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The Pleasure Of Progress Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 5, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Every Christian is to be pressing on to gain that more in Christ that can never be exhausted. Progress is to be a permanent part of the Christian life. There is no level where we have arrived at the end of our potential.
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Spain once controlled both sides of the Mediterranean Sea at the Straits
Of Gibraltar. On her coins were stamped the two Pillars Of Hercules. They
represented the two great rocks, and the words NE PLUS ULTRA=no more beyond.
As far as they were concerned, Spain was the end of the world. Paul wanted
to get to Spain, for that was the end of the known world, and he wanted to
touch the whole world for Christ. But then, brave men developed the courage
to sail beyond these pillars, and they discovered a whole new world. Spain
was forced to change their coin. They just took off the first word and left
PLUS ULTRA=more beyond.
There is always more beyond, because God has written the principle of
progress into His plan for man. Progressive revelation characterizes the
Bible. God does not tell man everything all at once. He first gives the
law, and later the Gospel. Jesus said to His disciples, "You are not yet
ready for all the Holy Spirit will teach you. It will come when you are
ready." They first followed Him and became loyal to Him as Lord. Then they
were filled with the Holy Spirit, and empowered to carry the good news into
all the world. The body of Christ started small, but grew until it was a
world wide organization. The principle of progress is everywhere in the
Bible. We start as babes in Christ, and then press on to become mature
servants in Christ. Growth, advancement, development, improvement, and
progression are the very essence of the Christian life. Jesus said to His
disciples that they would one day do even greater things than He did.
Every Christian is to be pressing on to gain that more in Christ that
can never be exhausted. Progress is to be a permanent part of the Christian
life. There is no level where we have arrived at the end of our potential.
Paul said we know only in part. In fact, progress is eternal so that even
in heaven we will be guided by the motto-more beyond. The idea of a static
heaven where there is no more progress is contrary to the nature of God. It
would be mean we would exhaust the infinite creativity of God, and be stuck
in a perfection where nothing new and exciting could be added to our
experience. This is a denial of the infinite, which by definition has no
level beyond which it can not go. If it cannot go further, it is finite and
not infinite. By definition progress is eternal with an infinite God.
The saints and theologians of history have all agreed that heaven will
be a place of progress. For progress to cease we would all have to become
equal with God, and that can never be. We will, however, be ever moving in
that direction. The poet was right who wrote-
Thank God! There is always a land beyond
For us who are true to the trail;
A vision to seek, a beckoning to peek,
A farness that never will fail.
I like that phrase, for those who are true to the trail. This is one
of themes of Psa. 84. Progress in Psalm 84 is portrayed as a pilgrimage in
verse 6. They are called blessed who have set their hearts on pilgrimage.
These are people who have determined their lives will be a journey, which
will draw them ever closer to God. That is their goal says verse 7, to
appear before God in Zion. For the Old Testament saint this meant getting
to Jerusalem. For the New Testament saint it is getting to the New
Jerusalem in heaven. In either case, life is a journey through some tough
places, like the valley of Baca, but they never quit. They go from
strength to strength, that is, they get stronger with every challenge they
face and overcome. They keep on keeping on, making progress until they
arrive at their goal.
So the main thing we see about Biblical progress is-we need a goal.
You cannot define progress without a goal. If you are on highway 35 heading
South at 65 miles per hour you are making good time, but there is no way to
know if you are making progress until your goal is known. If your
destination is North, we know you are not making progress, no matter how
fast you are going South. If you are only going 20 miles per hour, but you
are going North, you are making progress. It is not the speed, but the goal
that defines progress. It is the goal that makes any race meaningful.
Without a goal you only have motion and action, but no progress, for a goal
is necessary to measure progress.