“May the God who gives endurance and encouragement give you the same attitude of mind toward each other that Christ Jesus had, so that with one mind and one voice you may glorify the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ.” (Romans 15 v 5-6)
The Encouragement of God
I don’t know who you are nor what has gone on in your life but I do know He is here with you.
May the God who gives endurance and encouragement(Romans 15 v 5)
Where God is everything changes. He takes the bitter and makes them sweet; He takes the broken and heals their hearts; He picks up the fallen; He energises the tired; He cleanses the stained; He revives faith; He refreshes anointing; He renews His relationships; He encourages what is not there to be there.
Can you go again? Yes! Can you believe again? Yes!
He believes in you far more than you do. He is always speaking well of you before you have even done anything of merit. Your actions don’t bring His praise, you do, without doing anything.
He encourages you to change your position, to get up when you have been knocked down.
He encourages you to get ready and to have another go.
He encourages you to look again at His appointment of you for this world, you are chosen.
He encourages you to begin to serve Him where you are right now, to serve Him is to serve others.
He encourages you to lay your own agenda of what your life should be or what others expect and to live it out for Him alone.
How do I know this and how does He give this sort of encouragement?
In part it is the cry of our hearts in the place of solitude sat with an open Bible. In its fullest form it is a life of the consistent cry of our hearts with an open Bible where only He hears. It takes years to live this out but it can start today with a simple cry and a sure belief that “God gives endurance and encouragement”(Romans 15 v 5)
Hupomone
I am praying for my ministers that I serve this morning. I think of one in hospital with cancer; one battling cancer; one about to go in for surgery; another battling mental health; another getting help for the emotional abusive treatment they received; the list goes on; and we haven’t looked at those in the pews yet. Nor gone overseas to our brothers and sisters facing terrible situations every day of their lives.
I am comforted with the truth that God gives endurance to get through the most difficult seasons of life.
May the God who gives endurance… Romans 15 v 5
The inner battles within that are conquered are often greater victories than some public display of success. People never just give up. They gave up behind the smiles and laughter a long time ago. No matter how resilient you are if you are not continually being empowered by Christ then you will fade.
The word endurance is the English translation of Hupomone. This Greek word the Apostle uses doesn’t mean to ‘pull your socks up’ or to ‘keep smiling’ under duress. It is rather a conquering patience with anything that life can throw at us knowing that God will always turn even evil into good!
It is always too soon to give up because there is always God!
They didn’t come back – they endured.
23rd June 1978, 9 missionaries and their 4 children went through hell on earth.
Today, Elim UK and Elim Zimbabwe remembers it’s missionaries who were terribly murdered in the Vumba, Southern Rhodesia.
Peter and Sandra McCann, Philip and Joy…Wendy Hamilton-White… Philip and Suzanne Evans and Rebecca…Catherine Picken…Roy and Joyce Lynne and Pamela Grace…Mary Fisher.
They are an inspiration who with the great cloud of witnesses cheer us on who are here today. They fell to the ground but their act propelled others into a life of service in missions. They fell to the ground not because of God or an evil spirit, it was man who did this. But their life or their impact didn’t end on the ground. They fell to the ground but it wasn’t because they gave up but it was because God gave them the endurance to not give up.
“May the God who gives endurance …” (Romans 15 v 5)
Here are some of the things our missionaries wrote in letters before that night:
Philip and Suzanne Evans: 1976: “The situation here is, of course, disturbing, but once all the public arrangements and safeguards have been made, all we can do is to redeem the time for the Lord. In some ways it’s more necessary than ever that there should be a Christian witness in this country.”
Mary Fisher; the night before the attack sang her favourite song, “For me to live is Christ, to die is gain.”
Lynn, Roy and Joyce: 1978: “They are praying very hard for peace, meanwhile I think we must be faithful and one never knows when the fire will ignite and we too will be in revival.”
Peter and Sandra McCann: 13th January 1977: “These are not easy times and they are likely to get worse: we could leave anytime but not them. It seems so much remains to be done here, and so little time for us left – but only eternity will tell the tale of fruit born and nurtured in the hearts of our people… Don’t get the idea that we are losing hope, because that is far from true. Our hope is in God, and we have no reason to fear the devises of man.”
Catherine Picken: Jan 1976: “We want the whole area to hear the gospel message. It has been a joy to see God moving.”
Wendy White: April 1978: “In some places the real Christians are being strengthened in the face of persecution (as are very few real disciples of Christ Jesus have also been strengthened here in the school), but very few ‘stand’ when asked to denounce the Name of Jesus at the point of a gun. (Would we?)… ‘Though you slay me, I WILL TRUST you , Lord’ – I said it aloud (though there were no one there to hear me) and a few hours later, when I was determined to praise through and was offering the sacrifice of praise – suddenly Jesus was there with me, and my heart was warmed and lightened and full of praise.”
Amazing attitudes! Were they extraordinary people? No they were ordinary people with an extraordinary God who gave them endurance. He still does.
Don’t let the Bible leave your life
Two days ago I took myself off to Costa with my Bible and notebook. I was in between meetings, I just had 1 hour but I was in need of God. Do you know what I mean? Those times when we just need His help. We need Him all the time but there are those moments when the ache in our hearts, the longing of our spirit for the Holy Spirit to refresh and renew us. I began reading verse 3, how Paul quoted the Messianic Psalm 69 to show that not even Jesus demanded the use of his rights, so we shouldn’t either. I then read this next verse:
“For everything that was written in the past was written to teach us, so that through the endurance taught in the Scriptures and the encouragement they provide we might have hope.” (Romans 15 v 4)
And I saw it again….the influence of the Bible. Why does Paul keep referring back to the Old Testament? (It was his Bible, the Spirit was using him and others to write the New Testament).
It is because even today the Spirit uses the Bible to cause us to endure and to be encouraged. It is the testimony of my life.
Remember how Jesus in the most excruciating unbelievable traumatic of times, hanging on the cross, quoted these words:
My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?
Why are you so far from saving me, so far from my cries of anguish?
Why did Jesus say what he said? It is because as he went through hell the power of the Word of God held him. Just as he had done on many occasions where he would quote one verse from an Old Testament passage and the lesson wasn’t in what he quoted but the rest of the passage that he had been silent on. He endured because of the Scriptures.
What was Jesus saying? Maybe this:
“Though I feel abandoned and am going through hell, I still trust Him. And I know later in this Psalm that I am quoting, a Psalm that speaks of me, that vindication will come after the suffering.”
God’s written Word is at the centre of the cross.
Psalm 22, the Messianic Psalm, was in the mind of Christ. He was being held together by the Word.
Maybe someone today is going through their own personal hell or you know someone who is. Let the Bible speak at these times. Memorise, meditate and speak it out. Jesus needed the Word and so do we.
The Costa was a refreshing place for me as I saw once again that for my endurance and encouragement, I need the Bible.
Christ held back and so we should too
We don’t have to think of what benefits us first; we don’t have to please ourselves without thought of others; we don’t have to live our lives the way we want to; we can choose to be different; we can choose to be like Jesus.
“We who are strong ought to bear with the failings of the weak and not to please ourselves. Each of us should please our neighbours for their good, to build them up. For even Christ did not please himself but, as it is written: “The insults of those who insult you have fallen on me.” For everything that was written in the past was written to teach us, so that through the endurance taught in the Scriptures and the encouragement they provide we might have hope.” (Romans 15 v 1-4)
Jesus with all of his power, titles, position and rights gave them all up. What did he get in return? Insult after insult. Paul quotes Psalm 69 which was used in the gospels to describe the suffering that Jesus went through. We don’t know, but perhaps the ‘weak’ were throwing ‘insults’ at the strong?
The point is this that even though we might want to demand our rights to disputable matters, if Jesus could lay himself down, then we should follow his lead.
Keep the disputable stuff to yourself.
In concluding his teaching to who he describes as strong and weak Christians, Paul says to the strong that they should not impose what they believe and practice on those who don’t at that time have the same faith as them.
“So whatever you believe about these things keep between yourself and God. Blessed is the one who does not condemn himself by what he approves. But whoever has doubts is condemned if they eat, because their eating is not from faith; and everything that does not come from faith is sin.” (Romans 14 v 22-23)
Church is not a group of people who all agree on matters that are largely unimportant. Neither is it a community where a part are trying to convince the other part to be more like them. Paul is in the strong camp, he has understood the freedom of the Spirit and the work of Christ’s forgiveness.
We live in a world which preaches rights. Though these are certainly important. Within the Church the gospel is that anyone has the right to act and speak so long as they have one understanding eye on others who may not hold that position without condescension or judgment on either side. Let’s pray that this is the case in the church we are part of.
Sunday small thought: I want to belong to this kind of Church ….
Whose members have stopped fault-finding and therefore have more energy to create a place where they build one another’s faith in an atmosphere of peace.
“Let us therefore make every effort to do what leads to peace and to mutual edification.” (Romans 14 v 19)
It means those who want to control others, don’t and those who want complete freedom to do whatever they want, don’t.
The evidence of the presence of the Holy Spirit
Who will stop the selfishness and pride? Who will intervene so that ‘the strong’ believers with their freedom do not destroy ‘the weak’ who are not quite there yet? Who will bring true unity without one side bringing distress on the other because they are demanding change?
“Therefore do not let what you know is good be spoken of as evil. For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit, because anyone who serves Christ in this way is pleasing to God and receives human approval. (Romans 14 v 16-18)
Even those who have found freedom that Christ has brought can turn their good into bad because of the way they conduct their lives.
Is their hope?
The Church needs to look like Christ. Our horizontal relationships need to align with our vertical connection. We need to be right with one another; we need to be peaceful with one another and the Church needs to be more joyful. Our hope is the Holy Spirit.
The evidence of the Holy Spirit is that members are not destroyed for the sake of food or whatever issue is also of non-importance.
The Church becomes a safe place to grow at the pace of the Spirit because the Spirit is present.
The Church becomes a non-judgmental place where members are not grieved because they are not free enough or meeting some standard.
This is the work of the Spirit. This is the hallmark of a Spirit-filled Church.
Acting in love is a higher calling than acting with freedom.
I had dinner with a friend and they told me how in their Church they have a retired minister who does not agree with him over a topical issue for the Church. I’m reflecting on that this morning. Ever been in a similar situation? In such situations we often are tempted to try and change their minds and to convince them of the reasons why our position is the correct one. This Pastor however spoke with the retired minister and said ‘because we have far more that we do agree on I am not going to permit this issue to divide us.’
“If your brother or sister is distressed because of what you eat, you are no longer acting in love. Do not by your eating destroy someone for whom Christ died …Do not destroy the work of God for the sake of food.” (Romans 14 v 15, 20)
Have you noticed that even though Paul calls them ‘weak in faith’ he is not asking them ‘to get their act together’, to ‘come into the first century’ and he doesn’t shame them for not holding to what the ‘strong’ believe. He is clear that he doesn’t agree with their position, he is in the ‘strong’ camp who understand the freedom that Christ has given them. He calls them ‘weak’ for he knows they must grow in these issues (e.g. Mosaic laws around food). But loving them is more important than the unity of the issue.
Why is it in striving for unity someone not only gets ‘distressed’ but sometimes even destroyed? It is because often we think unity is solely an agreed position. It is because the act of love is not higher than our own cause.
So take a look at your own Church. Look at your ‘weaker’ members. Can you imagine a Church where each one of us are not demanding the other to change? Can you imagine a Church where our lifestyles are in check lest we distress the other? If you can then you have a picture of real love. If you can then it is because you are recognising Jesus gave his life for each one. If you can then the work of God is thriving in this atmosphere of love.

