Except By Prayer and Fasting

The Occasional Thoughts of a Pastor Seeking to Glorify God
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  • Just One Story IV: Don’t Bring a Knife to a Gunfight

    Posted on August 31st, 2009 Lance Johnson No comments

        We have all heard the expression, “Don’t bring a knife to a gunfight.” Again, I am not sure of its origin but it was very popular after the movie Raiders of the Lost Ark came out. In that movie one of the bad guys prepares to fight Indiana Jones, the “good guy,” with a large, curved sword. The crowd becomes very quiet because it is evident that the bad guy knows how to use this sword and everyone expects things to go badly for the good guy. Then, in a humorous twist, Indiana Jones nonchalantly pulls out a pistol and shoots the guy wielding the sword. So much for the bad guy. God’s people often make the same mistake. We take the wrong weapons to the battle. (In fact, we usually fight the wrong battle altogether, but that is another topic for another day.)

        After David volunteered to accept Goliath’s challenge, King Saul dressed David in his own armor and weapons. This was a natural thing to do. It was even a wise thing to do from a strictly military point-of-view. At first, David went along with the idea for just that reason—it was logical and what one did when getting ready to fight a formidable enemy. Saul and David were simply doing what was natural, what anyone else would have done in the same situation. It was such a common thing to do they did not think twice about it. In later battles in David’s life it may have been the correct thing to do, but not that time. David quickly realized that Saul’s armor and weapons we not appropriate for this battle. First of all, how effective could it have been in the face of such a large and strong enemy? Were armor alone sufficient Saul would have already taken care of the problem of the giant Philistine. More importantly, David could hardly walk in the armor; he had not “tested” it. In other words, he had no experience with the armor and did not know if he could trust it. It was more a burden than a tool. He did, however, have experience with God and knew that he could trust God and that God was sufficient for any enemy.

        David understood that God does not do things the way we do things. God does things in order to glorify himself. He does things in such a way that all will know that it is an act of God, not an act of men. Isaiah said, “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways, declares the Lord. For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts.” (Isaiah 55:8-9) God doesn’t do things the way we would do things. When we need water, we dig wells or build dams. God gave his people water from a rock. When we need food we either plant and harvest crops or hunt animals. God sent his people bread with the dew of the morning and made the quail simply show up in camp and surrender on their doorsteps. When we fight an enemy, we use armor and weapons. God used a boy with a sling and a rock.

        David knew that this battle was a battle of faith and that it could not be won with conventional weapons. So, he took off the armor, collected a few stones, put his faith in the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob, and went to do battle with a man many times his size. This is a lesson the church must learn. God promised that the gates of hell would not prevail against the church, but as long as the church goes to battle with the weapons of the world, which do not fit and only weight her down, Satan does not even bother to close the gates. He knows we will not defeat him with our church activities, marketing techniques, superficial Bible studies, mission boards, political activism, trite sayings and slogans, nor any other means except by the power of God working through his holy and sanctified people. As long as his people are indistinguishable from the people of the world—thinking like them and doing what they would do—Satan will continue to challenge God’s people with virtual impunity.

    May “he who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches.” (Revelation 2:11)

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  • Just One Story III: The Bigger They Are . . .

    Posted on August 15th, 2009 Lance Johnson No comments

    . . . the harder they fall. I have not studied the source of that old saying, but it may easily have come from the story of David and Goliath. No matter its origins, it sums up one of God’s lessons in the story of David and Goliath.

        Goliath was a big man and he was heavily armored and heavily armed. He was approximately nine feet tall, wore a bronze helmet, a coat of mail that weighed almost 200 pounds, and had bronze armor on his legs. He carried a bronze javelin and a spear with a shaft like a weaver’s beam. Just how big a weaver’s beam was we don’t know, but it had to be big to support a spearhead that weighed almost two pounds. As easy as it is to criticize the Israelite army for being afraid of him, they had good reason to be afraid. Because of his size, Goliath was accustomed to the fear he inspired in others. It is unlikely he had ever fought a one-on-one battle once he “had his size” as they used to say. Because of this he had a sense of invincibility. When David came out to challenge him, he “disdained” David as an unworthy opponent. He did not take David seriously. He logically believed that his size, his armor, and his weapons were sufficient to deal with any individual enemy, much less a young man. He feared no man and believed in his own size, strength, and ability.

        David, on the other hand, knew that this was not his battle, but the Lord’s. David did not trust in his own ability, strength, or experience. He trusted in the power and promises of God. He knew what God had done for His people; he knew what God had done for him; he knew what God would do on that occasion. He had complete faith and confidence in the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. Notice the difference in their attitudes when they came together for the battle. Goliath said, “Am I a dog, that you come to me with sticks? . . . Come to me, and I will give your flesh to the birds of the air and to the beasts of the field.” David responded,

    You come to me with a sword and with a spear and with a javelin, but I come to you in the name of the Lord of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom you have defied. This day the Lord will deliver you into my hand, and I will strike you down and cut off your head. And I will give the dead bodies of the host of the Philistines this day to the birds of the air and to the wild beasts of the earth, that all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel, and that all this assembly may know that the Lord saves not with sword and spear. For the battle is the Lord’s, and he will give you into our hand. (1 Samuel 17:45-47)

    David’s entire response glorified God. David trusted in the Lord not in his skill, experience, armor, or weapons. Because David was young and small he understood that he could not kill a giant Philistine, but God could and would if he had faith in Him. One of the basic axioms of Alcoholics Anonymous and other twelve-step groups is that one’s addictions are too big to defeat alone and that only by relying on God can those additions be conquered. AA’s historic success is a result of this great truth. As long as we depend on our own strength defeat is inevitable as it was for Goliath, but as long as we put our faith in God, He will defeat our biggest enemies.

    May “he who has an ear, let him hear what the Spirit says to the churches. (Revelation 2:11)”

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  • As The Church Sings

    Posted on July 21st, 2009 Lance Johnson No comments

    Just a quick note here. My friend, coworker for Elliott Electric Supply, and fellow worker in the Kingdom, Phillip Way, recently posted a great article about music in the church and how it teaches theological truth. You can read it here: As The Church Sings.