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Strike Up a Passion Part One: Faithful to his Call: The Submission

1 Kings 19:10-21

God is looking for a people full of passion.

Christ followers are passionate people.
Christ followers are people who burn with a passion to serve God and others.

Too often we take the life changing grace that has come to us very lightly.
Too often we allow ourselves to rest in the comfort of the grace of God that provides us salvation and we never allow it to touch others around us.

This message is the first in a series of message that are being written to clearly lay out the expectations and opportunities for the Christ-followers who are a part of this church.

Serving God is much more than an emotional experience.
Serving God is more than great worship and good music.
Serving God is more than reading our bibles and praying everyday.
Serving God is more than keeping ourselves unspotted from the culture around us.

Serving God is always about others.

God is calling this church to another level of walking with Him.
God is calling you to another level in your spiritual journey.

Maybe you are resting.
Maybe you have taken a break for a little while.
Maybe you have put your time in and just don’t feel it any more.

God has no reserves or weekend warriors.
God is looking for people who will serve Him by serving others.

There is a grave danger that church people have fallen into in recent years. It is especially serious in churches like this one.

Because the kind of worship we do answers the emotional need of some people it becomes very easy to become addicted to the Sunday morning experience and walk out of here emotionally stirred but never changed.

God is calling us as a church to begin to minister to other people.

It is one thing to have a nice safe, seeker-oriented service that we can invite our friends to but we must be about more than a nice safe and wonderful Sunday morning experience.

Tommy Tenney in his book The God Chasers, says, “There is something in us that makes us afraid of the commitment that comes with real intimacy with God. For one thing, intimacy with God requires purity. The days of fun and games in the Church are over. What do I mean by “fun and games”? If your definition of fun is low commitment and lots of chills and thrills, then all you’ve wanted to do is date God.

God is tired of us wanting to get our thrills from Him without putting on the ring of commitment! Some are more enamored with the goose bumps than the glory! Their addicted to the anointing, liking the feeling of being blessed, receiving the “gifts” like a religious “gold-digger” happy with chocolates, flowers, and jewelry. The last time I checked He was still looking for a bride, not a girlfriend; one who will stick with him.”

Our goal in the next few weeks will be to help you discover renewed or perhaps new passion about serving God and others.

To do this we are going to look at the story of Elisha’s call and entrance into a passionate relationship with God.

Elisha was called by God in an unusual fashion and this morning we are going to examine this call and understand how it works in our lives as well.

“So he departed from there, and found Elisha the son Shaphat, who was plowing with twelve yoke of oxen before him, and he was with the twelfth. Then Elijah passed by him and threw his mantle on him. And he left the oxen and ran after Elijah, and said, “ Please let me kiss my father and mother, and then I will follow you.” And he said to him, “Go back again, for what have I done to you?” So Elisha turned back from him, and took a yoke of oxen and slaughtered them and boiled their flesh, using the oxen’s equipment, and gave it to the people, and they ate. Then he arose and followed Elijah and served him.”

There are some steps that we must take to realize the potential that God has place within every one of us.

  1. Acknowledge the call God has placed on our lives.

There is no question if you take the Bible seriously that you God places a call on the life of every Christ follower.

Every one of us have been given personalities and gifts that are unique.
Every one of us has something to offer in the area of serving others.

The question I have for you this morning is simply this, Have you acknowledged God’s claim to your life and talents?

What are you doing with what God has given you?
How are you touching others in the community in the name of Jesus?

In the beginning of His ministry, Jesus was continually bumping into fisherman, tax collectors, and political activists and asking them to follow Him.

Listen to the words of Jesus. You have heard them many times.

You are the salt of the earth.
You are the light of the world.
Let your light shine.
Follow me and I will make you fishers of men.

Go and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all things that I have commanded you.

This message is not just about ministry opportunities within the church. While we have many opportunities for service and a serious unemployment problem you can answer His call to service outside of ministries sponsored by this church.

The question is not have you have you answered the call to a ministry at this church, the question is have you answered the all anywhere.

What are you doing to touch others?

“Then Elijah passed by him and threw his mantle on him. And he left the oxen and ran after Elijah, and said, Please let me kiss my father and mother, and then I will follow you.”

  2. Abandon ourselves to serve Him.

In the beginning of His ministry, Jesus was continually bumping into fisherman, tax collectors, and political activists and asking them to follow Him.

It’s hard to believe in today’s context, but these men followed Him. They abandoned their careers, their families, and their futures to follow Jesus.

All because Jesus said, Follow Me.

Jesus said, “Whoever loses his life for My sake will find it.” What He is saying is simply, whoever abandons his life will live it to the fullest.

Abandonment to God is dangerous. Serving God to the fullest extent is not safe. It is not lovely and quiet and pious. It is war. It is sweat, hard work, toil and sometimes heartbreak. It can even lead to death.

Like it or not we live in a day of anemic Christianity.
We live in a day when we have made Gods out of our personal desires, wants and wishes.
Tommy Tenney again says, “We have become addicted to the relayed word of good preaching and teaching. Too many of us have become, “milk-babies” who want to sit on padded chairs in an air-conditioned and climate controlled building where someone else will pre-digest what God had to say and then regurgitate it back to us in a half-digested form”

Sometimes I believe we can listen to too much Christian radio and TV.

How much preaching and teaching can we continue to soak up before it finally translates into service for God to others?

Personal story. (move and adjustments)

If you and I are to answer the call of God to passionate Christ-following we are going to have to encounter God in a new and fresh way.

We must leave the old ways and habits of our lives and stretch out before God until we hear his call clearly in our life.

Abandonment to God is costly and requires our undivided loyalties to Him.

Elisha models it well in this scripture.

“So Elisha turned back from him, and took a yoke of oxen and slaughtered them and boiled their flesh, using the oxen’s equipment, and gave it to the people, and they ate.”

He was done farming. He was ready to follow God’s call. He was passionate about it. In essence he burned the bridges behind him. Symbolically he sacrificed this yoke of oxen as a sign of his willingness to abandon all and follow God.

  3. Allow God to use us in His own way.

Elisha acknowledged the call by abandoning everything he knew that was familiar.

He allowed God to use him by serving an old prophet who was coming down to the end of his life.

What do you need to allow God to do through you today?
What is God calling you to do?

I long for the day when men and women of this body will begin to look at the neighborhood, the community we live in and begin to let God find creative ways to work through us to touch others.

Passion is always risky. The Bible gives example after example of people who fell in love with Jesus and left their jobs, their families, their security. Once people met Jesus, their passion became hazardous to their health. People were estranged from the church and rejected by their parents; they became unemployed suddenly, ended up in jail, lost their lives and became as nothings in the eyes of the world.

Passion is not to be treated lightly. The passionate life is a risky life.

God is calling out to you today to know Him and know Him passionately.

Mike Yaconelli in Dangerous Wonders writes:

A young girl graduated from high school somewhat unsure of her future. Took a year off but enrolled finally in a university. Her parents breathed a sigh of relief. After a year and a half she decided to drop out of school and live in Hawaii for a year. Her parents and grandparents were concerned. They cautioned her about the need for a college education in the modern world. She loved Hawaii and when she returned to the mainland she moved to Lake Tahoe where the snowboarding was good. Her parents continually cautioned her not to forget her education.

What her parents and family didn’t understand was that while she was “wasting her time in resorts” she was traipsing around in her soul, searching for God. Although her father was a minister, she had never fully embraced Christianity. It wasn’t that she didn’t believe in God it was more a matter of knowing God.

The next phone call that came really shocked them because she announced, “I am going to Africa.” I want to find God and I’m going to spend five months on the Mercy Ship which is now in South Africa. Her parents were shocked, but she raised the money and in two months she was on the boat.

After 5 months of service she wrote in her newsletter:

It was around midnight, and my friend Carolyn and I were sitting on top of a jungle gym talking about how quickly our time in South Africa had gone. The moon was shining through a thin slice of clouds, and the stars were shining almost as brightly as they do in my hometown. The wind was blowing some Eucalyptus trees, and Carolyn and I were bundled up in sweatshirts and dirt covered skirts. “I’ve fallen in love,” I told Carolyn, “I’ve fallen in love and I am never falling out.” I will never forget that night, the trees, the wind, the smells. I had broken out of my eggshell, emerged from my cocoon, and I was ready to tell the world that I had fallen in love. I had found what I was looking for, and when I found Him He hadn’t moved. He wasn’t lost. He just embraced me and said, “Thank you, thank you. I have loved you all along, Jill. All this time, I loved you first.” What an amazing love.

The girl who wrote the letter was our daughter, Jill! She wasn’t going to college. She wasn’t pursuing a career. She was risking her future on her search for God. And she found Him!

Sometimes to allow God to work through us we must live in a manner that will be unorthodox to those who like to dwell in safety. God may be calling you to risk.

God is calling. He is calling you to be passionate for Him.

“A young father, a typical type-A personality, followed the same routine every workday. He would arrive home around 5:30 p.m., park the car in the garage, walk out to the driveway with briefcase in hand, pick up the paper, proceed to the front door, enter the house, place the briefcase in the hallway, put the newspaper on the couch in the living room, then walk down the long hallway to the kitchen. Once in the kitchen, he would open the refrigerator, reach for the carton of milk, walk over to the glass, pour the glass full of milk, and return the milk to the refrigerator. Without thinking, he would pick up the glass of cold milk, grab a cookie from the cookie jar on the counter, and walk to the living room where he would sit down, power up the television with the remote, and watch the news while drinking his milk and eating his cookie, sometimes stopping during commercials to browse through the newspaper. His routine had been the same for many years and, unbeknownst to him, his three-year old son had noticed.

One night the father came home form work and began his usual routine. As he stepped into the hallway, setting his briefcase and newspaper down, he looked up to see his son standing down the hall, a smile on his face, obviously anticipating his father’s return. Dad knew something was up, so he stopped and watched his son turn around and head for the kitchen. Pleasantly surprised, the dad crept to the edge of the kitchen to see what his son was up to. The little boy ran to the corner of the kitchen, pulled out the bottom drawer (which he was not supposed to do), stepped on the drawer, climbed onto the counter (which he was not supposed to do), reached into the cupboard, and pulled on a glass, knocking the other glasses over. Thankfully, none of them broke. With glass in hand, the little boy scooted back down onto the drawer, then to the floor, and ran over to the cookie jar. He reached up as high as he could and barely grasping the jar knocked it over and spilled cookies all over the floor. Oblivious to his father, he scooped all the cookies up and put them back on the counter, except for one. He picked up the remaining cookie, ran over to the refrigerator, place the cookie and the empty glass on the floor, opened the refrigerator door, and reached inside and grabbed the plastic half-gallon container of milk. Awfully heavy for a three year old, it promptly fell to the floor, which knocked the top off and spilled a little milk. He then picked up the container of milk and, the container wobbling terribly, began to pour the milk into the glass, spilling milk all over the floor. Andy other evening the father would have yelled at his son by this time, pointing out the terrible mess he was making. Instead, he sensed something much more important was happening here; he patiently waited as the little boy picked up the cookie and the glass of milk and came running to him with a huge smile on his face. The dad threw his arms around his son and said, “Thank-you, Son!” Dad realized his son was giving him a wonderful gift.”

This three year old boy had acted purely out of passion for his father and, luckily, his father had recognized it. Normally by the time boys are three, the passion has been learned out of them, and by the time they are big boys, it’s a forgotten luxury of childhood.

As you heard this story, some of you were struggling with neatness. You heard voices of neatness and order screaming in your heads. “Don’t step on a drawer! Get off the counter! Look out, you’re going to break those glasses! Look at eh mess you’ve made on the floor! You’re spilling milk everywhere.” If the father had listened to those voices, who knows what damage would have been done to his son. The passionate love of the son revealed the passionate love of the Father, whose only response was gratitude.”

Some of only see God as a God who stands in the doorway of our life and continually tells us to, Put the glass down! Stop doing that! Get off the counter!

Can I remind you today that God is looking for passionate responses to His word and His world?

He is looking for people who will hear the call and respond to make a difference in the life of someone else.

As you stumble with your milk and cookies, God is loving you all the way. He will respond and use you in ways you could never imagine.

The response today is not unlike other responses we have invited you to participate in.

We often invite you to come forward and kneel and pray and certainly that is always an option.

Around the front of the altar area today are tables with matches. If you are hearing God’s call, the one that comes to every believer and you would like symbolically to pick up a match today as a reminder for you to let the fire of God burn in you. I would invite you to come to the front on your way out the door today and take one of these matches. Some of you might want to linger and talk with God. That’s okay. Just move over to the ends of the platform and spend as much time as you would like.

2002/11/10