E.A. Johnston teaches that God calls ordinary men to undergo a transformative journey of surrender and intimacy with Him, equipping them to accomplish extraordinary works for His glory.
In this sermon, E.A. Johnston explores the life of Moses as a profound example of God's preparation and calling for ordinary men to do extraordinary works. He emphasizes the transformative power of intimacy with God, the trials that refine believers, and the ultimate rewards of faithfulness. Johnston challenges listeners to embrace surrender and step into the divine adventure God has prepared for them.
Full Transcript
In Exodus 3.1 we read, Now Moses kept the flock of Jethro, his father-in-law, the priest of Midian. And he led the flock to the backside of the desert and came to the mountain of God, even to Horeb. That verse, friends, represents 40 years in the life of this man Moses.
Moses was 40 years in Midian, in a season of stripping and self-emptying. To Moses, his domestic shepherd life was only a refuge from Pharaoh, on the uneventful backside of a desert, tending another man's sheep. But it was much more than that.
It was a training ground in Christ's school for the work God had called and prepared him to do. And his greatest adventure lay before him an extraordinary experience of the Lord God. For what transpires next in the life of this man Moses is an adventure of 40 years in a intimate walk with God, where he would join in the divine work of the deliverance of a nation and witness miracle after miracle performed through God's wondrous works on the behalf of his people.
The Christian life is an adventure lived in a higher altitude than most mortal men. It is one of unspeakable plateaus and far-reaching vistas in an exhilarating climb for a lifetime. For to experience God in an intimate walk with him is to breathe thinner air in a realm of the impossible, where with God all things are possible.
The apostle Peter tasted it atop the choppy sea of Galilee as he defied gravity and walked on the water to his Lord on the Isle of Patmos. The apostle John saw a vision of the risen Christ. His head and hairs were white as wool, as white as snow, and his eyes as a flame of fire.
And when John saw that, he fell down at his feet as dead. An encounter with God will knock you off your feet for sure. And the apostle Paul was taken up to a third heaven, and the incredible sights he beheld he never divulged and kept a breathtaking vision to himself for 14 years.
The prophet Elijah got the ride of his life as he ascended to heaven in a chariot of fire, all a smoke and a blaze with the glory of God. Enoch was translated with God as a reward of his intimacy with God. An encounter with God will so alter one's life that the normal no longer satisfies.
One will long for a supernatural walk of such challenges and proportions that it can only be lived by a power greater than man. The road to this great adventure is accompanied by hardships, trials, afflictions. And whoever treads this solitary path will be exposed to great strippings, purgings, prunings, emptings, and losses, where eventually a death will occur within as self goes down in annihilation.
But the benefits and the rewards will be innumerable both here and in eternity. I once knew a minister in Scotland who knew Duncan Campbell, who was so mildly used in the revival in the Scottish Hebrides. And I asked this minister to describe to me in one sentence the man Duncan Campbell.
He thought about it, and then he told me, Duncan Campbell was an ordinary man who had had an extraordinary experience of God. And I believe, friends, that God is still on the lookout for an ordinary man, surrendered to him, that he can use to do extraordinary things through for his glory.
Sermon Outline
-
I
- Moses' 40 years in Midian as a time of preparation
- The shepherd life as a divine training ground
- God's call to a higher adventure
-
II
- Examples of biblical encounters with God
- The transformative power of intimacy with God
- Supernatural experiences that alter life perspectives
-
III
- The challenges and trials on the path to spiritual maturity
- The necessity of self-emptying and surrender
- The eternal rewards of faithfulness
-
IV
- The example of Duncan Campbell as an ordinary man used by God
- God's ongoing search for surrendered vessels
- The call to embrace God's extraordinary purpose
Key Quotes
“Moses was 40 years in Midian, in a season of stripping and self-emptying.” — E.A. Johnston
“An encounter with God will so alter one's life that the normal no longer satisfies.” — E.A. Johnston
“God is still on the lookout for an ordinary man, surrendered to him, that he can use to do extraordinary things through for his glory.” — E.A. Johnston
Application Points
- Embrace seasons of waiting and preparation as essential for God's work in your life.
- Seek a deeper, intimate relationship with God that transforms your perspective and purpose.
- Be willing to surrender self and endure trials to become a vessel God can use for His glory.
