By
Leonard Ravenhill
“For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ.”
-Romans 14:10 KJV
I want to tell you a story about when I was a young
boy going to school. You know, I didn’t mind school too much, but in
those days I was very envious of the school Captain. His name was
Renton, and he sat just across the aisle from me. He was the best
soccer player in the school and that’s what I wanted to be. He was
the best at cricket, and I liked cricket. He was the best runner we
had, and I liked running. He was not only an excellent athlete, but
a very good artist as well. And on top of all that, he was the
smartest guy in the whole school.
If I could ever save up my stomachaches, I’d save them until the day
before the final exam. But my mother was smart. She knew I was
saving them up. I don’t know how she knew, but she always did. I’d
get up that morning and say, “Oh mother, I don’t feel good at all. I
think I should stay home today.” But she’d always say, “You can stay
home tomorrow - but not today.” But staying home tomorrow
wouldn’t do me any good because today was the day of the
final exam. Today was the day of judgment!
I know Renton never felt like that because whenever we had a test,
as soon as the questions were put down on the board, he would get
his paper and dash through them. He was through the first two or
three subjects before I’d even gotten the thing read. He and another
fellow used to say, “Oh boy, exams!” They knew they’d be first and
second in the class when the grades came out, and so they were
excited about taking the test. Final exams didn’t scare them. These
boys were always at the top. They were not afraid of the Day of
Judgment. They were not afraid—because they were prepared for it.
QUALITY NOT QUANTITY
“For we are God’s fellow workers; you are God’s field, God’s
building. According to the grace of God which was given to me, as a
wise master builder I laid a foundation, and another is building
upon it. But let each man be careful how he builds upon it. For no
man can lay a foundation other than the one which is laid, which is
Jesus Christ. Now if any man builds upon the foundation with gold,
silver, precious stones, wood, hay, straw, each man’s work will
become evident; for the day will show it, because it is to be
revealed with fire; and the fire itself will test the quality of
each man’s work” (I Cor. 3:9-13).
The above scripture is talking about the day all
believers will stand before the Lord. When every follower of Jesus
will account for his life and his deeds before all of heaven itself.
Notice what it says very carefully, “...the fire itself will test
the quality of each man’s work.” Not how much work,
but rather what kind of work. Not the quantity but the
quality. This scripture is speaking of your whole life’s work. In
other words, your life’s work can be wood or hay or straw—or it can
be silver, gold, or costly stones. And on that day, the fire will
put it to the final test. What fire? The Bible tells that God is
love, but it also tells us that He is a consuming fire as well.
(Heb. 12:29)
Paul continues by saying, “If any man’s work which he had built
upon it remains, he shall receive a reward. If any man’s work is
burned up, he shall suffer loss; but he himself shall be saved, yet
so as through fire” (I Cor. 3:14-15). This illustration would be
extremely significant to the people of Corinth that Paul was
speaking to, because not too long before this was written, their
whole city was devastated by fire. They all knew firsthand what
damage fire could do. When the fire swept through Corinth, every
house that was built out of wood, hay, or straw, was devastated and
left in ashes. But the more wealthy people there had houses built
with beautiful pillars of granite, and some even had houses built
totally out of marble. These houses made of costly stones were still
standing after the fire swept through, though they were obviously
very badly scorched.
YOUR LIFE INVESTMENT
Let’s visualize it another way. One man is given $10,000 and he
invests it in wood - maybe some lovely mahogany. So this man’s
entire life work is made out of wood. It’s very beautiful, but when
the fire goes through it, what do you have? All you have is ashes,
maybe up to your ankles, and that’s all there is left. The next man
is given $10,000 and he invests it in hay. Another man given the
same amount invests all of it in straw. Does that sound foolish?
Well, people do it every day. Why? Because if you put $10,000 into
hay or straw, it looks like you are getting a lot for your money.
You could probably buy half the straw in Texas for $10,000, but,
boy, you’re going to have a mess when the fire gets to it. Instead
of ashes to your ankles, or ashes to your knees, it’ll be up to your
nose maybe. But that’s what some lives are going to be like: wood,
hay, stubble—then ashes.
Now let’s look at a few people who made much wiser
investments. There’s a man over here who has $10,000, and he invests
it in gold. (He won’t get much at $400 an ounce, will he?) The next
man invests $10,000 in silver, and another man invests the same
amount in costly stones. Each of the six men I’ve just spoken of had
the same amount of money, but they all chose different things to
invest it in. Now, we are talking about your life’s work. Do you get
the picture? Our whole life, from the very moment we begin to
witness for Christ, including all of our service and our labor for
Him, is going to be tested by fire. We must be very careful to make
wise investments, or in the end, all that will be left is ashes.
ETERNAL VALUE
Will our life’s work stand the test of the fire when we come before
the Lord? Will it have lasting eternal value—or will it end up in
ashes? There’s an interesting difference between wood, hay,
straw—and gold, silver, and costly stones. Wood, hay, and stubble
are found above the ground. They catch the eye, just like many
people’s ministries do. They are quite plentiful and easy to find.
On the other hand, silver, gold, and precious stones are found below
the ground. Nobody sees them—again, like many people’s ministries.
They’re not just lying around in a field somewhere for anyone to
pick up. They are much harder to come by; in fact, it takes a lot of
hard work to get them. That’s why they are so expensive. They are of
much higher quality than many other things, and much more rare too.
Again, it’s the quality, not the quantity that sets their
value. Many things are difficult in the Christian life, but we
should desire to acquire those things which will hold their value,
not only on earth, but in heaven as well.
MINISTRY AND MONEY
Every person’s life, including all of his ministry, is going to pass
through the fire. There’s a lot of public ministry that’s going to
go down in flames on that day, my brothers. The fire is going to
take the big showy life of every man and burn it until only a bunch
of ashes is left. I’m tired of seeing these fellows begging for
money on television. I believe every dime that comes into any
ministry will need to be answered for before the Judgment Seat of
Christ one day. Jesus talked about these men who’d go and take
widows’ houses. (Luke 20:46-47) Well, that’s what many are
doing now. And they’re not satisfied that you give while you’re
living, they ask you to hand over your house and all the rest to
them in your will. They’re going to give an account to God in that
day, but I believe we’re also going to give an account.
A brother was telling me this week that when he got
baptized and went down into the water, he suddenly realized that he
had his wallet in his pocket. Not many wallets get baptized! We kind
of say, “Lord, You look after my sins. I’ll look after the rest.”
You’ll give an account to God for every penny you’ve earned since
you became the property of Jesus Christ. He doesn’t just take your
sins—He takes all of you.
Oh yes, many may want to get filled with the Holy
Ghost and get a bank balance, but how many of you are big enough to
say, “Lord, in this crucial hour in human history, let me fill up
with the sufferings of Christ”? Can He share His sorrow with you?
Are you prepared to challenge demon power and say, “Listen, I’ve
moved into the place where the Apostle Paul was when he said, ‘I
glory in tribulations and necessities and reproaches’”? Watch out
though, because if you’re going to get mature in God, all the dwarfs
around you will criticize you and sneer at you and say, “Trying to
be holier than the rest of us, huh?” So you don’t have time for
basketball or going to see a baseball game?” No, maybe you don’t,
but that’s nobody’s business but yours and God’s.
Do you get so near to the heart of God that you share
His grief over the world and over the backslidden church that we
have today? One of the most famous preachers in the country recently
called at nearly midnight and said, “I’ve come to this conclusion:
God Almighty has already taken His hand off America—for the simple
reason that we’ve had so much light and we’ve rejected it!” It’s not
only true that we live in a world of bankrupt politics, we live in a
world (this is the most tragic part of all) of a bankrupt church.
WILL CHRISTIANS BE JUDGED?
I heard a woman say not long ago, “Well, praise the Lord. I’m glad I
don’t have to account for anything when I go to heaven. There is no
condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.” Wait a minute, you
can never isolate a scripture by itself. There’s no condemnation for
our past sins, and I’m sure we are all mighty glad of that.
But God was always saying to Israel, “Remember when thou wast a
bondsman in Egypt...remember your sin...remember your iniquity.”
You might say, “It doesn’t say the Christians are
going to be judged out of the books.” Yes, I think it does. Where?
In Malachi, (Mal. 3:16). It says that God has a Book of Remembrance,
and I think it would do you good before you go to bed every night
this week to ask God, “What did You put in Your book today for my
life?” It doesn’t have to be some outward act. You can worship God
on a tractor. It may not be the best way, but you can do it.
The Bible says that “we shall all stand
before the Judgment Seat of Christ” (Rom. 14:10 KJV). I think
that scripture means just what it says.
THE HOLY DEAD
A hymn writer says, “From earth’s wide bounds and ocean’s farthest
coast, through gates of pearl, stream in a countless host, singing
Father, Son, and Holy Ghost, Hallelujah.”
All the saints of all the ages are going to be there.
There’s another old hymn and probably not very many of you could
recite it, but I’ll bet most of you know the chorus: “Oh, when the
saints go marching in.” You know, they dance to that every night
down in New Orleans. They shuffle their feet along Bourbon Street
and have a great time, but that song is not for them, it’s for the
REDEEMED. It says, “When the saints go marching in.”
The saints will march into heaven in a multitude which no man can
number.
I can’t wait to see all the saints of all the ages.
Man, I’ll be thrilled to look at Isaiah and Jeremiah and those major
and minor prophets. We’ll be looking around and saying, “Hey,
there’s Abraham. I didn’t think he’d look quite like that.” But he’s
going to be there, all right. And just think of seeing Matthew and
Mark and Luke and John and everybody in Acts. Won’t it be wonderful
to see those men who walked with Jesus!
Let’s think about Paul for a moment. He gave his
intellect to God. He wrote about 14 epistles and traveled all over
Asia Minor. He was lashed at the post 195 times. He was in
weariness, and fastings, and pain, and tribulation, and distress,
and famine, and nakedness. He was subjected to false brethren and to
perils of the deep. What do you think his reward is going to be for
living a life like that? GRACE is free, but REWARDS are not free.
You might say, “But you’re talking about works.” Sure I am - because
God did. Jesus did!
COSTLY STONES
Silver, gold, precious stones. What are the precious stones? When I
read that, I think of the breastplate that was on the priests in the
Old Testament. It was divided by four rows of stones—three stones in
each row. Each stone was different. Each stone stood for the name of
one of the 12 tribes of Israel. The priest wore the breastplate over
his heart as he went into the Holy Place to pray for the sins of the
people. How do you handle this? Do you enter the holiest place of
all to make intercession for the sins of the people? Do you enter
into intercession at all? This is only possible through the blood of
Christ and the anointing of the Holy Spirit.
Intercession is our job now. We don’t need to send a
priest into the Holy of Holies. We can go ourselves! The New
Testament tells us that we are all priests—that we are a part
of the Royal Priesthood (I Peter 2:9). Do you wonder why the world
is poor and sick outside? Because we really don’t know how to pray,
that’s why! Because we’re satisfied that we’ve left our lousy living
and we don’t drink or lust or damn ourselves every day. We’re
Christians now...and we’re so content and so happy and so satisfied.
SILVER
The silver . . . what is the silver? I guess you can interpret it
in different ways. But I like to think of the scripture in the book
of Proverbs that says, “The tongue of the righteous is as
choice silver,” (Proverbs 10:20). I believe that the silver may
signify the words that we speak. I believe that God has an eternal
record of every word we have spoken since we’ve been saved. That may
be embarrassing. Oh, we won’t be ashamed of the good things we’ve
said, but what about our idle words? You know, the gossip, the
slander, the criticism, the prejudice. What about the time when
somebody upset you and instead of being quiet, you just spilled out
everything that was on your heart at that moment? And can you think
of all the awesome words we’ve preached to thousands of people over
the years? We’re going to answer for every word—and the fire is
going to be put to them. Will they be wood, hay, or stubble—or will
they abide the fire?
GOLD
What is gold a sign of? I believe it’s a sign of our devotion to
God. If I could have a small melting pot here, I’d put your $10,000
worth of gold in it and melt it down. What happens when you burn
gold? Nothing! It just changes from solid to liquid, but you don’t
reduce it. Can you see all the saints standing in heaven? And
there’s Leonard Ravenhill—standing before Christ whose eyes are
filled with holiness. The whole place is breathing holiness. There
in the presence and the majesty of an awesome God, the record of my
poor life is read before all the saints of all the ages. And He puts
the fire to my devotional life. Am I just a good showman? I sure
like to preach because God called me to preach. I don’t care how I
preach, and I don’t care whether you believe me either. I’m not
responsible for that. I preach out of my heart all I believe, and
I’d die for it. But say, am I just a showman? What’s my secret life
like?
I’ve said it many times and I’ll say it again - no
man is greater than his prayer life. I don’t care how big his
organization is. Let me live with a man awhile and share his prayer
life, and I’ll tell you how tall I think he is, or how majestic I
think he is in God. What’s your devotional life like right now?
Would you like Gabriel to hand down the book of your devotional life
for the last month so it could be read out loud at church this
Sunday? The gold is going to be tried through our devotional life.
GREAT MEN OF PRAYER
You’ll discover this: The men that have been the most heroic for God
have been the men with the greatest devotional life. America has
produced some of the greatest prayer warriors in the world. John
Hyde was one of them. I knew someone who had prayed with him, and
they said it was just awesome when this man went into prayer.
There’s a little book out on him called “Praying Hyde” that
would be well worth your reading.
Edward Payson, better known as praying Payson of
Portland, was another great prayer warrior. He used to kneel at the
side of his bed and pray, and pray, and pray. When they washed his
body for burial, they found great big pads on his knees like a camel
has. Tradition says that James had camel’s knees, but it’s a living
fact that Payson had them. When they were washing him, somebody
said, “What abnormal knees. They’re heavy with calluses.” That’s
because he used to pray at the side of his bed with energy—and he
wore two grooves about six or seven inches long into that hard floor
where he used to pray and make intercession.
One day I was in the Bible School of Wales and there
was dear Mrs. Rees Howells. (Her husband was dead now.) We stood on
the terrace and she turned and said, “Do you see the room there?” I
said, “Yes, I see that room.” “That door?” “Yes.” “Daddy (meaning
her husband) went through that door at six o’clock in the morning
and he stayed there until six o’clock at night every day for 11
months except the one day that his mother died.”
Let’s preview eternity and look at all the apostles
and all the saints of all the ages. Look, there’s Charles Finney
with his amazing revivals. There’s William Booth, the founder of the
Salvation Army. There’s John Wesley. Here are all the great heroic
figures we’ve all read about, and they are all watching while the
book is handed down and somebody’s going to read the record. Would
you volunteer and say, “Well, I’ll be happy to read my record to
this multitude”?
Suppose I say, “Gabriel, hand me the record for the
year of 1724.” When I open the book to that year and go to the
“B’s,” I find the name, David Brainerd. He was a young American who
died at the age of 28. All he possessed was a cowhide that he wore
with a rope tied around it. He used to ride over the Susquehanna
River to follow the Indians. David had a severe case of tuberculosis
and only weighed about 95 pounds. I remember reading his diary once.
He said, “I got up this morning and the Indians were still
committing adultery and drinking and beating their tom-toms and
shouting like hell itself. I prayed from a half hour after sunrise
to a half hour before sunset. There was nowhere to pray in the
Indian camp. I went into the woods and knelt in the snow. It was up
to my chin.” No, he didn’t have a heater with him or anything else.
He was just there in the frigid snow, tuberculosis and all. He
continued, “I wrestled in prayer until a half hour before sunset,
and I could only touch the snow with the tips of my fingers. The
heat of my body had melted the snow.” What amazing intercessory
prayer!
Well, God pity us. We can’t even get people into our
churches to pray, and we have velvet cushions on the seats and nice
stuff on the floor so our darling little knees won’t get hurt. David
Brainerd, Praying Payson of Portland, John Hyde, and Rees
Howells—when God puts the fire to their devotional life, I don’t
think there will be anything lost. It won’t be wood, it won’t be
hay, and it won’t be stubble.
TRUE JOY
I’m embarrassed to be part of the Church today because I believe
it’s an embarrassment to a holy God. Most of our joy is clapping our
hands and having a good time and then afterwards we talk all the
nonsense of the world. We’re overboard on laughter and happiness.
There’s an old saying in the world, “Laugh and the world laughs with
you.” I change it and say, “Laugh and the Church laughs with you,
but weep and you weep alone.” Because there isn’t enough real joy in
the house of God, we need entertainment. Entertainment is the
devil’s substitute for joy. Because there isn’t enough power in the
house of God, people are always looking for something to take its
place. We point the finger at the world, but we need to turn to the
Church and say we’d better all get sackcloth and ashes and humble
ourselves and say “Almighty God!” When I see the Church in the New
Testament, they didn’t have stately buildings or paid evangelists or
a lot of money. (They couldn’t get on television and beg!) But I’ll
tell you what they did—they turned the world upside-down!
Have you ever seen the little plaque that reads,
“Only one life, ‘twill soon be past, only what’s done for Christ
will last?” Well, that’s not what the poet wrote. The poet wrote
this: “Only one life, ‘twill soon be past, only what’s done for
Christ will last. And when I am dying, how happy I’ll be, if
the lamp of my life has been burned out for Thee.” Do you think all
Christians die happy? Not on your life! Some of them die as
miserable as sinners. Why? Because they’ve misused their time and
wasted their lives. Many of you have laid dying on a hospital bed
and prayed, “Lord, if You would only spare me, I’ll do this, that,
or the other.” Well, have you done it?
I discovered this poem the other day and I want to
share it with you.
His Plan For Me
When I stand at the Judgment Seat of Christ
And He shows His plan for me,
The plan of my life as it might have been
Had He had His way - and I see
How I blocked Him here, and checked Him there,
And I would not yield my will,
Will there be grief in my Savior’s eyes,
Grief though He loves me still?
Would He have me rich and I stand there poor,
Stripped of all but His grace,
While memory runs like a hunted thing,
Down the paths I cannot retrace.
Lord, of the years that are left to me
I give them to Thy hand
Take me and break me and mold me,
To the pattern that Thou hast planned!
-Author Unknown
The only thing that will tie me in victory continually, through the
blood of Christ, is that I give Him my adoration and my tribute
every day. It’s more than my service. It’s more than giving money.
But I need to love Him, magnify Him, and adore Him. I need to take
Him, as it were, by the feet and worship Him. If we will do this,
then we will experience real joy and lasting happiness.
CROWNS, CROWNS, CROWNS!
I don’t believe there will be any envy in heaven, but I could remind
you that there are at least five crowns to be given in reward. Paul
says the Lord will give him a crown of righteousness, which he says
the Lord will not only give to him, but to all those who love His
appearing (II Tim. 4:8). There’s a crown for the martyrs—those who
have died and those yet to die. Crowns, crowns, crowns! We won’t all
be the same in heaven. There will be great distinctions there. When
you see a political convention, you see people holding up signs from
California or somewhere. Well, maybe there will be signs in heaven.
“These are the Prayer Warriors.” “These are the Great Sufferers.”
“These are the Travailers.” “These are the Missionaries.” “These are
the Failures.” All kinds of people are going to be listed in that
Great Day. There will be great distinctions between people in
heaven.
There was a little woman in Ireland who had two
shops. She paid all the family expenses with what she made from one
shop and she saved all the money that came in from the other shop
for missions. She ended up sending four of her children to the
mission field and she financed each one of them. Man, she’s going to
have a reward some day, isn’t she? Because she was doing it as unto
Him!
Take a look at the dying thief. Oh, he’ll be in
heaven all right because Jesus said he would - but he wasted his
life. Then look at John Wesley for example. He was saved soundly
when he was 35 years of age, and he served the Lord for the next 53
years. You couldn’t think that the dying thief, a man who got in at
the last tick of the clock, is going to have the same reward as John
Wesley, could you? Wesley made an awful lot of money. Do you know
what he did with it? He built orphanages and churches. He printed
Bibles and hymn books. There was no time wasted in his life. He was
methodical and systematic. He went to dinner with the greatest man
in English literature and the man said, “Now you’ve finished dinner,
let’s fold our legs under the table and have a nice time of
conversation.” Wesley said, “I’m sorry, I have to go.” “But it’s not
yet nine o’clock, why are you going?” Wesley said, “I have an
appointment in the morning at four o’clock.” “At four o’clock
tomorrow morning?” “Every morning of my life,” he said. “With whom?”
“With God.” He disciplined his life. He disciplined his body in
eating. He disciplined his hand in his pocket. He’ll stand at the
Judgment Seat of Christ...an awesome prospect for any of us. “We
ought to live every day as though we’ve come out of another world
into this world—but with the power of that world still upon us. We
should live and speak and move in that power, and have our whole
being in Jesus Christ!”
THE FRAGRANCE OF WORSHIP
I heard the story for years, about the woman who came to Jesus with
an alabaster box of ointment, before I understood it—before I
realized that she came for one reason only. She came to worship
Jesus. How do I know? Because she brought the most sacrificial gift
she had and because she never said a word while she was there. How
do I know? Because she didn’t wash His feet with water, but with her
tears. She didn’t dry His feet with a towel, but she dried His feet
with the hair of her head. And she poured out that costly fragrance
and then wiped His feet. So what happened? The fragrance she poured
out on Him came back on her.
Do you wonder why your life isn’t more fragrant? It’s
because you don’t take time to be holy. You don’t take time to be
with Jesus. Because you think all the knowledge you get at Bible
school is enough. Oh no, God isn’t going to measure your intellect.
He’s going to try your life with His fire. Did you get up this
morning and thank God you were pure? Did you thank Him that He broke
that devilish fever you used to have for sniffing cocaine or
something? Are you really glad you’re not a prostitute anymore, but
now you’re a part of the Bride of the Lamb instead? Are you glad He
removed your bad temper and all those creepy horrible things that
used to master you?
I think again of a statement A. W. Tozer made to me
once. He said, “Len, you know, we’ll hardly get our feet out of time
into eternity that we’ll bow our heads in shame and humiliation.
We’ll gaze on eternity and say, ‘Look at all the riches there were
in Jesus Christ, and I’ve come to the Judgment Seat almost a
pauper.’” For God had not only given us Jesus Christ—He has with Him
freely given us all things (Rom. 8:32).
A DIFFERENT PEOPLE
I remember crossing a square in the city of Bath in the 1940s. I saw
two very fine young ladies—well, one was a young lady and the other
was only a girl. They were beautifully dressed and as they marched
across that square I thought, “There’s something different about
those girls.” Then I discovered that they were princesses. It was
our present Queen of England, Queen Elizabeth, and her sister,
Margaret. They were part of English royalty, and you know, there was
a dignity about them very different from anybody else who walked
there. Well, as Christians, we are part of GOD’S Royal Family,
and it should be evident to all that we meet that we are a different
type of people. If we can’t live as a different people on this
earth, we’ve no right to live here. We shouldn’t be affected by
changing customs or changing styles or changing opinions, or whether
the stock market goes up or down, or whether the clouds are
gathering for war. Those things don’t make any difference. We ought
to live every day as though we’ve come out of another world into
this world—but with the power of that world still upon us. We should
live and speak and move in that power, and have our whole being in
Jesus Christ!
BAPTISM OF OBEDIENCE
That final day is going to be awesome. Have you figured how you’ll
get on when you stand there? You and I will stand there alone on
that day and be judged for every aspect of our lives—for our
praying, our giving, our talking, and our doing. I still believe in
the majesty of that eternal court, with the King of kings and the
Lord of lords and the Judge of judges. You see, there’s no
possibility of any rehearsal, and what’s more, there’s no
possibility of any repetition. Because, again, this is the Final
Judgment, and to some God will say, “Come, ye blessed,” but to
others He’ll say, “Depart from Me.” No, it’s not so simple to be a
Christian after all. It’s a majestic thing.
We ought to live our lives conscious of eternity -
ready to be cut off at any moment. If you were to stand before the
Lord at this very moment, would you like your life story read by all
the millions in eternity? None of the outcasts of hell are going to
be there. Won’t it be wonderful—or will it? Or do you think you
might shrink a bit when you hear how God used David Brainerd or John
Wesley or some little washerwoman that had a life of intercession?
There’s no burden too heavy, or no situation too hard
for the one that you love. If we are love-controlled,
love-motivated, and love-energized, it will be all right when we
stand up there, because if there’s anything about love—it’s
obedient. We need to become a people who are baptized with
obedience. We need to be submissive to the total will of God, not
concerned about human opinion, and not asking for more to spend on
ourselves. We need to say, “Oh God, I want this life of mine to
glorify You, so that when I stand in Your awesome presence, as John
says, I shall not be ashamed at Your appearing” (I John 2:28).
Copyright (C)1994 by Leonard
Ravenhill, Lindale, Texas- http://www.ravenhill.org/.