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Praying for the Right Things--Part 2
2 Thessalonians 1:11-12
by
John MacArthur
All Rights Reserved
(A copy of this message on cassette tape may be obtained by calling
1-800-55-GRACE)
They were fascinated really by all of that and the conclusion they made,
somewhat naturally, was that the white men were gods and they flew in out of
the sky with all the stuff. And their conclusion was that gods were beings
who brought you lots of stuff.
When the war was over the armies were gone. Tribesmen built shrines to
the cargo gods. Their tabernacles were perfect replicas of airplanes or
control towers or hangars made out of bamboo or some kind of woven natural
material. They looked like the real thing but all they were good for was a
place of worship.
On some of the more remote islands the cargo cults are still thriving
today, right now today. And if you go to some of those places you will find
that some of them have personified all Americans into one deity and the name
of that god is Tom Navy. They pray, the people do, for holy cargo to be
dropped. And they venerate religious relics such as Zippo lighters, cameras,
eye glasses, ballpoint pens, nuts and bolts, other assorted things.
As civilization has begun to penetrate these remote islands where cargo
cults exist, their fascination for cargo has not diminished. Missionaries who
have been sent to those areas to preach the gospel find that the people
involved in the cargo cults give them initially a warm reception because they
think it's the second coming of the cargo gods. The problem is, they're
looking for the cargo, not the gospel. And missionaries find that they are so
steeped in a materialism they don't even understand that they cannot easily
receive the gospel. And it has become very difficult to penetrate these cargo
cultic peoples with saving truth.
Well I look at that kind of strange bizarre religious phenomena and I
see in contemporary Christianity quite an interesting parallel to that. It
may be called "The Word Faith Movement," or the "Faith Movement," or the
"Faith Formula," or the Word of Faith," or "Hyperfaith," or "Positive
Confession," or "Name it and claim it," or "Health and Wealth Prosperity," or
whatever it is, it's the same old thing. It's sort of a new brand of the
cargo cults where God is this God who dumps the goodies and their
materialistic external tangible consumable products that He delivers. These
contemporary teachers teach frankly that prayer is a means for self-
gratification. Prayer is a tool by which you get what you want. And
primarily what you want is material. It is consumable. It is something you
can hold in your hand. It is money. It is clothes. It is cars and houses
and other material things. There is in my mind no difference between the
strange bizarre cargo cults of the South Pacific and contemporary prosperity
preaching that reduces God to some kind of servant who upon the whim and at
the self-gratifying wish of anyone associated with Him must dump the cargo.
That's prevalent today. There is such a gross misunderstanding as a result of
that of what prayer is all about that it needs to be corrected.
Now that takes me to the passage before us. Open your Bible to 2
Thessalonians chapter 1...2 Thessalonians chapter 1 verses 11 and 12 takes us
into the prayer life of Paul. His prayer life is absolutely unlike the
approach to God that I have just described. Paul doesn't pray for material
things. He doesn't pray for consumable things. His prayers are much deeper
than that. Listen to how he prays, 2 Thessalonians 1:11, "To this end also we
pray for you and we pray always that our God may count you worthy of your
calling and fulfill every desire for goodness and the work of faith with power
in order that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in you and you in
Him, according to the grace of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ."
There's nothing material in that prayer. There's nothing consumable in
that prayer. There's nothing self-gratifying about that prayer. The God to
whom Paul prays is no cargo god. He doesn't bring radios and cameras and TVs
and binoculars and Zippo lighters. That's not what Paul prays for. Paul has
understood prayer for what it really is, on the deep level that God intended
it to be. So as we look at these two verses we've entitled this two-week
study, "Praying for the right stuff." There's an important element in this
that I need to remark to you about. There's a European theologian who said it
better than I could so I'll quote him. He said this, "A man prayed and at
first he thought that prayer was talking, but he became more and more quiet
until he learned that prayer is listening."
What did Soren Kierkegaard mean by a statement like that? What is he
saying? What he is saying is before you talk to God, listen and learn what it
is that God wants you to say. Before you go to God with your self-gratifying
list, why don't you learn that prayer is basically your asking for what you
know is already God's will? Prayer is lining up with Him.
That theologian was right. Prayer is listening much more than talking,
listening to know what the will of God is. True prayer is learning to think
God's thoughts after Him, learning to desire God's desires with Him, learning
to love what He loves and hate what He hates. And the deeper your prayer life
becomes and the more it lines up with God's will and God's longings and God's
desires and God's loves and God's hates, the less trivia will occupy it, the
less consumable things will be manifest and the more your prayer will be
sweeping grasps and affirmations of those spiritual realities that you know
are close to the heart of God. You will pray like this, "Our Father which art
in heaven, hallowed be Thy name, Thy Kingdom come, Thy will be done..."
That's why Richard Foster was right when he said, "Prayer catapults us
on to the frontier of the spiritual life." The reason why prayer catapults us
to the frontier of spiritual life is because it puts us in closest connection
with God, it lifts us to Him. It puts us in the place of keeping company with
God and there in that company with an open Bible and an open heart we learn to
listen before we talk.
I find in my own personal life that the richest and purest and truest
and most focus experiences of prayer that I have are when I pray before my
open Bible because God's will is revealed, God's heart is manifest, God's
longings are made known to Me. That which He loves is revealed, what He hates
is revealed. And that translates in to my affirmation and my prayer. This
becomes a way of life.
Thomas Kelly said, "It takes no time but it occupies all our time."
What did he mean by that? Let me quote him further, this is a very insightful
perception. Thomas Kelly wrote, "There is a way of ordering our mental life
on more than one level at once. One level we may be thinking, discussing,
seeing, calculating, meeting all the demands of external affairs. But deep
within behind the scenes at a profounder level we may also be in prayer and
adoration, song and worship and a gentle receptiveness to divine breathings,"
end quote. Absolutely right. We live on two levels. You may be involved in
whatever routines take up your time and you may have to give a certain amount
of your conscious mind to those routines. But one of the great realities of
the human mind by the creation of God is that it can be dealing with more than
one thing at the same time. It has the ability to split its attention. And
while we are dealing on the tangible transitory level of the external life in
which we are caught up, at the same time there is a consciousness that runs
much deeper than that.
This was Paul. Paul could be teaching, preaching, planning, writing,
working, exhorting, discipling, traveling, suffering, but all the time
underneath at another level, praying on a level that showed how deeply he
understood the mind of God. If in your life prayer is reduced to some period
of time identifiable in which you verbalize things to God or a period of time
in which you stop everything else and get yourself in a unique position and
focus your mind on God and lift up prayers even in a silent way, those while
being important cannot be the whole of your prayer life. Your prayer life is
simply a way of living and it goes on all the time. Your overt and obvious
external activities demand a certain amount of attention but there is that
deeper level of comprehension that is going on all the time within you that is
an unceasing communion with the living God.
It was so true of Paul's life that periodically as you read through his
epistles that lower level pops out. And you could almost say it's like a
volcano...there's a thin veneer, a thin crust on the surface of the earth but
underneath the earth is this boiling caldron of gas and fire and every once in
a while it bursts through the surface and the hot lava flows. And so it was
in the heart of Paul. There was a hot heart for God, there was an explosive
relationship with God and in the process of his writing or preaching,
teaching, discipling, traveling, planning, preparing, every now and then what
was going on all the time underneath in the warmth of his communion with God
would blow out the top. And so we find as we read his epistles that now and
again one of these prayers explodes on to the surface in a volcano of the heat
of his heart...such is verse 11 and 12.
Here we get to the deep level of Paul. He's not giving us some kind of
an explanation of theology. He's not taking us through the logical
progression of a doctrine. He's not giving us some kind of reason for a
certain exhortation. He's not defining for us a problem in the church in which
he wants to give a solution. He is not attacking some issue. He is not
dealing with some false doctrine or false teaching. Rather, all of a sudden
we go below all of that and bursting out comes this hot lava of his prayer
life. And we always note the word "always" because it seems to be always
there. Whenever he says we pray for you he always says always. And we have
to ask the question, how can you do that? And the answer to the question is
because there is this other level on which he lives in communion with God.
Paul on that deep level where prayer truly exists, where prayer is an
unending preoccupation knows God very well. On that level he understands the
will of God for it's been revealed to him in the Scripture. He feels what God
feels. He hurts where God hurts. He rejoices where God rejoices. He
understands what God wants, what God longs for, what God loves, what God
hates. It's part of spiritual maturity to know that. And consequently his
prayers are never shallow and they are never selfish and they are never short
sighted. They're always very deep, very profound, very spiritual. They always
reach out to embrace things that are utterly unconsumable, things that you
can't touch and feel. He isn't praying for the physical things.
And so I submit to you that this is a good point in our study of the
Word of God to remind ourselves that many of us for the most part pray for the
wrong stuff. And Paul prayed for the right stuff. And I suppose for some of
us prayer is a periodic time in which we stop everything and focus on
verbalizing our requests rather than an incessant way of life. Spiritual
maturity then is marked by those two things. It is marked by an unceasing
prayer life that goes on at a deep level beneath the surface of the normal
things and it is prayer that seeks the right stuff because it knows the mind
and the heart and the will of God.
Now looking at these verses again I remind you that last time we looked
at point one which is the resource itself. When he wanted something for his
own, when he wanted something for the beloved people to whom he ministered,
the resource was prayer. So verse 11, "To this end also we pray for you
always..." This underlying level of conscious communion with God always had
inherent in it prayers for his churches. He saw prayer as the means to gain
these spiritual ends. For Paul, and for any mature Christian, prayer is a
condition...prayer is a condition. It is a state of mind. It is a permanent
condition or a permanent state of mind by which the promises and purposes of
God, the spiritual well being of His people, the advance of His gospel and the
growth of His church are the passion of the believer. It's that kind of
condition. It's living in a condition where you are consumed with the
promises and purposes of God, with the well-being of His people, the advance
of His gospel and the growth of His church. And the things that concern you
are the things that concern Him. It lines up your heart with God. And we saw
something about the resource of prayer last time, about how it lines up with
the sovereignty of God.
Let's go to the requests, that's point two in this text. What is it
that he asks for? Lining up with God, knowing the mind and heart of God, what
does Paul pray for? Verse 11, "That our God may count you worthy of your
calling and fulfill every desire for goodness and the work of faith with
power," those three things. Nothing selfish, nothing shallow, nothing
external, nothing temporal, nothing consumable. This is rich, rich spiritual
treasure that he prays for.
First of all, worthiness...worthiness, "That our God may count you
worthy of your calling." This is a broad request that really encompasses
Christian character. I pray that God will make you worthy. In other words,
that God will enable you to deserve the name you bear. If you're going to go
around saying you are Christ's and Christ is your's, then you ought to deserve
that title. He uses the possessive pronoun "our God," just to remind his
readers and us that God is not a distant ogre, God is not someone to be
feared, God is not one who cannot be touched with the feelings of our
infirmities but through, of course, Christ has demonstrated that He is a
tender and caring God. And so in an intimate sense he identifies God as "our"
God. And he says, "Our God wants to make you or count you," that verb can go
either way in either case, if He makes you worthy He'll count you worthy, if
He counts you worthy it will be because He made you worthy, "But our God wants
to make you worthy so that you can be counted worthy of your calling."
Take that little statement "your calling" and let me help you to see
what it means. Whenever you see the term "calling," "your calling" in the
epistles of the New Testament, it refers to salvation. It's not the kind of
call say that Jesus would use in the gospels where He says, "Many are called
but few are chosen," that's just a gospel call where sinners are called to
repent, unbelievers are called to believe, unsaved people are called to be
saved. That's not the way it is used in the epistles. It is used of what
theologians would call an efficacious or an effective calling to salvation.
It is used for that time when God saves you. Your calling is the time when
God called you, the reality of your salvation. You were called to Christ by
God. And you were drawn to salvation. It's that sense, it's the sense of
Romans chapter 8 where it says, "Whoever was predestined He called and whom He
called He justified and whom He justified He glorified." So there you have
predestination, calling, justification, glorification, that's the flow of
salvation. The predestined are called to salvation where upon they are
declared righteous where upon they are set for glory.
You see the same thing in Romans 11:29, such callings of God are
irrevocable, such callings are irrevocable, they are permanent. Galatians
1:15, Paul talks about his salvation and he calls it the time he was called.
First Corinthians 1:26 talks about salvation as a calling, Colossians 1:3 to 5
and so forth. So it is the term which means an efficacious effective calling
to salvation.
You see the same thing in 1 Thessalonians 2:12, "So that you may walk in
a manner worthy of the God who calls you into His own Kingdom and glory." It
is a calling into the Kingdom. It is a calling to glory. It is a saving
call. It could be in the same terms that Jesus used when He spoke about the
drawing of the Father, "No man comes except the Father draw him," that's the
essence of that call.
So, he says, "Look, you have been called to salvation. You have been
called to God, called to Christ, called to bear the name Christian. You have
been called to be identified as God's people, God's child." Now, he says, "I
pray that our God may count you worthy of that calling, that you may be
deserving of bearing that name." He wants you to be worthy.
That word brings to mind a number of things. In Romans 1:32 the Bible
says that the ungodly are worthy of death, they are worthy of death. They are
unworthy of salvation. And that includes all of us, none of us is worthy of
salvation. So we can make the simple little point, God saves the unworthy.
God by grace saves the unworthy. We can add to that this, God then makes the
unworthy worthy. To the church at Sardis in Revelation 3 and verse 4 the Lord
said, "For you are worthy." God saves the unworthy and makes the unworthy
worthy. But beyond that, God wants them to become more worthy. He wants to
increase that in the practical sense. How can I understand that? Well,
before you're a Christian you're unworthy. When you became a Christian you
became worthy in a positional sense, that is to say just as you became
righteous in the righteousness of Christ, so you became in that righteousness
worthy. In other words, God made you worthy when you were unworthy and He did
it by grace. You didn't earn it, you couldn't earn it, you couldn't do
anything worthy of salvation, you can't do anything worthy enough to earn it,
you can't do anything worthy enough to keep it. But God gives you a
worthiness that is in Christ when He declares you righteous and cloaks you in
the righteousness of Christ, that makes you worthy.
So in the position that you occupy before God, you're worthy. But in the
practical sense Paul says I'm praying that God will make you worthy. In other
words, He'll increase that worthiness. You see a similar thing back in verse
5 of chapter 1, how that God through His chastening judgments is making you
worthy of the Kingdom for which you are suffering. God wants you to be more
worthy. He wants you to be more deserving to bear His name. He doesn't want
you to be ashamed to His name, ashamed to His church. So He wants to make you
more worthy, to increase your worthiness and He does it through suffering,
chapter 1 verse 5, He brings suffering into your life that sort of peels away
the flash and drives you to Himself and brings spiritual maturity. And here
in the positive note Paul is praying that God would continue that process
however it might need to work, that God would make you worthy of your calling.
You already are in position, you need to be more and more worthy in practice.
Some day in the future you'll be completely worthy because you'll be
perfectly holy. But in the meantime, we need to become more worthy of bearing
the name of Christ.
Christians are made worthy just as they're made righteous but they need
to become more righteous, they need to become more worthy. The matter of
living up to that internal divine worthiness is stimulated by God's judging
hand and it's stimulated by the Spirit of God as He moves in our lives through
the Word and its application. So he says I want you to be more worthy.
I think that's a prayer that every pastor should pray, every pastor does
pray. I want my people to be more worthy to bear the name of Christ. I don't
want my people to bring reproach on Christ. I don't want my people to bring
dishonor to His name. I don't want them to be the cause like the Jews were of
God being depreciated. You remember, he said the name of God was evil spoken
of because of their behavior in Romans 2. And there were some people in the
Thessalonian church who weren't acting in a very worthy way, they weren't
really worthy to bear the name. Look at chapter 3 verse 6, "We command you,
brethren, in the name of our Lord Jesus Christ, keep aloof from every brother
who leads an unruly life and not according to the tradition which you received
from us." There are some brethren out there who are in an unruly situation
who are not following the tradition, that is the Scripture, the Word, the
teaching you received from us. Verse 11, they're leading an undisciplined
life. They aren't working and they're acting like busybodies. Stay away from
those folks. There were some unworthy people. Worthy, yes, positionally
covered with the righteousness of Christ. But in their practical life they
weren't worthy to be called a Christian.
You know, I believe that sometimes God just kills those people, takes
them to heaven. They're not worthy to bear His name on earth. They are a
reproach to Him. And so he is praying that these people will walk in a manner
worthy of the name they bear. You have a tremendous responsibility. You have
a tremendous privilege, so do I, if we bear the name Christian to live in a
worthy way to bear the name.
Look at Ephesians and I'll show you how this same thought is a somewhat
recurring theme of significance in Paul's writings. Ephesians 4:1, "I
therefore the prisoner of the Lord entreat you to walk in a manner worthy of
the calling with which you have been called." You're to walk in a worthy way.
And he defines it, "All humility, gentleness, patience, showing forbearance
to one another in love, being diligent to preserve the unity of the Spirit in
the bond of peace," that's how you're to walk, that's what a worthy Christian
does. A worthy Christian is humble and gentle and patient and forebearing and
loving and seeks unity.
Look at Philippians chapter 1, Philippians chapter 1 verse 27, "Only
conduct yourselves in a manner worthy of the gospel of Christ." How is that?
Well, standing firm in one spirit, one mind, striving together for the faith
of the gospel, never alarmed by your opponents, suffering willingly. That's
how you are worthy. You walk in a worthy way when you pursue unity, when you
stand firm, when you trust God in the midst of difficulty, when you endure
suffering for His sake. Colossians 1:10 he says the same thing, this is what
we pray for, "That you may walk in a manner worthy of the Lord." How?
"Pleasing Him in everything in al respects, bearing fruit in every good work,
increasing in the knowledge of God, strengthened with all power according to
His glorious might, giving thanks," verse 12. What's...what's a worthy life?
It's a life which pleases the Lord in all respects. It's a life which bears
fruit in every good work, increases in knowledge, strengthened with power.
It's a life which is thankful. That's a worthy life.
And then as I noted earlier, 1 Thessalonians 2:12 says the same thing,
"Walk in a manner worthy of the God who calls you into His Kingdom and glory."
And how are you to walk? Well Paul said we walk this way, verse 10,
"Devotely, uprightly and blamelessly."
So you can see that this is a theme that Paul likes to go back to, this
idea of worthiness. And he is saying, "I pray that God may increase your
worthiness to bear the name of His Son." If you look at the New Testament and
sum it up, it would go something like this: a worthy walk, and I'll give you a
list, don't write it down, just listen, from the scriptures I've read and
several more goes like this, a worthy walk is a walk in humility, a walk in
purity, a walk in contentment, a walk by faith, a walk in righteousness, a
walk in unity, a walk in gentleness, a walk in strength, a walk in patience, a
walk in love, a walk in joy, a walk in thankfulness, a walk in light, a walk
in knowledge, a walk in wisdom, a walk in truth and a walk in fruitfulness.
Summing it up if you say Christ and you are related, 1 John 2:6, then you
ought to walk as He walked.
This then is a comprehensive request. He is praying that God would
enable Christians to live out their spiritual worthiness. They are worthy by
virtue of the righteousness of Christ imputed to them, they some day will be
worthy to walk with Him in white because all sin will be gone and in the
meantime he wants their worthiness to increase to encompass all of life.
That's a prayer for Christian character, Christian virtue.
The second request, the second request is really for goodness, for
goodness. He says the request simply in these words, "That our God may
fulfill every desire for goodness." I'd like to even call that point
fulfillment. He prays that God would give them fulfillment. The word there,
pleroo(?) means to accomplish. God, please accomplish in their lives
everything they desire when what they desire is good by Your definition.
That's his prayer that God would fulfill their every longing for what is good.
Where do you find what is good? Well, Jesus said there is one good and
that is God. So the one who has the completely good agenda is God. And he is
simply saying, "God, I want You to give them everything that they desire as
long as by Your definition it is good." Boy, that's a powerful point. I want
them to know fulfillment. I want their prayers to be answered. I want their
dreams to come true, their desires to be fulfilled, their longings to be
realized. But only if they're good by Your definition.
Back in the Psalms we get a little insight into this kind of prayer,
Psalm 21, I'll just read these to you, verses 2 and 3, "Thou hast given him
his heart's desire and Thou hast not withheld the request of his lips for Thou
doest meet him with the blessings of good things." That's the key. You gave
him what he wanted, You gave him what he asked for because it was good,
because You saw that it was good. Psalm 37, I know you remember, a very
familiar and helpful text, listen to verse 4, "Delight yourself in the Lord
and He will give you the desires of your heart." Wait a minute. Will God
give you everything your heart desires? Yes, if you're delighting in Him.
The point is if you are delighting in Him, then your desires are His desires,
He's first. And so when you pray He'll give you what you pray for because it
will be consistent with His desire. When you delight in the Lord your longing
will be for goodness and God will fulfill your longing.
One other note in the Psalms is in Psalm 138 verse 8, "The Lord will
accomplish what concerns me...the Lord will accomplish what concerns me." Why
is the psalmist so brash as to say God's going to do what's on my agenda? The
answer is because it had already been made evident in that Psalm that his
agenda was God's agenda. James says, "Look, you ask and you don't receive."
Why? "Because you want to consume it on your own lusts." You're asking for
self-gratification. Paul says, "God, give them everything their heart desires
when what their heart desires is...what?...good by Your definition." That's a
fulfilled life.
And I know that most people probably assume that God is reluctant to
make anybody happy, that God gets some satisfaction out of being a cosmic
killjoy, that God feels that there's got to be a little bit of raining on
everybody's parade just to remind them who's in charge, that God wants to
leave people with a sort of permanent misery to remind them that He's
stringent and demanding. That's not really so. God wants to give you the
desire of your heart. When you go to Him in prayer He wants to give you the
desire of your heart as long as the desire of your heart which you ask for is
a desire that you've learned by listening and you know His mind and His will.
Psalm 145:16 says, "He opens His hand and satisfies the desire of every
living thing." That's God. God is generous and gracious. He longs to give
His children what they long for but He longs for them to long for what they
ought to long for. And He knows that when they get it, it will bring praise.
Psalm 90:14 says that, when I give you what you ask for you're going to sing
a song to Me.
So what does Paul pray for? What's the right stuff to pray for? What
should you pray for in your own life, the lives of those you love, the people
in your church? You pray for their worthiness. Pray that their Christian
virtue will grow. Pray that their Christian character will grow. And then
you pray for their fulfillment, that God will do in their life the fulfilling
of every good thing which they long for because they know God longs for it,
too. If you want to get your prayers answered, then listen and know the mind
of God and the heart of God and pray for what is good by His definition and
He'll give it to you.
Third request, prays for their power. He wants them to be a worthy
people, a fulfilled people and a powerful people. "Pray that our God may
fulfill," we'll borrow the verb there because I think it's intended to be that
way. "That our God may fulfill the work of faith with power...that our God
may accomplish your efforts powerfully." They already were involved in the
work of faith back in 1 Thessalonians 1:3 he said, "I...I already thank God
for your work of faith." Listen, there's no such thing as a faith that
doesn't work, right? Faith without works is...what?...dead, James 2:17 to 26
is explicit in saying that. "Even so, faith if it has no works is dead being
by itself." But someone may well say, "You have faith and I have works. Show
me your faith without the works and I'll show you my faith by my works." In
other words, how you going to show me your faith, I can't see it? The only
way you can show it is in your works. And he goes on to describe that. Faith
works, he says. Just as the body without the spirit is dead, so also faith
without works is dead. So they had a real saving faith and it showed up, it
worked. It produced fruit. He says, "I thank God for your work of faith."
But what he's praying for now is, "I am asking God to make that work of faith
powerful." Not just minimal but maximal.
He understood salvation by grace through faith alone, but he also
understood that a salvation by grace through faith alone produced works. "For
we are His workmanship created in Christ Jesus unto good works," Ephesians
2:10, "which God has before ordained that we should walk in them." He
understood that. True saving faith is going to produce works. But he said,
"I want those works to be powerful." This is the right stuff, this is really
the right stuff.
You say, "By the way, how can that happen? How does that happen, that
powerful kind of thing?" Well you can go back into Ephesians 3 and you get a
hint, 3:15, Paul's praying and he identifies God in verses 14 and 15. And
then in 16 here's his request, "That He would grant you according to the
riches of His glory to be strengthened with power through His Spirit in the
inner man." That's the key. The power of God is released according to what I
just read you by the Spirit of God in the inner man. You say, "How does that
happen?" By letting the Word of Christ dwell in you richly until the Word of
God dominates your heart. He says I want your work of faith to be powerful
and I want your longings for goodness to be fulfilled and I want your life to
be worthy to bear the name of Christ. That's the right stuff to pray for.
That's what you ought to pray for for your partner in life, for your children,
for your friends, for the people you love, for your church. We get stuck like
a broken record on the temporal things.
And lastly, the reason...the resource for His desires for this church,
prayer. The requests, worthiness, fulfillment, power. Now the reason, this
is so basic, so important. Verse 12, "In order that the name of our Lord
Jesus may be glorified in you and you in Him according to the grace of our God
and the Lord Jesus Christ." Here's the reason. The purpose isn't for you,
the purpose is for the Lord, "In order that, or for the purpose that, the name
of our Lord Jesus may be glorified." There's that little possessive pronoun
"our" again, it's speaking of the intimacy with which we are related to Christ
even as we are to God. Here is the highest purpose, the highest motive, the
greatest reason you are to become like this, in order that the name of our
Lord Jesus may be glorified in you and you in Him. It's for His glory.
Let me break it down a moment. See that phrase "the name of our
Lord...the name of the Lord"? That is an Old Testament title for God. You
see it in Genesis 4:26, Exodus 33:19, Deuteronomy 5:11, Isaiah 42:8, Isaiah
56:6, it's a title for God. And here it says, "The name of our Lord Jesus,"
which is clearly and unequivocally identifying Jesus as God, Jehovah God, the
God of the Old Testament. The term "name" means all that He is, the totality
of the Lord, all that the Lord is would be another way to say that in a
different fashion. So he says all of this I want in you in order that all
that the Lord Jesus is may be honored, exalted, lifted up.
You remember in Daniel 9 when Daniel was praying for his people he
prayed and prayed and prayed through that whole wonderful chapter for the
needs of his people? And then at the end of that section he tells the reason
why. "O Lord, hear, O Lord, forgive, O Lord, listen and take action for Thine
own sake." Why? "Because Thy city and Thy people are called by Thy name."
Your reputation is at stake, God, please do this, your name is at issue here,
your reputation is at stake. You know as well as I do, friends, that the
number one excuse that people give for not wanting to become Christians is
they will say, "Well I know some Christians and they are basically....fill in
the blank...hypocrites." That always is an excuse people use. And that was
what Daniel was saying, "Lord, look, You've got to do something here because
Your name is at stake, Your reputation is at stake in the lives of Your
people. They bear Your name."
That's what Paul is saying. "God, I'm asking You to do this and Your
name is at stake and the glory of Your name is at stake." I want those who
bear the name of the Lord Jesus to bring honor to it. This is a wonderful
thing he says, "In order that the name of our Lord Jesus may be glorified in
You." Wow, what a thought, that God, the Lord Jesus Christ, could be
glorified in me, this earthen vessel, this humble clay, this sinful flesh.
But that's it. Just as glory could shine on the face of Moses, so it can
shine through me. That's why Jesus said, "Let your light so shine before men
that they may see your good works and glorify your Father who is in heaven."
See, we're to live so that God is glorified. He wants to be glorified in you,
says Paul. O God, do this that the Lord Jesus may be glorified in these
people and these people in Him. What does that mean? It's reciprocal. If
He's glorified through you...in other words, if He is honored through you then
He will honor you, He'll exalt you, He'll lift you up.
You're saying, "Is that taking about eternal glory? Sure. Is it also
talking about perhaps in this life? Perhaps. God is so gracious, He gives us
the privilege of glorifying Christ in us and then says, "And He will also
glorify you." He'll honor you. Sure in the future He'll glorify us, but even
now I believe our God will lift up those who glorify His name. He'll lift
them up with blessing. What a tremendous thing.
I pray...and here's the reason...that the Lord Jesus in the fullness of
who He is may be glorified in you and that in turn as He is glorified in you,
He will exalt you, He will honor you, He will lift you up. A very simple
spiritual principle. You honor Christ, Christ honors you.
Paul's desire here is expressed no better than in 2 Corinthians 8:23 by
Paul himself. Just listen to this, he says, "Concerning Titus, my partner and
fellow worker among you, and as for our brethren," he says this, talking about
the Christian fellowship, "As for our brethren, they are messengers of the
churches, a glory to Christ." Wow! Those who are our brethren who are
messengers of the churches, those who serve, are a glory to Christ, they are
an honor to Him. Isn't that your goal to be an honor to Christ and He in turn
will honor you? He will.
William Barclay expressed it, I think, when he said, "A teacher's glory
lies in the scholars he produces. A parent's glory lies in the children whom
he has begotten. A master's glory lies in his disciples." And that's the
same it is with Christ. His glory lies in those who belong to Him. Can there be
any privilege and can there be any responsibility greater than that? He
glorifies us because we glorify Him. Some day that will happen but I
think even now He will lift up the one who lifts Him up.
And then he closes by saying, "And all of this is according to the grace
of our God and the Lord Jesus Christ." That's why I'm praying, God, cause
You're the only one that can do it and You have to do it by grace cause these
people don't deserve it, they don't deserve to be made worthy, they don't
deserve to have their desires fulfilled and they certainly don't deserve to
serve with power. But I want You to do it, I want You to do it by grace even
though they don't deserve it in order that You might get the glory. That's
what he's saying. Do it by grace. Listen, everything that comes to you in
your Christian life is by grace, just like your salvation was.
And then this phrase at the end, "the grace of our God and the Lord
Jesus Christ." When you look at the original language there and you try to
figure out what the writer is really trying to say with those two terms "God
and the Lord Jesus Christ," you can come up with two pretty equally defensible
views. One is that he's talking about one person, God even the Lord Jesus
Christ, and he's actually calling God the Lord Jesus Christ, or calling the
Lord Jesus Christ God and there's one person in view. You also can see it as
two, God and the Lord Jesus Christ. In both cases he's affirming the deity of
Christ because in case number one he's talking about one person, God who is
the Lord Jesus Christ. In case number two he's talking about God and the Lord
Jesus Christ. Number one, it's one person. Number two, it's two equal
people. So in either case, again the affirmation of the deity of Christ. And
he is totally dependent on sovereign God, sovereign Christ to dispense this
answer to his prayers by grace because we don't deserve it.
So what do you seek for in your prayers? What do you ask for? I hope
you're not in to the cargo cult. What do you look for? What do you seek for?
What do you want for you, for everybody else? The right stuff, I hope. And
maybe if you don't talk so much and listen more, you'll learn what the right
stuff is.
Thank You, Father, for this great text directing us toward a proper
understanding of prayer. May it find its way into the very fabric of our
lives and may we live like Paul with that hot lava, as it were, of zealous
communion with You under the surface, at that deeper level which when bursting
forth always prays according to Your will. We want to pray in the Spirit and
we know the Spirit always prays according to Your will. Father, we would pray
for our church that You would make them and count them worthy of their
calling, that You would fulfill every desire for goodness and that You would
fulfill the work of faith with great power in order that Jesus Christ might be
glorified in them and then consequently they will be honored by Him and we ask
this not because we deserve it but because You're a gracious God and we want
to honor You. In Your Son's name. Amen.