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The Need of the
Hour-Specific Ministry
By
T. Austin Sparks
As we take account of the situation
in the Church today we feel more and more deeply convinced that the
greatest need of the hour is for men of vision and courage.
But we use the word ‘vision’ in the specific sense in which it is
used in the Bible and not in the general sense of enterprise. That
is, what is needed above all else is men who have had a Divine
illumination by the Holy Spirit in their own hearts as to God’s
purpose in this dispensation, and as to the particular Divine
emphasis for the present hour.
There can be much enthusiasm and zeal put behind a more or less
generally conceived idea of what needs to be done, with a resultant
activity and ‘movement’. The opposite of this, and that which we are
seeing to be so much more needed, is a burdening of the hearts of
‘chosen vessels’ with God’s own most pressing concern at this time,
resulting in an all-consuming passion which will accept all the cost
of its realization.
There are many earnest and devoted servants of God who are seeking
to be faithful in the work to which they feel God has called them.
There are passionate preachers, and men on full stretch for the
furtherance of ‘the Kingdom of God’. What we are saying is no
overlooking of this and of much more, neither is it an undervaluing
of the great amount of devoted and sacrificial service to the Lord.
Nevertheless we press our point. There are very few men in our day
of whom it can be truly said, ‘That man has a message from God for
the time in which we live’.
There can be all the difference between being saved and then going
into Christian service with the consequent studying of the Bible,
the preparation of sermons, addresses, lessons; collecting material,
mastering themes and subjects, and so on, and giving this out as
required or as opportunity affords - there can be all the difference
between this and an open Heaven, an anointing, an unveiling by the
Holy Spirit. It is the difference between our labouring to get, in
order to meet a constantly recurring demand, and the Holy Spirit
continually revealing Christ in us. This is a general difference,
though it is a very real one, and it may represent all the
difference between bondage and liberty, between limitation and
fullness, even between life and death in ministry. But this is not
our particular point. The need of the hour is not only for a higher
spiritual level of ministry in general - it is for men with a
specific anointing which will meet the situation as it is now.
No one who knows anything about present conditions will disagree
with the statement that the Church is in tragic need of men with a
message. Our point is that what is needed is the knowledge of what
is THE message for the time. That message must come from God to men
chosen for the purpose. This is not a ministry which can be taken
up. For such ministry there is usually a long and deep history with
God, a history full of mystery and suffering. Many phases are passed
through, all in the permissive will of God, or in His directive
will, inasmuch as they are intended to educate and give experience;
the course is never that of the established and settled kind, and so
big changes may be called for, each of which comes by a new
spiritual crisis.
No one can do anything in the making of such vessels, however much
they may be concerned for them. This is God’s work alone, and they
have to be left in His hands. We may sometimes almost despair as we
look in vain for such, but there may be many more under the Lord’s
hand than we have any idea of, and He will produce them in His time.
We do urge this need upon the consideration and prayers of the
Lord’s people today.
But what about
COURAGE? Men of vision and courage! Yes, and more courage will be
required here than in any other realm of which we know.
A specific message may - to begin with - set a distance between such
as have it and such as have not. This will give rise to many
possibilities. Even the best servants of God who have not so seen
will probably stand back. It will mean loneliness, and going on
alone perhaps for quite a time. It will mean ostracism,
misunderstanding, misrepresentation, suspicion, closed doors (so far
as man can close them).
Then, no commission from God is ever just verbal truth - it always
involves practical issues. These practical issues will appear like
the crystallizing of the truth, so that those who obey it will
become marked people. This raises a new set of opposing elements. If
God has given an unveiling concerning His purpose in Christ which is
of such vital importance as to have called for all this special
history and preparation, we must realize that it is of very great
moment to Satan’s interests, and he will leave nothing unused to
make its course impossible.
Let it be understood that in the line of a ministry such as Paul’s
the only way of fulfillment is that of Paul’s abandonment and
courage. Listen to him again:- “Circumcised the eighth day, Of the
stock of Israel, Of the tribe of Benjamin, A Hebrew of Hebrews; As
touching the law, a Pharisee, As touching zeal, persecuting the
Church; As touching the righteousness which is in the law, found
blameless. Howbeit what things were gain to me, these have I counted
loss for Christ.” (Phil. 3:5-7.)
Here is birth, religious training, tradition, status, prestige,
family, friends, reputation, all touched by his new revelation. He
let them go as it became necessary in the fulfillment of his
received heavenly vision.
And this was not all, for even in the apostolic circle Paul very
largely stood alone.
If the greatest need of the hour is that of men of vision, along
with it will go the need for willingness to pay the price. But there
is another side, and that is God’s side.
It is a great thing to be in possession of an open
Heaven and of a mandate from God.
From “The Work of the
Ministry” - Volume 1.
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