THE REFORMED WITNESS HOUR"Fighting Under the Banner of our Ascended King”Rev. Carl Haak
May 4, 2008; No. 3409
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Dear radio friends,
Our Savior’s ascension into heaven forty days after His
resurrection is important for us. From heaven, our ascended Jesus is the
One entrusted by the heavenly Father with all power. And He is the One
who, from heaven, blesses us His church and upholds us in the good fight of
faith.
If the other three events of
Jesus’ ministry (His birth, His death, and His resurrection) mean more to us
than His ascension, and if we make more of them than of the ascension, then, as
Christians, we are showing that the world’s holidays dominate us and not the
knowledge of our faith. The ascension is as important as (no, we may say
it is the crowning of) the other three. His birth, His death, His
resurrection all led to His ascension.
From heaven Jesus blesses
us. From heaven He is directing all things for the good of His
church. From heaven He holds each one of His children up in the fight of
faith. He upholds His church on the earth so that it continues to witness
of Him and of His saving truth. This makes all the difference. This
is our absolute assurance. We now, as individual Christians and as the
body of Christ, are in the valley here below. But He is on the mount of
God, and He extends His powerful blessing over us with unwearied
hands.
The ascension of our Lord Jesus
Christ, then, is the reminder that we, now, on the earth, are the church
militant—the church on earth that is headed toward the heavenly Canaan.
Sinful of ourselves, with many enemies seeking our destruction, we are now a
militant church. We are left on the earth for a purpose—to fight, to fight
the battle of faith, to fight sin in our own selves, to fight error and pride
and self and everything that is contrary to our God and to His Christ. In
this battle of faith we are over-matched. We are unworthy and
ill-prepared. But we fight under the banner of our ascended King
Jesus. We fight under His extended hands of blessing. We fight under
Him who holds the rod of God in His hands and has promised to bless
us.
I call your attention today to
the ascension of the Lord Jesus Christ, from a text of Scripture found in the
Old Testament: Exodus 17:8-16, where you have the attack of Amalek upon
the children of Israel.
Israel had been delivered from
the land of Egypt by Moses, led through the Red Sea, and has not yet arrived at
Mount Sinai, where they would receive the law from the hand of
God.
We read, “Then came Amalek and
fought with Israel in Rephidim” (v. 8). The Amalekites were descendants of
Esau, Jacob’s twin brother—Esau, who hated what was represented in Jacob.
Amalek was the grandson of Esau, and Amalek and Esau represent the forces of
this world as it hates the cause of God in the world; the reprobate world lined
up against God’s elect church. Amalek is called in Numbers 24:20 “first
among the nations.” That is, they were the first to enter the list as the
enemies of God and Israel. And they are the nation that has no respect for
God and is moved in contempt against God and His cause as represented in Jacob
(or Israel).
The Amalekites were desert
fighters. They were plunderers. And they were fierce, strong, and
cruel. They were masters of the ambush, of the hit and run, and they were
confident of the victory.
Now we notice two things of
their attack upon the children of Israel at this point. Number one.
As I have indicated, they were motivated by hatred and a desire that Israel not
get to her destination, namely, Canaan. Rephidim is nowhere near where the
Amalekites lived themselves. They came a long way from home. They
have journeyed with a great consuming purpose—hatred against Jacob. They
have heard what God has done to Egypt and of how Israel is on her way to the
promised land of rest. But they do not want Israel to inherit that land of
rest.
Secondly, we note that their
attack was cowardly. It was not, send out your best to fight our
best. But they bushwhacked Israel from behind. They attacked the
old, the feeble, the women and the children who trailed behind the columns of
Israel. Israel traveled like a large family. At Sinai they would
learn how to travel more effectively as a nation. But now they simply
followed en mass behind the pillar of cloud or pillar of light. And the
old, the faint, the weak, and the mothers and the children would end up in the
rear of the column. These are the ones that Amalek attacks.
So also the battle of our faith
today. In our battle our enemy, the flesh and the wicked world, is
motivated by hatred of the God we confess. The purpose of the enemy is to
keep us from the heavenly Canaan. Our enemy is a very skilled
opponent. And their attack is always upon the rear, upon the children,
upon the weak, upon the feeble.
Israel was not prepared to
fight. Physically they did not know at this time how to make an
army. They had been a slave people. They were not skilled in the
sword. Spiritually it was worse. They had just come from the chiding
of the children of Israel at Meribah. They had almost been ready to stone
Moses because there was no water to drink. They were very angry when they
did not get their way. They had just sinned against God in a grievous
manner. They had tempted the Lord, saying, “Is the Lord among us or is he
not?” They meant to say, “He is not among us. He makes it too
hard. He doesn’t care about us.” They enter this battle ill-prepared
and spiritually unfit. Amalek, the enemies of God’s people, said, “This is
the best time to attack Israel. They are down.” The devil says
concerning you, “Now I will attack because you are down.”
But let us not miss the truth
that in the battle we are led by Joshua.
We read, “And Moses said unto
Joshua, Choose us out men, and go out, fight with Amalek.” This is the
first time that Joshua is mentioned in Exodus. And Moses calls him
“Joshua,” a name that had not yet been given to him. He calls him “Joshua”
here because he is presented in this action as the picture as Jesus, “Jehovah
Salvation,” “leader of the host of God.” Joshua quickly, confidently goes
forth and chooses men to go with him to fight Amalek. And Moses says to
Joshua: “And I will take my rod up on the hill to overlook,” for the
battle would take place in a valley below. And that rod had just been used
by Moses to part the Red Sea and to smite the rock out of which came the
water. So that rod represented the power, the almighty power, of God with
His people. That rod and Joshua, then, represented that, in the battle as
we go forth to fight, it is the Lord Jesus Christ and His mighty power that are
the strength to uphold the cause of God. We go forth to fight. His
Spirit within us makes us willing to fight the good fight of faith. We
read, “And Joshua discomfited Amalek and his people with the edge of the
sword.”
So also the church on earth,
and you and I as members in Jesus Christ, are called to go forth and fight the
battle of faith. We fight against a sinful flesh within us. We fight
against the devil who is the tempter. We fight against lust and greed,
jealousy and pride. We fight against the willingness in us to give up in a
marriage—just go along and give up. We fight against anger. We fight
against the unwillingness to forgive another. We fight against the loss of
love for the truth. We become apathetic. We fight against
heresy. We fight against hopelessness and despair in the cause of
God. We fight against conformity to the world. We fight the good
fight of faith.
In this battle our strength is
to have our eye upon our ascended Lord Jesus, who holds the rod of God in His
hand and has extended His hands in blessing over us.
We read, “And it came to pass,
when Moses held up his hand, that Israel prevailed.” The picture is
this. In the valley below, Joshua and his raw recruits line up and come at
Amalek. And Amalek offers battle. Above on the hill is Moses holding
above his head the rod of the Lord, and so long as that rod stays up, Joshua and
Israel drive back the line of the Amalekites. It begins to bend. And
Israel goes forward.
But Moses wearies. The
rod comes down to shoulder level and then down to chest or waist. And as
the hands come down, Israel is driven back. The lines of Israel begin to
waver. Israel now is on their heels and being driven back by the
Amalekites. We read that Aaron and Hur aid Moses. They tell him that
he must sit upon a rock and they hold up his arms till the going down of the
sun.
This is a picture of the
powerful blessing of the ascended Christ over us now in the battle of faith, of
His tireless arms and of the certainty that through the ascended Christ the army
of God will prevail in the battle of faith. The rod of Moses, the rod of
the Lord, was the symbol of God’s power. It was equated to the hand of
God.
In Exodus 3:20 we read, “And I
will stretch out my hand, and smite Egypt with all my wonders which I will do in
the midst thereof: and after that he will let you go.” And then He
tells Moses: “Take thy rod, and stretch out thy hand....” The rod of
Moses brought the Ten Plagues. The rod of the Lord parted the Red
Sea. It was the symbol of the mighty power of God invested in our Lord
Jesus Christ. We read in Revelation 12:5 that the woman, the church,
“brought forth a man child, who was to rule all nations with a rod of
iron: and her child was caught up onto God, and to his throne.” Over
us, over the church, is the greater Moses, the One who has ascended up on high,
to the hill of God, to whom all power and might are entrusted. And it is
by His strength, by Him whose rod breaks nations in pieces, that the church
fights the battle of faith.
Tomorrow you must go to
work. Tomorrow your children will play or go to school, and moms will be
at home. Do you know who you are as the people of God? We read,
“Then came Amalek.” Amalek, the forces of evil and sin, will battle
against the church and all who confess the name of Jesus. They will
assault, they will attack where they believe there is weakness. There will
be temptation. There will be discouragements. They will try to push
you off the path of life eternal. How will you fight?
Follow Joshua. Look up to
the ascended King Jesus at the right hand of God. Live in the assurance
that all power, might, and glory belong to Him. See the ascended King with
His arms and His hands raised above you with the rod of God. Realize that
you are under His sight. By prayer go to Him and by faith fight, fight in
His strength.
We soon become weary.
Moses’ arms grew tired, for he was only a shadow of Jesus Christ. You try
to do that once. I remember, as a boy, going home after hearing a sermon
on this portion of Scripture. And I took my mother’s broom and tried to
hold it outstretched over my head. Soon I grew most weary and could not
hold it up there any longer. So also we grow weary. We become
discouraged. It seems that the Amalekites are going to break our
line. They are going to rout us.
Then remember in this battle of
faith these things. Number one. There is no weakness or weariness in
our ascended Lord. He is the almighty Son of God who faints not neither
grows weary. The ascension declares that everlasting power, strength,
dominion, and faithful love are entrusted to Christ, and He is the One who now
holds the church. Look to Him. Lift up your eyes to the hills, from
whence cometh our help. Our help cometh from the ascended Lord. Our
help is in the name of the Lord Jesus, ascended in power and
glory.
Second. The uplifted rod
of Moses was not only a symbol of power but also a symbol of blessing. The
hands of Jesus Christ extend up over us. They are extended in
blessing. That means that in the conflict, in the battle of faith, in the
struggles against sin, we are yet assured that He is blessing us. We
cannot always see that with the human eye. We cannot feel that with the
human emotions at all times. We cannot understand that. It seems
that Amalek prevails. It seems that sometimes children and families are
swallowed up and lost to us. It seems that the church suffers setbacks and
deteriorates. But it is not so. The cause of God shall know no
defeat in this world. The hands of blessing are extended over the cause of
God. Not only power is extended over us, but the promise to work all
things for good, the promise to bless us.
This is, of course, not an
excuse for us not to fight diligently in the battle. It is no excuse for
discouragement. We must not leave the field. We must not run.
We must not ask as Israel did, “Is the Lord among us?” But we must look up
to the hill of God. We must hold fast to the truth of Scripture. We
must rejoice when we see our Lord ascended up on high and His hands extended in
blessing over us His church.
Our assurance is the
victory. And Moses, we read, “built an altar, and called the name of it
Jehovah-nissi”: Jehovah, our banner.
For our assurance in the
battle, a banner has been raised over us. A banner was a very important
thing in any army. Maybe not as much today, with all of the
communications, but in times past the banner of the army was crucial. The
banner was the flag or pennant each regiment or battalion would have—their
colors. Perhaps you have seen pictures of this in battles of the Civil
War. The banner was where the leader was, where your company stood, where
your battalion had made its stand. In confusion and in shouts of battle,
in screams and smoke and explosion, you needed to see where the banner
was. There you had to stand. Where the banner flew, you would rally
to the flag and you would make your stand around the colors because there is
where the leader stood.
There is a banner over
us. And, as I said, that banner is the Lord’s hands extended in blessing
and holding the rod of God. Jehovah, the I AM THAT I AM, has given the
victory to us in the ascended Lord Jesus Christ. He has gone up on high
above all powers and principalities, dominions and might. He is given a
name above all other names. He is Lord of lords and King of kings.
We fight, but we fight not uncertainly. We fight under the banner of the
ascended King. He goes forth conquering and to conquer.
You face relentless
temptations? You become downcast over God’s cause in the church? You
struggle personally with Amalek, who bushwhacks you, who comes suddenly behind
you and robs you of your hope? Look to the banner!
Jehovah-nissi. Then, with renewed strength, zeal, and confidence go
forward. Follow Joshua into the valley below. And stay around that
banner—the banner that is the full truth of God in Jesus Christ. There are
false banners being unfurled in the church—banners representing a limited God
and a powerful man. There is no safety under that banner. Banners
that are representing the denial of the inspiration of Holy Scripture, the
compromise of a holy life. There are many false banners. If you
stand under those false banners, you will be put to flight. The enemy will
see your backside.
Stand under the true banner of
the truth of God in the Holy Scriptures, the truth of the sovereign God in Jesus
Christ His Son. Then, if there are only fifty of you, if only forty, if
only ten—if you are under the right banner, stand.
Our assurance is that the
victory is ours in Christ. We read, “And Moses’ hands were steady until
the going down of the sun.” Jehovah will put out the remembrance of Amalek
from under heaven. When the sun goes down on the earth in the day of the
Lord’s return, only the church will occupy the field of battle. His hands
are steady until the sun goes down in your life and you die. Think of the
ascended Lord Jesus and yourself and your life right now. Over you is
Joshua, Jesus, who holds all power and who loves you and rules in a perfect way
so that, as you fight, you will not be destroyed. And all your hardships
must work final glory. Over the head of the church are the hands of power
and blessing, steady, until the sun goes down on the earth and He returns
again. Amalek will not be found. Full victory will belong to
us. Now go and fight the good fight of faith. Look to the
banner. Look up to the hill of God. For this is His word: His
saints shall not fail, but over the earth their power shall prevail. His
church shall be built. His glory shall be seen. I know that.
For over us, right now, is Jesus, the King of salvation, with arms outstretched,
hands holding the rod of God containing all power and blessing.
Let us pray.
Father, we thank Thee for the
truth of the ascension of Jesus Christ and the victory that we have in
Him. Bless Thy precious Word to our hearts. In Jesus’ name,
Amen.