Ephesians 3:14.
"For this reason, I bow my knees
before the Father..."
So we know that we have prayer.
The prayer of an apostle.
And what he's praying
for this church in Ephesus.
"For this reason, I bow my
knees before the Father
from whom every
family in heaven..."
Or, "from whom the whole family
in heaven and on earth is named,
that according to the riches of His glory
He may grant you to be strengthened
with power through His Spirit
in your inner man (or inner being)
so that Christ may dwell in your hearts
through faith."
"So that Christ may dwell
in your hearts through faith."
Now, we looked at this last week.
And I don't feel like the few comments
that I made last week
on these mighty verses - or even verse -
verse 17, "that Christ may dwell
in your hearts through faith."
I don't believe that they've
been adequately handled.
I feel like this is one
of the greatest truths.
I feel like most of us
pass over this verse
when we read Ephesians.
I feel like it has very little meaning,
very little substance,
very little impact on our life -
if the truth be told.
I think this is a window
into some of the richest possibilities
of being a Christian.
And I feel like we would do a disservice
if we simply run on to
something else right now.
And I'll tell you this,
all through the week -
and I don't believe that this had to do
with the fact that I was sick this week -
but every time I would come
and open up the Scriptures
and I would look at this verse,
the more I looked at it -
you know what this is like -
if you've spent any amount of time
studying and meditating on Scripture;
if something grabs hold
of you in Scripture,
you begin studying it,
looking at it, mulling it over.
The bigger and bigger it got to me,
it felt like it sucked the energy
and the life right out of me.
What I was reminded of
was the Queen of Sheba.
You remember how it was said
she saw Solomon's wisdom
and she saw his house
and she saw his servants
and she saw how the whole
thing was decked out
and she saw the offerings
that were being given,
and you know what it says?
It sucked the breath or it took the breath
right out of her.
And that's how I felt to this verse.
I felt staggered by it.
I felt ashamed maybe
that a jewel was here
and I haven't seen it for what it is,
but this is how I felt
about this verse 17.
As I was being confronted by this,
one of the things that I wanted to do
was I wanted to say, Paul -
this was the title of
the message last week -
Paul, teach me to pray.
And you know one of the things
that really strikes me
about Paul's prayers
is the way he prays for Christians.
Go back to Ephesians 1,
the first place where we found
Paul's prayers in this letter.
If you go back to chapter 1:16,
Paul said, "I do not cease
to give thanks for you
remembering you in my prayers."
We have the same thing going on here.
He's praying for the Ephesians.
"That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ,
the Father of glory may give you..."
now some of your Bibles say "a spirit."
I think it should be "the Spirit."
I think he's talking
about the Spirit of God.
In the original, it's difficult to know
whether it should be a capital "S"
or a small "s," but "the Spirit."
Now, let's say he's talking
about the Spirit of God.
Praying for Christians
that they be given the Spirit.
They have the Spirit.
And even if it's a small "s,"
"the spirit of wisdom and of revelation
in the knowledge of Him."
What are we saying?
Are we saying that they're void of that?
Are we saying that these Christians
at Ephesus lacked any bit of wisdom
and of revelation in the
knowledge of Christ?
Listen, v. 18, "Having the eyes
of your hearts enlightened
that you may know what is the hope..."
Now get this.
That they might know what
is the hope of their calling,
or the hope to which He has called you.
The hope of God's calling.
But what are we going to say?
Are we going to say that these people
don't know anything of that?
If they've experienced it, obviously.
If they've been called of God
and they're saved,
they know something about this.
Or, what's the next thing?
"That they might know what are the riches
of His glorious inheritance
in the saints."
Or the next thing,
"what is the immeasurable greatness
of His power toward us who believe
according to the working
of His great might."
You see, what I'm learning
about Paul's prayers
is that Paul,
all through this letter,
do you know that every place
that talks about his prayers,
he's praying for something
that at least in part,
these people already had.
And what that does,
is it so powerfully comes home
that there is so much more
in the Christian life.
You've got to see that from these prayers.
That he's talking to God
about the needs of Christians,
and he's praying for the very things
that if we were to be honest we would say
they probably already have -
at least, to some degree.
See, that's the issue. To some degree.
Why is he praying?
Because he knows that they don't have it
to the degree that they could have it.
That's the issue.
That's the issue all the way through here.
These prayers don't mean
that the Ephesians
were void of these realities.
It's enlargement. That's it.
Enlargement.
What more we could have.
And that's what I want
us to get a feel for.
Before I just run on to something else,
we need to feel it.
I could have more.
I could have more if I were to pray,
if others were to pray for me
and ask God for these very things.
I could have much more.
Christianity.
Oh, I forget where it was.
It's just coming to my mind right now.
Spurgeon talking about the Christian life,
and he sees it as many
men in the Christian life,
they wade in the shallows.
And he said some, a few,
they go out deeper
to where they're waist-
deep in these waters.
And he said, oh, just a scarce amount -
the very fewest -
dive in and find it an ocean to swim in.
(incomplete thought)
There's a possibility here.
He's praying,
"Christ may dwell in your
hearts through faith,"
to people who are already Christians.
And you've got to let that register.
They're already Christians.
He's praying that Christ would dwell
in their hearts.
This - do you feel it?
This is what you were meant to be.
This is what we're to press on to be.
This is what's possible for us.
And I don't want us to be content
to sit stagnant in our Christian life.
Do you realize this about yourself?
The potential.
What more there is to be had.
It's precisely because this reality exists
that Paul prays the way he prays.
If this reality didn't exist,
if the Spirit of God was saying to Paul,
"Paul, there's no more.
Once you've become a
Christian, you've got everything.
You don't need anymore."
If that was the reality, the Spirit of God
would not have moved upon Paul
to pray this prayer.
The very reason that he's praying this way
is because this reality is possible.
Greater, greater.
This is what is possible
for you in this life.
And I would just say this to all of us,
can you be content
when there's such verses as this?
I'm telling you as this
got bigger and bigger
before my eyes and sucked the breath
right out of me,
it makes me want more.
My greatest fear is that as a preacher
that I would handle this
verse in such a way
as to just leave you all that way.
Just the same and content.
And walk out of here
with no greater expectation
than what you had before you heard
me preach on these verses.
And I fear having a church that knows
very little in experiential fashion
of what this verse means.
See, this is the thing,
when we even hear it,
when we hear Paul praying
that according to the riches
of the glory of God,
that we would be strengthened
with power by His Spirit
in our inner being,
that we might have Christ
dwell in our hearts through faith.
When we hear that,
what?
My fear is that we would say,
"I don't know what that is.
I can't relate.
I mean, yeah, that's nice.
Let's go on to something else
because that doesn't really
move me, that doesn't stir me.
I don't really know what
Paul's talking about there.
I mean, yes, we walk
by faith, not by sight.
And I've got this faith that
Christ is there somewhere
and that He's real.
I believe the facts.
I believe Jesus died.
I believe He rose again.
And I don't know about this,
but you know, I guess I assume
it should be true that Christ is in me."
That's not what we want.
That's not what Paul's talking about.
Paul isn't talking about something
that you should take by faith in your head
to know it's true, but there's no
experiential reality behind this.
That is not what this is about.
Because where he's going
to go on with this
is that we might have
strength to comprehend
with all the saints
what is this breadth and length...
This gets into the realities
of being rooted and grounded
in the love of Christ
and having that love burst forth on us.
If we get to the place where we say
we don't know anything about this,
I don't know whether we should
bow our heads and weep,
or we should just try another religion.
Or go back to the starting point,
because if that's all we're getting out
of what Christianity is all about...
Paul is telling us something.
Look, the Christian is called
that one who hungers and thirsts.
And I hope that there's
a longing in your soul.
And I was just reminded
of Psalm 81 that says,
"Open your mouth wide,
and I will fill it."
It's like, Lord... give me this.
Give us this.
Give us the more.
Don't tantalize us.
Don't dangle this in front of us only.
I'll tell you what this is all about.
Craig talked about the glory.
It's about that glory coming inside.
It's that glory becoming real.
The possibility.
I want us to pursue this
until we can all say,
"yes, I know at least something
of what Paul's speaking of."
This is one of the greatest truths
that a Christian can
ever be confronted with -
the possibility of more of Christ.
Surely then, what could
be more important to us?
If that is a reality that for each of us
to know what this is - what is this?
And to know how to pursue it,
how to arrive at this position.
And I want us to think.
I want us to think what's
actually being said here.
And we're just going to focus
right in on verse 17
and the first part of chapter 3.
Verse 17, "so that Christ..."
So that Christ -
let's give the emphasis there first.
"...That Christ may dwell in
your hearts through faith."
Christ.
And what I want you to see
as the apostle's prayer
is that Christians might possess
the indwelling Christ in the heart.
This is Christ - actually Christ
dwelling in the heart.
What is this?
It is far, far more than when we say,
"Well, I bear you in my heart."
Or, "I have you on my heart."
And Paul talked that way sometimes.
He would say things like this,
"make room in your hearts for us."
"We've wronged no one.
We've corrupted no one.
We've taken advantage of no one.
I do not say this to condemn you,
for I said before that
you are in our hearts."
That's not what Paul's talking about.
What is that?
That means I have affection for you.
I'm thinking about you.
But that's not what Paul's talking about.
We don't want to limit it to that.
In Ephesians 3:17, Paul is speaking about
far more than having
feelings in our heart for Christ.
Don't try to water this down
by saying that it means that we simply
have thoughts about Christ
or warm fuzzy feelings toward Him
or that our lives even resemble Him.
That's not it.
That's not what Paul's praying for here.
Do you realize a dead Mohammad
can produce that in his followers?
A dead Joseph Smith can produce that
in his followers.
What? They think about him.
They even are inspired by him.
They even resemble him perhaps.
They imbibe his teachings.
But that's not it.
What Paul is talking about here
is the living Christ dwelling,
dwelling in you.
The living Christ does not
influence His people
far away, separate, from the grave.
It's nothing like that.
What Paul sees is this:
The people of God being influenced
by an actual living Christ
that takes up His dwelling inside
the believer.
He is actually inside.
It is the presence of His own self
that influences us.
Not just what we read about Him
in a book.
You see, if that's all
that Christianity is,
that is a miserable kind of Christianity
where your Christianity comes from a book,
where your faith is simply
these abstract facts that are removed.
That is not biblical Christianity.
Biblical Christianity is Christ
actually coming inside the believer,
into the heart of the believer,
within us,
exercising influences upon us
which are inseparable from His presence.
That's it.
Paul uses the term "dwell."
And as I said last week,
it's got a "kata" on the front.
It means "down."
He settles down into the believer.
This is not some shallow thing here.
And as I reminded you last week
from John 14:23,
I mean, hear Jesus' words.
He says that "My Father and I,
we will come to him
and make our home with him."
No matter what you
want to say about Islam,
Mohammad can't do that.
"We will make our home with him."
And I mentioned to you Revelation 3:20.
There's Christ. He says,
"I'm knocking at the door."
And He says, "To those who hear
and open that door,
I will come in
and I will sup with them and he with Me."
You need to hear that.
"I will come in."
See, this isn't some teaching like,
oh, this is just speaking of affections
and feelings.
Like: I bear you on my heart
because I have a deep love for you.
Sometimes the New Testament
speaks that way,
but when it comes to
Christ in the believer,
that is not the issue.
He says, "My Father and I,
we will make our home
in you."
"I will come in."
Paul is not praying merely
for some thing to happen.
He's not praying that we would simply
grasp the truth of this.
We're talking about Him.
He wants us to be strengthened
to receive Christ Himself,
Christ in our hearts.
We're not just pursuing
some truth about Christ.
That's not it.
It's Him.
And this isn't just theory here.
It's to where Christ comes in.
Brethren, do you recognize?
You get some people,
and I had a brother telling me recently
about his concern for people
who they seem to talk the talk,
but they seem to lack
a sense of the reality.
And you know when your Christianity
is all theory, that's bad.
That's bad because Christianity
deals with more than
just a knowledge up here
of what the truths are.
You know what I see?
I see some people -
and we don't want to be these people -
they know the truth
and they try to persuade themselves
that what is true of biblical Christianity
because it's described in this book,
they try to persuade themselves
that it's true of them.
But we're talking of something -
listen, if Christ indwells your heart
and you're rooted and grounded
in that love that He saturates you with,
and you begin to have some idea
about the breadth and length
and height and depth
and to grab hold of this
unsearchable love of Christ,
and you're filled with
all the fullness of God,
I guarantee, that's not the kind of thing
where you have to sit back and say,
"Well, I don't feel the reality of this,
but because I believe it in my head,
I'm going to try to persuade
myself that this is real."
That's not what's happening here.
That's not the kind of
Christianity we find in Scripture.
Let me ask you this:
is Christ real to you?
Is Christ real within you?
I'm not talking religion and church
and reading your Bible
and singing the hymns.
Is Christ real to you? Him!
Has He come in?
And in the same way
that He would sit down with somebody
and have supper with them,
and you would know it,
do you know that reality?
Because if not, I'm telling you,
don't be content.
Look, if you're not ready
to go further here,
if you're content with this,
you can be content with that.
But I think verses like this
are meant to make us not content
and to take the prayer
as an indication that this is a promise.
If Paul weren't under inspiration,
we might question:
Well, he's fallible.
Could he be praying for something
God wouldn't maybe perhaps
really be willing to give us?
But he is under inspiration,
which means Paul asking this for us
is as good as it being a promise.
This is God telling him,
"Paul, pray that way for them
and let's record it
in the letter to the Ephesians
for all the future generations to see
that this is a very valid and
legitimate thing to ask for
because I intend to give this."
It's a promise.
Christ came.
You think about this,
Christ came from the glory,
and He dwelt among us,
He tabernacled among us.
And what happened?
He lived and He died.
And He died on that cross
and after three days,
He came forth.
Death couldn't hold Him.
And for 40 days, He was here.
And then He ascended to
the right hand of His Father,
and Scripture says that He is there
to intercede on our behalf.
And I'll guarantee you this,
as much as it is a reality
that He sits in Heaven,
there situated at the
very right hand of God
making intercession for His people,
I'll tell you this, it is just as true
that He is within every
believer in this room.
That is a fact.
Not just that you have an
affection on your heart
and soft, warm, fuzzy feelings about Him,
it is that He actually has come in
and He dwells there.
He lives within the believer.
That is a reality.
We're not talking just about some theory
or some "thing" or some "it."
It's not just some doctrine.
This is Christ - more of Christ -
that Paul prays for.
And look, I would say, we must pursue it.
Because He dwells there by faith.
And if we really understand faith,
then it's something that
we're going to pursue.
Before I get to that,
Paul isn't just using
some figure of speech
which actually doesn't mean, after all,
that Christ is in us,
but some other meaning.
Do you remember what Paul himself
said to the Galatians?
He said, "I was crucified with Christ."
And then what does he say?
"I live, yet not I,
Christ lives..."
Christ who lives in me.
Or Colossians - Craig's been
going through Colossians.
Colossians 1:27,
"Christ in you,
the hope of glory."
Now you should just
stop right there a second.
If you simply have a
head knowledge of this
and you're trying to
persuade yourself of this,
because there's no real evidence.
You're just trying to
hope and persuade yourself.
You're seeking to persuade yourself
that Christ is in there even though
you're not really sensing this
in any tangible expression.
How can Christ in you
be the hope of glory?
You see what Paul's saying?
To have Christ in you is the very thing
that gives you the hope
that Heaven awaits you at the end.
Christ in me.
Christ.
I would say it again,
do you know the reality of this?
Are you experiencing Christ in you?
Inside.
When Christ manifests Himself to us,
this is not merely a figure of speech.
It's real. It's actual.
If it's not real, it can't give us
the least hope of glory.
So, it's Christ.
Christ who dwells in you.
Now let's think about the next thing.
Christ may dwell in your
hearts through faith.
I want to look more closely at the heart.
What is the heart?
What is it?
It's you.
I mean, let me ask you this:
Where are you?
Where are you?
You say, well, I'm right here.
Can't you see me?
Well, to about the fifth row.
I can't see you after that.
I see you.
But see, I see your body.
That's not what I'm asking.
I'm not asking where your body is.
Where are you?
Where are you hearing me?
Right here, but where are you
processing what I'm saying?
Where are you?
Where is the center of
consciousness right now?
It feels like it's in our head, right?
In our brain somewhere.
And yet, we feel. We feel here.
We can feel.
And it's all mixed together
in this mysterious way.
Where are you?
That is the heart.
And Paul often talks about the heart.
He loved the term.
It comes up in his writings a lot.
And let me just give you a sampling
of the way that he used the term.
Because I want us to get a feel
for what did he mean by it.
When he talks about Christ
dwelling in your heart,
where is the heart?
What is the heart?
Where is Christ dwelling?
Where should we look for
evidence of His dwelling?
Well, in Romans 1 -
don't look at these,
because I'm going to
shoot through them fast.
You won't have time to get there.
But Paul talking about fallen humanity,
he talks very specifically
about them being futile in their thoughts,
their foolish hearts darkened.
Their foolish hearts darkened.
The heart is where the thoughts are.
Their thoughts - they're
futile in their thoughts.
The thoughts of the heart.
Only evil continuously.
It's where we think.
It's where we're thinking now.
Paul talked about the lusts of the heart
a little later on in Romans 1.
The lusts of the heart.
Or, the desires of the heart.
It's where we desire.
It's where we think.
He also speaks about an impenitent heart.
You know what that means?
That means we repent in the heart.
That means we feel sorrow for sin
in the heart.
There is a turning of the will
in the heart.
That's where that happens.
The work of the law - this is Romans 2 -
the work of the law
is written on their hearts.
What does it mean to have the law
written on your heart?
It means you know it,
you feel convicted by it -
conviction, the conscience.
That's where the heart is.
"The love of God poured
abroad into our hearts."
Have you ever read that one in Romans 5?
What does that mean?
That means we feel God's love for us.
We have some cognizance of it
and we're feeling His love.
He bears witness of His love for us.
That happens at the heart level.
Or you read this, Romans 6,
"obedient from the heart."
Obedience.
Where I'm surrendered.
Where my will is operative.
That is at the heart level.
Or, "let the peace of God
rule in your hearts."
Being at peace, not at war.
"With the heart one believes."
You see where we're at?
It's where we think.
It's where we know.
It's where we believe.
It's where we desire.
It's where we repent.
It's where we feel - he talks about
the sorrow of the heart.
"Deceiving the hearts of the naive."
Or, "the imagination of the heart."
"The purposes of the heart."
"Their hearts may be encouraged."
Or, "thankfulness in your hearts."
You see everything that's
attributed to the heart?
And here's my question:
The heart is you
at the deepest level - it's you.
It's at your level of consciousness.
Your level of knowing,
your feeling, your desire.
That's where Christ is going to dwell.
Remember.
It means to settle down.
Where are you?
Are you able to look where you are
and say yeah, Christ is here with me.
That's what Paul's praying for.
Christ would settle down.
That's what He means when He says,
"I stand at the door and knock."
You open that door.
I'll come in and I'll sup with you.
I'll have dinner with you.
I'll eat with you; you with Me.
There's going to be a closeness
as there is when you have communion
with somebody across the dinner table.
And in Eastern mindset,
this is extremely close.
We don't take it like they did.
Can you look, where are you?
And just think.
Look. Look where you are in there.
Not your body.
Not your physical eyes.
But are you able in your consciousness
to look above and beneath and beside
to the right hand and to the left hand
and say Christ is here with me?
He dwells with me.
Oh Lord, I want You here more.
Or do you look around
and you're just trying to
persuade yourself that it's true,
but when you look around,
if you're going to be honest...
The heart is you.
It's the deepest part.
It's the consciousness.
Where are you?
See, this is what Paul's praying for.
You're not alone anymore
when this happens.
Oh, how the world
struggles with loneliness!
But you're not alone.
This is the greatest communing
and fellowship that can be imagined.
He comes in and He settles down.
And so when you arise in the morning,
when you go off to sleep at night,
you know what happens?
He's there.
He's close.
And you know He is.
Where are you?
Is Christ there?
Because you see, this is what
Paul says is the hope of glory.
It's when you turn and you say He's here,
and I hear His voice.
Oh, the hope of glory!
This is the seal that I'm heaven-bound.
He wouldn't come with me now
if He wasn't going to take
me to be with Him then.
That's the issue.
You remember the two
on the road to Emmaus?
Because that's a tremendous visual
of Him coming in to eat.
Did not their hearts burn within them?
Why? Because when Christ
comes into your presence,
it does something.
Their hearts burned.
Christ came in.
And He dined with them.
And you know what? While He was there,
their whole self was
consumed with that reality,
that this One sat at their table.
And you know what they weren't doing?
They weren't trying
to convince themselves:
this is true.
Well, we're trying to persuade
ourselves that He's really here,
but there's no evidence of it.
We don't see Him. We don't feel it.
Our hearts really don't burn.
We basically are sitting
with an empty table -
it's just you and me,
the other guy on the road to Emmaus
and we're just sitting here
and we're trying to imagine
Him being over in the seat.
That's not what they did.
Oh, I know they didn't
recognize Him for awhile,
but they were totally consumed
with this One.
This is no theoretical thing.
This is true.
This is not the kind of thing
where we don't know it's true,
but we're always trying to
persuade ourselves this is true.
This is the possibility
being held out by Paul
in this prayer to all of us
that Christ might settle in.
Not like those two guys
where Christ vanishes,
but where He settles in
and He doesn't vanish.
Basically, He settles in
and He comes more and more
in His fullness and He takes you
right on out to the eternal day
when you'll see Him as He is.
This is Christ in His personal presence
and power in the center of your being.
That's what this is.
This is being permeated with Christ.
This is Christ coming,
Christ breaking in upon the soul
with His presence.
Brothers and sisters,
there's more to be had.
That's why Paul is praying.
He wasn't doubting the salvation
of the people back there in Ephesus.
He believed every bit they were saved.
In fact, he says confidently,
you were chosen before the foundation
of the world.
He was confident.
He wasn't doubting their salvation.
But then on bended knee he pleads,
Lord, strengthen them with the power
of the Spirit of God
according to the riches of Your glory.
Strengthen them and sweep them
into these fuller realities of Christ.
Now, I want to emphasize
the last two words.
That Christ may dwell in your hearts
through faith.
These two words,
they convince me
that none of us should be content
to simply let Paul pray for us,
or let somebody else pray for us
that Christ might dwell in our hearts,
or that we just simply pray for it.
We should.
We should pray for it.
But if you say, well,
that's all we can do.
Paul's praying, by the way,
and you know, he's
not really telling us
that we should do
anything else. It's by faith.
We simply take this at God's Word
and isn't that what faith is all about?
We just sit passively by and wait
for Christ to come into our hearts.
And I would just ask this,
since when is faith ever passive?
It isn't.
Since when does true, God-given faith
in any aspect of life
just sit passively by?
Do we say God's going to save some
from every tribe and tongue
and so we're just going
to passively sit back?
We don't say that.
Do we say that God is going to save
whosoever He wills so we're
not going to evangelize?
Are we going to say,
well, God's going to do
what God's going to do, so we don't pray?
We don't think that way.
That isn't the way we want to think.
Through faith. Faith.
Listen, listen.
Jesus Christ coming to a church,
He says, "Behold, I stand at the door."
To a church.
"I'm standing at the door
and I'm knocking.
You open the door."
He says, "I will come into him."
And so I think the thing
that we should ask is this:
Do you believe Christ can come in?
Do you believe He can come in more?
Do you believe He can settle down more?
That's certainly what Paul's praying for.
For the life of the Ephesians.
Is that reality that he's praying for
in the life of the Ephesians
also possible for us?
I don't believe these truths are meant
to simply apply to the
Ephesians and not to us.
This is the Word of God.
It's profitable for every one of us
for doctrine, reproof, correction,
instruction in righteousness,
that the man of God -
that's for all of us,
not just for the Ephesians.
Shouldn't we ask ourselves the question:
Lord, okay, You stand
at the door and knock.
That picture in itself is showing
a responsibility on our part.
Wouldn't you agree?
If we are to open and He will come in,
I think the question arises,
how do we open?
What do we do?
We need to be strengthened here.
Strengthened - that's where Paul started.
Strengthen us!
Why? Where do we need strength?
Maybe in the area of resolve?
Maybe in the area of the will?
I mean, you can get
gripped by this reality.
There's a door here.
Christ is saying, "I'm on the other side.
Come and open, and I'll come in."
And you know what?
You can sit in a message like this
and you can hear this and you can say,
"Yeah, I want that."
"I want that."
Have you ever noticed -
maybe the word "fickle" is a good word -
have any of you ever been in the place,
you sat under powerful preaching,
you had a sweet time in prayer
or powerful season in the Word,
and you're resolved.
I want that.
I want to go deeper.
I want to go further.
I believe it from Scripture.
I can have it.
But what happens?
Any of you ever been there
where you look up
and it's like what happened?
How did I get distracted?
I mean, I was resolved for this.
How did I get here?
I was determined. I wanted that.
I made certain resolutions.
Have you ever been there?
You make these spiritual resolutions
and then what happens?
What's the difference between
the people that press on to know the Lord
and the ones that kind of give up
or are always struggling?
Always falling short?
What's the difference?
Well, I think it comes back to this.
I think it comes back
to being strengthened
by God Himself to have
a will that's committed.
I think it comes to having appetites
that are strong.
I mean, we know it.
You know what, I got sick this week.
My appetite has not been there.
Do you ever go through
seasons in your life -
maybe you're saying yeah,
way too many of them -
where you're hungry?
You're hungry all the time.
You can eat and you're still hungry.
What's the difference?
Well, there's a difference
in the health of that appetite.
I'll tell you,
if our appetite itself
were to be magnified a hundred fold,
we desperately needed Christ.
Maybe some of the trivialities
that have sidetracked us
and derailed us -
did any of you after last week's message,
any of you go out of here thinking,
yeah, I want that?
I want that.
I want you to want it!
I hope so!
See, that's the kind of
thing that I'm afraid of.
That you went out of
here not thinking that.
I hope you did! I hope some of you did!
You were feeling like: I want that!
I want to know more of the fullness
of Christ settling in to my heart.
I want that. I want it deeper.
But, tomorrow came and what happens?
We forget.
We become distracted by something else.
Oh, you were fully resolved a week ago.
A week ago right now, it was like,
ah, I want that!
I'm going to open the door!
I want Christ to come in.
You prayed last week:
Lord, give me that!
The thing that Paul prayed for.
Give me people to pray that for me!
I want it.
But the cares and the concerns
and the trivialities of the world -
and you see, our commitment is weak.
Our will is too weak.
Your faith is too weak.
I mean, you hear the man in Scripture:
"Lord, I believe. Help my unbelief."
And I guess one of the things
that I would have our faith to go to
in the very beginning is this belief
that there is a God who can and will
and does strengthen His people.
Has your faith even
latched on to this reality?
That there is more -
I can have Christ settle in.
I can have Him come into me
in a way that He's never come into me.
Go back and read the Song of Solomon.
You want to feel this at the level -
marriage is only the picture!
The intimacies of marriage
are only the picture.
And you can go back there
and you can say yes,
"my Beloved, He put His
hand to the door latch."
And what happened?
"Well, I already washed my feet."
Is that not the sad commentary
on too many of us?
Yes, I want it! He stands at the door!
He's knocking! I want to let Him in!
But it's just like the Song of Solomon.
We hesitated.
We hesitated.
Something else was more important.
You know what will happen?
The Lord will test your heart.
I wanted to sing that song:
"I asked the Lord that I might grow."
Because you know what happens oftentimes?
You say, "Yes, Lord. I want this.
And I'm going to seek to be careful
to not let the kinds
of things into my life
that might grieve and offend You.
I want You to find my heart
a sufficient place for
You to dwell deeply in."
And you know, you begin to pray for this,
and you begin to long for this.
And what happens?
You begin to pray,
"Lord, strengthen me for this.
More of this. More of Christ."
And then you know what happens?
The Lord tests your heart.
You remember the song.
Suddenly Newton's hymn breaks in upon us.
It can seem very discouraging.
Yes, brother, I went
out of here last week.
I was very determined, but you know
what I found during the week?
I found such manifestations
of pride in my own heart
and idolatry or something else.
I asked the Lord that I might grow.
But you see, you forgot the song.
Because you hear things
like this and it's like:
That's glorious! Christ coming in!
And oh, bringing His fragrance,
His power and His presence
in my inner being.
Yes! I want that!
I asked the Lord that He might come in.
And Newton said,
"and seek more earnestly His face."
Yes, I want to seek more
earnestly to open that door
that He might come in.
"'Twas He who taught me thus to pray."
Isn't Paul teaching us to pray this way?
That Christ may come in.
Lord, You're teaching us to pray.
"And He I trust has answered prayer,
but has been such a way as
almost drove me to despair."
See, that's often what happens.
Lord, please come in.
Come close.
Indwell.
Come in and sup with me.
And see, we hope the
same way Newton hoped.
"I hoped that in some favored hour,
at once He'd grant me my request.
By His love's constraining power,
subdue my sins and give me rest."
Instead of this:
"He made me feel the
hidden evils of my heart,
let the angry powers of hell
assault my soul in every part."
And you know what happens?
You suddenly feel like,
Lord, I want this.
I want to go deeper.
But as soon as I set my heart to it
and I begin to pray I feel like
I'm further away than ever from Christ.
You may actually feel much
worse now than before.
Why? Because things have come up.
They've come to the surface in your heart
that you never imagined were there.
It drives you to despair.
It drives you to be desperate.
But you know what I say?
Is look, this is often part of it.
This is often what God is doing.
Why? You have to remember this.
I think this is key.
Those Laodiceans -
if Jesus would have
just broken in right away
and said to them,
"I stand at the door and knock.
Open up."
Well, you know what they were saying.
We're rich.
We've got our act together.
We don't need anything.
We've prospered. In need of nothing.
And you see, you feel so boldly
and confidently, "Yeah, I'm good."
"Christ, come on in."
But Jesus said this to them:
You know what the problem is?
You don't recognize
the reality about yourself.
What?
The reality is that you're wretched,
miserable, poor, blind, and naked.
And you see, what we
have to recognize is this:
That when Christ comes in,
we don't deserve it.
We don't deserve it.
Our faith needs to go there.
Our faith needs to
latch on to that reality.
Christ coming in and settling down,
it's entirely a mercy.
You don't deserve it
and your performance
isn't the basis of it.
Look, it's true,
you can do things to
drive your Master away.
There's no question about that.
But how does Jesus want the Laodiceans
to approach the door?
Confident? Got our act together?
Let me tell you this.
If you began to pray
and you began to seek this,
and suddenly God began
to show you things in your heart,
then you know what?
What you want to do
is like the Laodiceans,
you want to repent.
You want to recognize what you are
in your own strength.
And recognize that this is
God's way of taking you on,
taking you deeper.
To sweep that heart
that Christ may come in.
Don't resist that.
And don't be in despair because of it.
Oh, the devil will be right there saying,
"Look at you. You're a mess.
You think Christ is going to
come in and dwell there?"
Listen, whatever his foul language may say
you remember this:
Christ came to save sinners.
And He came to save them
and He came to love them
and He came to commune with them
and He came to dwell within them.
And never because of
any merits on their part.
Simply because for their sake,
He's willing to die and to do this
that the glory of God might be shown.
Several years ago,
actually when I was in
this portion of Scripture,
maybe a verse or two removed
from where we are right now,
I first brought up this picture.
Praying Payson - Edward Payson.
I'm going to his hometown.
I've seen his grave.
I'll be heading there in August.
In Payson's works,
you remember the concentric circles.
He basically paints a picture.
Imagine the sun in the middle.
Concentric circles moving out.
Concentric means they
all have the same center.
Concentric circles moving outward
like the orbit of planets
in the solar system.
Christ is in the middle.
And you know what?
The tighter the diameter,
the more - more real, the closer
that Christ is dwelling.
And listen, Payson paints
the picture like this:
he says those that are closest in -
closest to the sun -
he says, "they're the ones who value
the presence of their Savior
so highly that they cannot bear
to be at any remove from Him.
Even their work..."
He recognizes they need to work.
They can't be in prayer all day
or just sitting in their Bibles all day.
But even in their work,
"they will bring up and do it in the light
of His countenance."
They're knowing His presence
right there,
and they're mindful to find that presence.
Some of you have heard how Wesley said
he was determined to pray until he prayed.
He was willing to pray until he found God.
That's the kind of Christianity you want.
You want it to where you
are going to press on
until you find Him.
These people - they don't
want to ever lose Him.
They don't want to lose
"one ray, one beam of His light."
Now, he takes us out
to the next concentric circle.
He says, "Others,
who to be sure would not be content
to live out of Christ's presence,
but they're yet less wholly absorbed by it
than those on the inside.
And it may be seen a little farther off.
Engaged here and there
in their various callings.
Their eyes generally upon their work,
but often looking up for the light
which they love."
But they're just not as sensitive.
Then he says there's a third class.
A third circle.
A bigger, broader diameter.
Further away.
It's beyond the first two.
"But, it's yet within
the life-giving rays."
They're Christians.
"It includes a doubtful multitude."
And by "doubtful," he doesn't mean
doubtful whether they're saved.
He says they are within
the light-giving rays.
They're doubtful
about what they really want most in life.
"Many of whom are so much engaged
in their worldly schemes.
They may be seen standing
sideways to Christ."
Brethren, if the truth be known,
how many of us are sideways standers
to Christ?
"...Looking mostly the other way.
Only now and then turning their faces
towards the light."
Now he goes further out.
"Yet farther out, amongst the last
scattered rays of the sun.
So distant that it's often doubtful
whether they come at all
within the influence
of those light beams."
They may not be real.
"It's a mixed assemblage of busy ones,
some with their backs
wholly turned upon the sun.
Most of them so careful and troubled
about their many things
as to spare but little time
for their Savior.
The reason why the men of this world
think so little of Christ is
they do not look at Him.
Their backs being turned to the sun,
they can see only their own shadows
and are therefore wholly taken up
with themselves.
While the true disciple,
looking only upward and inward,
sees nothing but his Savior
and learns to forget himself."
I would say this,
if Christ does not settle down -
this is the prayer -
that Christ may settle down
in your heart through faith.
If Christ doesn't settle down in you,
what do you have?
If you're in there by yourself,
and you look around and it's just you -
your will, your desires -
what do you have?
What loneliness!
What emptiness!
Are you there alone?
Or is the presence of Christ's
own self there with you?
His personal presence. His power.
At the center of your being,
the center of your consciousness,
living there.
What the height of foolishness
to say, well, I believe.
So whatever you're talking about,
it must be real.
Height of foolishness
to be content with that.
Look, you want to be like these people
who look up and there He is.
There are the beams of His light,
of His glory that radiate
and you have a sense:
I'm not alone.
He's here with me.
I'm not alone.
His blood has covered me.
I'm not alone. His voice speaks to me.
I'm not alone. I smell the
fragrance of His presence.
I feel Him here.
I feel Him on my conscience.
I feel Him in my thoughts.
I feel Him in my desires.
I feel Him in my hungering and thirsting.
I hear Him.
That voice.
You don't want to just say,
no, it's not true, but I'm a believer,
so it must be true.
You try to persuade yourself of that.
The question is this:
is Christ a living reality?
And you know what it seems like
to those who say, "yes, He is"?
Those are the ones more
desperate to get more.
Oh, this is good.
Lloyd-Jones said this -
and I feel it's spot on -
he says, "I've often felt that there are
many people today
who have taken so much by faith,
that they have nothing."
You hear what he's saying?
Of course, he's not talking
about genuine faith.
Because I'll tell you
what genuine faith does.
You know it - those
champions in Scripture,
or you find people that "by faith..."
one guy did this,
"by faith" she did this,
"by faith..."
What did they do? They pressed forward.
They saw the promise.
And they sought to embrace that promise.
They saw a city
whose foundations were of God
and they pressed forth.
And you know what it says?
It says they had opportunity to go back,
but they didn't go back.
And you know what? You
have an opportunity to go back,
just like it was before you
ever heard this message.
But you know what they did by faith?
They embraced the promises.
They obtained the promises.
That's what faith does.
Faith presses in.
Faith goes on.
What Lloyd-Jones is talking about
is the kind of faith
that is not true faith at all.
It believes some facts
it's content therewith
and it just seeks to persuade oneself
that all these theories in their brain
are somehow reality.
But it doesn't act on what it believes.
Listen, if you believe this;
if you believe there is a way
to go over and open the door,
then I would take up your mind
and your thought and your meditations
and your Scripture readings
and your prayers with:
"Lord, show me and teach me
and strengthen me
according to the riches of Your glory
that I might have the strength
to persist enough to
make it over to the door
and open it up.
I want You in here.
I want to know something about You
beyond what I know now!"
Anybody else want that?
I hope you do.
Embrace it. Chase it. Pursue it.
Open that door.
Pray. That's what Paul was doing.
Pray.
We need to be strengthened to persist
and to pursue:
Lord, I believe. Help my unbelief.
Lord, I want this,
but help me to want it more.
Strengthen me to pursue.
Strengthen me to press in.
Because we can get all lathered up,
and I know many times
through my Christian life
I've been right there.
You feel so powerfully affected,
like, oh, I could never go
back to how I was before.
And then what happens? A week later,
you're back to where you were before.
Why?
Why?
Because we need to be strengthened.
We need more resolve.
We need more commitment.
We need more humility.
We need to see ourselves more like
what Jesus was telling
those Laodiceans they needed to see them.
You're miserable.
You're wretched.
You're poor, you're blind,
and you're naked.
By ourselves, we are.
Separate from Christ,
that's exactly what we are.
"Vile" is how Wesley put it.
As Christians, aren't we obedient?
As Christians, aren't we good?
Yes, but you can view those realities
separate from Christ.
When we become self-confident -
that's where the Laodiceans
were - self-confident.
You know what kind of
Laodicean lukewarm attitude,
how it would manifest itself here?
It's just: I'm good.
That's what they were: "I'm good."
We got it. We're okay.
We're rich.
We've got our act together.
Things are good.
And you get done
with this, and it's like,
"Whatever. I'm good."
"I'm out of here."
That's a present-day Laodicean.
May God help us to abhor that
and press on.
Don't be content.
Don't be content to not be able to say,
you know what?
I don't know the fullness of that text;
I don't know the fullness
of Ephesians 3:17,
but you know what, ever since
I heard it preached on,
I have longed, I have thought on it,
I have meditated on it,
I have given myself to thinking about it,
I've prayed for it.
I am pursuing God for it.
And you know what?
You know what the reality is?
I don't know as much as
I think I can know about that,
but God has broken in.
There has been light.
There has been a closeness.
Things are happening.
Because when Christ comes in -
"I will come into him."
That's what He promises.
"I will come in."
Look, if it happens,
you're going to be able
to have a testimony
that you're going to be able to share.
What could be better?
What can be more glorious?
What? You're too busy?
Are you too busy to sleep?
Are you too busy to eat?
Are you too busy for this?
What's more important?
Man doesn't live by bread alone.
What's most important?
Look at that prayer and say:
God promises something in that prayer
and I want it.
Lord, give it to me.
Please, Lord, give it to me.
Father, I pray for all of us.
Give us more.
Give us more.
And give us a discontentment
to simply drink of the broken cisterns.
Give us more.
I pray in the name of
our Lord Jesus Christ,
Amen.