Missionary Weapons

September 11th, 2012 by Dave Leave a reply »

No lyrics on screen. Let the video speak.

If I then, your Lord and Teacher, have washed your feet, you also ought to wash one another’s feet —John 13:14

Ministering in Everyday Opportunities. Ministering in everyday opportunities that surround us does not mean that we select our own surroundings— it means being God’s very special choice to be available for use in any of the seemingly random surroundings which He has engineered for us. The very character we exhibit in our present surroundings is an indication of what we will be like in other surroundings.

The things Jesus did were the most menial of everyday tasks, and this is an indication that it takes all of God’s power in me to accomplish even the most common tasks in His way. Can I use a towel as He did? Towels, dishes, sandals, and all the other ordinary things in our lives reveal what we are made of more quickly than anything else. It takes God Almighty Incarnate in us to do the most menial duty as it ought to be done.

Jesus said, “I have given you an example, that you should do as I have done to you” (13:15). Notice the kind of people that God brings around you, and you will be humiliated once you realize that this is actually His way of revealing to you the kind of person you have been to Him. Now He says we should exhibit to those around us exactly what He has exhibited to us.

Do you find yourself responding by saying, “Oh, I will do all that once I’m out on the mission field”? Talking in this way is like trying to produce the weapons of war while in the trenches of the battlefield–you will be killed while trying to do it.

We have to go the “second mile” with God (see Matthew 5:41). Yet some of us become worn out in the first ten steps. Then we say, “Well, I’ll just wait until I get closer to the next big crisis in my life.” But if we do not steadily minister in everyday opportunities, we will do nothing when the crisis comes.

Journal DJR
Good Morning Lord.
We dont want this message to become or promote, “Sin Management” … where we continually try to get better and better, at little things and big things. It’s too close to doing it in our own power … and we found how well that doesn’t work. And you call that kind of righteousness “filthy rags”. Another thing we see as a trap is the bumper sticker, Jesus is my Co Pilot. That still leaves us as the pilot. Doing our own thing and asking Jesus to bless it. Better let Jesus be the pilot. We’ve decided that the best way to prevent slipping into doing our own thing is to remember that our job is merely to show up. Show up surrendered and with an attitude of expectation. Expecting that you are here in the mundane and the magnificent. And that you always have plans for us. And they are for good, for a hope and a future. Jer 29:11 Thank You Jesus.

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