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Study
Materials
The Holy Spirit and Missions
Rev. Rod Russell-Brown
Presented at the AWF International Assembly in Dalfsen, Netherlands, April 2004
Introduction
The subject we will consider this morning
is ‘what part does
the Holy Spirit play in mission.’ This is a very big
subject. We could have looked at:
- the Spirit’s leading the task of world-wide
evangelisation
- discerning the Spirit’s leading
- the convicting work of the Holy Spirit in missions
- the clash of the Holy Spirit and Demonic powers
Of necessity I’ve had to limit the consideration to what I
consider are some key points that particularly relate to the Holy
Spirit’s ministry in the work of the Great Commission.
For your information, I consider myself a local
church pastor essentially and have not served as a missionary. I am a young denominational
leader and so please listen with those things in mind. I should add
that the written manuscript that you’ve received was not meant
to be read. It was designed to be preached. So excuse
the more conversational style in the written version.
So what does the Holy Spirit have to do with missions? Let me suggest
2 areas that are key.
I. The Holy Spirit who grows our character
A. What does
the bible say?
I want to pick up key points in Romans 6 and 8 as these chapters
speak particularly about the matter of sanctification.
1. Romans
6
Significantly, this foundational chapter
dealing with sanctification doesn’t mention the Holy Spirit.
Romans 6 begins rather with the work of Christ on the cross.
The first 5 chapters of Romans you will remember deal with the
issues of sin and salvation. Paul then moves to deal with sanctification.
a. We
need to understand who we are in Christ – dead
yet alive.
You and I have been set apart for Christ. We no longer have
to sin. That is the whole message of Rom 6:1-14
(Rom
6:6-8 NIV) For we know that our old self was crucified with
him so that the body of sin might be done away with, that we
should no longer be slaves to sin—{7}
because anyone who has died has been freed from sin. {8} Now if
we died with Christ, we believe that we will also live with him.
We need to know, come to recognise, to perceive this truth.
b.
We need to believe that we are dead yet alive in
Christ.
(Rom 6:11 NIV) In the same way, count yourselves
dead to sin but alive to God in Christ Jesus.
This counting1 ourselves
or reckoning ourselves to be dead is an action of faith. It
is saying “I choose to think of myself as being dead to
sin, for in Christ I am! Further, in Christ I am alive.” It
is not enough to intellectually know it, I must have faith, believe
this truth.
c. We need to live like it.
Paul goes on to say, in effect – “this
is who you are Christian, live like it!”
(Rom 6:12 NIV) Therefore do not let sin reign in your mortal body
so that you obey its evil desires.
We are to no longer sin for 2 reasons. The first is that it
is disobedience to God to sin. The second, is that I no
longer have to sin. Sin is no longer necessary.
Gal 2:20 says that Christ lives in me. I am
a new person in Christ no longer under obligation to the flesh,
no longer having to sin.
As I walk by faith in Christ, I am empowered to
obey Christ. Christ’s
Spirit giving me ability in the midst of temptation. Sanctification
is not freedom from temptation but rather victory in obedience
despite temptation.
d. We
need to recognise the power of the Holy Spirit
within us.
In Romans 8 it is the person of the Holy Spirit who is emphasised.
The Apostle Paul describes the work of sanctification
in cooperative terms. The Holy Spirit operates in our lives
but the believer must respond. Sanctification is natural for the Christian but it
is not automatic. We must choose obedience; choose victory.
In Rom 8:5-8 Paul compares sinful living and Spirit
living. The
result is if you choose the sinful living, the flesh, death results. If
you choose the Spirit, life and peace results.
He goes on to say in Rom 8:12-13:
“Therefore, brothers, we have an obligation—but it is
not to the sinful nature, to live according to it. 13 For
if you live according to the sinful nature, you will die; but
if by the Spirit you put to death the misdeeds of the body, you
will live”
So the Spirit empowers the believer to obey, applying the work of
the cross in everyday life.
2. Summary
of Romans passages
So what can we conclude from these passages? There is a new
dynamic that operates in the life of the believer. By faith
in identifying with Jesus Christ not only has the penalty of sin
been done away with so too has the power of sin in the
believer’s
life.
We have here both the motivation to conquer sin,
God’s command,
but also the power to conquer sin, the work of Christ on the
Cross as applied by the Holy Spirit.
So how is the believer set free? By trying, just trying harder
and being disciplined? By suppressing sin pushing it down? There
is some truth in these ideas. But the more accurate picture
is “emancipation by habitation.” I am set free
not because of my ability to hold on to God and be good for Him
but rather because He now indwells me by the Holy Spirit. My
will and ability are now infused with power by his will and ability.
“...and the life I now live in the flesh
I live by faith in Son of God.”
B. Illustration
Have you ever seen the ways bullies operate in the
school- yard? They
will come up to the weakest kid usually and push them about.
They will push and push you. But because of fear of being
beaten up or fear that if you got into a fight you couldn’t
win, you always back down.
There is within you and I a tendency, an inclination
to sin, to disobey God (the sin nature has not been eradicated). The
bible calls that nature sin, the old man or the flesh - various
names.
Our tendency to sin is like the bully in the schoolyard,
it will push you and push you and push you. Friends what is the best
thing to have in a fight? That is simple – a strong friend
who beat the living daylights out of the other guy.
Do you know we have a powerful friend, who will
never leave us? When
the bully of sin comes to me and says, “I’ve got you,
you can’t win, you have no option except to disobey God.” You
can say – I have a friend, more than a friend a conquering
hero who lives inside me and I don’t have to give in. I
will fight you sin, but not with my puny strength but with the
strength of Jesus Christ the risen Lord!
C. Applying the truth
So how does this all apply to us and specifically to missions?
1. Who are
we sending?
Are we serious about sending people to the ends
of the earth with the message of the cross? Well it seems to
me that we better be able to live the message that we preach. Now
I’m not
suggesting perfection, only heaven will bring that. Yet
there should be substantial character maturity in those we send
and certainly in our own lives as mission leaders.
L.L. King, past president of the C&MA in the US understood
the importance of sanctification preceding ministry. He commented:
“The
record makes clear that Dr. Simpson and his associates first
organised the Evangelical Christian Alliance. This fellowship
of Christians united in their devotion to Jesus Christ and to
the truths of Scripture that pointed to Him as the all-sufficient
Lord. Afterward, they formed the Evangelical Missionary Alliance
as the missions arm of that fellowship of faith.
They followed this sequence because its fulfilment (ie missions)
depended on Holy Spirit-filled individuals who supremely loved Jesus.
Our special trust to evangelise at home and abroad therefore finds
its source and strength in a very personal imperative: to experience
the truth we proclaim, truth that finds its complete expression and
fulfilment in Jesus Christ.
Dr. Simpson himself set for us that standard: “I felt I dare
not hold any truth in God’s Word as a mere theory or to
teach others what I had not personally proved.””2
In another place Dr. Simpson commented:
“Many a missionary among the unsaved tribesmen has found that
the failure of his temper and spirit has done more in a moment
to counteract all his teaching than years could undo.” On
the other hand “The power that can suppress the angry word,
and stand in sweetness in the hour of provocation in the humble
kitchen and laundry, has often become an object lesson to the
proud and cultured mistress, until her heart has hungered for
the blessing which has made her lowly servant’s life a
ministry of power, and her humble heart a heaven of love”3
I am aware that some of the challenges that have
regularly surfaced amongst missionary work has been issues
of interpersonal relationships. Often
these have not been between missionary and those to whom they minister
but rather between missionary and fellow missionary. Sometimes
there have been genuine cultural differences. My point
is that even given cultural differences, eventually the work
of the Cross must flow over cultural lines so that unity and
forgiveness can flow.
I was blessed at the last AWF APAC meeting where
InterDev was facilitating a partnership with the various Alliance
organisations in Thailand culminating in the organisation INTO,
ministry to Thai people overseas. But
God broke in during the meetings and we saw confession of sin, healing,
forgiveness granted for some long-term issues. There were cultural
issues involved here. Yet God moved.
Walking the walk of holiness is tough enough in
our home cultures, but it becomes a whole lot more complex
cross-culturally. So
our missionary candidates and those of us who oversee them need
to walk in regular character development, becoming more and
more like Jesus Christ.
2. Means of Sanctification – the
church
We recognise means of sanctification, ways that
the Holy Spirit uses to change us. Typically we recognise:
- The blood of Christ – bringing pardon
from sins and power over sin.
- The Holy Spirit Himself
- The Word of God, the truth of Scripture
- Prayer and other spiritual disciplines
- The ordinances of baptism and the Lord’s
Supper.
Can I suggest that there is another key means of
grace that we might do well to systematically develop? I speak of the church and
more specifically accountability relationships. I have seen
that an accountability group of some sort can greatly help in dealing
with sin issues that arise.
Part of our problem at least in Western Christianity
is the problem of independence amongst many of us. We are usually
happy to work as colleagues in ministry but sometimes not as brothers
and sisters to look after each other’s souls. We men are
particularly challenged in this.
Can I suggest that things are going become tougher
in people’s
lives and more critical as we go on because of the dysfunctional
nature of many families in the Western World. The missionary
candidates we are/will be sending often won’t have had the
benefit of a Christian culture that values a wholesome family. They
then take their family of origin problems into their marriage and
ministry.
It was an indicator of our times when Bob Fetherlin
a year or so back sent around to missionaries a personal challenge
on the dangers of pornography and specifically internet pornography.
We can’t walk this sanctification track alone. The
Holy Spirit uses means including His people.
I have personally found 2 things helpful to me in this area.
First, committing to coaching relationships. I have a man
I speak to once every 4-6 weeks. We talk about ministry and
he asks me accountability and support questions about things God
has put on my heart to achieve. In addition he’ll ask, “how
are you going, what about your wife and kids, what’s happening?” That
has helped greatly to keep me walking on the straight and narrow. He’s
a guy around my own age.
Second, I’ve found being a part of an accountability group
helpful. We would ask each other 10 standard accountability
questions relating to our walk covering – resentments, unforgiveness,
honesty, purity etc.
One particular morning our group worked through
the questions and a brother had said that he’d been greatly
tempted sexually through the week. It was knowing that the group
meeting was coming up and the support that we were able to give
that kept him from sin.
We need each other in this Christian life.
The first area deals with the Holy Spirit who grows
our character. The
second are a . . .
II. The Holy Spirit who empowers the missionary enterprise
A. What does the bible say?
We’ve talked about being set apart, sanctified from sin. This
is the sense of being filled with the Spirit as it is used in Eph.
5:18. Let’s consider being filled with the Holy Spirit
from another angle.
The book Acts speaks of being filled with the Holy Spirit in a different
sense and that is primarily in the context of being empowered for
service.
I have found it helpful to distinguish between the sanctifying work
of the Spirit and the empowering work of the Spirit.
There are a few ways the verb “to be filled” is used. According
to Acts – people were filled as follows:
A person can be filled with lies (5:3), with jealousy (5:17; 13:45),
with rage and confusion (19:28,29).
As apposed to these things, the early believers and specifically
the disciples were filled with the Holy Spirit. 4 (2:4;
4:8; 4:31; 9:17; 13:9; 13:52).
What did this filling with the Holy Spirit lead to?
It resulted in speaking in tongues on a number of occasions, worshiping
God, speaking the word of God with boldness and prophesying.
However in terms of the key promise in Acts 1:8,
being filled with the Holy Spirit pre-eminently resulted in being
witnesses all around the world.
(Acts 1:8 NASB) “but
you shall receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon
you; and you shall be My witnesses both in Jerusalem, and in
all Judea and Samaria, and even to the remotest part of the earth.”
The emphasis in Acts was upon the Holy Spirit leading and empowering
the church in evangelism that resulted in the planting of churches.
We can say then from Acts that the Holy Spirit empowers
the believer to serve Jesus Christ. What does this empowering look
like in practice? Let me suggest that the Holy Spirit’s manifestation
is primarily in and through the Holy Spirit’s gifts.
We can contrast this to the sanctifying work of the Spirit which
is primarily manifested in the Holy Spirits fruit as per Gal 5.
B. The Gifts of the Holy Spirit
There are 3 major lists of gifts in Rom. 12, 1 Cor.
12 and Eph. 4. Many of these gifts, eg teaching, administration etc, are
straightforward and attract no controversy. However there are
other gifts that are considered very controversial.
Some maintain that the so-called miraculous gifts
(tongues, prophecy, healing, miracles etc) have died with the age
of the Apostles. Is
this true? I have to say that I can see no solid evidence biblically
for such a position.5
From the point of view of both scripture and what
traditionally the C&MA has believed, we maintain that all of
the gifts of the Holy Spirit are available today for the edification
of the church and for ministry to unbelievers. This includes the
more controversial gifts of 1 Cor. 12:8-10 wisdom, knowledge, faith,
healings, miracles, prophecy, distinguishing between spirits, tongues
and interpretation.
Now I have observed 2 extremes that are easy to adopt when talking
about miraculous manifestations and the gifts of the Spirit.
1. Accept everything
This is the person or church that will accept anything
that comes along claiming to be of the Holy Spirit. Whether it’s
a false prophecy, a demonic miracle, or someone barking like a dog
or roaring like a lion!
The tragedy here is that in a desire to see God
manifest Himself in power this person accepts any so-called “gift of the spirit” without
discernment.
How many people have we had to be rebuild in Alliance churches from
the ruins of false spiritual experiences?
2. Accept nothing
This is the person or church that will accept nothing
including that which is genuinely of the Holy Spirit. This includes
the rejection of a manifestation of God’s Spirit that glorifies
Jesus Christ and edifies the church.
The tragedy here is that there is such a fear of
being deceived that God dare not show Himself in power in church
or a ministry situation for you can guarantee He, ie God Himself,
won’t be considered
to operate “decently and in order.”
Brothers and sisters, there is the genuine supernatural
manifestation of God by His Spirit and this manifestation does
not have to be manipulated or “worked up” by emotional
trickery. I
asked our Australian churches this question and let me ask you...
Could it be that some of our churches perhaps need to learn to be
a little more open to the manifestation of the gifts of the Holy
Spirit?
Now I known full well that I’m on very thin ice in saying
these things. However it is true that for many of us we have
professed accurate doctrine but been afraid or at least unwilling
to see this doctrine applied.
How many Christian people in Australia outside the
C&MA have
remarked to me over the years about the C&MA – “you
are the people who believe in the Holy Spirit and His gifts but don’t
practice them.”
I’m aware of the damage that Pentecostalism/Charismatic movement
has done in certain areas of the C&MA. I’m aware
of the foolishness that has been exhibited. This brothers and
sisters is neither reason to ignore Scripture on this matter or our
historical roots.
If our people are going to serve others, if they
are going to minister using God’s gifts mistakes will be made. Mistakes will
be made but we need to grow together and deal carefully with immature
believers helping them to grow in correct use of God’s gifts.
If we want things neat and tidy, we will never allow
space for people to use their spiritual gifts. This particularly,
although certainly not exclusively, applies to the gifts of 1 Cor
12:8-10.
Let’s have a look at some people who were
filled with the Holy Spirit and what flowed from it.
C. Illustrations
1. Jesus was
anointed with the Spirit prior to commencing
His ministry
As we look at the life of Jesus, it is interesting
to note that whilst He was fully divine from birth, an incredible
and indivisible union of the Son of God and man, his public ministry
didn’t
commence until after His baptism. It was after Jesus had been
baptised in water that the Holy Spirit descended on Jesus and then
began His public ministry. (Acts 10:38 NASB) “You know of Jesus
of Nazareth, how God anointed Him with the Holy Spirit and with
power, and how He went about doing good, and healing all who were
oppressed by the devil; for God was with Him.”
2. Paul
was filled with the Holy Spirit after his
conversion
In Acts 9 we meet Paul who had an extraordinary
experience with the resurrected Christ. He was clearly converted
(Ananias calls him brother vs 17) and yet Annanias is instructed
to lay hands on him that he’d be filled with the Holy Spirit.
In both Jesus and Paul’s case ministry began
after they were filled with the Holy Spirit.
3. Contemporary
example of empowering
Rev Robert Henry, the first Director of the C&MA of Australia
tells the story of a very close friend of his. He was a bible
college companion. The man had a wonderful character he was
just like Christ Himself, the sort of person you loved to be around.
The man entered ministry as a pastor yet he was
not happy. He
could see that he wasn’t leading anyone to Christ. And
so, he took time out and sought God that he would be filled with
the Holy Spirit, anointed particularly so that people would be converted
under his ministry.
As a result of this prayer to God, this earnest
seeking, a major difference occurred. People started to come to Christ as a
result of his ministry. God met him. As the early disciples
were empowered by the Holy Spirit to witness, so was this man.
4. Contemporary
example of empowered ministry
There is counselling that relies on the ability
to be able to understand people and to read them in a counselling
situation. Now understand
I’m all for trained counsellors.
Yet there is counselling that is empowered by the
Holy Spirit. Philippa,
my wife, some years ago found her self in a counselling situation.
She had previously sought God’s Spirit’s infilling and
had on this occasion.
In the midst of this situation a picture popped
into her head. It
was the picture of a girl ridding a pushbike and they were chained
to a house along with her. Somewhat bizarre you’ll agree. Not
knowing exactly what this was about, she asked the counselee, “does
this mean anything to you?” Her answer “well yes,...”
The counselee explained that she’d been bound to her house
because of all of things that had happened there. She would
escape by riding away on her bike. Of course the woman was
still bound up and she had no escape. God gave Philippa a supernatural
knowledge of this situation. Now this I would describe as the
biblical “word of knowledge” gift. It is not something
that can be turned on at will but a gifting as the Spirit wills.
The fruit and change from that encounter were highly
significant. The
counselee experienced real freedom as she repented of her sin and
dedicated herself to God. The picture that Philippa was given
by the Spirit was instrumental in the woman becoming free.
D. Applying the truth
So friends, I want to ask us simply – have we been
preaching and teaching the necessity of being filled with the Holy
Spirit and about the gifts of the Spirit? Have we been instructing
new believers in this area of the Christian walk?
Have we perhaps drawn back a little because of the foolishness we
see in other believers in other churches?
Let me ask a more basic question, have we ourselves
been filled with the Holy Spirit? Have we perhaps “leaked?” For
me at least it is easy to find myself depending on techniques instead
of God. For this reason I need to seek daily to be filled with
God’s Holy Spirit. And can I tell you the further I go
in the Christian Life, the more I need to be filled for the things
God has called us to is too big for any of us to fulfil on our own.
I have appreciated using management techniques. I’ve
appreciated material from a number of sources encouraging me to establish,
purpose and mission statements, establishing biblical goals and measuring
the results.
I have encouraged people to use various tools available
to us in Australia, Church Resource Ministries “Refocussing Your Church” and “Natural
Church Development.”
BUT...Friends these things by themselves will
not renew the church. Management techniques can never bring
revival and renewal to the church. These are matters of God’s
Spirit. It
starts with you and I as we walk in the Holy Spirit as empowered
men and women.
Learning, academic understanding is vitally important,
but it must not be set against or substituted for the Holy Spirit’s
empowering.
So what about the Holy Spirit in missions? We desire to see
Unreached People Groups touched for the gospel. We desire to
see people who have never heard the gospel converted. How can
we do this if there is not the empowering work of the Holy Spirit? How
on earth can we go into demonically bound places and expect that
we can by merely natural means see a turning to Christ?
Our missionaries and missionary candidates need
to be filled with the Holy Spirit. They need to listen to
the Spirit of Christ saying, “go and do this or that.” They
need to answer the Macedonian call, or obey by not going into an
Asia or a Bithynia.6
We as leaders need to be filled with the Holy Spirit. This
is not something we can work up or make happen but we can seek God
daily to empower us. And so we pray “Lord today I’ve
got this, this and this to do. Empower me to do these things
in your way and to your glory. Fill me with your Spirit.”
Let me comment on a personal challenge we face in
Australia. We
have a number of people being licensed as pastors who were not brought
up within the C&MA. As such they have often come with a
conservative evangelical perspective on the ministry of the Holy
Spirit. This has meant that in some of our churches that it
is tough to speak about particularly the empowering work of the Spirit
because of some leaders fear, or diffidence on the matter or outright
confusion about the ministry of the Holy Spirit.
As we seek to plant churches we need to be careful that we are maintaining
our spiritual ethos and values.
One senior Chinese leader in Australia recently commented that issues
of prayer and an appreciation of the ministry of the Holy Spirit
were major weaknesses in the Chinese work in Australia.
Friends we cannot afford to attempt doing supernatural
work with merely natural talents. We need the Holy Spirit’s
anointing His touch, His filling.
It may be that we have been filled with the Holy
Spirit before, we’ve seen His anointing. The fact is we can revert to
trusting our own abilities instead of God’s anointing. Is
that where we are today?
III. Conclusion
What does the Holy Spirit have to do with missions?
We’ve
looked at 2 areas that are vitally important.
The Holy Spirit takes the work of Christ and sanctifies
us growing our character. The Spirit also empowers and directs
the missionary enterprise.
May our ministries be operating under the sanctifying
and empowering work of God’s Holy Spirit. |
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About
the author
Rev. Rod Russell-Brown graduated from the Alliance
College of Theology in 1980 with a B.Th. He was ordained in 1983
and in 1990 was granted an M.A. (Biblical Studies) from Pacific
College of Graduate Studies, Melbourne. He has served as a pastor
in Perth, Washington from 1981-1991 and in Canberra
ACT from 1992 to 2000. Rev Russell-Brown is the current President
of the Christian and Missionary Alliance of Australia and has served
in the position since 2000. Rod is married to Philippa and has two
children Amanda (20) and Simon (18). He resides in Canberra,
ACT. His
interests include playing music, surfing, soccer and electronics.
Footnotes
1 logivzomai (verb):
second person, plural, present, middle, imperative – to reckon,
to consider.
2 L.L. King in, Niklaus,
Sawin, Stoesz, All for Jesus, CPI, Pennsylvania, p. 252.
3 A.B. Simpson,
Power from on High, Vol 2, CPI, Pennsylvania, p. 375.
4 Words
Used: Acts 2:4; 3:10; 4:31; 5:17; 13:45 – ejplhvsqhsan – of
pivmplhmi. Acts 4:8;
13:9 – plhsqei;" –
aorist passive participle – of
pivmplhmi. Acts 9:17 – plhsqh'../" – aorist
passive subjunctive – of pivmplhmi. Acts
13:52 – ejplhrou'nto – imperfect
passive indicative – of plhrovw. Acts
8:15-17 – “received
and fall upon”; Acts
10:44-48 “fell
and poured out;” Acts 19:1-7 – “receive and
HS came on them.”
5 The use
of 1 Cor. 13:8-10 seems very tenuous at best. Certainly no
other Scripture can be shown that demonstrate an expectation that
the gifts of the Holy Spirit can be expected to die out.
6 Acts
16:6-7. |
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