Upon the ROCK
SHEE TSE LOONG [SINGAPORE]
For no other foundation can anyone lay than that
which is laid, which is Jesus Christ. (1 Cor 3:11)
SOMETIMES
WE wonder how seemingly fervent believers can drop out of church altogether.
Previously active in church work, regular in Bible-study and never missing a
single service, they now keep Christ totally out of their lives. We just cannot
reconcile our observation of their past zeal with their present indifference
because we think that they were once like us, truly knowing why we are here and
why we are Christians. Or are there times when we ourselves question why we
ever got involved with Christ?
A
Christian who does not know exactly why he is one must seriously examine his
position. Unless he consciously commits his life to the lordship of Christ with
full understanding and conviction, his church attendance is mere ritual and his
faith, superstition.
Full Understanding
Not
everyone who enters the church gates does so with the same motives or
expectations. Parents, spouses, friends, eloquent speakers, interesting
activities, miracles, material benefits, or simply having nothing to do, are
but a few of a myriad of reasons why some people remain in church. But a church
made up of such people rests on flimsy foundations and does not even
approximate to the church which Jesus said would prevail against the gates of
hell1. So there is no true church unless its people fully understand
the reason for their following Christ.
John 6
traces the itinerary of a great multitude of Christ’s followers from southwest
of the Sea of Tiberias where they numbered over 5000
to Capernaum
further north where many left following Him2. The narrative reveals
the wrong motives that many had in their persistent following of Christ. As the
story unfolds, it becomes evident that as long as one’s discipleship rests on
motives other than Christ Himself, his faith cannot last.
Wrong Foundations
When the
five thousand had eaten their fill and perceived that Jesus was no ordinary
man, they started to have certain expectations of Him — that He should be their
King and overthrow their Roman oppressors3. They had faith all
right, but it was founded on an expectation of a physical kingdom. But Jesus
withdrew from them, for His kingdom was not of this world4.
Not
willing to be disappointed, the insistent multitude got into boats and pursued
Jesus across the sea to Capernaum
where He further exposed their carnal motivation — they sought the loaves, not
Him5.
To these
carnal seekers of political and economic gains, everything, including spiritual
things, could only be understood in terms of the physical— unless they see a
sign, they would not believe6. Are there not many today who say that
unless they see God, they would not believe He exists? Are there not Christians
who must have miracles spaced out at regular intervals throughout their lives,
lest they forget or lose sight of the reality of God? Their foundation is not
Christ, but miracles that can be seen and felt by their physical senses.
Full Conviction
In
contrast with the wrong motivations which hinge on the physical, the love of
God is the mainstay of a person whose faith is founded on Jesus Christ. The
whole discourse about the true bread of life from heaven, the eating of His
flesh and the drinking of His blood is really not that intriguing. It points to
the simple fact that the sacrifice of Christ is the thing that spiritually
attracts and keeps the Christian7. This is the beautiful way in
which the Father draws people and those thus drawn will persevere till the end.
None of them will be lost because they are taught of God8. Those who
come to Christ because of Christ Himself will have the full conviction that
secures their resurrection on the last day:
“After
this many of his disciples drew back and no longer went about with him. Jesus
said to the twelve, “Do you also wish to go away?” Simon Peter answered him,
“Lord, to whom shall we go? You have the words of eternal life; and we have
believed, and have come to know, that you are the Holy One of God.” Jesus
answered them, “Did I not choose you, the twelve, and one of you is a devil?”
He spoke of Judas the son of Simon Iscariot, for he, one of the twelve, was to
betray him.” John 6:66-71
“For this
is the will of my Father, that every one who sees the Son and believes in him
should have eternal life; and I will raise him up at the last day.” John 6:40
Sure Foundation
The bricks
and mortar of the church are those who truly know God and are known of Him, who
stand on a sure foundation9. They really know why they are
Christians and what they aim for in life. They confess that they are mere
sojourners on earth and look forward to “the city which has foundations, whose builder and maker is
God”10.
Rooted in Christ
Rooted and built up in him and established in
the faith, just as you were taught, abounding in thanksgiving. (Col 2:7)
RECOGNISING
CHRIST as our sure foundation is not good enough. It is only the beginning of
establishing one’s faith. God has known from before the creation11 those whom
He sets upon this sure foundation. The Christian then, has to know Christ
deeply, that is to be rooted in Him, before he can be built up into His
perfection12. It starts with an intense desire to know Him. This was
the key to Paul’s transformation from a merciless persecutor to an apostle with
profound knowledge of Christ’s love.
“Who are you, Lord?”
Paul, then
known as Saul, was a man who had great zeal in doing whatever he believed was
right. The ignorance that blinded his zeal was cleared on the road to Damascus when he asked,
“Who are you, Lord?”13 After his conversion, his zeal, now rightly
focused on Christ, was with such intensity that nothing of the world was not
counted as dung “because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus (his)
Lord”.14 After years in the ministry, he still felt that he had not
known Him enough: “that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection ....
Not that I have already obtained this .... but I press on.”15 His
life was a constant pursuit of Christ, of knowing Him better. The question:
“Who are you, Lord?” was never far from his mind.
“I know whom I have
believed”
The
sweetness that a deeply rooted Christian experiences as he “grows in the
knowledge of (the) Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ”16 is something
incomprehensible by someone outside the relationship. It thrives even in
adverse circumstances: “that I may know Him ... and may share His sufferings,
becoming like Him in His death”17; “and therefore I suffer as I do.
But I am not ashamed for I know whom I
have believed.”18
Sharing in
the sufferings of Christ draws the Christian closer to Him, because by so doing
he cuts himself off from sin.19 In this manner, he becomes not only
conformable to Christ’s death, but also experiences the power of the
resurrected life: “that I may know Him and the power of His resurrection ....
that .... I may attain the resurrection from the dead”.20
Rooted & Grounded
The
goodness of Christ fully satisfies a Christian who reaches deep enough to tap
its inexhaustible resources: “that Christ may dwell in your hearts through
faith; that you, being rooted and grounded
in love, may have power to comprehend with all the saints what is the breadth
and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ which surpasses
knowledge, that you may be filled with all the fullness of God”.21
The
process of understanding Christ’s love is reinforced with a progressive realisation of one’s own imperfections. To the Corinthians
Paul wrote (circa AD 55): “I am the very
least of all the saints.”22
Years later, he wrote to the Ephesians (circa AD 61): “I am less than the least of the saints.”23 Towards the end of
his life, he wrote to Timothy (circa AD 63): “I am the foremost of sinners.”24 The more he knew Christ, the
deeper he felt about his own imperfections, and the more he appreciated the
extent of Christ’s love for him. At this stage, nothing could separate him from
his Lord.
Against the Tide
And the rain fell and the floods came, and the
winds blew and beat upon that house, but it did not fall because it had been
founded on the rock (Mt 7:25)
A
CHRISTIAN needs to be deeply rooted in Christ and His words because he is
called to stand against, the tide. Being rooted in Christ, we grow in “the
knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature
of the fullness of Christ; so that we may no longer be children, tossed about
with every wind of doctrine.”25 Not only can we defend against evil,
we “contend against principalities,
against the powers, against the world rulers of this present darkness, against
the spiritual hosts of wickedness in the heavenly places”26 by being
“strong in the Lord and in the strength of his might.”27 Elijah, “a
man of like nature with ourselves”28 provides an example of one man
against the tide.
Power
Elijah was
a man full of vigour. Beginning from the bold
proclamation of drought to King Ahab, his life was filled with activity and
spectacular events; travelling to Chenth, to Zarephath, to Carmel, and to Jezreel;
the miracle of the oil and meal, the raising of the widow’s son, the contest on
Mount Carmel, the slaying of Baal’s prophets, the praying for rain. By the hand
of the Lord, he was always at the forefront, thrusting forward with unrestrainable force. This was beautifully pictured in his
race against the coming rain in which he overtook Ahab’s chariot to arrive
before him at the entrance of Jezreel.29 Today, the phrase “in the spirit and power of Elijah”
describes one who stands against the tide to turn it around, that is, to turn
the hearts of the people back to God.30
Perseverance
Power and
perseverance are complementary. In a long race, both speed and stamina
contribute to final victory. Chasing chariots and being at the forefront were
not all God had intended for Elijah. He had still one important lesson to learn
— perseverance. So God allowed him to suffer his first failure — giving up in
the face of persecution. The same man who courageously opposed Ahab, called
fire down from heaven, slew 850 false prophets, now asked for death when threatened
by a mere woman. But he quickly learnt to “eat and drink” from the providence
of God to receive new strength.31 The Elijah who sped past Ahab’s chariot with all his
might now pushed forward steadily,
with sustained stamina, through 40
days and nights to Horeb, the mount of God.
At the
mount, Elijah lodged in a cave, and it was there that the lesson on
perseverance was impressed deeply in his heart. There “a great and strong wind
rent the mountains, and broke in pieces the rocks before the Lord, but the Lord
was not in the wind; and after the wind an earthquake, but the Lord was not in
the earthquake; and after the earthquake a fire, but the Lord was not in the
fire; and after the fire a still small voice”.32 He saw that God was
not found in the powerful manifestations but in the still small voice that
assured him of the silent reserve of 7000 God-fearing souls in Israel who had
not worshipped Baal.33 God’s solution to problems, Elijah found, did
not lie in the thick of action that he had grown accustomed to. If only he had
realised earlier the truth of these words: “In quietness and in trust shall be
your strength”34, he would have persevered.
Final Words
There is no other foundation but Christ, the
solid Rock upon which the Christian stands. Rooted
in Christ, the Christian is like a strongly founded tower, an emblem of
unyielding strength against the tide.
The world passes away quickly, but the Word of God endures forever.35
So does every Christian who hears the Word and practises
it faithfully.36
1.
Mt16:18
2. Jn 6:1,
10, 23-24, 66
3. Jn
6:14-15
4. Jn
18:36
5. Jn
6:26
6. Jn
6:30,36
7. Jn
12:32-33
8. Jn
6:37-39, 44-45
9. II Tim
2:19
10. Heb
11:10, 13-16
11.
Ephesians 1:4
12.
Colossians 2:10
13.Acts
9:5
14.
Philippians 3:8
15. Philippians
3:10, 12
16. II
Peter 3:18
17.
Philippians 3:10
18. II
Timothy 1:12
19. I
Peter 4:1
20.
Philippians 3:10-11
21.
Ephesians 3:17-19
22. 1
Corinthians 15:9
23.
Ephesians 3:8
24. 1
Timothy 1:15
25. Eph
4:13-14
26. Eph
6:12
27. Eph
6:10
28. Js
5:17
29.1 Kgs 18:44-46
30. Lk
1:17
31. 1 Kgs 19:5-8
32.1 Kgs 19:11-12
33.1 Kgs 19:18
34. Is
30:15
35.1 Pet
1:24-25
36. Mt
7:24-25