Ministry Basics Series Lesson 11
Much of our problem
today is that few who minister are actually qualified to minister.
We have substituted seminary education for the preparation of the
Holy Spirit with the result that few actually have the basics of the
ministry built into their life and don't know how to minister these
to others.
Paul tells us that he
did not receive his gospel, his message from men. That men did not
teach it to him but that he received it by revelation of Jesus.
For I would have you know, brethren, that the gospel which was
preached by me is not according to man. (Galatians
1:11 NASB)
For I
neither received it from man, nor was I taught it, but I
received it
through a revelation of Jesus Christ. (Galatians
1:12 NASB)
We have substituted
intellectual knowledge for the revelation of the Spirit. That is why
many of the lives of those who minister do not manifest the fullness
of the life of Jesus.
All ministry begins in
Jesus, as we have said, it is of Him, through Him and
to Him. The basics of that ministry is three-fold:
The blood of Jesus
The cross of Jesus
The life of Jesus
Without understanding
these three ministry basics we will be unfruitful in the ministry of
the Lord and will be frustrated in our own understanding and
application of His Word.
The Lord has provided these three things to enable us to be brought back to a place of being summed up in Jesus (see the Purpose of the Father lesson). It is important that we understand these three things and their place in our ministry of reconciliation.
We use words many times
without thinking about their meaning. Words become overused to the
point that we don’t really know what they mean. We only know
how to use them in the right context. That makes it sound like we
know the meaning whether we do or not. The blood of Jesus is just
such a phrase. It is misused frequently in Pentecostal circles.
Have you ever heard the phrase “plead the blood”? Where
did we come up with that? It is not in the scriptures. The closest
thing to this phraseology is in Revelation 12:9-11 where the saints
overcame the accuser of the brethren by the word of their testimony
and the blood of the Lamb. As we shall see in a moment, this is the
only true form of “pleading the blood”. We testify to
what the blood of the Lamb has done for us and this testimony is used
specifically to overcome the Accuser.
What is the purpose of
the blood? Who is it for—us or God? Most people would say us,
but it is actually for God. The blood is an atonement. It is what
God sees instead of our sin. Therefore, its primary purpose is for
God—to satisfy His justice and righteousness.
For the life of the flesh is in the blood, and I have given it to you
on the altar to make atonement for your souls; for it is the blood by
reason of the life that makes atonement.' (Leviticus
17:11 NASB)
Leviticus 16:30 tells
us that the blood cleanses us before God. We are made pure before
Him. Its purpose is to provide justification before God.
Our old nature is not
cleansed or made righteous by the blood. His provision for our old
nature is the cross of Jesus. The blood and the cross are not
interchangeable. We sometimes treat them as if they are, but they
are not. The blood takes care of our heavenly needs—righteousness
and justification. The cross is God’s methodology for our
daily walk—the putting to death of the old man.
We need to understand
the use of God’s provision for us. If we understand this
properly we will take away half the enemy’s weapons against us.
If we are sick and the Doctor gives us a treatment regimen that is
designed for a different disease than the one that we have, it
doesn’t do us much good. The treatment is true for the proper
disease but not for others. It is the same with God’s
provision—the blood of Christ is for certain things and the
cross of Christ is for other things. If we need to treat something
with the cross, it doesn’t mean that the blood is not true. It
just means that we are trying to treat the wrong thing with it—that
is not what it was designed for.
Look at how the Blood
is used in Revelations.
Then I heard a loud voice in heaven, saying, "Now the salvation,
and the power, and the kingdom of our God and the authority of His
Christ have come, for the accuser of our brethren has been thrown
down, he who accuses them before our God day and night. (Revelation
12:10 NASB)
"And they overcame him because of the blood of the Lamb and
because of the word of their testimony, and they did not love their
life even when faced with death. (Revelation
12:11 NASB)
It is by the Blood that
we cast down our Accuser. Who is our accuser? Satan! Where is he?
Before God. What is he doing? Accusing us. The Devil is not
running around the earth wrecking havoc (this doesn’t happen
until he is cast out of Heaven in Revelation)—he is before God
accusing us.
While he is accusing us
before God, what is happening in our minds? The same accusations are
also being whispered to us. That is the link between our minds and
the Devil’s accusations. As the accusations continue we
receive condemnation. How do we stop that? By testifying to what
the Blood has done for us.
The Blood has covered
our sin. The Blood justifies us before God. We can declare to the
enemy that we stand under the Blood. God sees the Blood not my sin;
there is no condemnation because God sees the Blood.
So, you see, the Blood
is for God to see and for us to use to overcome the accuser. The
Blood is a spiritual weapon to be used against the work of the enemy.
The cross is for our daily walk; it is a weapon against the flesh.
The Blood keeps our
conscious clear. The Blood doesn’t wash our hearts. Ezekiel
says that we get a new heart.
"Then I will sprinkle clean water on you, and you will be clean;
I will cleanse you from all your filthiness and from all your idols.
(Ezekiel 36:25 NASB)
"Moreover, I will give you a new heart and put a new spirit
within you; and I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and
give you a heart of flesh. (Ezekiel 36:26
NASB)
Jeremiah said that the
heart is desperately wicked. That is why we have to have a new one.
For the same reason that we don’t wash and iron clothes that
are going to be thrown away, God doesn’t wash our heart. We
get a new one because the old one is going to be thrown away along
with our bodies. The old heart epitomizes the old nature and it is
to be done away with.
The old man must be
delivered to death so that the life of Jesus may be manifested. As
long as our old man is alive and active, Jesus is not revealed in us.
We must be delivered to death so that the life can be revealed.
While the blood justifies us before God, if we are dealing with a “cross” issue, the blood is not what is effective—we need the cross. It is inappropriate to pray, “O Lord, by your blood don’t let me sin tomorrow.” It is appropriate to pray, “My old nature has been crucified with Christ, I will not yield to temptation. Strengthen me, Lord, in the inner man.” Do you see the difference between the two?
The blood deals with
our sins—what we have done. The cross deals with the body of
sin—who we are—the son of Adam. The only thing that can
be done with the old nature is to crucify it. You can’t clean
it up, send it to church, make it good, or do anything else with it
except crucify it. That’s why we receive a new nature in
Christ and we are to live by the new nature.
We need to understand
three expressions of the cross:
The word of the cross
The work of the cross
The way of the cross.
The word of the cross
is the preaching about the cross. The work of the cross is what
Jesus accomplished when He hung on the cross. The way of the cross
is the daily application of the cross to our lives. It takes the
power of the Spirit to reveal the work of the cross and it takes the
power of the Spirit to apply the way of the cross to our walk.
The work of the cross
is a one-time event—a crises event. From then on we reckon the
deed done. Our old man was crucified with Christ—it is
done—the life I now live in the flesh I live by the faith of
the Son of God.
I have been crucified with Christ; and it is no longer I who live,
but Christ lives in me; and the life
which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who
loved me and gave Himself up for me. (Galatians
2:20 NASB)
The way of the cross is
the application of the work of the cross on a real-time basis—a
daily lifestyle that incorporates the work of the cross. In our
lives the old nature is reckoned dead. The work of the cross is for
the old man—the way of the cross is for the new man.
Jesus said that we
should deny ourselves, take up the cross daily, and follow Him. This
is a three-step process. It begins with us denying ourselves. Many
people think of this as taking up their cross; but, Jesus said deny
ourselves first and then take up the cross (Luke 9:23). What is the
difference between these two?
Denying ourselves does
not kill the flesh. A good moral person can deny the urge to steal
because he is a good moral person. It doesn’t have anything to
do with God. Taking up our cross always involves death—the
death of the flesh. This always involves God.
There are three
characteristics of the Cross:
a principle in God before the foundation of the world, the Lamb was slain before there was a need for a savior.
a place where divine loves meets human hate, where the human will crosses the will of God;
a power for those that believe.
We have all heard the
scripture preached about the cross being the power of God; in most
cases, we have not rightly divided the word of Truth.
For the word of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing,
but to us who are being saved it is the power of God. (1
Corinthians 1:18 NASB)
This is not a scripture
for the lost. The preaching of the cross is not for the lost—they
consider it foolishness. The preaching of the cross is for us who
are being saved! Read this scripture carefully—that’s
what it says—the word of the cross is the power of God to us
who are being saved! To those that are perishing (the lost), it is
foolishness—they laugh at it.
Then, what is the power
of God to the lost? The Gospel! (See What is the Gospel?
lesson.) The lost need to hear that Jesus came, died (shed His blood
for atonement), was buried, rose and revived, and is now Lord of all.
It is through the Gospel that the Holy Spirit woos the lost.
Why is the Cross the power of God to us who are saved? Because, the power to be transformed into the image of Christ lies in the Cross not in the Blood. Songs and messages about the Cross are not (or shouldn’t be) salvation messages—rather they should be overcoming messages! We overcome in our daily walk by the Cross not the Blood.
If we are going to
evangelize, we must have the life of Christ manifested in us. They
know when they are seeing flesh and when they are seeing real life.
Jesus must be revealed through us for ministry to be effective.
We express the life of Jesus in three ways:
by thoughts
by intentions or motives
by actions.
Jesus was moved with
compassion and love for those that he came into contact with. If we
are manifesting the life of Jesus, we will be moved in the same
manner—by the love of God. This is not a mealy-mouthed love
like many have today, but a true love. Not a love that excuses but a
love that confronts.
Read the story of the
Rich Young Ruler in the scriptures (Mark 10:17-22). After Jesus had
told him what to do from the viewpoint of the Law and the Rich Young
Ruler said that he had done that, the scriptures say in Mark that
Jesus looked at him and loved him. Then, He told him to sell
all and give it to the poor and follow Him. The Rich Young Ruler
couldn’t handle that and walked away.
This was
confrontational love. When Jesus looked into the Rich Young
Ruler’s heart, He saw something that stood between him and God.
Confrontational Love always seeks to remove the things that stand
between us and God.
And finally, the life of Jesus is manifested through actions. If healing is needed, then pray for the sick. If deliverance is needed, then cast out devils. If food is needed, then multiply what is available. When the life of Jesus is present, miracles occur.
In the Garden were two
trees—the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil and the Tree of
Life. Adam never ate of the Tree of Life, only of the Tree of
Knowledge of Good and Evil. So, we now have two family trees—one
of Adam rooted in the Tree of Knowledge of Good and Evil and one of
Jesus rooted in the Tree of Life.
We all understand from
genetics that we inherit characteristics from our ancestors. From
Adam’s tree we inherit rebelliousness, independence,
disobedience. But if the last member of that family dies, the
characteristics, the genetics, die too. If I was the last Nelson
with no successors and I died, everything from my ancestors dies with
me. That is what happened with Jesus as the Last Adam. He was the
last of that family. When He died all of Adam died with Him.
Jesus rose as the
Second Man, the first born of a new race—the Head of a new
family. When we are born again, we are born into that new family and
inherit the family traits of righteousness, peace and joy. We have a
new family tree and the nature that goes with it.
The nature of the
Adamic tree is grabbing or grasping—we grasp for power,
pleasure, money. It is characterized by the phrase “for me”.
The nature of the family of Adam is selfishness, self-centeredness.
Of course, this “grasping” trait can be traced back to
Lucifer who grasped at being God and fell. He tempted Eve with the
same line—you can be as Gods—and she grasped at that.
The nature of the Tree
of Life (Jesus) is giving—He gave himself for us. It is
characterized by the phrase “for others”. The scripture
says that Jesus was equal with God but did not grasp at equality with
God but humbled Himself. We are to have the same mind—think
the same way that Jesus did.
When we go to minister,
we must operate from the proper family tree. If we minister from the
Adamic tree, we go in pride, use manipulation, get as many
“decisions” as possible so that we can add more notches
to our gun—“we had 27 saved last night in our street
witnessing!” My first reaction to that is “where are
they today”. If they were born into the family, where are they
when the family gathers?
We need to remember: “If it wasn’t done through the life of Jesus, then there was no life in what was done.”
© 2004, 2009 Art Nelson www.lifestreamteaching.com