[cog] Maintaining the Joy of the Lord (Part 1)

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From: "Jan Ross" <jross@...>
Date: Sun, 30 Jul 2000 22:10:32 -0400
Maintaining the
Joy of the Lord

by David Wilkerson
July 24, 2000


"The joy of the Lord is your strength" (Nehemiah 8:10). At the time these
words were proclaimed, the Israelites had just returned from captivity in
Babylon. Under the leadership of Ezra and Nehemiah, the people had rebuilt
Jerusalem's ruined walls. And now they set their sights on reestablishing
the
temple and restoring the nation.

At this point, Nehemiah called a special meeting at the city's water gate,
within Jerusalem's rebuilt walls. "And all the people gathered themselves
together as one man into the street that was before the water gate"
(Nehemiah 8:1). Some 42,360 Israelite men were on hand for this meeting.
Standing alongside them were 7,300 servants, including 245 singers.
Altogether, about 50,000 people were gathered.

First came the preaching of God's word. Scripture says the people were
hungry
to hear it: "They spake unto Ezra the scribe to bring the book of the law of
Moses...Ezra the priest brought the law before the congregation both of men
and women, and all that could hear with understanding" (8:1-2).

These people didn't need to have God's word pushed on them. A consensus of
hunger had developed among them. And they were fully prepared to submit to
the authority of God's word. They wanted to be governed by it, to make their
lives conform to its truth.

Amazingly, Ezra preached to this crowd for five or six hours - "from the
morning until midday" (8:3). Yet no one even noticed the time. "The ears of
all the people were attentive unto the book of the law" (8:3). These people
were totally captivated by God's word.

What an incredible scene! You simply wouldn't see such an occurrence in any
American church today. Yet, I tell you, true revival can never take place
without this kind of all-consuming hunger for God's word. Indeed, when God's
people grow weary of hearing his word preached, a spiritual death begins -
and the joy of the Lord departs.

You may have heard of the phrase "sermon tasters." This term is almost 200
years old, originating in London during the mid-1800s. At that time, the
great preacher C.H. Spurgeon delivered sermons to 5,000 people every Sunday
at the Metropolitan Tabernacle. Across the city, Joseph Parker also preached
anointed messages. And other fiery pastors preached throughout London,
delivering deep, revelatory, prophetic words.

It became a popular sport among wealthy Londoners to hop in their carriages
and race across the city from one church to another, sampling the preaching
of these ministers. Each Monday in Parliament, exclusive meetings were held
to discuss which preacher delivered the best sermon and who brought forth
the
deepest revelation.

These gadabouts were dubbed "sermon tasters." They always wanted to lay
claim
to some new spiritual truth or revelation. But very few practiced what they
heard.

At the water gate in Jerusalem, however, there was no eloquent preaching, no
sensational sermon. Ezra preached straight from the scriptures, reading for
hours on end. And as the people stood and listened to God's word, they grew
excited.

At times Ezra was so overcome by what he read, he stopped to "bless the
Lord,
the great God" (8:6). The glory of the Lord came down powerfully, and
everyone raised his hands in praise to God: "All the people answered, Amen,
Amen, with lifting up their hands" (8:6). As certain passages were read,
"they bowed their heads, and worshipped the Lord with their faces to the
ground" (8:6). The people humbled themselves before God, in brokenness and
repentance. Then, after a while, they stood up to experience more.

Please note - this meeting didn't include any exciting stories to stir up
people's emotions. There was no manipulation from the pulpit, no dramatic
testimony. There wasn't even any music as yet. These people simply had an
ear
to hear everything God said to them.

I believe the Lord desires to move among his people in the same way today. I
see his Spirit stirring up churches wherever there's a hunger for his word.

Yet I've also been in churches where people constantly glance at their
watches, before the sermon has started. Then, when the pastor says his final
"Amen," the people begin a mad race for the parking lot. There is no real
joy
in such a church. So, how can we expect desperate sinners to ever want a
part
in it?

The kind of revival we see in Nehemiah 8 requires a pastor who is as excited
by the scriptures as Ezra was. Yet it also requires a people who are just as
anxious to hear God's word and obey it. Even the most fiery preacher can't
stir up a complacent congregation if they're not hungry to hear God's truth.


The Result of This Powerful
Preaching Was a Wave of Brokenness Among the Hearers.

A half-day of preaching wasn't enough for the hungry Israelites. They wanted
even more of God's word. So they formed groups, with seventeen elders
besides
Ezra leading them in Bible studies the rest of the day. "(They) caused the
people to understand the law...so they read in the book in the law of God
distinctly, and gave the sense, and caused them to understand the reading"
(Nehemiah 8:7-8).

As these people grasped God's law, they began to mourn over their sin. "All
the people wept when they heard the words of the law" (8:9). Picture the
scene: 50,000 people lay scattered on the ground, mourning their sin in
unison. Like a hammer, God's word had broken their pride. And now their
weeping echoed over the hills for miles.

I ask you - is this what revival is all about? Is it a word so piercing that
people are driven to their knees, weeping and repenting before God?

I have experienced such holy gatherings myself. When I was a child, our
family attended "camp meetings" at the Living Waters Camp Ground in
Pennsylvania. Jesus' second coming was preached with such power and
authority, everyone was convinced Christ would return within the hour. A
holy
fear fell, and people were driven to their faces. Some cried as if they were
hanging over hell by a thread - wailing, broken, sorrowing over sin.

Often, God's word was preached all day and into the night. Early the next
morning, people could still be found lying prostrate in the prayer room,
grieving over their sin. Some even had to be carried out.

It was on such a night that the Lord called me to preach, at the age of
eight. I was in the Spirit for hours, broken and weeping, God's word coming
alive in my heart. Christ's soon return burned within me as an imminent
reality. I'll never forget that wonderful experience.

Yet, as glorious as all of these manifestations were - whether at Living
Waters Camp Ground, or at Jerusalem's water gate centuries ago - none of
these things can draw sinners into God's house.

Imagine an unsaved person who's trying to bear up under life's stresses. He
has marital problems, he's hurting and confused, he's afraid his life has no
meaning. Such a person is joyless, disgusted with life. And nothing he tries
can satisfy his thirsting soul. He's convinced he can't make it through the
day without medicating himself with alcohol.

If you took this man to a church service where people were lying about
prostrate, mourning over sin, he wouldn't understand what was going on. In
fact, chances are he would leave more depressed than when he came in.

We have to understand - the water-gate revival in Jerusalem wasn't for
sinners. It was strictly for the backslidden children of God. Likewise, few
unsaved people ever attended Living Waters camp meetings. In both cases, the
Lord was trying to repair his children - to deliver them from corruption,
baptize them with joy and make them strong.

God's testimony is never that his people are lying on their faces, crying
rivers of tears. No, the testimony he wants to bring forth in his people is
joy - genuine, lasting joy. "The joy of the Lord is your strength"
(Nehemiah 8:10). This joy - which results from biblical preaching and true
repentance - brings true strength to God's people and draws sinners into his
house.

Most Christians never associate joy with repentance. But repentance is
actually the mother of all joy in Jesus. Without it, there can be no joy.
Yet
any believer or congregation who walks in repentance will be flooded with
the
joy of the Lord.


What Is Missing in
Multitudes of Churches Today
Is the Thing Most Needed by The Lost:
Genuine, Soul-Satisfying Joy.

I often hear Christians say, "We prayed down a revival in our church." But I
say this cannot happen by prayer alone. There can't be any such awakening
unless both the pastor and the people hunger diligently for God's word. And
they must wholly commit their lives to being governed by the scriptures. We
simply can't obtain heaven's joy until the pure word has convicted us of sin
- breaking down all pride, prejudices and false dignity.

When David disobeyed, he lost the joy of the Lord. And that joy could only
be
restored by true repentance. So he prayed, "Wash me throughly from mine
iniquity, and cleanse me from my sin. For I acknowledge my transgressions:
and my sin is ever before me. Purge me" (Psalm 51:2-3, 7). David also prayed
to regain what he'd lost: "Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation"
(Psalm 51:12).

I believe this explains the death pall that hangs over many churches today.
In short, there is sin in the camp. And it's impossible to maintain the joy
of the Lord if sin is present. How can the Holy Spirit pour out joy on a
people who continue to indulge in adultery, addictions and materialism,
living like the unsaved?

The Lord lifted his glory from Shiloh because the high priest, Eli, refused
to deal with sin in God's house. Eli had become accustomed to the easy
life -
and if you're addicted to pleasure, you won't be motivated to expose sin.
God
finally wrote the word "Ichabod" above the door of the sanctuary - meaning,
"The glory has departed." Then he held up Shiloh as an example of what
happens to a church when sin is ignored. God's glory - including all
gladness
and joy - dissipates, in individuals and in the corporate body.


Where God's Word Is
Revered, the Inevitable
Result Is an Outpouring of
Genuine "Jesus Joy."

Ezra told the crowds, "You've been excited about God's word - hungering for
it, loving it, allowing it to work in your heart. You've repented, wept and
mourned - and God is pleased with you. But now it's time to rejoice. Take
out
your handkerchiefs, and wipe away your tears. This is a time for great joy
and mirth."

The glory of the Lord fell on Israel, and the people spent the next seven
days rejoicing: "All the people went their way to eat, and to drink...and to
make great mirth, because they had understood the words that were declared
unto them" (Nehemiah 8:12).

The Hebrew word for mirth here means "glee, merriment, gladness, happiness."
This kind of mirth isn't merely a good feeling - it's an inner joy, a deep
exuberance. Its expression may look different in each of us, because such
joy
takes place deep inside us. But it's clear to everyone around us that our
wellspring of joy comes from heaven.

Whenever Israel turned to sin and idolatry, the Lord removed their mirth: "I
will also cause all her mirth to cease" (Hosea 2:11). "I will take from them
the voice of mirth, and the voice of gladness.and this whole land shall
be...an astonishment" (Jeremiah 25:10-11). "All joy is darkened, the mirth
of
the land is gone" (Isaiah 24:11).

At times, Israel put on a false joy to try to cover their sin. We see this
happening as well in many churches today. We may witness singing, dancing,
manifestations, loud praising - but those who love God's word can discern
whether it's true or false joy.

You may recall Israel's shouts as they danced around the golden calf. When
Joshua heard the people, he said, "There is a noise of war in the camp"
(Exodus 32:17). But Moses replied, "It is not the voice of them that shout
for mastery" (32:18). Moses was saying, "That's the shout of a people still
in bondage. They haven't mastered their sin." Gold had become Israel's god,
and it brought a shout to the people's lips. Yet it was a shout of false joy
- a noise that signaled God's impending judgment.

I once preached in a large church full of this kind of noise. During the
worship, the pastor and organist whipped the people into a frenzy. The
congregation sang and clapped loudly for an entire hour. After a while, I
felt physically sick. I prayed, "Lord, something's wrong here. This isn't
the
sound of a people who've mastered their sins."

A year later, the pastor and organist were exposed as homosexuals. Yet the
people had never discerned this about their leaders, because they weren't
grounded in God's word. Instead, they'd followed a noise that appeared to be
joyful but that was leading them toward destruction.

When we started Times Square Church in 1987, we quickly realized we were
pastoring in a modern-day Corinth. And we had to preach a strong message
that
would expose all sin.

Our services were attended by many Christians who worked in the
entertainment
industry - in theater, TV and film. These people shouted loud praises - but,
in some cases, their noise wasn't the sound of mastery. Some had chosen to
stay in careers that clearly dishonored the Lord, working in plays or shows
that blasphemed God.

We wondered whether we could evangelize unsaved show people if our own
congregants were still involved in wicked aspects of the business. Finally,
we decided we couldn't allow a double standard. So we preached holy
separation - and the Lord began to deal with the people. Many of them gave
up
lucrative careers in entertainment, and God blessed them marvelously. One
former actor now pastors a church in Jerusalem, preaching Christ on Mount
Carmel.

(continued on Part 2)
Jan Ross
jross@...
http://focusontheword.com
ICQ#18767082

"Sha'alu Shalom Yerushalayim"
(Pray for the Peace of Jerusalem) Psalm 122:6

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