“For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways” (Isaiah 55:8).
“When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on earth?” (Luke 18:8)
Here in one paragraph is the boiled-down gist of what I have learned about the way God works….
When God decides to do something eternal, He loves to start small, use ordinary people, employ any method He chooses, and take His own good time about it. At the conclusion, only people of faith will be on hand, seeing what God has done, loving what He has revealed, and basking in the glory on full display.
Or, more concisely, “Our God is in the Heavens; He does whatever He pleases.” That happens to be Psalm 115:3.
Our Lord, being God, can do this any way He pleases. But what I have noticed and what I preach is that His way most often seems to involve the following:
God loves to start small. The Lord began a nation with elderly Abraham and Sarah. He began to deliver Israel from Egypt with an 80-year-old has-been, Moses. And when the time came to redeem a lost world, He sent a Baby.
That process continues today on every level. When God initiates a great ministry, He starts with the germ of an idea or a burden on someone’s heart, and goes from there.
The kingdom of heaven is like a mustard seed…the least of all the seeds, but when it is grown it…becomes a tree…. (Matthew 13:31-32)
As the prophet Zechariah preached, the temple of Solomon was being rebuilt but on a vastly smaller scale. He asked, “For who has despised the day of small things?” (Zechariah 4:10) Good question, isn’t it? I have an opinion on that, one you might not care for: Preachers seem to do that. They disdain small offerings, small crowds, and little events. You will even hear this from time to time, “Well, we’re a small church and we can’t do anything!” I submit that is almost blasphemy. It’s unbelief, that’s for sure.
I love the statement of Jonathan, champion son of King Saul. As he and his armor-bearer decided to take on a group of Philistine soldiers, Jonathan said, “It doesn’t matter to the Lord whether He saves by the few or by the many!” (I Samuel 14:6). Don’t you love that?
God loves to use ordinary people. “You see your calling, brethren,” said Paul to the Corinthian church. “Not many mighty. Not many noble. Not many wise according to the flesh” (I Corinthians 1:26). When Jesus needed 12 apostles, He went not to the rabbinical school nor to the Council of Seventy but to the seashore where He chose untrained but hard-working fishermen.
Celebrities and dignitaries often have more obstacles to deal with. The common people, pardon the expression, and those who live simply have fewer complications and can respond more quickly. “As Jesus passed on from there, He saw a man named Matthew sitting at the tax office. And He said to him, ‘Follow me.’ So he arose and followed Him” (Matthew 9:9).
The worker on the Graham dairy farm in Charlotte NC in 1934 took 16-year-old Billy Graham to the Mordecai Ham crusade where Jesus saved him. He said this very thing: “You think this boy must have been someone special as a teenager. But he was not. In fact, if you pulled together a hundred teenage boys from Charlotte, and I told you God was going to use one of them to bring the gospel of Jesus to millions, you would not have picked Billy Graham. He was a typical teen. It was as if the Almighty said, ‘Eeny meenie, miney mo….I’ll take that one.’”
This is encouragement for all of us, but an excuse for none of us.
God loves to use surprising methods. Those who would be used of Jesus will be asked to give when they have nothing left, to love their enemies, to rejoice in adversity, and turn the other cheek (see Luke 6:27-38). They will sing at midnight after the beating they received earlier goes untreated and they are locked into a cold prison cell (Acts 16:25). They will rejoice they are counted worthy to suffer for The Name (Acts 5:41).
The Lord’s plan of spreading the gospel to the ends of the earth may require His disciples to be arrested and mistreated and called before Caesar to defend themselves. But when the magistrate orders, “Tell the court what you have been preaching,” the disciple is to let the Holy Spirit speak. This is His chosen method to get the truth to the rulers (see Matthew 10:16ff). So, when God’s people are arrested unfairly and put on trial, we must never think the Lord’s plan is being subverted. Often, this is His plan.
God does not mind taking His own good time. You and I are the ones in a hurry. But most of the prophecies about the Messiah were given 800 years before Jesus was born. For people alive today, that would be the equivalent of two hundred years before Columbus. The dark ages. Eventually one night outside Bethlehem, shepherds saw angels who told them “unto you is born this day in the city of David a Savior.” The time had come!
The sheep-herders ran into the city, hurrying from stable to stable until they found the little family, and they fell down and worshiped. Then, they hurried out and told everyone the great news. Then they went home to wait for God’s promises to be fulfilled in the Messiah, the Savior.
And they waited. For decades, they waited. Nothing was happening. Where was the promised Messiah? Didn’t we see Him as a baby? Didn’t the angels say this was it? So, where is He?
Abruptly, without a word of warning, one day an unkempt preacher walked out of the desert and began to preach and baptize at the Jordan. “Prepare ye the way of the Lord!” was his message. This was it. Jesus was near.
The Savior was here.
Three years later, on a mountaintop angels said to a group of bewildered apostles, “Don’t stand here gazing into the heavens. This same Jesus will come again in like manner as you have seen Him go.” It’s been 2,000 years since that promise was given. Is it still good? Should we still be expecting His return? “With the Lord, one day is as a thousand years and a thousand years as a day” (2 Peter 3:8).
When you start following Jesus, you may want to throw away your clock and your calendar. He operates on His own schedule.
At the end, only people of faith will still be standing, on hand to see and enjoy and worship. Everyone else will have grown tired of waiting and have wandered off.
Not everyone who starts out following Jesus sticks around to see how things work out, to see the coming together of all things, to enjoy the vindication of Truth and the victory of righteousness
Some cannot understand how Jesus’ methods apply to their situation and trust more to their own instincts and judgments. These abandon ship. They move along to the prosperity preachers and other false prophets who offer simpler programs and more immediate gratification, but have no patience with delayed reward nor appreciation for a Savior who would get Himself crucified and then try to make something good from it. (See Matthew 13:21, among other places)
Jesus said, “When the Son of Man comes, will He find faith on earth?” (Luke 18:8) Will He find anyone still believing, still standing by, still at work. “Blessed is that servant whom His master finds so doing when he comes” (Matthew 24:46).
That’s how He works. Therefore…
We should beware of placing our agenda, our instructions, our demands before the Lord. He is Lord. He is in charge. Our constant prayers should be “Thy will be done on earth as it is in Heaven” (Matthew 6:10) and “What will You have me to do?” (Acts 22:10).
We should learn to wait upon Him. “You will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous,” He said in Luke 14:14. Can we wait that long, believe that strong, sing that song? David said, “I waited patiently for the Lord and He inclined unto me and heard my prayer and brought me up…” (Psalm 40:1ff). Said the prophet, “They that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength….” (Isaiah 40:31).
We should not quit even when the results seem meager. “Let us not grow weary in well-doing, for in due season we shall reap, if we faint not” (Galatians 6:9).
And so, faithful disciple, “lift up your head; your redemption draweth nigh!” (Luke 21:28).
Amen. And double amen!