Approximately two thousand years
ago a decree was issued at the judgment seat of Almighty God. It provided
"legal" protection for the church against the devil. Indeed, when
Jesus died for our sins, the "ruler of this world" was judged (John
16:11). Our debts were nailed to Christ's cross and canceled; principalities
and powers were disarmed. In truth, because of Jesus, we have a legal right not
only to be protected from our enemy but to triumph over him (Col. 2:13--15).
Having said that, we must also
acknowledge that the church has only rarely walked in such victory since the
first century. Why? At least in part, the answer is this: to attain the
protection of Christ, the church must embrace the intercession of Christ. We
must become a house of prayer.
Indeed, church history began with
its leadership devoted to the Word of God and to prayer (Acts 2:42; 6:4). Every
day the leaders gathered to pray and minister to the Lord (Acts 3:1). In this
clarity of vision and simplicity of purpose, the church of Jesus Christ never
had greater power or capacity to make true disciples.
Today, however, our
qualifications for church leadership include almost everything but devotion to
God's Word and prayer. Leaders are expected to be organizers, counselors, and
individuals with winning personalities whose charms alone can draw people.
In Luke 18:8, Jesus challenges our modern traditions. He asks, "When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on the
earth?" His question is a warning to Christians who would
limit the power of God at the end of the age. Jesus is calling us to resist the
downward pull of our traditions; He is asking us individually, "Will I
find faith in you?"
Before we respond, let us note
that Jesus associates faith with "day and night" prayer (Luke 18:7).
He is not asking, "Will I find correct doctrines in you?" The Lord's
question does not so much concern itself with our head as with our heart. What
we believe is important, but how we believe is vital in securing the help of
God.
Indeed, procuring the supernatural
help of God is exactly the point of Jesus' parable in Luke 18. His intent was
to show that "at all times" we "ought to pray and not to lose
heart" (v. 1). To illustrate the quality of faith He seeks, He followed
His admonition with a parable about a certain widow who petitioned a hardened
judge for "legal protection" (v. 3). Although the judge was initially
unwilling, yet by her "continually coming" (v. 5) she gained what was
legally hers.
Jesus concluded by asking, if an
unrighteous judge will respond to a widow's persistence, "will not God
bring about justice for His elect who cry to Him day and night, and will He
delay long over them?" Jesus said, "I tell you that He will bring
about justice for them quickly" (vv. 7--8).
Understanding God's Delays
Our heavenly Judge will not
"delay long" over His elect, but He will delay. In fact, God's
definition of "quickly" and ours are not always synonymous. The Lord
incorporates delays into His overall plan: Delays work perseverance in us. So
crucial is endurance to our character development that God is willing to delay
even important answers to prayer to facilitate our transformation.
Thus, we should not interpret
divine delays as signs of divine reluctance. Delays are tools to perfect our
faith. Christ is looking to find a tenacity in our faith that prevails in spite
of delays and setbacks. He seeks to create a perseverance within us that
outlasts the test of time, a resolve that actually grows stronger during
delays. When the Father sees this quality of persistence in our faith, it so
touches His heart that He grants "legal protection" to His people.
Desperation Produces Change
It is significant that Jesus
compared His elect to a widow harassed by an enemy. The image is actually
liberating, for we tend to conceptualize the heroes of the faith as David or
Joshua types -- individuals whose successes obscure their humble beginnings.
But each of God's servants has, like the widow, a former life that is brimming
with excuses and occasions to waver.
Look at the widow: She has
legitimate reasons to quit, but instead she prevails. Indeed, she refuses to
exempt herself from her high potential simply because of her low estate. She
makes no apologies for her lack of finances, knowledge or charm. Giving herself
no reason to fail, she unashamedly plants her case before the judge where she
pleads for and receives what is hers: legal protection from her opponent.
How did a common widow gain such
strength of character? We can imagine that there must have been a time when,
under the relentless pressure of her adversary, she became desperate, and
desperation worked to her advantage. Desperation is God's hammer: it demolishes
the stronghold of fear and shatters the chains of our excuses. When our
desperation exceeds our fears, progress begins.
Today the force prodding many
Christians toward greater unity and prayer has not been the sweetness of
fellowship; more often it has been the assault of the enemy. We are in
desperate times. When it comes to touching God's heart, other than for a few
essential truths, unity of desperation is more crucial than unity of doctrine.
God's Elect
Our nation is suffering from a
deep social and moral collapse. If we have ever needed God's anointing, it is
now -- but where are God's elect? Where are the people whom Daniel says
"know their God" and "will display strength and take
action" (Dan. 11:32)?
Is there no one divinely
empowered who can fell the Goliaths of our age? Perhaps we are looking in the
wrong places. Perhaps we need only to look in our bathroom mirror. If you
believe in Jesus and are desperate for God, you qualify as one of God's elect. Remember,
in the above parable the widow typifies Christ's chosen.
We have erroneously held that
God's chosen will never be assaulted by the adversary, much less driven to
desperation and "day and night" prayer. But this desperation is often
the very crucible in which the elect of God are forged. Jesus portrays this
characteristic metaphorically in the picture of the widow; He reveals the means
through which His elect prevail in battle at the end of the age.
When all is said and done, it is
also possible that this widow may not have been a singular person but a
corporate people -- a "widow church" -- united in Christ in a
singular, desperate prayer for protection against her adversary.
We need the "legal
protection" that a national revival provides. But it will not come without
unceasing prayer. You ask, "Where was the prayer behind the Charismatic
movement?" The Lord spoke to my heart that the Charismatic movement was
His answer to the cries of a million praying mothers -- women who refused to
surrender their children to drugs and the devil.
It is our turn to pray. We are
the widow who cannot give herself a reason for failure; God will answer our
day-and-night cry. Let us position ourselves at His throne on behalf of our
cities and nations. Certainly, as we persevere in faith, the Lord will grant us
legal protection from our enemy.
Heavenly Father, forgive us for
our lack of prayer and for giving ourselves excuses to fail. Lord, we thank You
for making us desperate. Help us now to prevail, to attain the "legal
protection" You have provided us against our adversary. In Jesus' name.
Amen.
Francis Frangipane
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