THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"Spiritual Strengthening”Rev. Carl Haak
April 27, 2008; No. 3408
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Dear radio friends,
Please open your Bible today to Ephesians 3:16-19 and read the
apostle’s prayer for spiritual strengthening.
Your heavenly Father desires
your spiritual strengthening. It is His purpose that the spiritual life
that we possess, that He has given to us, be strong and vibrant. It is not
the will of the heavenly Father, nor is it acceptable, that our spiritual life
become faint-hearted, listless, complacent, or dull. But He desires that
our faith always, by His grace, be robust. And in the words of Romans 4,
referring to the faith of Abraham and Sarah, that it be a faith that gives glory
to God, and that we walk in the power of that faith.
For that reason (that God
desires our spiritual life to be strong, vibrant, and growing stronger) He gives
to us the Lord’s Supper. The Lord’s Supper is an ordinance of the church
of Jesus Christ,a means given by Jesus Christ, for the assurance, the
strengthening, of our faith, for it assures us of the love of God for us, of the
full and gracious pardon of all of our sins, and of the promise of an indwelling
Holy Spirit to be and abide in our souls.
Just on that point, that the
Lord’s Supper is given for the strengthening of faith, we would like to
encourage the young people and young adults to make confession of their faith in
the Lord Jesus Christ. If you have faith in Him; if you say, “Lord, I need
to be strengthened in my faith”; if you struggle and have many questions; if you
love the Lord and believe His Word; if you want to live a holy life but say,
“there is weakness in me and there are struggles in me and I’m not what I should
be”—then I want to encourage you to make confession of your faith. For the
Lord’s Supper is given, not for those who are perfect, but for the strengthening
of such faith.
This is also now the prayer of
the apostle Paul, that we be strengthened spiritually. You might look at
these four verses and say, “That is a mouthful!” And it certainly
is. It is packed with intense spiritual truths. It is a passage in
the Scriptures that may be compared to one of the mountain ranges that God has
made in the earth, places of vast and intense glory: the Himalayans, the
Andes, the Cascades, the Rocky Mountains. So also this passage is one of
those lofty, one of those intensely majestic, spiritual passages. The
apostle Paul puts a lot of spiritual truth into this passage.
Note with me that the apostle
Paul is praying. He is on his knees (v. 14). And he is on his knees
for us. He is praying for us. His prayer is not a superficial
prayer; it is not a prayer, perhaps, in today’s common language in Protestantism
(“Well, Lord, I just want to say that I hope they have a good ‘Super-bowl
Sunday’”). No! His prayer reflects that this man knows God deeply,
loves God supremely, knows what the spiritual life is all about in the world,
and desires that these blessings be given to us. He prays that Christ
abide in our hearts. He prays that we be rooted and grounded in
love. He prays for the enlargement of our spiritual abilities to
comprehend the love of Christ. He prays that we be filled with the
fullness of God.
But the central theme of his
prayer is that he prays for spiritual strengthening. He says, “I bow my
knees [I get down on my knees] unto the Father,” in order that He would grant
unto you, by the Holy Spirit, to be strengthened with might in the inner
man. The main thing that he prays for is our spiritual
strengthening. Not physical strengthening, not emotional strengthening,
not financial strengthening, but strengthening of our spiritual life of the
inner man, by the Spirit of God is us.
Spiritual
Strengthening
What Is That?
Paul is praying for the
strengthening, as he says in verse 16, of the inner man. The inner man
does not refer, as the world would think, to the inner life of a person.
Everybody has an inner life (his person, or what psychology calls his
“ego”). Paul is not referring to the inner life in that sense. But
he is referring to the inner man of Christ—the gift of grace called spiritual
rebirth or regeneration.
The apostle refers to it in II
Corinthians 4:16 where he says, “For which cause [that is, because of all of
these persecutions] we faint not; but though our outward man [the outward man is
our physical life] perish, yet the inward man,” says Paul, “is renewed day by
day.” This is a life, says Paul, that does not perish. It does not
get arthritis. It does not decay. But the inner man, the inner life,
is the life of Jesus Christ, the reborn life, which God has given by
grace. It is a life that unbelievers do not have, and that we did not
have, but that God implanted in us by His grace. It is a life, says Paul,
that is there by the Holy Spirit, by the strengthening of the Spirit, who puts
it there and protects it there and nourishes it there through the Word of God
and through the sacraments.
His prayer now is that this
inward, spiritual life be strengthened with might (or with ability). The
apostle is praying, then, that the spiritual life of Christ, the new life of
Christ in me, the life that will not perish, that that life be
strengthened. For, when that spiritual life is given to us, it is not
given as a full-grown man, but as a babe.
It is a life that is victorious
and perfect and will go to heaven. Yet in this present world, due to our
sins, it is subject to illness and weakness, and the devil constantly seeks to
get it to go astray. So, Paul says, I pray that your inward spiritual life
in Christ be strengthened.
And what that means is
explained further in verse 17, when he says that Christ dwells in your hearts by
faith. When he says, “I pray that your inward man, given to you by the
Spirit, be strengthened,” that is the same as praying that Christ abide in you
by faith. We are strengthened spiritually when Christ abides in us, by
faith. Spiritual strengthening is not what some televangelists do before a
packed audience when the deacons bring up one who is infirm, and the evangelist
places his hand on the man’s forehead and he falls backward and the deacons
catch him, and he has supposedly been imparted spiritual life—and all the other
foolishness. That is not spiritual strengthening.
But spiritual strengthening has
to do with faith in Jesus Christ. It is the truth that Christ abides, says
the apostle, within you. The indwelling Christ, by faith. And Paul’s
prayer is, “May the Holy Spirit cause that the life of Christ in you, the faith
in you, becomes strong, so that Christ may be in all your thinking, in all your
willing, in all your desiring, and so that you may live, not after the impulses
of your own thinking, of your own heart, of your own responses, but after the
impulses of the Spirit.”
I pray God, says the apostle,
that you be strengthened, that you might live out of faith in the abiding Christ
within you.
Is that your prayer? Is
that your heartfelt need after a week? Do you pray, “Lord, strengthen the
life of Christ in me, the life of faith, the inward man. Strengthen the
truth that Christ abides in me and that I am His child”? We do not need to
be exhorted to make such a prayer with respect to our bodies. We want our
bodies to be firm, toned. With respect to our finances we want them to be
strong. With respect to our emotional life we want that to be
strong. With respect to our business we want a strong, flourishing
business. But all of those things, say the Scriptures, belong to the
perishing, earthly life. They are important. But on your deathbed,
you are not going to say, “I wish I had been stronger in my shoulders. I
wish I had a stronger portfolio.” On your deathbed, as a child of God, you
are going to pray, “Lord, I wish (I see very plainly now), I wish all my days I
had been stronger spiritually, with the abiding Jesus Christ.” Is that
your prayer?
When That
Happens,
What is the
Result?
The apostle goes on, very
briefly now, in verses 17 and 18, to tell us what the result of spiritual
strengthening will be. The result of spiritual strengthening that he prays
for is not the one that we would have picked first.
He says, “that ye,
being rooted and grounded in love, may be able [here is the result—you must be
spiritually strong so that you can do something. Do what? So that
you are able] to comprehend with all saints what is the breadth, and length, and
depth, and height…of the love of Christ, which passeth knowledge.” The
result of spiritual strengthening will be, says the apostle, the greater ability
to comprehend the love of Christ.
We would say, “Lord, make me
more strong spiritually to resist sin.” That is good. “Lord, make me
strong to do good works, to be the type of Christian that I should be in this
world.” That is also good. We might even say, according to our
pride, “Lord, make me strong spiritually so that others in the congregation
o-o-o and ah-h over my spiritual abilities.” That is pride!
But the apostle is asking and
praying for something that is behind all of that, something that comes before we
can walk in good works, before we can resist the devil. He is praying,
“Make them strong spiritually, give their faith to grow, in order that they may
begin to apprehend, in order that they may begin to lay hold on something,
something that is large, something that is immense—the love of God in Jesus
Christ.
That is his
prayer. The result of spiritual strengthening is that we begin to
comprehend a little bit more the love of Christ for us. And out of that
comprehension of the love of Christ flows the Christian
life.
The apostle Paul wants to
emphasize in the passage the bigness of the love of Christ. In effect he
says, this is something no scale can weigh. You cannot get a measuring
tape around this. You cannot place a slide rule by it. You cannot
type in the data in the computer and let the computer figure out the
formula. You might be able, through the theories of triangles and
corollaries and distances, to comprehend how far a star is away from you.
You might get something on that. But you cannot comprehend this. You
cannot get your mind around this: what is the breadth, the length, the
depth, and the height of the love of Christ, which passeth, says the apostle,
knowledge. The emphasis is on the bigness of the thing.
And his prayer is, Lord,
strengthen them spiritually—so that they can do good works? Yes. But
strengthen them spiritually so that they form in their mind, in their heart, a
better estimate, a better understanding personally, of the measureless love of
Christ. And he is praying here, not just for the minister in his study as
he compares Scripture with Scripture, that the Holy Spirit give him to push back
his chair and say, “How can anyone explain the love of God?” He is praying
not just for theologians, so that they can write clear, penetrating books about
the love of God. He is praying not just for old people in rocking
chairs. But he is praying for all the saints. Note verse 18:
“May be able to comprehend with all saints.” That is you, boys and
girls. That is you, Dad and Mom. That is each one of us. That
each one of us may get a better comprehension of the love of Christ that passes
knowledge.
Cause them to grow
spiritually—why? So they get a better understanding of the love of
Christ. We can talk about it. We are going to read the Lord’s Supper
form about it. We are going to celebrate it. But it passes
knowledge. It is too high. I cannot attain to it. I cannot
comprehend it.
So here is the heart of the
matter. The prayer is, “Lord, strengthen me spiritually so that I might
begin to apprehend the mystery of the love of Christ for me.”
Now there is a step in there
that I missed, in verse 17: “That ye, being rooted and grounded in love,
may be able to comprehend….” The step that is in between “Lord, grant that
we may grow spiritually” and “so that we may comprehend the love of God,” is
that we be rooted and grounded in love, or that we love each other. So the
idea is not that we go off into our own spiritual corner (with the Lord!), and
we grow in an understanding of His love. That is not what Paul is
praying. That is not the way it works. But he is praying that we may
grow in that love, that we may be strengthened spiritually and grow in our
understanding of the love of Christ...in the communion of the body of
Christ.
Specifically, the love of
Christ expands our hearts for each other. Our hearts have to be expanded
in love. I would like to use the example (I do not think it happens any
more, but) when I was a little boy in the 60s, then Mom and Dad would take us to
the shoe store in South Holland to get our Sunday shoes. My foot was small
and wide. There was no shoe wide enough. Shoes would always be an
inch or two too long, but never wide enough. I liked a particular shoe,
but it pinched. They had in the shoe store this wooden thing that the shoe
salesman would put into the shoe to stretch it. He would turn a screw and,
because the shoe was made of leather, it made the shoe bigger. They could
stretch the leather, so that you could get your foot into the shoe more
easily.
So, says the apostle, our
hearts become shriveled, like a prune. They become very narrow,
selfish. And, the apostle says, if we are to comprehend with all the
saints the matchless love of Christ, then the Holy Spirit needs to expand our
hearts and fill them with the love of God for each other.
That is his
prayer.
What Is the Ultimate Goal,
or Purpose for Spiritual
Sstrengthening?
And then, there is one more
step. The prayer is not only, “Lord, grant that they grow spiritually,
strengthen them so that they comprehend the love of Christ.” Paul adds one
more thing: To the end (literally) that they might be filled with the
fullness of God. The final goal is that we be filled with the fullness of
God, which means that the grace and glory of God, through faith, might be in
us. And then that this fullness of God Himself might emanate from us, so
that God might be glorified in us, so that we might become pure as He is pure,
and so that we might desire to be faithful servants of our God.
So that is the prayer. Is
that your prayer? “Lord, strengthen me in the inner man, the life of
Christ in me, in order that, being strengthened, I might better comprehend the
love of Christ, in order that, comprehending that love of Christ, I might be
filled with the glory of God, and God might be glorified by me.”
That is quite a prayer.
But as we pray that, Christ says, “Now come, and in this Supper I will
strengthen you.” God grant it.
Let us pray.