TRUE REVIVAL: Conformity to Christ By Francis Frangipane

We have three foundational standards in our home church, River of Life Ministries. One is to be a house of prayer. That means our hearts are positioned to stand in the gap in prayer between the judgement and the mercy of God. Our earnest goal is to manifest the intercession of Christ Himself, where redemption brings an end to sin rather than God using His wrath.

Another of our goals is to attain Christ’s meekness. This forever will be a goal because the moment we assume we’ve attained it, we’ve actually lost it. Yet, possessing the humility of Christ remains an ever living passion in our spirits. Without humility, we can’t see with clarity what we lack in spiritual substance. Humility enables us to grow in all the other virtues and gifts we see manifest in Jesus.

However, the very center of our vision at River of Life is to attain the character and power of Jesus Christ. Humility helps us see what we lack; prayer helps us appropriate God’s provision for that need. Yet, the pinpoint goal is the full revelation of God’s Son manifest within a many membered body.

People define success in many ways — range of influence, souls saved, churches started, etc. However, to me the definition of a successful life is measured in how truly transformed we are to Christ’s likeness. When persecuted, do we pray? When attacked, do we turn the other cheek? When threatened by the impossible, do we trust God? When crucified, do we forgive?

You see, the issue is not how many people are attending church, but how many are becoming Christlike. The evidence of true revival is not whether we fall, jump, roar or soar, but how Christlike we are on Monday morning when we’re in the world.

One Goal
Attaining Christlikeness must become our life. In His prayer in John 17, Jesus said, “This is eternal life, that they may know Thee, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom Thou hast sent.” We cannot know who God is without first knowing Jesus Christ. To know Christ is to know God; to see Christ and what He did, is to behold the beauty of God.

Consider: Paul’s primary goal wasn’t to convert the world, but to reveal Christ to the world. He never laid out a plan to write two-thirds of the New Testament. He never sought even to become an apostle. His one singular passion was to know Jesus.

In his letter to the church in Philippi, Paul reveals the inner cause of His outward achievements. He writes, “that I may know Him, and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed to His death” (Phil. 3:10). He said he counted “all things to be loss in view of the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish in order that I may gain Christ” (Phil. 3:8). His love and passion for Christ produced miracles, power, virtue, revelation and conversions of sinners in the world.

Beware Of The Dogs
A mature Christian is one who sees Christlikeness as the true objective of His salvation (Phil 3:15). In contrast, Paul warned the church that there were goals that could awaken false religious fervor, which would obscure our vision of personal transformation. Thus, he wrote, “Beware of the dogs, beware of the evil workers, beware of the false circumcision” (Phil 3:2).

In the first century, dogs were not so much pets as they were scavengers, animals that fed on garbage and waste. Likewise, there are Christians who are always sniffing out what is wrong, looking for what is corrupt. They actually feed off the knowledge of other people’s failures. Paul says to beware of the dogs. Don’t become a Christian who feeds off garbage.

He also says to beware of the “false circumcision” and the “evil workers.” Under the Jewish Law, circumcision of the flesh was one of a long list of painful obligations that were necessary to be accepted by God. Paul says that all of those obligations were fulfilled in Christ. True circumcision is something God does to the heart by the Spirit (Rom 2:29). An evil worker was one who, among other things, placed upon the Christian a yoke of religious bondage instead of the yoke of Christ.

One True Goal
A time will come when every knee will bow and every tongue confess Jesus Christ is Lord. Between now and the fulfillment of that promise, the church will increasingly become Christlike. Our passion must be to know Jesus and become like Him. We must reach for this goal while we are in this world, not the next. It will not be difficult to become Christlike in heaven; God wants us Christlike on earth – at work, in our neighborhoods and in our families.

Conformity to Christ is God’s promise for each of us. Scriptures tell us that “as many as may be the promises of God, in Him they are yes” and “amen” (2 Cor 1:20). Whatever is in your heart that you are believing for, God says the answer is “yes!” That’s how much the Father loves His Son. That’s how high a price Jesus paid for us. But first, if you want the promises, you’ve got to pursue Christlikeness, for the promises are “in Him.” The first promise that God seeks to fulfill is the promise of His Son revealed through us.

The Father, who knows us intimately, is continually drawing us toward knowing Him. This is the essence of all true spiritual experience. The journey is described in the 139th Psalm:

“O Lord, Thou hast searched me and known me. Thou dost know when I sit down and when I rise up; Thou dost understand my thought from afar. Thou dost scrutinize my path and my lying down, and art intimately acquainted with all my ways.”

The word translated “scrutinize” literally means “to winnow.” God winnows our path. When a farmer winnows grain, he throws the grain and its mixture of straw and husks into the air. The kernels of wheat or barley fall into a pile on the threshing floor, while the chaff, or refuse, is blown away by the wind. David is saying that this is what God does to us. He winnows our lives, allowing the Holy Spirit to blow away our chaff, so that what remains is the pure grain of our lives, resting at His feet.

I tell you, if you are serious about wanting to be like Christ, He is going to put you in circumstances where your only true choice is to become like Him. I can think of many things that people attribute to me as being a virtue; they ask, “How did you attain such and such?” In reality, I had no choice. All my other choices were winnowed away. In Gethsemane, Jesus could indeed have had the cup of suffering removed — 12 legions of angels would have come to His aid (not that He needed angels to save Him). Yet to save Himself from the cross would mean all mankind would be lost. Yes, He had a choice, but He did not consider that a viable alternative. Likewise, God winnows us until the chaff, flesh and even the excess baggage of our lives are removed. What remains is the most precious element of our lives: Christ in us.

In the story of the Israelites’ captivity, we find cruel taskmasters appointed over them, who afflicted the Hebrews continuously (Ex 1:11). Yet, verse 12 says that the more the taskmasters afflicted them, the more the Israelites multiplied and spread out. This is the way it is with the Lord. The more the enemy seeks to afflict you in some battle, the more Christ begins to multiply in your life and the character of Jesus spreads throughout your soul.

In the midst of God’s winnowing, we must decide to be like Jesus. There is something that happens deep inside when we say, unequivocally, that our vision and passion is the pursuit of Christlikeness. When conformity to Jesus becomes the reason we live, true revival has begun in our lives.

Resource: http://www.frangipane.org/cgi-bin/gx.cgi/AppLogic+FTContentServer?pagename=FaithHighway/10000/1000/728/textmessage

How Kingdom Principles Transform Leaders and Their Ministries – James B. and Molly Davis Scott

The Impact of Kingdom Leaders

With so much being written and taught on leadership, why does the leadership crisis continue to grow in the Church? It’s because one critical element is still lacking in our understanding of spiritual leadership. Yes, we need leaders who possess excellent leadership skills and can make effective decisions, but that’s not enough. There’s more to it than grasping the “how to” techniques of leadership, or even developing a certain leadership style.

In my tiny bedroom as a child, there hung a picture of a Scot collie standing over a little lamb in the midst of a violent Canadian snowstorm. Often I’d lie there thinking about that poor lamb asleep in the snow. In the distance you could see the vultures, waiting to kill and devour the unsuspecting lamb. You could hear the fierce encircling snow and wind, and feel the disorientation that produces an intense desire to lie down—a singular moment that brings death.

I’d marvel at that brave collie standing over the lamb, raising its voice against the bitter wind, calling for the master. I dreamed of growing up to be like that collie, finding lost and helpless sheep asleep in the storms of life and calling for the Master.

There are destructive, even hateful forces in this world seeking to destroy us. Sometimes we feel like curling up, hoping the storm will pass over so we won’t have to face the struggle any longer. It’s easy to want to escape, but the best recourse from evil is to recognize its existence, preparing to meet it head on.

Too many sheep are being lost without experiencing the full and abundant life God intends for them. And too few collies are out there calling for the Master’s help. God is calling for Kingdom leaders who love God and others with their whole being to go out into the storms of life and find the lost, bringing them to the Master.

The Character of Leadership

Becoming a Kingdom leader is primarily about who we are on the inside. As the transformation process progresses, it influences our style of leadership and determines our effectiveness as spiritual leaders, impacting the organizations we work in. Kingdom people want to follow a Kingdom leader.

Kingdom leaders have a strong desire to be complete Christians. They want to grow by participating with God in making their lives all they can be for themselves and others. They’re willing to work for the Kingdom, carrying on the ministry of Jesus through the Holy Spirit. But Kingdom people need this warning: neither Satan, nor the world, nor casual Christians want you to become a complete Christian.

No Christian organization or ministry can rise above the level of the quality and commitment of its leadership. Character is an essential dimension of leadership: Therefore, we want Kingdom leaders who are:

  • Walking with God. This is a leader who truly has a heart for God and is faithfully seeking his direction through prayer, Scripture and by listening to the Holy Spirit as he speaks through mature Christians.
  • Reflecting Christ’s character. A Kingdom leader must have integrity, honesty and truthfulness—all those qualities that generate trust. Without trust there’s little hope for growth and success in ministry. Holiness in heart and life is the basis of respect and foundational in building respect.
  • Relating as a team player. Kingdom leaders are secure enough to work in harmony with other strong leaders in a team relationship. Trust and respect are developed in an environment where everyone feels free to share his or her thoughts, feelings, ideas and corrections. Real leaders are open to receiving unfavorable feedback about situations and figuring out within the team how to deal with them.
  • Caring with action. This is genuine compassion, like Jesus modeled, that not only listens to what people have to say, but does something about the situation. Listening to people is a wonderful ability; however, for a leader that’s not enough. Leaders go into action and make things happen.
  • Exhibiting a gentle spirit. Great leaders always seem to have this element of humility, gentleness and kindness. This is not weakness, but the essence of Christ-likeness.

Three Doors to Spiritual Transformation

Becoming a Kingdom leader who produces other Kingdom leaders happens only through spiritual transformation. It’s a very personal and individual process, but it happens best within the community of faith.

To be effective representatives of Jesus in the world, it’s imperative that we live in an obedient relationship with the Spirit. Everything else is secondary to this primary qualification. His active presence in our lives is absolutely essential in becoming who we want to be and in living how we want to live. Through this process our lives are transformed, giving us greater power to serve Christ in the world and greater effectiveness in leading others in Kingdom work. It’s only then that our organizations can be transformed.

There are three doors that lead us into Kingdom effectiveness:

  • Door One: Refreshing our love and obedience to the Trinity. In our union with God the Father, Son and Holy Spirit, we’re empowered to become complete Christians. By developing a unique and special relationship with each person in the Trinity, we’re shaped to live and love as God intended.
  • Door Two: Restoring the power of connection. The unequivocal call of Jesus is to be in union with his Body, where we find the life-giving force and power for Kingdom living. Through other believers we discover the help we need to sustain our calling in ministry.
  • Door Three: Reforming our lives in service to the world. When we become one with the Spirit, we hear his call to go into the world and proclaim by word and deed God’s Kingdom with love, compassion, and justice.

Living in the Realities

Kingdom people are fortified by three gifts from the Father:

  • God gives you his righteousness so you can be made right with him.
  • God gives you his peace so you can live without fear or an anxious spirit in this world.
  • God gives you his courage so you can speak up for issues of justice and mercy.

The last reality is the most exciting: When we move toward God, he moves toward us. Spiritual forces are put into motion, yielding joy and effectiveness beyond anything we could ever do on our own.

God has provided a vast pool of resources for effective ministry. With these tremendous promises and resources, we’re now ready for whatever task the Spirit gives us. What more could be needed?

Resource: http://www.christianleadershipalliance.org/?kingdom_leaders