-
Time To Engage: "Secret Discipleship”
Contributed by Dennis Lee on Jan 19, 2025 (message contributor)
Summary: There are no 007 Christians. Therefore, it’s time to come out of the darkness and into the light of Jesus. In this message we’ll look at how this is our reasonable service, an essential necessity of belief, and an absolute demand in our journey of faith.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- …
- 5
- 6
- Next
Time to Engage: The Journey to Discipleship
“Secret Discipleship”
Watch on YouTube channel: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8zGVHkfAZug
As you may be aware, we’re into our series on discipleship, which is taken from the third word of the vision that God gave us last year entitled, “Exchange, Energize, and Engage.”
This is also part of our overall vision of discipleship here where our goal is to build up the house of God within every person. The Apostle Paul said, “Do you not know that you are the temple of God and that the Spirit of God dwells in you?” (1 Corinthians 3:16)
We started this series at the beginning of the year looking at how we go about building a spiritual life, and then last week we looked at, in this building process, our need to first and foremost prioritize our lives to Jesus, and we did that by looking at the priorities in Jesus’s life.
Today, I would like to look at a topic of how we are trying to play 007 Christians, and what I am calling “Secret Disciples.”
But instead of getting right into the teaching I’d like to tell you a true story about a fourth century Christians monk named “Telemachus.”
Telemachus lived in a remote village, tending his garden and spending much of his time in prayer. One day he heard the voice of the Lord telling him to go to Rome, so he obeyed, setting out on foot.
Weeks later, he arrived in the city at the time of a great festival. The little monk followed the crowd who were heading into the Coliseum. He saw the gladiators stand before the emperor and say, “We who are about to die salute you.” Then he realized these men were going to fight to the death for the entertainment of the crowd. He cried out, “In the name of Christ, stop!”
As the games began, he pushed his way through the crowd, climbed over the wall, and dropped to the floor of the arena. When the crowd saw this tiny figure rushing to the gladiators and saying, “In the name of Christ, stop!” they thought it was part of the show and began laughing.
When they realized it wasn’t, the laughter turned to anger. As he was pleading with the gladiators to stop, one of them plunged a sword into his body. He fell to the sand. As he was dying, his last words were, “In the name of Christ, stop!”
Then a strange thing happened. The gladiators stood looking at the tiny figure lying there. A hush fell over the Coliseum. Way up in the upper rows, a man stood and made his way to the exit. Others began to follow. In dead silence, everyone left the Coliseum.
The year was 391 A.D., and that was the last battle to the death between gladiators in the Roman Coliseum. Never again in that great stadium did men kill each other for the entertainment of the crowd, all because of one tiny voice that could hardly be heard.
This story illustrates the power that one person can have when they courageously take a stand for the Lord.
Times haven’t changed all that much from when Telemachus took that fateful journey. The same games are played, maybe not as deadly, but just as brutal. It is played in today’s MMA (or Mixed Martial Arts), in unsanctioned street fights, or on the Internet where kids are becoming adept at killing others on video screens.
The unfortunate reality is that we tend to compromise our beliefs and values so as not to upset the fun or recreation of others.
In churches there are in endless discussions concerning these beliefs and values, but what I’ve found is that they’re not so much to see how beliefs and values can be kept, but rather to see how many of them can be eliminated.
Christians are saying that it isn’t necessary to go to church, to tithe, to get baptized, or to actively witness, saying, “My life is my witness.” It’s gotten to the point where some who call themselves Christians believe that confession is not essential to living a Christian life, or to salvation. Christianity has become more of a fire insurance policy, a guarantee, if you would, against hell.
But the Bible knows of no such faith. The Bible teaches us to discover God’s will and then do it. It involves finding out what the Bible says, and then living our lives in accordance with God’s word, not according to our wishes or desires.
What might be said is that Christianity is in danger of becoming wrongly defined. Let me give an illustration of what I mean by being wrongly defined.
On a test a teacher asked, “What is a lobster?” One student wrote, “The lobster is a red fish that moves backwards.” The teacher wrote in the margin. “A very good answer, but for three exceptions: In the first place, the lobster isn’t a fish; in the second place, it is not red, and in the third place, it doesn’t move backwards. Aside from these little mistakes your answer may stand.”