a fallen world. It would be a good thing to see Acts 2:42 in a church because it is evidence of the Holy Spirit moving in God's people - not as a program or a formula for "church growth."
The same mistake can be made concerning those who met together in one accord on the Day of Pentecost. We can gather groups together, hoping for the Spirit to manifest Himself in power. We want tongues of fire; we want to feel the place shaken! But remember, the disciples tarried in Jerusalem in obedience to the direct command of Christ. It wasn't their idea or plan. There was no formula besides simple obedience to God and submission to His will. We can push the prime button on our lawn mowers and pull the rope to start the engine until our hands blister, but without fuel the engine will never start. The living sacrifice of a believer purified in the blood of Jesus is the only acceptable fuel. Without the Holy Spirit the work will never be done. Reading the Bible more and praying more will never aid you in achieving your plans but are means to God's ends. These disciplines can be evidence of the Spirit within you or they can be empty exercises. Spiritually we are like pneumatic tools which need the power of the Spirit (pneuma) to function and accomplish any purpose for which we are designed. One soul in submission to God is of greater use for His kingdom than all the formulas or programs man can muster.
Don't fall for formulas. It is only in the full surrender of a life before God, a soul who falls before God in humble faith and obedience, who will receive and in reality experience the abundant life God has provided for all who seek Him.
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