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Christlike Faith Series
E.A. Johnston
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0:00 10:40
E.A. Johnston

Christlike Faith Series

E.A. Johnston · 10:40

E.A. Johnston teaches that God builds and tests our faith through trials to make us more Christlike, revealing Jesus in our daily lives.
In this devotional sermon, E.A. Johnston explores how God builds faith in believers through trials and suffering to make them more Christlike. Drawing from Scripture and inspiring stories, Johnston emphasizes the importance of authentic faith that reveals Jesus in everyday life. Listeners are encouraged to embrace challenges as opportunities for spiritual growth and to reflect Christ consistently in their actions.

Full Transcript

We are in our faith series and studying the life of faith. How God tries our faith, tests our faith, builds our faith, strengthens and stretches our faith. When Jesus was here in his earthly ministry, he was continually looking for faith among his followers.

He was always challenging his disciples' faith by putting them in humanly impossible predicaments and seeing how they would react. Then he would say something like, O you of little faith, or he'd ask them, where is your faith? He commended faith in a Gentile woman and then he healed the woman with an issue of blood because of her faith. He would say, your faith has made you whole.

Our message today, friends, is entitled Christlike and we will look at how God builds faith in us to make us more Christlike, to make us more like Jesus. We read in Philippians 3.10, that I may know him and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of his sufferings being made conformable unto his death. I am reminded about a story of Dr. W. Graham Scroggie who told about the time the missionary, Helen Rosevear, was a member of his church.

She came down front in response to a call to missions. Graham Scroggie wrote in her Bible flyleaf the verse Philippians 3.10 and then he handed her Bible to her, looked her in the eye and commented that I may know him. You are here.

Perhaps one day you will be privileged to know the fellowship of his sufferings. Well, years later, Helen Rosevear was a missionary in Africa in the Congo during the great uprising of the 1960s and she was cruelly attacked by four men. She was physically abused by them and as they were kicking her and beating her, the one thing that got her through that horrible ordeal was the memory of Graham Scroggie saying to her, perhaps one day you will be privileged to know the fellowship of his sufferings.

She said that's the only thing that got her through. It was Jesus and her suffering while she was being attacked. It was that fellowship.

The faith life is the most exciting adventure in the world, friend. Many say they want to go deeper with God. They say they want to know his power.

But let me say this, friend. If you want to know the power of his resurrection, you must be deeply familiar with the fellowship of his sufferings. I was talking to Adrian Rogers one day and I asked him if he knew the time that God touched his life with power and anointing.

He looked far away and then he looked back at me and he said it happened right after the death of his baby boy. He said during that time he was seeking God in a deep way and it was then he got a touch from heaven for service. Every man I've known who's been used of God in a deep way was familiar with suffering.

God wants to build faith in us so we can be more like Jesus. God wants us to be Christ-like and he will place us in circumstances to press us to see what comes out, the flesh or Jesus. Every time I was with Adrian Rogers I felt like I was with Jesus.

He was one of the most Christ-like men I've ever known. Just being in his presence made you feel like you were hanging out with Jesus. But God doesn't restrict this just to super saints.

God's desire is for every follower of his to be made more and more like Christ, to become Christ-like. God will prune us with his divine pruning knife to strip back self so Christ can be revealed. God will purge us in his refiner's fire to get the dross out of our life that's blocking the view so Christ can be more clearly seen in us.

I believe, friend, that if you are a man of God others should be able to see that. I went to work once for an ungodly man who every time he opened his mouth he cussed God and cursed Jesus. It was hard just to be around this beast of a man.

Every terrible situation he purposely put me in. I responded to it as a Christian until one day in his office he confessed to me that it was apparent I was a man of faith. God will place us in difficult situations to see what spills out.

A lot of Christians are just surface Christians who have no spiritual depth in their life. When I was a young man I attended weekly prayer meetings of other believers. The man leading the prayer meeting was a big man, a big heavy set man.

He always used such heavenly words when he led us in prayer. I was a practical joker back in those days. One night before we got started in prayer I played a practical joke on him.

I snuck my hand up behind his neck and scratched his neck with my fingernail. When I did I yelled, Spider! Well, the first thing out of his mouth was he damned God. And it shocked all of us there that this man who led us in prayer could so easily cuss and damn God.

That's what spilled out of him because he was a surface Christian. You know, friend, Christianity is not just a profession of faith. It's a way of living that reveals the nature of Jesus in us to others.

Too many today name the name of Christ without having any reality of God in their lives. That's why other teenagers rebel because they lead their kids with a do-as-I-say mentality rather than lead them with a do-as-I-do godly example. Our kids, especially our teenagers, are seeking realness.

They're looking for reality. They're watching us parents to see if our so-called religion is really real in our lives. Or do we just behave one way at church in front of our church friends and behave an entirely different way at home when we're with our family? Do we have a life of consistency or can it be said we're just plain old hypocrites? If we are really Christians, shouldn't our lives stand out in a sin-loving society? Or do we just blend in with our lost neighbors? I'll never forget the story told about Dr. Stephen F. Olford.

He was invited to preach at a big Dallas church and the pastor asked one of his interns to go pick up Stephen Olford at the airport. Well, the young man asked to see a photograph of Dr. Olford so he would recognize him. No need for that, said the pastor.

Just go to the airport terminal and when the passengers get off the plane, look for a man who has God all over him. Well, the young intern did just that and as soon as he saw Dr. Olford with his coat over his arm, carrying his briefcase, he knew he was the man of God. Christlikeness is what God is doing in us in our sanctification process where we get to the place in our Christian walk that Jesus is prevalent in us because we have made him preeminent in our daily living.

The next time God places you, friend, in a difficult circumstance, pay close attention to how you react to it and in it. Can others see Jesus in you or do they just see a Christian behaving badly? I'll close this message with a story I heard J. Vernon McGee tell. He said he was in a park one day handing out gospel tracts and a man took one of his tracts and as he took it, he pointed at J. Vernon McGee and told him to go on about his business for he was going to keep his eyes on him and see what kind of tracts he made.

Often, our daily behavior is more of a gospel witness than we realize as the world is watching the church to see what kind of tracts we make. Let me ask you, friend, when you were squeezed like a lemon, what comes out? Sour juice or is it lemonade? Let us pray.

Sermon Outline

  1. I
    • God tests and builds our faith through challenges
    • Jesus sought faith in his disciples and commended it
    • Faith is essential to experiencing God's power
  2. II
    • Knowing Christ includes sharing in His sufferings
    • Suffering refines faith and reveals Christlikeness
    • Examples of faith through suffering in ministry
  3. III
    • Christlikeness is the goal of faith development
    • God prunes and purifies believers to reveal Jesus
    • Our lives should visibly reflect Christ in all circumstances
  4. IV
    • Authentic faith is more than surface-level profession
    • Our behavior is a gospel witness to the world
    • Responding to trials reveals what truly lives in us

Key Quotes

“If you want to know the power of his resurrection, you must be deeply familiar with the fellowship of his sufferings.” — E.A. Johnston
“God will prune us with his divine pruning knife to strip back self so Christ can be revealed.” — E.A. Johnston
“When you were squeezed like a lemon, what comes out? Sour juice or is it lemonade?” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Embrace difficult circumstances as opportunities for God to build and reveal your faith.
  • Strive for consistency in your Christian walk so others can see Jesus in you.
  • Remember that sharing in Christ’s sufferings is part of growing deeper in faith and power.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to be Christlike in faith?
Being Christlike means allowing God to build and refine our faith so that Jesus is clearly seen in our character and actions.
How does suffering relate to faith?
Suffering is a part of the Christian journey that tests and strengthens faith, helping believers share in Christ's sufferings and grow spiritually.
Why does God allow difficult circumstances?
God uses difficult situations to reveal what is truly in our hearts and to help us become more like Jesus through faith.
How can others see Christ in me?
Others see Christ in you when your daily behavior consistently reflects Jesus' love, grace, and faith, especially under pressure.
What is the role of faith in experiencing God's power?
Faith is the key that unlocks the power of God's resurrection and enables believers to experience His presence and miracles.

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