Being Christ’s Witnesses

Posted by on April 25, 2004 under Sermons


BEING CHRIST’S WITNESSES

Intro: After Jesus’ resurrection, he spends forty days ofinstruction and fellowship with his disciples.Because he lives, he is able to form a truthful community of people whoare forever changed by being in the presence of the living Lord.
Read Acts 1:1-11

Q & A with Jesus
Luke summarizes what must have been a fascinating forty days by reporting one brief dialogue betweenJesus and the apostles just before his ascension.

  1. The disciples have a question: Is it now that you’re goingto restore the Kingdom of God?
  2. Jesus’ answer establishes the relationship that this new community has with the Creator Godand the living Lord, he gives them instructions about what they must do – butit is rooted in who they are because of their encounter with the Lord: Godwill restore his kingdom according to his plan. As for you …

Let us confirm and confess that God is incharge. He rules. His rule is over all the earth and in thechurch we live by that rule – that’s why the church is a visible representationof God’s kingdom – because he rules. Heestablished the kingdom in Christ through the cross and the resurrection.
If we can trust the kingdom establishment andrestoration to God, then let’s consider what it means to live as his communitygathered beneath the cross worshiping the crucified savior who is also therisen, living King. What does it meanfor us to BE his witnesses? We will explore this bytaking a look at three pairs of words …

Knowing and Being

  1. Restoration is about people.
    • The restoration of kingdom is not establishment of an institution or political territory – it isabout the restoration of obedient people.The term kingdom when used of God’s kingdom does not refer to politicalterritory. His realm is the whole universe. Kingdoms are made up of people ruled by aLord – otherwise you just have land.
    • So, the term kingdom may also refer to “rule” or “reign” – If God is to restore his kingdom then it means more than people knowing about the boundaries and laws and it means more than knowing who is in and who is out. It calls for change – a change to our very being. The kind of change that happens when we encounter the good news about the kingdom.
  2. “Being in the know” is not the goal.
    • We are not the keepers of truth and gospel. We are witnesses to the truth.This makes quite a difference, for truth and gospel are not commodities that we can hoard or market. God is nota secret waiting to be revealed. God reveals himself.
    • The DaVinci Code -A secret society keeps a secret about Jesus, and only those in the know andthose who can find the clues and secrets can be in on the truth – and accordingto the book, the church is aware of itand they keep it secret and promote a lie that suits their purposes.
    • We are not a group that initiated people into our “club” if they know allthe secret wisdom. We publiclydemonstrate a different kind of living that is based on the presence andexistence of the Risen Christ.   (See David Chadwell’s bulletin article below about what it means to BE Christ’s witnesses and the community beneath the cross.)  We are not the guardians of the truthfor the truth speaks for itself, we are witnesses to it and we stand convictedand changed by it.
  3. Being who we know is the Kingdom way …
    • We are witnesses to the living Christ because we have “beheld him” andexperienced his presence – I mean this collectively – as a church, a peoplesurrounded by a cloud of witnesses trailing back to the first “eye-witnesses.”
    • Rather than being in the know we are called to BE who we know – JesusChrist.

Church and Witness

  1. A witness is a witness because of something that has happened.
    • One cannot train to be a witness.It is not a role or a title. One is a witness because he/she has seen, heard, experienced something. Something has happened to the person or around the person and he/she experienced it.
    • It may have changed you – but you didn’t necessarily have anything to dowith it. [9/11- changed many who witnessed it]
  2. The apostles witnessed the risen Lord.
    • And that is why they are “church.”
    • Recall that Christ appears to over 500 after his resurrection (1 Corinthians 15)
  3. Good leaders stay true to this (Acts 1:22)
    • Eleven Witnesses wasn’t enough, why? Because this is a witnessing community – not just individuals.Many share in this common experience of the gospel event.
    • The criteria for leadership among the apostles is a witness to the risen Lord (Acts 1:12-15) -even Paul witnesses the risen Christ and it changes him (Acts 9).
    • We just “are” witnesses because we have believed in something revealed – something we witnessed and something affirmed since the time of the first eyewitnesses.

Power and Prayer

  1. We continue to witness the active work of God among us. If he is living (and we affirm this) then he is still present. That means he is capable of action.
  2. Jesus promises empowerment from God. It is a gift.
  3. The first “work” of the church is prayer.
    • “I have so much to do that I cannot begin the day without three hours of prayer” – Martin Luther
    • This is our problem. Ourvalues are upside down – we believe that prayer is the seasoning for the maincourse. In reality, prayer is the root,stem and leaves – our effort is just a blossom.
    • We have a hard time believing that prayer actually gets anything done. We are a little too secular and we want things that we can chart and measure and plan. We want to meet needs and fix problems. We tend to believe prayer is good for the soul, but little else.

Be Still and Know That I Am God
When I ministered for the church in Lake Jackson, Texas, three of us attended a wonderful evangelism conference. We were heading home and buzzing about all of our ideas to take what we had learned and put it into action at Lake Jackson. Halfway home we ran out of gas. I was driving and I have only run out of gas twice in my whole life (and the first time it was the car’s fault – a bad gas guage). So now the three of us sat in a van with no gas on I-45 near Fairfield, TX.We were stopped in our tracks and this gave us time to recall that the first work of the church is prayer. All of our ideas and enthusiasm could not match the power available to us as a gift from the living Lord.
So my companions and I were brought before God in prayer. It was for the church that we prayed. It was for the lost that we prayed. It was for the future that we prayed. As the world rushed on at 70 mph, we sat and prayed. All of our talk about plans and programs (evangelism) and busy-ness were put aside. There was only one thing that we needed to do – and it wasn’t finding gasoline. We prayed.

Running out of fuel is so symbolic of where we often find ourselves in all of our “busy-ness.” Even our church busy-ness can be a distraction from letting God work, and paying attention to that so we can BE his witnesses. If only we would pray more and ask God to give us what we need and allow him to use us as he wants.

Will we stop to be changed in order to BE the witness he needs us to be? When we disregard or neglect prayer and worship, what are we saying? Do we believe the power and the work is up to us or God? When we bear all the responsibility aren’t we acting as if we have all the authority and ability – even if we would never admit that publicly? Our actions must be consistent with our belief because church is a matter of BEING Christ’s witnesses.