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Godly Change Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Mar 30, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Change is wise when the old way of doing something can be done better to fulfill the purpose for which you do it at all. The Christian life is to be a life of constant change where we are getting better and better at pleasing God.
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Many years ago the U. S. Army wanted to get off more rounds of cannon
fire, and so they hired a consultant to study the problem. He went into the
field and noticed that the soldiers stepped back from the cannon and waited
for about 3 seconds every time they fired it. When asked why they replied
that they were following directions laid down in the army manual. The
consultant read through all the back issues until he traced the instructions to
their origin in the Civil War. Soldiers were then advised to step back before
firing to hold the gun horses head so that they would not bolt and thus jerk
the cannon off target. These were important instructions at the time, but
everything had changed, and horses were no longer there. These instructions
had passed down for years and were followed even though they had no
relevance whatever. The manual was changed to fit the changed
circumstances.
Change is wise when the old way of doing something can be done better to
fulfill the purpose for which you do it at all. The Christian life is to be a life of
constant change where we are getting better and better at pleasing God by
loving Him with all our hearts, and by loving our neighbor as ourselves. The
goal of all we do as a church is change. Change is the name of the game, and
if we do not see change we are failing. Christ-likeness is only achieved by
change. Christian education does not happen just because information is
imparted. There are millions of non-Christians who can tell you the story of
Adam and Eve, Noah, and Jonah. They can even tell the story of the cross
and resurrection. They have the facts, but they are not changed by them.
You do not have a Christian education until the facts of the Bible change your
life, and lead you to a commitment to Christ as Lord of your life.
Nobody becomes a Christian without change, and nobody becomes a
growing Christian without more change. Change is the essence of the
Christian life, and when a Christian stops changing, they stop growing. The
Christian is only learning if he or she is changing. A school teacher told one
of her students he had to stay after school and write on the blackboard one
hundred times, so he would learn the proper way of saying it, "I have gone."
He laboriously worked his way through the 100 lines, and then he left this
note for the teacher: "I finished and I have went home." All his efforts were
not a learning experience for he did not change.
Learning means that you change in your thinking, feeling, or acting. If
change does not happen, learning has not happened. You cannot measure
Christian education by how many years you have gone to Sunday School, or
how many books you have read. The only measure that matters is how much
have you changed to become a Christ-centered person.
D. L. Moody wrote the entire theology of the Christian life on the fly leaf
of his Bible. He put it in 7 stages of change.
1. Justification-a change of standing before God.
2. Regeneration- a change of nature from God.
3. Repentance-a change of mind about God.
4. Conversion-a change of life for God.
5. Adoption-a change of family in God.
6. Sanctification-a change of service unto God.
7. Glorification-a change of place with God.
If the goal is to be like Jesus, and we are not yet there, then it follows that
change is what the Christian life is all about. It begins with change and does
not cease until we become like Him in the resurrection. An evangelist visiting
a girls mission school in the South Sea Islands was greeted by two rows of
girls singing, "What a wonderful change in my life has been wrought since
Jesus came into my life." He was deeply touched when one of the staff
members leaned over and whispered, "Everyone of those girls is either the
daughter or granddaughter of a cannibal." Change is the sign of authentic
Christianity.
Someone once very cleverly put up a sign in the church nursery using one
of Paul's sentences to the Corinthians. It was from I Cor. 15:51 which says,
"We will not all sleep but we will all be changed." Being changed is basic to
the nursery care of babies, and it is basic to the plan of God for His people.
The last thing that happens to us in time is change. The mortal puts on
immortality. Both the living and the dead has this in common: They end time
and begin eternity with change.
We could go and on with evidence to support the importance of change in