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THE
GOSPEL OF MARTYRDOM
VS.
THE GOSPEL OF SUCCESS

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here]
Stephen stood before the Sanhedrin. The appointed
Jewish leadership confronted this anointed Jewish believer. They
glared; he glowed. They were enraged; he was enraptured. Their faces
were contorted with anger; his was like the countenance of an angel.
“Men and brothers,” he said, “listen to me.”
He rehearsed the history of Israel, from Abraham
to Moses to David, the faithfulness of God in spite of the unfaithfulness
of the people. But Stephen was not there that day merely to recite
the lessons of history. He was there to be a witness, and as a faithful
witness he spoke. His words turned to piercing rebuke:
You stiff-necked people, with uncircumcised
hearts and ears! You are just like your fathers: You always resist
the Holy Spirit! Was there ever a prophet your fathers did not
persecute? They even killed those who predicted the coming of
the Righteous One. And now you have betrayed and murdered Him
-- you who have received the law that was put into effect through
angels but have not obeyed it (7:51-53).
Soon his body lay battered and bloody, a mangled,
motionless mass. He had not backed down. He had not compromised.
He had not omitted a word. He was a witness and a prophetic voice.
And that day he became the Church’s first martyr -- the first,
but not the last. Hundreds of thousands have followed in his path.
Being a witness for Jesus could cost you your life.
In the early Church, witnessing and martyrdom quickly
became associated: The Greek word for “witness” is martus.
Witnesses testify with their lives and often seal their words with
their own blood. Have you done any “witnessing” lately?
It’s one thing to read the Word and be stirred
by the examples of men like Stephen. But this was real life! He
was probably a young man with a wife and children. His whole future
lay before him. His family was dependent on him. There may have
been a toddler waiting to greet him that day when he came home.
But he never came home!
And then there was his ministry. He was a powerful
preacher, anointed to heal the sick and perform miracles. Think
of all the lives he could touch! Think of all the good he could
do for the kingdom of God.
Why didn’t Stephen simply deny the false
charges? “Men and brothers, the accusations are not true.”
Why didn’t he politely dismiss their questions and calm their
anger? Why did he continue to stand up and speak out? The answer
challenges us all: He was not seeking to save his life; he was
seeking to be a witness.
For whoever wants to save his life will lose it,
but whoever loses his life for Me will find it (Matt 16:25).
This is the story of the true Church in every nation
and in every age:
You did not renounce your faith in Me, even in
the days of Antipas, My faithful witness, who was put to death in
your city -- where Satan lives (Rev 2:13b).
This is the gospel of martyrdom, the gospel of
Jesus. It is the gospel that Paul preached and lived:
I consider my life worth nothing to me, if only I may
finish the race and complete the task the Lord Jesus has given me
-- the task of testifying to the gospel of God’s grace (Acts
20:24).
That is why he could say:
I eagerly expect and hope that I will in no
way be ashamed, but will have sufficient courage so that now as
always Christ will be exalted in my body, whether by life or by
death. For to me, to live is Christ and to die is gain (Phil 1:20-21).
As Leonard Ravenhill observed, Paul didn’t
mind if the cost of his obedience was prison,
for it were better that he should be “the prisoner
of the Lord for a few years than that his fellow men should
be the devil’s prisoners in hell forever (Why
Revival Tarries, 118).
How different this is from the philosophy that
rules in today’s luxury-soaked America. How different this
is from the modern gospel of success! Jesus cut to the very core
of the issue. When Peter told the Lord in no uncertain terms that
He was not to go the way of suffering, rejection, and death
(“Never, Lord!” he said.” This shall never happen
to you!”), Jesus identified Peter’s words as satanic.
Get behind Me, Satan! [Jesus said to Peter.]
You are a stumbling block to Me; you do not have in mind the things
of God, but the things of men. (Matt 16:23)
What was at the root of this satanically inspired
theology? What fueled Peter’s opposition to the cross? It
was a different set of values, a different perspective, a different
viewpoint, a different understanding: “you do not have
in mind the things of God, but the things of men.” Now
we’re getting down to the basics!
One “gospel” is interested in the things
of this world, the things of men. The other gospel is interested
in eternal things, the things of God. One message cultivates preservation
of self; the other cultivates denial of self. One says, “Add
to your life!” The other says, “Lose your life!”
One message encourages self-satisfaction, the other encourages self-denial.
One message tells carnally minded people “what their itching
ears want to ear” (2 Tim 4:3); the other message tells the
truth.
Whether or not we have much in this world is not
the central issue. (Most of us in America have an incredible abundance,
dozens of times what we actually need to live.) What matters is
our attitude towards our what we have. And we who have an abundance
must guard our hearts. Riches are deceitful!
Jesus rebuked the church of Laodicea:,
You say, “I am rich; I have acquired wealth
and do not need a thing.” But you do not realize that you
are wretched, pitiful poor, blind and naked (Rev 3:17).
But Jesus commended the church of Smyrna:
I know your afflictions and your poverty --
yet you are rich. . . . Do not be afraid of what you are about
to suffer. I tell you, the devil will put some of you into prison
to test you, and you will suffer persecution ten days. Be faithful
to the point of death, and I will give you the crown of life (Rev
2:9-10).
We must see how tragically earthly the gospel of
success really is. It still stands in the way of the cross.
It still rebukes Jesus for promising suffering and death.
In fact, it actually calls the path to Calvary “religious”
-- meaning traditional, unanointed, and fruitless.
It is no overstatement to say that there is
no cross in the gospel of success. In its most extreme modern
forms, it originates from the pit. (Remember, it was Satan whom
Jesus rebuked for trying to keep Him from going to the cross.)
The gospel of success criticizes the message of
the cross because it leads to “death.” But the true
gospel must lead to death -- death to the flesh, death to the will
of man, death to this world’s priorities. Only through death
can there be resurrection. Only through the cross can there be abundant
life. In fact, if you want what some teachers call “the God
kind of life” you’re going to have to experience “the
Jesus kind of death.” Which path will you take?
The last generation taught what is often called
“pie in the sky” theology -- and this theology certainly
had its problems! There were plenty of negative distortions in the
message. But we have substituted something worse. We now have the
theology of “have your cake and eat it too.” The first
message starved its hearers, depriving them of the blessings of
life in the Spirit in this world. The second message engorges
them, robbing them of the light of eternity.
People of God, we are not to center our
lives around eating and drinking, gaining and possessing, having
more and being merry, because tomorrow we do not die. No.
We live forever! How foolish that we conduct ourselves as if this
world were our lasting home. We’re just passing through!
When Jacob was a frail old man he said to Pharaoh:
The years of my pilgrimage are a hundred and
thirty. My years have been few and difficult, and they do not
equal the years of pilgrimage of my fathers (Gen 47:9).
King David, in spite of the equivalent of billions
of dollars of riches, could say at the end of his life:
We are aliens and strangers in Your sight, as were
all our forefathers. Our days on earth are like a shadow, without
hope (1 Chr 29:15).
Hebrews 11 commends Abraham -- certainly a prosperous
and influential man -- because,
By faith he made his home in the promised land
like a stranger in a foreign country; he lived in tents as did
Isaac and Jacob, who were heirs with him of the same promise.
For he was looking forward to the city with foundations, whose
architect and builder is God. . . . [All of them] admitted that
they were aliens and strangers on earth. People who say such things
show that they are looking for a country of their own . . . a
heavenly one (11:9-10, 13-14, 16).
How much more does the New Testament call us to
live in the light of eternity!
Jesus told His disciples to rejoice when
they were persecuted and rejected, “because great is your
reward in heaven . . .” (Matt 5:12). He told them
-- and us! -- to store up treasures in heaven (Matt 6:19-21),
and Peter reminds us that we have a heavenly inheritance
“that can never perish, spoil or fade” (1 Pet 1:4).
That’s why we who suffer for Jesus now will be “overjoyed”
when His glory will be revealed at His return (1 Pet 4:13). There
is great joy now because there will be endless joy then!
You sympathized with those in prison [for the
faith] and joyfully accepted the confiscation of your property,
because you knew that you yourselves had better and lasting possessions
(Heb 10:34).
Consider the example of C. T. Studd. Raised in
a wealthy, aristocratic home in England last century, he became
a national celebrity as a sensational cricket player at Cambridge.
(He could have become the “Michael Jordan” of his generation.)
But through the preaching of D. L. Moody, he experienced a deep
transformation and left everything to go to the mission field.
Was he wrong for abandoning a phenomenal sports
career in England in order to preach the Word in China and Africa?
Was he “religious” because he chose to forsake fame,
fortune, and comfort to live sacrificically among the heathen? The
decisions he made and the path he chose make one thing perfectly
clear: He was not seeking to get ahead in this world. He was seeking
to please the Lord. There is a difference!
On judgment day, and throughout eternity, men and
women like C. T. Studd will be accounted wise. They will have our
admiration and God’s commendation. Does anything stop us from
following their lead? It will mean going against the grain!
Our country is saturated with a “save your
life, improve your life” mentality -- from health clubs to
exercise videos, from savings plans to retirement funds, from insurance
policies to computer programs guaranteed to put you “in control
of your life.” Be successful! Live in greater security and
ease! Enjoy the American dream! Jesus says, “Follow Me --
even to the point of death.”
After His resurrection, He told Peter the kind
of death by which he would glorify God (John 21:19).
What a concept! Think of a discussion among the first eleven disciples:
“Matthew, Bartholomew, Thomas, by what kind of death are you
going to glorify Him?”
For these men, this would not have been idle talk:
According to tradition, all the first apostles, with the exception
of John, died a martyr’s death. (John was reportedly boiled
in oil twice -- and survived.) For them, the issue was
not, “Will we be called to die for the glory of God?”
But rather, “By what kind of death will we glorify
Him?”
What about us? Is the call any different today?
By what kind of death are we called to glorify God? Death to our
reputation? Death to human opinion? Death to our careers? Death
to our plans and goals? Or maybe the literal death of a martyr?
Savonarola, the prophetic priest in the fifteenth
century Catholic Church understood the cost of fidelity to the Lord.
When offered the red hat of a cardinal, he replied:
No hat will I have but that of a martyr, reddened
with my own blood.
The fatal flaw of the modern, carnal prosperity
message is that it encourages us to set our eyes on the things of
this world. It makes it harder for us to leave all, lose self, and
follow Jesus. It eliminates the call to take up our cross.
(Remember, Jesus was not the only One called to carry the cross.
Read Luke 9:23 several times out loud, and digest each word slowly:
“If anyone would come after Me, he must deny himself and take
up his cross daily and follow Me.”)
The gospel of success says, “Jesus died for
you so you could prosper and succeed in this world.” (Of course,
there is some truth to the prosperity message, but its
emphasis is way off.) The biblical message says, “Live
so as to lose your life for the Lord” -- meaning go anywhere,
do anything, make any sacrifice -- as long as souls are saved, lives
are changed, the kingdom is extended, and Jesus is exalted. As children
of God, we now make our decisions based on entirely different priorities.
We are already subjects of the heavenly kingdom. We have already
died to this world!
Of course, there are things in this present age
that are important. Justice in our society is important.
Compassionate action on behalf of the poor and hurting is important.
Righteousness and integrity are important. Morality and family values
are important. But only those whose lives are given over to a higher
-- and eternal -- purpose can radically change things here. As C.
S. Lewis said:
It is since Christians have largely ceased to think
of the other world that they have become so ineffective in this
one.
Can we be honest with ourselves? A major reason
why we don’t take a stand against godless laws is because
we don’t want to risk our lives. We’re not willing to
suffer the consequences.
A key reason why we don’t share our faith more clearly and
-- in love -- more aggressively is because we don’t want to
experience rejection. We don’t want to lose our friends, or
our jobs, or our ease.
One major factor that keeps many of us from the
mission field is that we’re too comfortable here and now.
(Let’s face it: Here and now is where it’s at for most
of us. There’s only one way you can prove me wrong: Live differently!)
It’s time for the old spirit of martyrdom
to enter the church of America. (Much of the Church worldwide has
no choice in the matter. Christianity for them is synonymous with
suffering. Just ask the families of the Christian men in Sudan or
Ethiopia who were crucified for their faith -- in the last
few months.) It’s time that we do God’s will, and God’s
will alone.
I once heard Richard Wurmbrand ask why, when the
Supreme Court passed the law removing public prayer from our schools,
American Christians chose to comply. What would have happened if
we simply refused to obey? The whole thing probably would have been
turned around overnight. And if it wasn’t turned around? Then
at least the church, through her biblical obedience, would have
been turned around!
If only we would value obedience to the Lord more
highly than we value self-preservation! If only the favor of God
were more meaningful to us than the opinions of people! If only
we would count suffering for Jesus to be a privilege! What could
stop us then? This country boasts of fifty-seventy million
born-again Christians. (Of course, that figure is preposterous.)
But what if just one million true believers here (just
twenty thousand from each state!) decided to obey God and stand
up for what is right, regardless of the cost? Our nation would be
absolutely shaken. Now is the time to awake!
In 1984, after hearing K. P. Yohannan of Gospel
for Asia preach a challenging message, a Christian man named Samuel
gave up his good job in South India and moved with his family to
the region of Karnataka. There he began preaching to unreached Hindus,
known for their hostility to the gospel. The Lord blessed the work,
and even a Hindu priest was born again.
This was more than the extremists could take. They
burst into a meeting one Sunday and severely beat Samuel with iron
rods, breaking his hand, arm, leg, and collar bone. When his seven
year old son ran up and cried out, “Please don’t kill
our daddy!” they struck the boy on the spine, breaking his
back. Then they left, warning Samuel that if he ever preached there
again, they would kill him. The beating was so severe that Samuel
and his son were hospitalized for several months.
After his release, Samuel attended a workers’
meeting with K. P. Yohannan. The first night, during a time of prayer,
his arm was supernaturally healed of paralysis he was suffering
as a result of his beating. The next night he testified of the things
he had recently experienced for the Lord.
K. P. asked Samuel, “What are you going to
do now?” With a peaceful determination, the young man replied:
I am going back. Even if I am killed, my blood will be the foundation
for many more churches.
He returned and has continued to preach. His son
is back in school and is also doing well. And Samuel has baptized
many more converts -- and has been beaten again.
Would we have gone back and preached? K. P. was
honest enough to admit that his own reaction might have been different.
First he would have come up with lots of good scriptures to justify
not going back. And then he would have used his best argument:
I’m only forty-some years old! God wants
me to use my brain for His kingdom. With all the investment He
has made in my life since I was sixteen, would it be right for
me to be killed by some fanatics next week? Don’t be stupid!
I am going to leave this place so I will have another forty years
of my life to invest in and build God’s kingdom
(Living in the Light of Eternity, 159-60).
Samuel thought differently. He was not out to save
his life, he was out to save sinners. With such resolve how could
he be defeated? His life is not his own! In past centuries, missionaries
endued with the same spirit sailed off to far away lands with their
belongings packed in caskets. They were making a one way trip!
A few years ago, a young evangelist moved into
an area in Asia famous for its violent resistance to Jesus. The
radical religious opposition immediately came to his apartment,
making their intentions clear: “We’ll kill you if you
stay here and preach!” The evangelist only smiled. “I
came to die,” he replied. Today his church has 200 members.
That is the power of the gospel of martyrdom. That is true success.

Download this document in Word format: click
here

Dr. Michael L. Brown
ICN Ministries
PO Box 1446
Harrisburg, NC 28075
704-782-3760
e-mail: ministry@icnministries.org
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