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DISCIPLINE 2008 |
-Part 1 |
Ed Corley
From Paul we gain insight that leads us toward what we will now call THREE CIRCLES OF SUPPLICATION. Whereas in the past we have made reference to the “discipline of intercession,” it has come to my attention that the term intercession is used in the New Testament only with reference to the Lord Jesus and to the Holy Spirit. The term supplication defines the kind of praying we do one for the other. Still, in our praying, we maintain three circles. Within each one is the hope, or expectation, that the strength and grace of God's Kingdom will prevail in the lives of those for whom we make the supplication. The FIRST CIRCLE is small, only large enough for "me." In it we fight our own private wars and deal with our inner struggles. Oswald Chambers, a man of God from the early Twentieth Century said, "Every man is a walking civil war." But, the strength and government of God's Kingdom can reach each one of us in our private war. As we come under the influence of what these prayers will release in a life, we begin learning that the Lord is on our side in all of our battles. He is with us to prevail over our weaknesses, and as well, to prevail over the strength of the enemy who is opposing us. If we continue in our private circles without opening ourselves to the administration of God's Government, we may have well enough inner struggles to go with us all the way to the grave. There may never be a peaceful day, unless we should, perhaps, sign an inner truce with some of the forces of evil at work in us, then allowing them to do their work unopposed. But, we're not going to consider this. The glory of God’s Kingdom is open to us. It can set up its rule in us. The SECOND CIRCLE of supplication is at least double the size of the first. We discover this when we move from our private circle of “civil war” into the circle of someone else to help in their war. In our supplications before God’s Throne we can release into the circles of others the same strength and grace of that Kingdom we are coming to know. That doesn’t mean any other one has to submit to its rule, however. The Holy Spirit does not violate anyone’s will. But, as we hold others before the Throne with the urgency of praying like the Lord Jesus teaches in the parable of the man begging for bread in Luke 11:1-13, we might well expect hearts to become softened. Let’s remember that man begging for the bread was doing so for another man who had lost his way in the night. We move into the THIRD CIRCLE when we enter the conflict with spiritual forces that rule large areas—like villages, cities, states, and nations, or clans, corporations or institutions. We can also bring the disciplines of the second circle into this third as we hold before the Throne people who lead states, nations, clans, corporations, etc. We learn to seek the release of God’s strength, wisdom and grace in them. Then, as the leaders become godly in their leadership, the Holy Spirit will have instruments through whom He can bring godliness to the realms of their leadership.
The First Circle
Paul had two amazing testimonies about his own personal wars. One conflict, covered in Romans 7:14 thru 8:14, can be summarized in the statement: I am carnal, sold under sin (Rom 1:14). The other battle, of which Paul told in II Cor 12:7-10, is summarized here: there was given to me a thorn in the flesh, the messenger of Satan to buffet me (II Cor 12:7).
Many of us can find—some in greater measure than Paul, some in less—an identification with him in both of his battles. The first conflict was settled by the official—yes official—work of Jesus Christ Who was his Lord. The other was resolved by the grace of God. There is no doubt but that, whatever the conflict of anyone of us, the same resolutions can become effective for us. The reason we speak of the work of the Lord Jesus as an official work is that He officiated in resolving Paul’s inner conflict. We might think we can officiate in our own process of becoming an overcomer, but there is really no one of us who can succeed without the work of the Lord who will come within us to carry out the work. It is amazing what we can find in the Romans 8 account that comes through with the answer for a conflict that may well be like our own. As we view the Scripture about Paul’s struggles, particularly as it comes through in the Greek New Testament, we can see why his battles were so fierce. In seeing his conflicts, we may well see our own. And, in seeing his resolutions, we can discover what can be ours also. Without going into a theological explanation of his problem, let us simply view the passages in which Paul tells of his conflicts. We take them from the King James Version, but with some revelation that comes through from the Greek New Testament. They brings to us the answers we may grasp for our own. Paul held two answers for the triumph he knew in his life: Christ Jesus and God’s grace. Before we see the passages, let us take a very brief lesson in New Testament Greek. Nearly all Greek Verbs have built into them a personal Pronoun that informs the reader who is performing the action of the Verb. This is so, unless there is an emphasis on the one performing a particular action. Then the Pronoun is written as a separate word. Usually, the First Person Greek Pronoun indicating the one performing the action is added on the end of the Verb. In English, the first person Pronoun serving as the Subject of a Verb is “I.” In Greek it is ego. But, as we have said, it is seldom placed separately in front of the Verb, except for emphasis on the one performing the action. It is to be noted in the passage from Romans 7 how Paul made excessive use of the word ego. Not every time he made a statement in the First Person did he do this. It was so frequent in the Rom 7 passage, however, that it takes our attention. And, it reveals something about Paul’s struggle. As we observe the passage, let us take note of all the times he told of something with a First Person Noun. Since it cannot become evident in a translation how often he made use of the word ego, we will place this word each time he used it. We will take special note of it in verse 24. This verse places a most unusual emphasis upon Paul’s ego. In this brief verse, we can find the key to his problem. It may very likely provide the key for the problem any one of us may have with sin. We have underlined each First Person Pronoun. A life centered in itself, with one’s ego as the point of reference for all its desires, actions, ambitions, toils and labors can never know true freedom from “the sin” of which Paul tells in the Romans passage that extends from verse 5:12 all the way through verse 8:14.
Now we come to Paul’s statement of resolution. There is no way humanly possible to overcome one’s carnal nature whose will it is to rule in every person who is outside of Christ. The foregoing verses from Romans 7 have been filled with the account of Paul’s struggling ego as he tried to overcome the rule of the sin brought upon the human race by Adam’s rebellion. But we are beginning to see the emergence of THE answer. We are about to see a man coming from under the rule of carnality to become a son of God.
We come now to the continuation of Paul’s revelation of the redemption that became effective in him. To him, Christ Jesus was his Salvation. He wasn’t just Paul’s hope of a way to arrive in heaven. He was Paul’s life while still on this earth. Even in his Roman imprisonment, he made little mention—he made almost no mention—of being incarcerated. Instead of being in prison, Paul was in Christ. An amazing thing for us to lay hold on is that Paul lived in the same dispensation in which we live. He never knew Christ after the flesh. Jesus had been here, had trained His twelve disciples to be Apostles, had died on the cross, had been buried and was raised from the dead. Then He was taken back into the heavens, all before Paul knew Him. Yet, Paul came to know Christ Jesus in a way others before him had not. What Paul wrote is some of the greatest revelation of Light and Life mankind might ever read. We are about to explore—though I feel not worthy or capable of leading you in it—a section of the revelation given to him. In it we will find one of Paul’s greatest string of words, short but so long they reach into eternity. Let us see them here. They are: them which are in Christ Jesus. Reaching back upon what we call “Romans Truth,” Paul made the following reference in Ephesians 3 to the revelation given him. Even though he was incarcerated in Rome when he wrote this, we remember of Whom he said he was a prisoner. After we complete this brief Ephesians interlude, we will resume our time with Romans.
As with the words from Romans 7, we will go on in Romans 8 to discover what Paul called the law of the Spirit of Life in Christ Jesus. By his use of the word law, he meant the general principle, or rule of life, which declares that anyone “in Christ Jesus” will know the Life that emanates from Him. As the Word of that “law” opens to us, we enter some of the most amazing writing ever opened to the eyes of man. As before, we will take the verses from the King James Version then gain what further understanding the Holy Spirit may open to us from the Greek text. Before looking into this passage, let me say the following about it. On looking at it in the Greek, I took note of two prominent words. Twelve times the word sarx (“flesh”) appears, no more to be seen in Romans 8 after verse 13. Fifteen times the word pneuma (“spirit”) appears within the first fifteen verses, and continues on throughout the chapter. The Spirit brings us into the will of the Father by helping us in our weaknesses, especially that of communicating with Him. Oh, the power of a Spirit-filled life!
Whereas the battle just described was settled by God’s indwelling Spirit, the one we are about to consider was resolved by God’s enabling grace. Both the flesh and the affliction would have swallowed up Paul had he not found his answers from God. But he profited from them both to become a better minister of the mystery of Christ. He set a powerful example for us in both.
Paul’s First Circle of Supplication One winter night I was standing alone in a drizzling rain, waiting for a bus to come along that would take me to a little mission church where I would lead a few people in a Bible study and prayer meeting. I felt a little sorry for myself as I thought I was “suffering” for the Lord. As I stood up against a building that I think now was a bar, I took out my pocket testament and began reading Paul’s second Epistle to the Corinthians. My “suffering” that night was so trifling as to not even be worthy of being called “suffering.” Nonetheless, that’s what it was to me at that time and it became an occasion for me to learn one of the greatest lessons I might ever learn. I invite you to read these verses with me, as I read them that night. There is so much that is amazing about Paul’s writing, that I find myself making use time and again of the Word that came to me that night. I use it with regard to this passage. There is an unusual amazement about II Cor 1:3-7. Ten times in those few verses, Paul made use of some form of a word based on parakaleo. This is the base of the word “comforter” that Jesus used when He made reference to the Holy Spirit in the following verses from John—14:16, 26; 15:26 and 16:11. Now, let us simply read this opening passage to I Corinthians. I don’t think I can add anything to what Paul said. It was clear to me that night standing in the rain. May it be clear to you, and bring comfort to you, as it did to me. Whatever comfort the Lord brings to you in any time of trial can become a resource from which you may draw to minister comfort to others.
Paul has much more to teach us about personal suffering, or we could call it personal conflict, or personal trials out of which he learned to draw as he ministered to others. The significance of what we learn from what he went through in his battle with a thorn in the flesh is great. It probably helped define Paul’s personal being as we learn from him as a man who knew himself in Christ. See his following testimony.
We can't know for sure what Paul’s thorn was. We can only perceive it was grievous. Some think it was bodily pain or sickness, perhaps near blindness. Could it have been the result of the light that shined upon him when he met Christ on the Damascus Road? That would not seem probable for Ananias came to him and prayed for him, after which, as it were, scales fell from his eyes. But, he did say to the Galatians, Ye would have plucked out your own eyes, and have given them to me—Gal 4:15. Some think his thorn was the indignities imposed upon him by the false apostles, and the opposition he met from them. They considered his bodily presence was weak, and his speech contemptible—II Cor 10:10. Whatever his thorn was, he considered it was given to him lest he be exalted because of the great measure of revelation given to him. Whatever this was, for a time Paul considered it a grievous thing. But the thorns Christ wore for us, and with which He was crowned, sanctify and make easy all the thorns in the flesh with which we may at any time be afflicted. Christ Jesus suffered, being tempted (being put to the test), that he might be able to succour (come to the aid of) those that are tempted (Heb 2:18). Should it have been a temptation to sin that Paul faced, it would, indeed, have been a most grievous thorn. Such testings are messengers of Satan, sent to buffet us. “Indeed it is a great grievance to a good man to be so much as tempted to sin.” Matthew Henry
Note in this verse the Lord's special word to Paul about His strength being made perfect in weakness. Here, strength is from dúnamis, the same word the Lord Jesus used in Acts 1:8 when He said, . . ye shall receive power. It means the power of ability. Again, what a wonder! The Lord told him, "The ability to be and to do what I want you to be and do will come into it's fullness in your weakness." That thorn in the flesh from which Paul sought freedom was, indeed, the very platform from which he could be launched into the greater purpose God had for his life. See it! This same grace will work for you and me. Whatever is grievous can become a platform for something wonderful, if we but open ourselves to the grace God proffers us in it.
Why did Paul rejoice in these things? Because in them—or maybe through them, or maybe because of them—he came to know the enabling grace of God and the power of Christ's Kingdom. Simply put, in his weakness he came to know the strength of Christ. And that was cause for rejoicing. When we too come to know this, our testimony becomes not so much, "I have been healed! Or, I have been set free from a terrible situation!" We begin, instead, to bear the testimony of Christ Himself Who has become our life and our strength. Let's face it. All of us have a battle with weakness. Even the strongest persons in the world continue with its encroachment upon them. So, whether it is the end of the age, or the end of life, that moves in for the strike, they both crowd us into finding answers that will stand in the final contest between weakness and strength. Personally, as I grow older, I see that the most important things in life are those that give me confidence with regard to the Kingdom of God. There alone can I find the unchallenged stability that will prevail over everything that would try and weaken me or make me fear.
The Second Circle of Supplication
We learn of Paul's movement in the circle of praying for others when we read the Epistles he wrote from his Roman prison - Ephesians, Philippians, Colossians, I Timothy and II Timothy. In these, the only shadow of a glimpse we have that he had a personal need was when he asked Timothy to bring the cloak he left at Troas with Carpus and the books and parchments (II Timothy 4:13). His only personal request for prayer was that utterance might be given unto him to open his mouth boldly, to make known the mystery of the Gospel (Ephesians 3:18). But even in this, it was a prayer that would lead to his helping others. The greatest thing we go on to learn about Paul’s praying was that he left his own circle of personal needs and made his supplication for others. His prayers while in jail are what have guided us through years of disciplined praying for others. We find these prayers, always prayed on behalf of others, recorded for us in Eph 1:15-19; Eph 3:14-19; Phil 1:9-11 and Col 1:9.10. We enter the second circle when we care enough about what is going on inside the circle of someone else to enter their conflict with them. We do this with the knowledge that God's glory is open to them and that the government of His grace can prevail in the circle of their warfare. The beauty of this second circle of war is that we can enter it without "interfering" in the other person's affairs, sometimes without their even being aware we're praying for them. They just come to know the work and presence of Christ in their circle with them. But there is another beauty. When we enter the conflict for someone else, we make room for the Lord in our own conflicts. It may even be when we return to our own circles to nurse our wounds, we will find they have been healed. God's grace has prevailed and the battle that once dragged us down in defeat has become His battle. We have vacated our post to Him. What an exchange! Few people want others to touch their inner man, but at the same time they all have a silent cry for help. Generally, when people have inner turmoil, they do not want advice or preaching, nor will they receive it. But the love, and faith, and care of an intercessor is different. Of course, when someone needs a friend, loses a loved one, has an accident, needs some groceries or help with their children, we learn to go openly, with compassion and with a willingness to do what we can. The open works become evident; that we're praying for them may remain silent to their ears. But it will reap results.
Something happened several years ago that helped me learn the lesson about moving from my own circle of need. I was overcome with the sorrow and despair of having lost my wife and family. I thought it would destroy me. I didn't see how I could continue living. At one time during this trial, I needed someone who would listen to me with some understanding and pray with me. I visited some friends, a couple whom we had received into our home many times when they were traveling in ministry and whom I felt would understand and sympathize with my pain. As I talked with them of the loss that had come to me, the wife of the couple said to me, "You know, we can understand exactly how you feel. We just lost our dog." I couldn't believe my ears. Had this sister in the Lord actually said this to me? Could she compare my loss with theirs? I could not respond. I became silent about my own hurt. Later the Lord spoke to me, "I am bringing you to the place where you will not depend on others to minister to you. If you will leave the circle of your own hurt and take on the concern for others who may seem to have even lesser trouble than your own, I will take on your concern." What a powerful exchange! It is one of the greatest principles of living in Christ's Kingdom we can know. It is a secret that those who make supplication for others must come to know. However, we should never think ourselves beyond asking someone to pray with us about an inner conflict. Sometimes the breaking that comes with an open confession is useful in setting us free from inner bondage. But, as intercessors, we come to know that our dependency will usually reach unto the Lord Himself, while we become instruments for Him to use in bringing healing to others.
We have several things to learn from Paul about praying for others. Probably the most striking for us now is that his intercession went beneath the surface and worked toward releasing the character and strength of God's Kingdom into lives and situations. He had discovered this for himself and made supplication for others that they might know the same. It seems we are most often inclined to pray surface, or emergency prayers. If we have a prayer meeting and ask for requests, generally the needs that present themselves are for sicknesses, finances, family problems, trips, programs, and losses. We all seem to want immediate answers and quick releases. But Paul's praying reached beneath the surface of life to lay hold on things eternal and that could be worked out by the presence of the living Christ. He asked for things that, if they find their release in us, will bring sickness and loss and need over into the strength and grace of God. He sought release and answers from a resource far beyond what the world affords us. Thus, all the answers to his requests would hold in them the elements of miracles. Paul never regarded that the impossibility of any situation or that the weakness of any life could prevail. He saw only that the power and authority of God's grace and the presence of Christ would prevail.
Let us go now with Paul into his Roman Prison. What a place for the mighty Apostle! He was stripped of his personal freedom. He had no ringing testimony of God's intervention in "getting him out." Whereas Peter had been set free from his incarceration, he was left to discover the grace of God in his prison, not in release from it. But there, he moved out of his own circle of need and took up a concern for others. It is apparent; as he did this, God moved into his circle. By finding exactly what Paul prayed while in his prison, insight and inspiration will come to us who sometimes feel enclosed in our own . We ask you now to move out of your own circle of need and enter the circles of others. It is not a thing too difficult to do. Let the ones you take on become as many you can bear.
Paul never mentioned sicknesses or personal needs. He never brought his own financial difficulties or agonizing circumstances before the Lord. Instead, he reached for the power, character and qualities of God's Kingdom and prayed for their release in others. It was all material for miracles. We see in the four passages the substance of twelve prayers which we can stretch over a year, taking a month with each one. In doing this, we have seen repeatedly in our own lives and families the power and effectiveness of what we may call "soaking prayer.” Become very familiar with the following Scriptures. Read them in their context. Study them, memorize them, learn to meditate on them as you incorporate them into your praying, both for yourself and for the persons you are ready to embrace in your circle of supplication. While these prayers reveal the desires we hold for others, there is nothing to rule out making the same supplications for ourselves. As we spend time praying along the lines of these prayers—generally every day, sometimes repeatedly throughout the day—we will find that the very discipline around which each revolves will begin working its way into our own lives. Just handling the Word of the Scriptures in our hearts and using it in prayer will release its power in us. We took up this discipline of intercession nearly a quarter century ago. Our lives were changed. We invite you to enter it with us yet again in this current year. As we all come together in agreement, although miles and oceans separate most of us, we will see the healing and regeneration of families, fellowships, ministries, fellow employees…and, the list could go on and on.
The Third Circle of Supplication
This must be a brief survey. By no means can we cover what could be, and should be, presented.
By no means are the above allusions to specific passages the full revelation of instruction for our preparation. What is contained in them, however, will lead us toward our becoming the overcomers to whom Jesus made reference in His Letters to the Seven Churches, seen in Rev 2 and 3. The following two passage of Scripture are but samples of those we must give attention to in the days that follow.
Finally, we see Ephesians 6:10-18, the prime passage of all Scripture that lays out the principles of the spiritual conflict. It leads us into that place to which we who know Christ Jesus as Lord are called. These verses give us the key that opens the third circle of supplication. It becomes a contest between the spiritual forces that oppose the Kingdom of God and believers in the Lord Jesus Christ who have come to know their position in Christ. In the consummation of the ages this conflict will be brought to its end. Presently, we are being called into this matter of supplication. This is the strongest form of praying in which we might engage.
If Thy people go out to battle against their enemy, whithersoever Thou shalt send them,
...then hear Thou in heaven their prayer and their
PRAYER STARTER
Leaving the Circle
of Our Private War
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