Let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith.
History records several great revivals in Europe and America, and there's no doubt we could use another one now. What are the indications that God is making His presence known in an unusual way? Today we begin a series on what happens when God comes to church.
Stay with us. From the Moody Church in Chicago, this is Running to Win with Dr. Erwin Lutzer, whose clear teaching helps us make it across the finish line. Pastor Lutzer, as we embark on what happens when God comes to church, may I ask if you have experienced special visitations of the Spirit? Dave, I really do believe that I have, but before I comment on that, I want to say that this is the beginning of a series of messages, as you implied, entitled When God Comes to Church. And even as we think about the book of 1 Thessalonians on which these messages are based, I hope those of you who are in your homes, if you have a Bible available, that you will follow along with us. But now in answer to your question, I have to say that in the late 70s in Canada, there was a spiritual awakening. Now many people in America and elsewhere around the world who pray for revival, I think they often have no idea what they are really praying for. They want the Holy Spirit of God to come and to convict others, and they don't realize that when God really moves when he comes to church, he begins the work with his own people. They are led to deep repentance and reconciliation. I could tell you one story after another, and all that happens under the inspiration of the Holy Spirit. But one other thing that is very important for you to know is that today is one of the last days we're making a special resource available for you entitled, Don't Be Deceived – Six Lies About Jesus. If we want America to repent, we certainly have to be clear about the Jesus about whom we are speaking. For example, one of the chapters is entitled, Is Jesus the Only Way to God?
Are you able to defend that? Well, as I've mentioned, for a gift of any amount, we're making this available for you. Here's what you do.
Go to rtwoffer.com or call us at 1-888-218-9337. We exist here at Running to Win to help you on your spiritual journey. Sometimes God comes to church. You say, well, God always comes to church. He's always there. In fact, he's everywhere. Yes, of course, he's everywhere.
So in that sense, he's always with us. But sometimes the manifest presence of God, as the ancients used to call it, is much stronger than it is at other times. There are times when God comes to church in such a way that there is greater blessing, greater conviction, and greater joy than you and I have ever seen in a congregation when God shows up.
Because remember, the reality of God is much greater than our experience of God. And when God shows up, people know that God has shown up and he's come to church. In fact, in this series of messages, I'm going to be telling you in a future message how God showed up in Chicago in 1858 in ways that you perhaps have never heard about. Began in New York City, came here to the city of Chicago and other cities of America that as secular historians said that the revival of 1858 was the event of the century. God showed up.
Today I'm going to simply tell you very briefly about the 1740s. Northampton, Massachusetts, there was an evangelist by the name of Jonathan Edwards and Jonathan Edwards began to preach and people were converted almost spontaneously and he began concerts of prayer throughout the area. Then he teamed up with an evangelist by the name of George Whitfield who was converted in England, actually born in a tavern in England so you can understand his heritage and his background. But he was converted and became a great evangelist and a great friend here in America as well, particularly a friend of Benjamin Franklin.
Though Franklin did not accept Whitfield's message, they did become friends. And the revival was so great that Benjamin Franklin says that one could not walk down the street without hearing psalms sung in different families on every street. God showed up in New England.
The crowds were so large they'd go preach to miners and the description is that the miners stood there and they wept and the tears would go down their sooty faces, making furrows on their cheeks. As a result of that, there was deep conviction of sin, but there was also a passion for God. That always is part of revival. If all that you had was conviction of sin, there are people who are saying, you know, what would I do if God were to take all my sins away? I'd have nothing to do.
I'd have such a vacuum in my life that I wouldn't know what in the world, where in the world to turn. Well, well, you see, the passion of God filled that. And so people began to pursue God and to seek him out. And there was so much righteousness that according to one biographer, one could leave a bag of gold in the street and it would still be there in the morning, even if it was there all night. In other words, you see, converted people don't steal.
So you could leave a bag of gold and no one would take it because the revival was so intense. It's estimated that 50,000 people were converted as a result of what we call in America the first great awakening. There's no doubt that God showed up. Now it was in response to prayer, but it was also this sovereign work where God sometimes comes and simply decides that he's going to do the extraordinary.
Usually his work is imperceptible, but sometimes it is powerful and sometimes it is visible. And when it is, everybody knows God has come to church. In fact, throughout history, this has often happened. Let's go back 2000 years. 2000 years there was a city north of Athens called Thessalonica. Today it is known as Salonika.
Think of a map of Greece and there's Athens and then you go up the coast along the Aegean Sea and there's Thessalonica. The apostle Paul decided to go there with a man by the name of Silas and they held meetings in the synagogue. And the Bible says that when they were there, they stayed with a man by the name of Jason.
Don't know too much about Jason, but he allowed them to stay in their home. And Paul was there for three weeks reasoning in the synagogue. And what Paul did is he argued this. First of all, that Jesus had to suffer, which was a very new concept to the Jews because they thought that the Messiah wouldn't suffer.
He just come to rule. And then secondly, he proved that Jesus fulfilled the suffering predicted in the Old Testament and Jesus was the Messiah. And the Bible says that many God-fearing Greeks believed.
It's an interesting expression. God-fearing Greeks and some prominent women, it says, believed and were converted. Now, this created a riot. In fact, the Jews didn't like what was happening. So this is the story. They go into Jason's house, it says in Acts 17, and when they could not find them, that is Paul and Silas, they dragged Jason and some of the brothers before the city authority shouting these men who have turned the world upside down have come here also. And Jason has received them and they are all acting against the decree of Caesar saying that there is another King named Jesus.
So they dragged Jason out of the house and he has to post bond before he can get free. Paul and Silas decide to leave town and they go to Berea. Now, as Paul is thinking about this experience, he's saying, I wonder, I mean, I taught them all of this about the church. There was some new converts, but what about the leadership of the church? Did the church survive? Bible says that he prayed for them night and day, but you know, you never know. Church planting.
What a challenge. You know, we here at the Moody Church want to plant churches. What we'd like to do is to raise up young men who are able and trained and begin churches. We haven't been able to do that. One problem is time and scheduling and another, quite frankly, if I may be very upfront today, one problem is money. If you look at our bulletin, you'll notice that we are falling behind in our general fund and we don't say much about this, but there are many ministries we cannot do because we're constantly behind in our general giving. And so that impacts us.
But that's what we'd like to do. We'd like to become a church planting church. But you can imagine the apostle Paul here. He is struggling with how in the world did they do? So he goes to Berea, then he goes to Athens and he ends up at Corinth and he sends Timothy, who wasn't associated with the riot. He sends Timothy and he says, go check on the church and bring me word. Timothy comes and says, Paul, you won't believe it. This church is thriving. And so the book of 1 Thessalonians was written by Paul to this thriving church that was only a few months old. Unbelievable to think of the characteristics of this church because God showed up.
God showed up. Now, you know, in ancient times you could switch religions and when you switched religions, what happened is you, you began to serve this other God and you got the rules and the regulations connected with it, but it didn't change your heart. What happened in this pagan city was as the gospel came, it actually changed people's affections.
It actually changed what they loved and what they hated. That's what the gospel does, changes us from the inside out. And as a result, you have here now the characteristics of a church that is alive, brand new with all the problems of a new church. And of course, eventually they would have all the problems of an old church because every church has its challenges. But what a church it was. Would you turn please to 1 Thessalonians chapter one, the letter that Paul wrote to this thriving church. And very briefly, I'm going to list for you five characteristics of this church that had come alive as a result of the gospel being preached in it. This is a church in which no doubt God attended and his presence was incredible. Paul gives a greeting and then in verse two, we thank God always for all of you constantly mentioning you in our prayers, remembering before God and our father your work of faith, labor of love, steadfast of hope in the Lord Jesus Christ.
First of all, it was a transformed church. Where do you get this faith? This faith that inspires work.
Where do you get the kind of love that can be a labor of love? Where do you get the hope in the midst of a pagan world that believed that there was no hope? The only answer is through the gospel. And here these qualities were birthed in their hearts by God and were wherever you have a church that has the right to be called a church, it should always have the characteristics of faith, love and hope. And if we do not have that, we are not converted.
So Paul, Paul is saying here that what you are experiencing is a miracle of God. In fact, these three virtues are really given in the right order, aren't they? Faith looks to the past to what Jesus Christ has done. Love serves in the present and hope endures knowing that there's a future, the endurance of hope.
It's not hope so, it's the sure confidence that God is on your side. And no matter how tough it is in your vocation, no matter how much you hate Monday mornings, no matter how difficult it is in your relationships within the family, you always know that God is there and that his help is present and a better day is coming. It's a transformed church because God showed up. Secondly, you'll notice that it is also a confident church. Where does it get its confidence from? Notice what Paul says, for we know brothers, verse four, loved by God that he has chosen you because our gospel came to you not only in word but also in power and in the Holy Spirit and with full conviction.
It is a confident church. Who began the church? Whose idea was it? When I was going to a one room schoolhouse, and by the way, I think it was in high school, I finally discovered that there were some schools in the city where you had grade one in one room and grade two in another.
We had never heard of that. We had grade one over here, the teacher began with this row, then she left the grade ones and went to the grade two, all the way to grade eight. And in those country schoolhouses, sometimes there were squabbles and sometimes there were arguments and even fights.
And of course, as you know, I steadfastly stayed away from those kinds of things. But what the teacher always asked is, who started it? That's what she wanted to know. Let me ask you, who started the church? Whose idea was it? It was God who chose you, Paul says. It's God who started this.
This has nothing to do with human origin. It is the Lord God who begins the church through choosing people to eternal life. And what does he choose them for?
To leave their sins? Yes, he chooses them out of the world, but they are for himself. You know, God wants you. It's your heart.
It's everything that you own, all of your loves. And so God chooses us for himself. And once you know that, you know that the God who chose you is not going to give up on you and he's going to be with you until the end. And that gives confidence and Paul says our word came on to you, not in word only. If all that you hear from me today are words and so that you conceptually understand the message and so that you can know what I'm saying, if all that happens, if that's all that happens to you, then we have failed in our prayer life and in our yieldedness because the word should never go out just in word only. Should always go out with the demonstration of power that the power to convict, the power to change, the power to transform. That's the way the word of God should go out. And with much conviction, that settled conviction that you belong to God, that God is number one in your life and that really nothing else matters about God and his promises. It is that overwhelming conviction that you should experience when the word of God is read and when it is preached.
If it goes out in word only, it's not transforming. It may challenge the mind. You may learn new ideas, new insights, but unless it is transforming to the heart, not just the emotions, but the actual heart, then of course there's a disconnect. And you and I know people, don't we, who hear the word called my family last night in Canada and there's a man who died suddenly unexpectedly of a heart attack, age 75, a very, very wealthy farmer who wanted to buy up most of the land in his area and almost did. And the only thing that was said at his funeral about his spiritual life was that he attended church and he'd always say to the pastor, good sermon. Well, all right, we'll take that good sermon better than I guess bad sermon. Like the woman said to the door to the pastor, you know, your sermon is like a cup of cold water to a drowning man. Think about that a little bit, folks.
Think about it. But his wife says he had no spiritual interest at all. None came and sat, came and listened, always left unchanged. That's the word in word only. But when it comes with the power of God and conviction, there's that settled idea of walking with God and knowing that you do even apart from arguments, even apart from the apologetics for the Christian faith.
Well, anyway, pulses. It was a confident church. It was a joyful church. You'll notice in verse six he says that and you became imitators of us and of the Lord for you received the word in much affliction with joy. Can you put those two words together?
Those two phrases. You received the word in much affliction. I mean, the blood was running down their backs because of persecution and yet you received the word with much joy. How do you have joy?
You can't unless God shows up. Because first of all, what God does is he takes care of the nagging conscience. Can you imagine how joyful you could be if your conscience didn't trouble you over sins that you've committed, over relationships that are broken and mistakes that you have made? Can you imagine having all that taken away and then to be given the confidence that no matter what the fluctuating circumstances are that you belong to God forever because he chose you to belong to him?
It brings a sense of joy, even in the midst of great affliction. And this church had it because God showed up. And my dear friend, this is Pastor Lutzer. God will not show up unless the Jesus in whom we believe is the biblical Jesus. I like to emphasize that there are many different Jesuses out there. In the New Testament, the Apostle Paul even told the people in Corinth, you have believed in another Jesus.
And that Jesus, it was so much like the real Jesus that the people couldn't tell the difference. That's why we're making a special resource available for you. And this is the last week that we're making this resource available for you. It's entitled Don't Be Deceived, Six Lies About Jesus. Here's what you can do.
Go to rtwoffer.com or call us at 1-888-218-9337. This book, which I wrote a number of years ago, emphasizes the uniqueness of Christ, the lies that are being told about him, and the kind of Jesus in whom we must believe. God of very God, the only one qualified to lead us to the Father. If you want to bolster your faith and share it with others, ask for this resource, Don't Be Deceived, Six Lies About Jesus. It's time now for another chance for you to ask Pastor Lutzer a question about the Bible or the Christian life. The return of Christ has been expected for almost 2,000 years.
It's appropriate that Robert should ask this question. When will the second coming of Christ happen? And what events will happen around that time? Robert, you have to keep in mind that some of us believe that the second coming of Jesus Christ is going to happen in two stages. First of all, there will be the rapture of the church, 1 Thessalonians chapter 4, when we are snatched up and we are taken to be with the Lord. The dead in Christ rise, those who are alive are transformed, and together we are with the Lord.
Now, we believe that that could happen at any time, and it could have happened years ago, actually. On the other hand, we also believe that the return of Jesus in glory, the glorious appearing, takes place after the rapture, at least seven years after the rapture, maybe a little bit more than seven years. Now, this is Matthew chapter 24. Now, if you read Matthew chapter 24, you know that there are signs that lead to this glorious returning of Christ. That's when the Bible says that the gospel is preached when false prophets come and all kinds of various things happen, earthquakes and wars.
So that might be an answer to your question. Now, I don't want to get too complicated, Robert, but follow this carefully for just a moment. I believe that even today we can see some of the signs that will lead to the glorious appearing of Jesus Christ. They may be beginning to form now, and if that's the case, it might be that the rapture is close, and even though we don't know what signs exactly precede the rapture, remember it could happen at any moment. Bottom line, let's just be ready no matter when and how God chooses to wrap up history. We know that Christ is coming, all of the details we can discuss and perhaps disagree about, but He is coming, and we will be accountable. Thanks for asking, Robert, God bless you, and you have a good day. I'll see you next time.