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Highjacking God
E.A. Johnston
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0:00 11:31
E.A. Johnston

Highjacking God

E.A. Johnston · 11:31

E.A. Johnston warns believers against hijacking God and Scripture for personal or man-centered ministry success, urging a focus on God's purposes rather than human happiness or numerical growth.
In this teaching sermon, E.A. Johnston challenges believers to examine how they use Scripture and serve God, warning against the temptation to hijack God for personal or man-centered ministry success. Drawing from Romans 8:28 and his own experience of burnout and divine encounter, Johnston calls for a refocus on God's sovereign purposes and eternal impact rather than numerical growth or popularity. This message encourages a faithful and God-glorifying approach to Christian ministry.

Full Transcript

I'd like to begin our message today, friends, by reading a familiar Bible verse. Many of us know it by heart. It's Romans 8, 28.

And we know that all things work together for good to them that love God, to them who are the called according to his purpose. Let me preface my remarks by saying I believe this verse of scripture has been one of the most hijacked verses from the Bible. The secular world applies it to them.

Even Hollywood built a popular TV series around it and abused it for their own gain. But we must ask ourselves a question. Who is this verse speaking of? It's a part of an epistle of the apostle Paul, and it's addressed to believers only.

He's writing to born-again believers who are called of God, saved by God, and who are living for God in a love relationship to him. If that's not you, friend, then this verse doesn't apply to you. You can't steal it or hijack it to make it fit your purposes.

But now that I've established this premise, let me say this. The born-again believer at times will often hijack this verse as well, and even hijack God as well to suit their purposes as well. This is typical of the pastor of a church who desires success in ministry.

He graduates seminary and receives a call from a church within his denomination, and he goes about his task of doing all he can to grow that church with more members. He may try to make his church relatable with the unchurched, so he removes the word Baptist from the title. It's no longer Faith Baptist Church, but Faith Church.

Then he changes the music program to attract more young people, so he gets rid of all the old hymns about the blood, and he adds a rock band to the worship time. He may even add some strobe disco lights for added visual effect. Then he shortens his sermon message to about 20 or 15 minutes, and he's sure that most of his message will be upbeat, positive, and uplifting, so that folks will be encouraged to return the following Sunday for more motivation.

After all, he believes you go to church to have a good time, so he does all he can to make sure his congregation has a good time, and he is quite successful with this strategy. People are coming in droves. The parking lot is full every Sunday to come to his church for a little slice of heaven and a lot of happiness.

Since his focus is church growth, he measures his success numerically. The more members he has, the more success he has. He makes sure his messages are upbeat and positive, and that they don't disturb anyone, but there's two main problems to this man-centered methodology.

First, his messages don't disturb anyone, and therefore there's no conviction of sin, so nobody's getting saved, and people join his church, and they plant their lives there, and he grows his church numerically, but with the unconverted church member. Secondly, he's guilty of hijacking the Bible for his own purposes, and hijacking God for his own purposes as well, for in his mind, he has a big ministry for God that he has worked hard for, and he wants God to get behind it and give him more power, so he can do more of it, which is centered around his ministry philosophy of the happiness of man. Just outside the sanctuary, he adds some comfortable lounge chairs and a coffee bar to make church feel more like a Starbucks, and he waters down his message to make it more palatable to sinful man, and he's quite the success within his denomination, and he's called to bigger and bigger churches because he has a track record of growing a church, and one's ministerial success is gauged by brick and mortar and counting members, but he is blind to the fact he's guilty of hijacking God for his own purposes.

He wants success, and he wants God behind that success, so he keeps God behind him and out of view as much as possible. Sadly, many men finish their ministry as a little boy on the seashore, playing in the sand, who likes building things like sand castles that may look good and hold up for a little while, and as the tide comes in, every shrimp has its hole, but it doesn't last as far as eternity is concerned, and it eventually will wash away. I had to find that out for myself.

I graduated from two different seminaries with two doctorate degrees, and they didn't prepare me for what ministry really was. Ministry success isn't building the biggest church within your city, or building the biggest church within your denomination, because if that's all your ministry is, then you've hijacked God for your own purposes, and your sand castles that you built will one day wash away. All I can do, friend, is give you my story, and hopefully it may help you along the way to reset your priorities and have a more impacting life for God.

Years ago, I was literally burning myself out for God. I was working 20 hours a day, non-stop, maintaining a secular career and a ministry on top of it, where I was so overworked I was getting only four hours of sleep at night. George Whitfield once told his London congregation, I fetched this sermon while most of you were asleep.

Whitfield burned himself out for God, dying at the age of 55. His famous comment was, I'd rather wear out than rust out, and he did just that. Well, I've just returned from England and Scotland, where I've been conducting research for my two-volume definitive biography on Whitfield, and I was plumb wore out.

It was 2.30 in the morning, and I was having trouble breathing. I felt like I was dying, so I rose from my bed and went to my study across the hall and plopped myself down before my open Bible, and as I sat there exhausted, I told God I was throwing in the towel. I told him how tired I was and how worn out I was, and if it was all right with him, I was ready to go home to him right there and then.

Well, I know I have friends in ministry who claim God speaks to them every day, and I don't doubt that the Holy Spirit influences their daily living, but there have been scant few times in my life where God has actually broken through the material atmosphere of this world to actually speak to me, but when he has, it's been life-changing, and this was one of those times. In the Gospels, Jesus often responded to a question with a question. Well, that night at 2.30 a.m., as I was hunched over my Bible with sweat pouring down my face and crying out to God to take my life because I was ready to come home to him, I heard a clear voice ask me a concise question, and the voice asked, what do you do for a living? I answered, investments.

After a prolonged pause, I heard, I have an investment in you, and I will receive the dividends from my investment. Well, I went back to bed and got on with my life, but that day changed the entire way I served God from that point forward because I realized I'd been guilty of hijacking God for my own purposes as I served him. I was working myself to death on this road of my own making and asking him to get behind me and bless it, and I didn't realize at the time all I was doing for God was building my own little sandcastles on the sand that looked good down here but wouldn't hold up for eternity because they were for my purposes.

Romans 8.28 tells us that God works in our lives for our good but not for our purposes, rather all things are for his purpose. When I fully realized that, all my service to God from that point forward was so he could receive the dividends off his investment for his glory, for it all made sense to me then and it still makes sense to me now, and since that time I've kept my focus on Jesus sitting on his throne ruling there while he gathers up here and gathers up there a few more dividends from a life spent for him and eternity.

Sermon Outline

  1. I. The Misuse of Romans 8:28
    • Secular and even Christian hijacking of the verse
    • The verse applies only to born-again believers
    • The dangers of twisting scripture for personal gain
  2. II. The Man-Centered Ministry Model
    • Focus on church growth and numerical success
    • Watering down the gospel for popularity
    • Hijacking God to support personal ministry ambitions
  3. III. Personal Testimony of Burnout and Revelation
    • Burning out through overwork in ministry
    • A life-changing encounter with God's voice
    • Realizing the need to serve God's purposes, not personal ones
  4. IV. Living for God's Glory and Eternal Impact
    • Serving to bring dividends to God
    • Rejecting man-centered success
    • Focusing on Jesus and eternal rewards

Key Quotes

“I believe this verse of scripture has been one of the most hijacked verses from the Bible.” — E.A. Johnston
“If that's not you, friend, then this verse doesn't apply to you. You can't steal it or hijack it to make it fit your purposes.” — E.A. Johnston
“Ministry success isn't building the biggest church within your city, or building the biggest church within your denomination, because if that's all your ministry is, then you've hijacked God for your own purposes.” — E.A. Johnston

Application Points

  • Evaluate your ministry or spiritual life to ensure it aligns with God's purposes, not personal ambitions.
  • Avoid watering down the gospel to gain popularity or numerical growth in your church or community.
  • Focus on serving God faithfully for His glory and eternal dividends rather than temporary success.

Frequently Asked Questions

What does it mean to hijack God in ministry?
It means using God or Scripture to support personal ambitions or man-centered goals rather than submitting to God's sovereign purposes.
Who does Romans 8:28 apply to according to the sermon?
It applies only to born-again believers who love God and are called according to His purpose.
Why is numerical church growth not the ultimate measure of success?
Because growth without genuine salvation and conviction is building on sand and does not honor God's eternal purposes.
How did the speaker’s personal experience influence his message?
His burnout and a direct encounter with God led him to refocus his ministry on serving God's purposes rather than his own.
What practical advice does the sermon offer for ministry leaders?
Ministry leaders should prioritize God's glory and eternal impact over popularity, entertainment, or numerical success.

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