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A Serving Church "“ Part 1 of 2

Running to Win / Erwin Lutzer
The Truth Network Radio
November 22, 2024 1:00 am

A Serving Church "“ Part 1 of 2

Running to Win / Erwin Lutzer

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November 22, 2024 1:00 am

When God comes to church, things happen. Transformation occurs, and people become willing to serve others, giving themselves without a time agenda. Servant leadership is about pleasing God, not people, and making financial sacrifices in ministry. The goal is to develop character, people who walk worthy of God, with dignity and belonging to Him.

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Let us run with endurance the race that is set before us, looking to Jesus, the founder and perfecter of our faith.

It's great when people give others first place. That's what happens in a church experiencing the direct moving of God. Today, Paul commends one church for its Spirit-led service, and we'll learn the lessons they learned so long ago.

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, give us a look ahead into what a serving church is all about. Dave, I'm not sure that I have said this before, but sometimes I think that when you have a pastor and a pastoral staff, the congregation thinks that they are the ones who are serving God, and certainly they are, and the congregation might actually feel left out. That's why it's so important that when we talk about a serving church, we're talking about a church where members feel a sense of ownership, and so they volunteer. They are willing to be trained and to be helped to do the work of the ministry. That's the way the New Testament church functioned.

But at the same time, it's so important for us to recognize that we always must point people to the right Jesus. And this is the last day we're making a special resource available for you. It's a book I've written entitled, Don't Be Deceived, Six Lies About Jesus. For a gift of any amount, we're making it available for you. Here's what you can do.

Go to rtwoffer.com or call us at 1-888-218-9337. Our heart's desire and our heart's prayer is that you will be saved, but the only one who can save you is the biblical Jesus. When God comes to church, things happen. Oh, I know that God is always coming to church because God is everywhere, but I'm talking about the real intense moving of the Holy Spirit of God. When that happens, there's transformation. One of the noticeable indications that God has come to church is the willingness on the part of people to serve, to say I am available for whatever God has called me to do.

I'm willing to help even at great personal inconvenience. When you have that, you know that God has come to church. I believe one of the great examples of where God came to church was the church at Thessalonica.

You remember just north of Athens, if you go to the Aegean Sea, there you can see the, on a map, the city of Thessalonica or where it used to be. And Paul was there only apparently three weeks, and he taught them so much and he fell in love with them in a way that was really remarkable. And there were two groups of people in the church.

There were Jews who were the custodians of God's revelation. You'd think that that would have humbled them, but it had the opposite effect. They became self-righteous. Just like us as Christians, the fact that if you are a born again believer today, you above all people should be greatly humbled. We should be the most humble, broken people on earth.

And yet sometimes it's a cause for pride and we strut and we swagger. And that's not Christ-like because we are undeserved recipients of God's blessing. So there were Jews who were very proud of the fact that they were Jews and they were not interested in learning about the Messiah, but there were also some Greeks. And the Greeks, you remember, they were schooled in Plato.

And I will say this to those of you who have a Greek background, that Plato and Aristotle were probably two of the most brilliant men God ever created. And yet they could not get to God because human reason, human reason does not have the building blocks to solve the question of God and what he's like and his relationship to the world. And yet you had many of them believing in Jesus and both needed the gospel.

Both needed the gospel. Our text today is 1 Thessalonians chapter 2. 1 Thessalonians chapter 2, where the apostle Paul says in verse 2 that we had boldness in our God to declare to you the gospel of God. That little phrase, gospel of God, can mean either the gospel about God. It can also mean and more likely it's the gospel that belongs to God. When you come to Moody Church and we proclaim the gospel, we're proclaiming a message that no man would have ever invented. Nobody would have come up with the idea that the only way to redeem sinners is to have God himself in the second person of the Trinity come and be crucified and offer a sacrifice and then freely give eternal life to those who turn from their sin and believe.

No one would have come up with that on their own. This is God's gospel. And then Paul talks about himself and he does it partially in defense but partially also to model for us what servant leadership is really about.

And that's our topic for today. And as we go through chapter 2, all 19 verses, we are going to go through as one would experience a garden. You don't stop at all of the flowers.

You walk from one batch of flowers to another and you simply walk past a lot of them because you can't do it all. And in order to do that, we're going to look at five characteristics of servant leadership. And I want to apply this message not just to the pastoral staff and the elders, but to everyone at Moody Church who serves and to those of you who aren't serving yet, but you will. Everybody with a Bible open.

All right, quickly, are we ready to walk through the garden and pick some flowers? First of all, the Apostle Paul shows us that in his servant leadership, he says, his motive was pure. In fact, in verses three and again in verse five, he lists all of the reasons why he did not come to Corinth.

Undoubtedly, there were some people who were critical of him thinking that he had come because of greed. He says, I did not come because of error. I wasn't preaching something I made up. He says, not because of impurity.

I wasn't sleeping with women on my day off nor an attempt to deceive. I wasn't using this to somehow lead you astray and to control you as false teachers do. But just as we have been approved by God and so forth, verse five, for we never came with words of flattery. You can use flattery. Flattery can either be truthful or it can be lies, but both are wrong.

If they are used to try to manipulate and to try to get that person to do what you want and to make a deal. He says, we didn't use flattery nor with the pretext of greed. We didn't come and leave the city with bags full of money. God is witness nor did we seek glory from people. Paul says, I wasn't among you there, he says, so that others would say what a wonderful teacher Paul is.

Think of how much he knows. He said, we weren't there to receive praise from men. This gets to the heart of the motivation of what it means to be a servant. To be a servant means that you're not singing so that people will tell you how wonderful you are and how the song minister to them. Though you can use that encouragement from time to time that you don't preach like I have the privilege of doing so that people will come up later and tell you what a great sermon it is. Paul says that is a sinful motivation.

You say, what motivated him? Well, it's there in verse four. He says, but just as we have been approved by God to be entrusted with the gospel, so we speak not to please man, but to please God who tests our hearts. That's the reason that you serve is to please God.

The opinion of others might have their place, but that's not the first question that you ask. The first question that you ask is, is this being really done so others will think well of me or is it being done for God? Are you content if God is satisfied even if no one else is satisfied? God tests our hearts. God tests our motives. This past week I heard a story of a man whom I happen to know.

He's from South Africa, but he lives in Canada and in South Africa. Now this man spends most of his time in prayer and he was in South Africa and he fasted for 11 days and he believed that God wanted him to have some meetings in a church and other people agreed. You should go to that church. They said, we have a place for you to stay and what we want you to do is to have meetings there.

So the meetings were advertised. He went to the couple's home where he was to stay. The wife was a believer. The husband was not a believer, but they were glad to house him and so he went to his first meeting and he went there and no one showed up at seven. He actually went to pray for a couple of hours. No one showed up at seven and then he thought, well, maybe, maybe there's been a mistake. Maybe the meetings were advertised at 730.

730 came and nobody showed up. Well, he was very discouraged and he was about to go home and he said, God, what is this? And it was as if God spoke to him and says, well, for who are you doing the preaching? Why don't you preach for me? I thought, okay, I'll preach for God.

I'll preach to an empty church. So he did preach to sermon, took an offering that would have been interesting. Took an offering, gave the benediction, went home. They asked him, how did the meetings go?

How many people showed up? He said, nobody showed up. They said, what did you do? He says, I preached a sermon for God. And that night, that man could not sleep.

The man of the house, she said, what's your trouble? His wife said, and he said, it's that preacher down there. He preached a sermon for God, even though God was the one who was listening, only one who was listening. And that night, that man was converted. Now you say, well, see, that's what you get for these people who spend a lot of time in prayer. You know, he fasts for 11 days. He goes to the church early and he prays for a couple of hours and look at how beneficial his prayer turned out to be. Nobody showed up to the meeting.

Not too fast. As those meetings continued, many people were converted and today there's a very strong church there. Some of you are discouraged because you've chosen to pray with Christ for one hour every week of this year and you've done it a couple of times and you've noticed no difference. And you say to yourself, well, you see, God doesn't answer prayer, but God is working and God will answer even if he doesn't answer it the way in which you think he should and as quickly as you think he should. So God is there.

So I have to ask you today, see, when God comes to church, he house cleans our hearts. The motives are changed. It isn't what people will think of me. Now it's what God thinks of me. It isn't for greed.

It isn't for, for manipulation so that you can get ahead. It has everything to do with this simple question. Is God pleased? No wonder Paul continues on and says, you know, we were like a gentle among you, like a nursing mother, verse seven, taking care of her own children. So being affectionately desirous of you, we were ready to share with you not only the gospel of God, but also ourselves because you had become very dear to us. You begin to live this way with a God directed motivation and you find that you don't just give people your time. You give people yourself.

Only God can do that. And that's what happens when he shows up. How does a nursing mother do it? Does she say, well, you know, I'm on duty nine to five. This kid cries in the middle of the night. I'm sorry. Wait until morning.

Wait until nine o'clock till I get to work. No. Why she is imparting not just her time, not just her ability, but she gives herself to the children as my wife did as our children were growing up pulses. That's the way ministry should be. That's what should be happening at the moody church. People giving themselves to others without a time agenda. I know we can't do it all, but with, with such a sense of devotion and commitment to one another that we give not just our time, but we give ourselves. I have a pastor who was preaching on this, who had a lot more nerve than I do, but in the middle of the sermon, he asked an usher and the idea just came to him to bring an offering plate. And so he put the offering plate on the platform and he stood in it. That's what we give to God. When God comes to church, we give ourselves pulses. That's the motivation of servanthood.

Second note is quickly the sacrifice. Paul says in verse nine and following for you. Remember brothers are labor and toil.

We work night and day that we might not be a burden to any of you while we proclaim to you the gospel of God. Paul says, I continue to work on tents. That's where the idea of tent making comes in so that we never even talked about money. So nobody would say Paul's in it for the buck.

Or he lived at a time when there were professional orators who used to come and give speeches, but they always in advance would say how much money they needed for their speech. Paul says, that's not, I don't, I want to stay away from that. And you know, of course that the ministry has often been disgraced because people are in it for the money. You say, well, pastor Luther, you get paid from the church. The staff gets paid from the church.

Paul is not giving here a universal principle. In fact, later on, he says that those who teach the word and preach the word have a right to be taken care of. But what Paul is telling all of us very strongly is this, that when we do ministry, the motivation is not the motivation of money and shame on any person who has that motivation. You receive the money in order that you might serve, but you don't serve with a view to ask the question, how much do I get? You don't go into the ministry because you say, well, this is going to make more money than some other vocation.

And by the way, seldom does it make much money, more money than other vocations. Remember the elders in a little church that prayed, oh God, we promise that if you keep him humble, we promise to keep him poor. You know, that's the agreement. The other day I said to the staff with a smile on my face, I was admonishing them regarding something about the need to do something. And then I said, remember this, we here on the staff, we are paid to be good. You know, we're paid to be good. We have an expectation. I said all of the people at Moody church who volunteer, they're good for nothing.

Yeah, you're good for nothing. Paul says we have to be willing to make financial sacrifice in ministry. If our ministry does not in any way affect our checkbook, if it does not affect the way in which we give, if it does not affect our motivation, we are not Christ-like in our service. God has not yet come to church as long as we're hung up on all these things. So Paul says, I made that the sacrifice of that, the sacrifice of devotion. He says we were holy and righteous and blameless before you. And I say this to the pastoral staff and all the leadership at Moody church that we who are in leadership should be more holy, more righteous and more blameless than we even expect our congregation to be.

That's a note of conviction for all of us. So Paul says here, he says there's a sacrifice to servanthood and then he says, what is the goal? The goal here is in verses 11 and 12 where you know how like a father with his children, we exhorted each of you and encourage you and charged you to walk in a manner worthy of God. What's it all about? What are we trying to do with our teenagers? What are we trying to do with our leadership? What are we doing in our ABF's adult Bible fellowships? What are we, what are we trying to accomplish at the end of the day? What we want is character.

People who walk worthy of God in keeping with the dignity of belonging to God. When I was growing up, we as kids used to say to our mother and father, like most kids do, well, we can't do this. Why can't we do this?

Because look at the neighbors, they're doing that. And our parents used to always say, now their name is, and then they'd give the name and then they'd say, but you know, you're a Lutzer and this is a different family. I don't know whether or not that helped, but it should have. And so I say to those of you today who are Christians, the world can do this, this, this, but you can't because guess what? You belong to a different family.

Thank you very, very much. We are to walk worthy of God. And you know, my friend, being a member of the right family always begins by putting faith in the right person, namely Jesus Christ. And it's so important that we believe in the Jesus of the New Testament, not the Jesus of popular culture. Today's the last day we're making a special resource available for you. It's entitled, Don't Be Deceived, Six Lies About Jesus.

For a gift of any amount, it can be yours. And let me tell you that it is very important that we understand, for example, why Jesus is the only one qualified to lead us to the father. It's important for us to understand how Jesus Christ claimed to be God. All of this is in this resource. Here's what you do. Go to RTWOffer.com. That's RTWOffer.com or pick up the phone and call us at 1-888-218-9337. Now, because this is the last day that we're making this resource available, I'm going to be giving you that contact info again. But before I do, from my heart to yours, thank you so much for supporting this ministry.

Because of you, running to win is heard in more than 50 different countries in seven different languages. But here's what you do to contact us. Go to RTWOffer.com. That's RTWOffer.com or pick up the phone and call us at 1-888-218-9337.

Right now, go to RTWOffer.com. Thanks in advance for helping us get the gospel around the world. It's time now for another chance for you to ask Pastor Lutzer a question about the Bible or the Christian life. Tithing. It means giving a tenth of your income to God through the church and through other ministries. Cornelius wants to know Pastor Lutzer's take on tithing. He puts it like this, I want to know what Moody Church believes about tithing. I've heard some say this is an Old Testament concept that has been done away with.

Cornelius, thank you for asking. In the New Testament, there is no emphasis on tithing, and I'll tell you why. Because under grace, we have a brand new relationship with God, and therefore we should give as God has prospered us. We should give with joy. We should not be bound by a law that says you must give. That takes out the actual heart of what giving is all about. In the Old Testament, the 10% was a kind of a tax. It was used in the temple, it was used to pay the priests, etc., etc. And in the New Testament, we don't have that, and therefore tithing is not a requirement. But Cornelius, I do need to add that 10% is a good way to begin the giving process.

It's a good benchmark. And if we give generously, we'll want to give even more generously, and according to 2 Corinthians, God is going to prosper us so that we can give more. That's a whole matter of the heart, not of the law. So go in peace, Cornelius, but be generous, and God will bless you. Thank you, Cornelius, and thank you, Pastor Lutzer. If you'd like to hear your question answered, go to our website at rtwoffer.com and click on Ask Pastor Lutzer. Or call us at 1-888-218-9337.

That's 1-888-218-9337. You can write to us at Running to Win, 1635 North LaSalle Boulevard, Chicago, IL 60614. Running to Win comes to you from the Moody Church in Chicago to help you understand God's roadmap for your race of life. Next time, why it's going to get tougher for Christians in the days ahead, and why maintaining our integrity then will be more crucial than ever. Thanks for listening. For Dr. Erwin Lutzer, this is Dave McAllister. Running to Win is sponsored by the Moody Church.

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