Just
Going Through the Motions!
As
American Christians face the pending years in the rapid degradation of our societal
moral values, these times will test the genuineness of our faith and our
resolve to be faithful. Christianity is
not designed to function in vacuum.
Christianity is intended to flourish within the constant friction
between truth and error, light and darkness, morality and immorality, and the
constant battle “against principalities,
against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against
spiritual wickedness in high places” (Ephesians 6:12b).
Fundamental
and Evangelical churches are rapidly sliding into Post Modernism and Emergent
Church views stretching themselves beyond imagination for some kind of
quasi-cultural relativism. They strive
for some common center with one
another while abandoning all Scriptural parameters defining holiness before
God. They seem more concerned with being
accepted as friends of the world
rather than giving the world spiritual direction to Christ to be saved and to
walking in fellowship with Him. James
4:4 warns against this nonsense – “Ye adulterers and adulteresses, know ye not
that the friendship of the world is enmity with God? whosoever therefore will
be a friend of the world is the enemy of God.”
Christians
of the twenty-first century face very similar problems as did the faithful of
the nation of Israel before Israel’s captivity under the chastisement of
God. In fact, Israel’s captivity was due
to the compromise of the priesthood of Israel and their corruption of Jewish
society. The faithful remnant cried out
to God for divine justice often without realizing that God’s judgment of
nations happens in time and to ALL those within the nation. It is foolish when the faithful fail to
realize that they are in part responsible for the moral degradation within the
culture they live and testify. It is
never enough to set in the light and curse the darkness!
“1 The
burden which Habakkuk the prophet did see. 2 O LORD, how long shall
I cry, and thou wilt not hear! even cry out unto thee of
violence, and thou wilt not save! 3 Why dost thou shew me iniquity,
and cause me to behold grievance? for spoiling and violence are
before me: and there are that raise up strife and contention. 4
Therefore the law is slacked, and judgment doth never go forth: for the wicked
doth compass about the righteous; therefore wrong judgment proceedeth” (Habakkuk 1:1-4).
Habakkuk
prays for revival. Like most of us, he
understands very little of what must be done in order for revival to come. Like most of us, Habakkuk desperately wants
and needs revival but is not really willing to pay the price of personal
sacrifice necessary for revival to come.
Habakkuk
had a burden (v. 1). That burden was
directly related to the difference between where he was spiritually and where
his nation was spiritually. Yet, there
was a greater difference than Habakkuk realized. The difference was between the holiness of
God and where Israel was spiritually. God
had built deep convictions of truth into Habakkuk’s life. Habakkuk saw everything in his world through
the eyes of those convictions. Yet,
Habakkuk’s convictions were not necessarily in perfect alignment with God’s
holiness. He was deeply burdened by the
contradictions between the truth he knew and the practices of those around him.
This
burden is expressed in the questions and statements of Habakkuk 1:2-4. Yes, if we look at these verses
superficially, we will fail to see why Habakkuk was among those who needed
revival. To avoid that, we need to spend
some time on some of the symptoms that reveal that we (individually and as a
local church corporately) may need revival.
Just going through the motions
Christians can be doing
all the right things for all the wrong reasons.
When you go to church services, are you excited about the things of
God? Are you focused on worship and
praise of God?
The
word FOCUS can reveal a great deal about our need of revival. Ask yourself this question, what motivates me
to attend church services and minister to others? Your answer will tell you where your focus
is. Be honest with yourself. When your FOCUS is right, you will answer - because
you want to express a genuine, heartfelt love for God and praise Him for what
He has done and is doing for you. You
will attend church services because attending will provide you an opportunity
to love others and to extend yourself to others in ministry so as to teach and
to learn. (Be honest in your evaluation!)
1. When you are just going through
the motions, you have lost your excitement for the things of God and do not
really expect God to do anything during your church’s services. (Be honest in your evaluation!)
2. When you are just going through
the motions, you are not really cognizant of the lost people around you and
you do not make plans to bring them to Christ.
(Do you take Bible tracks or your Bible with you to work?)
3. When you are just going through the motions, when God
opens windows of opportunity for ministry and witness, you will view them as
inconveniences and disregard them. (Be
honest in your evaluation!)
If this describes you (be
honest in your evaluation), you desperately need revival.
How does the fact that we are just
going through the motions impact our missional vision?
When our Christianity
degenerates into just going through the motions, one of the most dangerous
things that can happen to a Christian (and to a local church) begins to happen. Read Habakkuk 1:2-3 again and see if you can
find what it is.
“2 O LORD, how long
shall I cry, and thou wilt not hear! even cry out unto thee of
violence, and thou wilt not save! 3 Why dost thou shew me iniquity,
and cause me to behold grievance? for spoiling and violence are
before me: and there are that raise up strife and contention.”
A little red, flashing
warning light ought to be going off right now.
When your Christianity is just a duty to perform and you are just going
through the motions, your focus is taken off of serving Christ and that focus
begins to fall upon yourself and the faults of others. Whenever you begin to focus on yourself, your
Christianity immediately moves out of focus to the degree your focus is off of
Christ. The longer this goes on, the
more difficult it will be to overcome.
Stop
right here for a moment. When was the
last time you really were serving the Lord with gladness and rejoicing and
really focusing on the needs of others? When
was the last time you were really excited about the things of God, about
reading His Word, about praying, about hearing preaching, about singing songs
of praise, about true worship, or about witnessing for Christ? Perhaps you can see that you need to change
your FOCUS and begin to pray for your own revival.
Let me share with you
an amazing truth about all of this. When
your focus is on helping others realize their potential in Christ, amazingly
your Christianity grows and you grow as a person. When your focus remains on yourself, you
stagnate and cease to grow as a Christian as long as your focus remains on
yourself. You may still learn Bible
verses. You can find your way around the
Bible and you no longer do all those things you used to do, but you know
your Christianity is just a façade.
As soon as you begin to
focus on yourself, your Christian growth comes to a screeching halt and you
have really stopped serving the Lord even if you are still going through the motions. Now you do what you do just to protect your
image.
Notice
as well in Habakkuk 1:2-3 that as Habakkuk begins to focus on himself, he
begins to take the failures of others PERSONALLY and becomes offended. A person or a local church needing revival is
the person or church that is the most susceptible to offenses and all the
problems that go with them. Stop for a
moment again. Who are the most easily
offended people in your local church?
Are they those who are serving the Lord and winning souls, or are they
those who are doing nothing and just going through the motions? Easily offended people have some silly notion
of self-importance. They are often
arrogant, angry, argumentative, and unteachable.
Notice Habakkuk’s prevailing
attitude reflecting his need of revival in Habakkuk 1:2.
When Habakkuk begins to
take offenses personally, he begins to accuse God of injustice. He blames God for the existing conditions. After all, why doesn’t God just take care of
these people that refuse to do what is right. It is easier to pray that God would kill them,
or harm them, than to pray that God would bring revival. This is easier because to pray for revival
must involve a commitment by the faithful to be part of the solution. The revived believer prays for direction from
God in being part of the solution. He
then moves in the direction of his prayer.
Revival follows God bringing conviction that leads to repentance.
God is always bringing conviction. God will convict anyone that reads or hears
the truth of His Word or its proclamation.
God will convict that His Word is righteous and that there is pending
judgment upon the unrighteous. However,
many will go away from the proclamation of God’s Word angry and unrepentant. Those people will continue to just keep on going through the motions. Repentance is a change of heart, of mind, of
attitude, and of FOCUS that brings one’s life into harmony with God’s
proclaimed righteousness. Convicting is
God’s part in revival. Repentance is our
part.
Changing our FOCUS, how
do we do that? Read Habakkuk 1:3. Habakkuk asks, “Why do you show me these
things?” Habakkuk appears to be ignorant
of his personal responsibilities in dealing with the immorality within his own
culture. It is almost as if Habakkuk is
saying, “I cannot do anything about this.
Why do you “shew me iniquity, and cause me to behold grievance?”
“Why dost thou shew me iniquity,
and cause me to behold grievance? for spoiling and violence are
before me: and there are that raise up strife and contention.”
The truth is that Habakkuk
could do something about it! He could
speak out publicly against the aberrations.
He could warn of God’s pending judgment.
He could pray for God to use him in a being a bold witness. He could recognize that the problem was that the
majority of the people of Israel were lost and needing to be saved.
Like Habakkuk, most
believers want ACTION without PARTICIPATION.
We want RIGHTEOUSNESS without ever having to confront UNRIGHTEOUNESS. We pray that God will do for us what He has
commanded us to do. It is wrong to pray
for God to act without being willing to participate in providing the answer and
being part of the solution. Once we
begin to think that way, we are just going through the motions. Then, we just continue as part of the
problem.
Revival
happens when the faithful are willing
to repent and change their
lives. Then they become the spark of
life that ignites life in others. They THEN become God’s kindling for revival.
Have
you been just going through the motions?
The longer you have been doing it, the harder it will be to
overcome. When was the last time you
walked the isle of your church to come before the Lord broken over something
God has spoken to you about? If it has
been awhile, either your life is perfect or you are just going through the
motions in your Christian life. Be
honest, which one do you think is true?
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Numerous studies and series are available free of charge for local churches at: http://www.disciplemakerministries.org/
Dr. Lance Ketchum serves the Lord as a Church Planter, Evangelist/Revivalist.
He has served the Lord for over 40 years.
1 comment:
Amen Dr. Ketchum! This convicted me. Thank you for writing this.
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