In
previous articles of this series, we have studied about “The Challenge” that a
finished work is for us today [December 2005], and “The Method” of finishing the work [January 2006].
Each of God’s people around the world must be involved in the finishing
of the work, doing their part through personal testimony and personal witness
to those around them. In this article,
we will consider “The March” in the Christian’s life.
Jesus
said, in John 4:34, “My
meat is to do the will of him that sent me, and to finish his work.” If Jesus’ food was to do the will of the One
that sent Him and to finish the work, is that our food and drink today—to do
the will of Him that has sent us and to finish His work? God is calling us today to partake of this
food and drink and to make it our purpose for living.
The
first chapters of the Book of Joshua record the experience of the children of Israel as they entered the Promised Land. Uncertainty, fear, and trepidation gripped
many of them, because they had been told about the giants in the land. God had given Joshua direction to cross over
the Jordan to Canaan, and it was only through explicit obedience to His
direction that Canaan was conquered.
Triumphant
March
In
Joshua 6, very
specific directions from the Lord for embattling with and conquering Jericho are recorded. This
city was a formidable obstacle in the conquest of the rest of Canaan. In verses 6, 7, and 10, we
read: “And Joshua the son of Nun called the priests, and said unto them, Take
up the ark of the covenant, and let seven priests bear
seven trumpets of rams’ horns before the ark of the Lord. And he said unto
the people, Pass on, and compass the city, and let him that is armed pass on
before the ark of the Lord.” “And Joshua had commanded the people, saying,
Ye shall not shout, nor make any noise with your voice, neither shall [any]
word proceed out of your mouth, until the day I bid you shout; then shall ye
shout.”
What
interesting battle plans! Not since this
time have battle plans ever been laid like this. The directions were for a small, armed group
to go first, followed by seven priests blowing on seven trumpets. The Ark of the Covenant was to follow the
priests, with the entire armed host marching after it. As they marched, they could not be laughing
and talking or conversing in any way.
The instruction was, “You shall not shout, nor shall you make any
noise.” They were to march in silence
together for six days.
Then,
we know the rest of the story: “And it came to pass at the seventh time, when
the priests blew with the trumpets, Joshua said unto the people, Shout; for the
Lord hath given you the
city.” Verse 16. On the seventh day, as they finished that
seventh circuit, they were to shout! Oh
to have heard that shout!
Obey
the Orders
For
six days, the entire armed host was silent as it marched around the city, but
on the seventh day, the seventh time marching around the city, when the priests
blew the trumpets with a loud blast, every person gave a loud shout. The walls of the city came down, and Jericho was conquered without a fight.
Think
this through for a moment. Suppose they
had decided that it was not that important whether or not they were quiet
during the first six days of marching around the city, and they engaged in
talking and conversing with their friends.
Do you think the victory would have been won? No.
What if some were growing weary of the silent marching, so they decided
to shout on the fifth lap or the sixth lap around the city? Would the victory have been won? No.
Without united effort, without marching in unity, without explicitly
following the instruction of God, Jericho would never have been conquered.
In
the finishing of our work today, unless we learn as they did to march in unity, the work will not be finished by us. God will use others who will march in
unity. A disunited army could not
conquer Canaan, and a disunited army is not going to finish the work
today.
Imagine
how the situation would have unfolded if they had taken the orders from Joshua,
which came directly from the Captain of the host of the Lord, and said, “All
right, we will march around the city.”
And then Ephraim had begun marching around the city clockwise as Judah had begun marching around it counterclockwise. Or perhaps
Dan had started at the West Gate while Naphtali had
started at the East Gate. Another tribe
had started marching at 7:00 a.m., but another group had not gotten started until noon. Perhaps they had
greeted one another or had waved to the curious onlookers as they marched. Would the plan have worked? Definitely not.
An
army that fights like that is not ready to face any foe. It is very easy for us, as we stand up
against sin and against apostasy, to begin standing up against our brethren
too, and not march in unity.
Smiting
Fellowservants
In
Matthew 24, Jesus
concludes His message on the signs of the times—what is to precede His coming
and what His coming will be like. He
tells a parable of two servants—a faithful servant and a wicked servant. Jesus brings, at the end of this discourse of
last day events, a very interesting conclusion.
Note verses 48 and
49: “But
and if that evil servant shall say in his heart, My
lord delayeth his coming; And shall begin to smite
[his] fellowservants, and to eat and drink with the
drunken.” Is there anything absolutely
terrible, any grave sin, we might say, with which this evil servant is
condemned? He does not even verbalize
it; He just says in his heart, “My Lord is delaying His coming.” And that leads him to smite his fellowservants.
Can
we be guilty of this? Is it possible to
smite our fellowservants with more than just a
fist? A tongue can smite our fellowservants too, can it not? The Lord says, of those who are smiting their
fellowservants and of those who are not marching in unity, that their portion is going to be with the hypocrites
when He comes. Their portion is going to
be weeping and gnashing of teeth, because they did not join the army that was
marching shoulder-to-shoulder in conquest of Canaan.
We
need to forget our silly differences and pray that the Lord will help us to not
be smiting our fellowservants, because anyone that is
smiting his fellowservants will not be in the army
that is going to finish the work. We
need to realize who the enemy really is.
The enemy is not one another. The
enemy is not those who disagree with us or have different ideas; the enemy is
the prince of the unconquered and unwarned world.
One
Mind
“Now
the God of patience and consolation grant you to be likeminded one toward
another according to Christ Jesus: That ye may with one mind [and] one mouth
glorify God, even the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” Romans 15:5,
6.
What
an amazing passage! It directs that we
are to have one mind and one mouth. What
do we do with our minds? We think. Our ideas, our thought processes, come from
our minds, and here Paul says that we are to have one mind. The church is to have one mind, one purpose,
one goal, one mouth. What do we do with
our mouths? We speak. We are not to be saying multiple different
things. We are to have one mouth, and we
are to be speaking one thing.
How
can that happen? Philip-pians 2:2 tells us,” Fulfil ye my joy, that
ye be likeminded, having the same love, [being] of one accord, of one
mind.” Paul says that we are to “fulfill
my joy, be likeminded.” And then he
tells us how that is possible. We are to
have the same love. We are not going to
have the same mind, the same mouth, or march shoulder-to-shoulder until we have
the same love. Do we have the same love
today?
Brotherly
Love
On
the first night of one of my trips to the Democratic Republic of the Congo, my travel companions and I discovered that the people whom
we were visiting had been preparing a mud hut for us. It was actually quite large. They had gone out of their way to make what
we would call a mud mansion. But they
were not completely finished with it by the time we arrived. There were not yet any doors on the hut, but
we were very tired, only wanting a place to sleep, as we had been traveling for
many, many hours by multiple conveyances.
During
the night, we were awakened by sounds outside of the hut. Peering outside, we noticed that the kerosene
lantern was burning, and there beside it was a brother who had not yet been
baptized. He wanted to make sure that we
were safe, so he stayed awake the entire night to be a guard for us. When I learned that he had stayed sitting
upright in a chair all night just to make sure no one harmed us, I felt so
badly for him, but he had love.
This
man was baptized while we were there. He
had been a member of the Baptist Church. He had discovered a
little bit about the Advent message from a sign along the road, and he had
received Bible studies. He took the
studies back to his church and other Baptist churches, and the members accepted
what they learned from the lessons and wanted to know more about the
Seventh-day Adventist message. They
accepted the Sabbath. He was there at
our location as their representative. We
were never able to visit the other members, as they were 160 kilometers—about 100 miles—away. We did not have time to walk there, but 15 Baptist churches had sent him to learn
more of the Adventist message. One
reason God could work in their hearts, I believe, was because they had a love
in their hearts for the brethren and for the message.
God
is going to work in our churches; the more love and the more unity we have, the
more He is going to work with us. Ellen
White wrote: “The success of our work depends upon our love to God and our love
to our fellowmen. When there is harmonious action among the individual members
of the church, when there is love and confidence manifested by brother to
brother, there will be proportionate force and power in our work for the
salvation of men.” Testimonies
to Ministers and Gospel Workers, 188.
March
Shoulder-to-Shoulder
We
need to march in unity. We need to march
shoulder-to-shoulder if we are going to conquer Canaan. So often, though, we think that the method to
which God has called us is the only method, and everybody must use that
method. We think that anybody who is not
doing what we are doing is just not quite as sanctified as we are.
My
friends, we need to all march in unity.
There is a work to be done in literature work, but literature work alone
is not going to finish the work. There
is a work to be done in medical missionary lines, but that alone is not going
to finish the work, even though it was given for evangelism. It was not just given to educate our
churches; it was not just given so we could treat those among our number that
become sick.
Do
you remember that Loma Linda University used to be called the College of Medical Evangelists? Medical missionary
work was given as a part of finishing the work and of evangelism. Ellen White often used an interesting phrase:
“gospel medical missionary evangelist.”
(See, for instance, Medical Ministry, 56.)
The purpose of medical missionary work is to do evangelism. The purpose of literature work is to do
evangelism, public evangelism, personal work among the
members of the church.
We
have to march shoulder-to-shoulder and work together to finish the work,
because there are those who will respond to literature work but who will not
respond to other work. There are those
who will respond to medical missionary work who will not respond to something
else. There are those who will respond
to public evangelism and personal testimony who will not respond to other
methods. God has called us, just as He
called the army that was to conquer Canaan. He has called us to
march shoulder-to-shoulder.
Achieving
Unity
How
can we march shoulder-to-shoulder? How
can we work together in unity? My
favorite sermon titles are the ones that begin with “How”! I like practical things, and we are given
some practical counsel regarding unity.
“The
unity that exists between Christ and His disciples does not destroy the
personality of either. In mind, in
purpose, in character, they are one, but not in person. By partaking of the Spirit of God, conforming
to the law of God, man becomes a partaker of the divine nature. Christ brings His disciples into a living
union with Himself and with the Father.
Through the working of the Holy Spirit upon the human mind, man is made
complete in Christ Jesus. Unity with
Christ establishes a bond of unity with one another.” Sons and Daughters of
God, 286.
We
can be united with one another by striving to be united with Christ.
“The
cause of division and discord in families and in the church is separation from
Christ. To come near to Christ is to
come near to one another. The secret of
true unity in the church and in the family is not diplomacy, not management,
not a superhuman effort to overcome difficulties—though there will be much of
this to do—but union with Christ.” The Adventist Home, 179.
When
there is a lack of unity, when there is division, when there is discord, we
have to examine our hearts. We
individually must ask, “Lord, am I in union with You? Am I the cause of this disharmony? Am I marching in a direction different from
the rest of my brethren, or am I marching shoulder-to-shoulder? Am I in union with Christ?”
Another
interesting area that we are told will affect unity is also given: “Those who
would be overcomers must be drawn out of
themselves.” Fundamentals
of Christian Education, 207. Do you want to be an overcomer? If we are not overcomers,
we are not going to finish the work. If
we are not overcomers, we are not going to enter into
the Holy City.
Be
Overcomers
How
can we overcome? How can we be drawn out
of ourselves? She says, “The only thing
which will accomplish this great work, is to become intensely interested in the
salvation of others.” And then she says,
“This does not mean that you are to convert men to your way of doing, or to
compel them to view things in the same light as you do; but you are to seek to
present the truth as it is in Jesus.” Ibid.
Continuing,
Ellen White says, “Missionary effort will become more general, and the example
of one zealous worker, working in the right direction, will influence others,
and they also will go forth to preach the gospel. The missionary spirit will pass from house to
house, and the brethren will find something to talk about of more interest than
their grievances.” Ibid.,
208.
Have
you ever been in a church where there are discussions about grievances? If so, it means that there is not enough
missionary work being done, because she says that if we had greater missionary
work being done, we would not find time to talk about our grievances. We would have more important things to
discuss.
She
goes on: “They will be interested in displaying the jewels of truth which the
Bible contains, and churches will be established, meetinghouses erected, and
many will come to the help of the Lord.”
And notice what the result will be: “The brethren will be united in
bonds of love, and will realize their unity with experienced Christians in all
parts of the world, as they are one in their plans, one in the
object of their interest.” Ibid. [Emphasis
supplied.]
What
brings about this unity? It is brought
about by union with Christ and an intense interest in the salvation of others
and by missionary effort that leads us to forget about talking about grievances
and problems in the church. These
different things become nothing when we have the goal of a finished work before
our eyes.
I
am always amazed how this works! Every
time a church is involved in active evangelism, there is greater unity than at
previous times. I have noticed this
played out every year with the youth class at camp meeting. Each time we have gone out door-to-door in
the community, the spirit is always different when the young people get back
into the van than when they got out.
When they return, they are talking about the person they met at one
door, and the person that signed up for Bible studies at another, and the
literature they gave away. There is a
common spirit and more of a unity, just in that van.
That
is what we need in our churches. We have
to look those giants in the face, and we have to march forward
shoulder-to-shoulder, being as aggressive in our work as possible. We have to look at the giants in our hearts
and ask the Lord to bring those giants in our hearts down, that we might have a
closer unity with Christ and that we, as a church, can march in unity—because
God’s work will be finished by His church marching in unity,
shoulder-to-shoulder around Jericho.
Cody
Francis is currently engaged in public evangelism for Mission
Projects International. He also pastors
the Remnant Church of Seventh-day Adventist Believers in Renton,
Washington. He may be contacted
by e-mail at: cody@missionspro.org.