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If
you had a vision to really make an impact upon the world, how would you go
about fulfilling it? Leadership and management courses today would probably
suggest that one of the first steps in that process would be to find a group of
sharp, competent people and to begin to impart your vision to them. We would
probably search for the brightest and the best. We might go to the great
institutions of learning or to the boards of highly successful corporations to
find that group of people.
However, we find that
Jesus did none of those things. He went by the seashore and called poor,
uneducated fishermen. What would a fisherman know about changing the world? Or
what would a tax collector know about communicating with a hurting world? Why
did Jesus choose the common for this most uncommon task? Why did He give such an
extraordinary job to such ordinary men and women?
The task of world
evangelism was the most important task ever given to any group of people.
And look whom He chose. A doubter. A denier. Men and women who couldn't be
found anywhere near in His most critical moment on this Earth, the moment in
which He would die for the sins of the world. So, why did He choose them and
why were they so successful? Christianity could have stopped dead in its tracks
if that first group didn't accomplish what Jesus gave them to do.
But just the opposite is
true. The ways of God are different from the ways of the world. Jesus birthed
the most revolutionary movement ever known on the face of this planet. Billions
believe in Him and pledge their allegiance to Him today because of what took
place in the first century. He took timid men and made them courageous giants.
His plan of action was different from many of our church boardrooms. His plan
was to wait. To wait? That's right. Wait! They were to wait for the promise of the
Father to be endued with His power.
Jesus told His
disciples, "But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you;
and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and
in all Judea and Samaria,
and to the ends of the earth." (Acts 1:8 NIV). The Greek language is very
clear in its description of the power given to that uneducated band of men and
women. The Greek word in this passage is "dunamis" from which we get
our word "dynamite." There was an explosive power given to those
early disciples that would enable them to transform the Roman
Empire.
But perhaps the most
intriguing word used in this passage is "martus." It's the Greek word
that's translated into English as "witness." Strong's Dictionary
defines "martus" as "a witness (literally [judicially] or
figuratively [genitive case]); by analogy, a 'martyr.'" This spiritual
dynamite power given to those who wait upon the Lord is so forceful that it
enables the most fearful to become the most courageous for Christ - even unto
death. And many of those who heard those words would die for proclaiming the
Gospel.
That's why prayer is so
critically important. Prayer is intimacy with God. And when we've met with God
in deep fellowship, then His perfect love casts out all fear. There's no fear
of what man can do to us, because we have that "dunamis" to become a
"martus." When Jesus chose a group of people to change the world, He
found simple, humble, holy, praying men and women, and with them He shook the
world. God can do more with one simple person who prays than a dozen geniuses
who don't have a clue about intimacy with God. That philosophy may not go down
well in the boardrooms of the world, but it sure went down well in the upper
room of Jerusalem.
Wait! Pray! And watch what happens.
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