Henry Blackaby explores the reasons why revival tarries, emphasizing the need for focus on God's people and their relationship with Him.
This sermon delves into the heart of God as revealed through the life of Jesus, emphasizing the importance of understanding God's Kingdom mysteries and seeing ourselves and God as intended. It explores the significance of Jesus coming to His own, praying for His disciples, and the unity among believers that brings glory to Christ. The message highlights the need to follow God's pattern in His Word, give attention to God's people, and keep them in relationship with God.
Full Transcript
This scripture gives us an incredible insight into the heart of God. And you see it expressed in the life of the Lord Jesus. And I am sensing in the time I have with you to share with you why I believe revival tarries.
And this morning I want to introduce to you the heart of our Lord and therefore the heart of the Father who sent Him. And I want you to listen as the Spirit of God takes the Word of God and lets you hear an awful lot more than I'm saying. He will take the Word and impact your heart with His Word.
To that end, let us take a moment to pray and ask that we would have ears to hear as He has granted them to us. Father, it is astounding to us as sinners that You have indicated through Your Son that it has been given to us to know the mysteries of Your Kingdom. You have given us eyes to see and ears to hear and a heart to understand.
Forgive us when we have not seen or failed to hear or let our hearts grow hard so that we have missed what You were doing. Father, thank You for Your presence to enable us to see ourselves as You see us, but more than that to see You as You intended for us to see You. So may the spiritual eyes which You have given us and the ears which You have granted us be fully alert and responsive to embrace and to incorporate into our own lives that which You would say to us, and we ask it in Your name, Amen.
I'm going to give you several scriptures from the life of the Lord Jesus. The first of these is John 111. He came to His own.
If that's all you heard and the Holy Spirit helped you, it would rearrange your life. He didn't come to the lost. He came to His own, and you'll see that even more clearly.
And of His own, as many as received Him, to them gave He the right or the authority to become children of God, to those who believe in His name who were born of God. Now hear carefully the prayer of the Lord Jesus in John 17. It is fascinating, at the beginning of His coming, He said He came to His own.
And at the end of His life, He said, Father, I have finished the work You gave Me to do. And the rest of that 17th of John is a description of how Jesus related to God's people. And He said, Father, these were Yours, and You gave them to Me.
You told Me what to tell them, and I have told them, and they have believed. That was God's strategy to touch a world. God's strategy is His own.
And beginning at verse 9, you have an amazing sequence of truths. I pray for them. Who's them? Hear it carefully.
The disciples. He said, I pray for them. I do not pray for the world.
If Jesus didn't pray for the world, should we? You see, we have taken our cue for our activity from the religious culture in which we live, not from the Scripture. And somehow, I believe, revival tarries because we do not follow the pattern of God in His Word. And I want to share with you in this time that revival tarries because we fail to give attention to God's people.
Hear what He says after that. He says, I pray for them. I do not pray for the world, but for those whom You have given Me, for they are Yours, and all Mine are Yours, and Yours are Mine, and I am glorified in them.
Hear that. How is Christ glorified? What the lost do or what the believers do? In your relationship to the people of God, is there such a transformation taking place that Christ is glorified in God's people who have been entrusted to your care? He said, Father, I am glorified in these Your disciples. Then He goes on to say, Now I am no longer in the world, but these are in the world, and I come to You.
Holy Father, keep through Your Name those whom You have given Me, that they may be one. How? Not one with each other, but one in them, in the Father and in the Son, and you're going to see that in a moment. Because He prays, Father, may they be one in Us.
And the implication of that is incredible. So He goes on to say, While I was with them in the world, I kept them in Your Name. Let me ask you, if you're a pastor, could you say that of all that God has entrusted to you, you have lost none, but that you have kept every one of them because they were His, and you have kept them in relationship to all that God is? When I, you've heard me say before that when I began my ministry in California, I read from John 6, this is the will of Him that sent me, that of all that He has given me, I should lose none, and that truth became an absolute for me.
As a pastor, God adds to the body as it pleases Him. Is that not true? According to the Scripture, God composes the body called the Lord.
Sermon Outline
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I
- Introduction to the heart of God
- The significance of hearing God's Word
- The importance of prayer for understanding
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II
- Jesus came to His own
- The authority given to those who believe
- The relationship between Jesus and His disciples
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III
- God's strategy to touch the world
- The focus on God's people
- The implications of unity among believers
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IV
- Christ's glorification through His disciples
- The role of pastors in keeping God's people
- The will of God regarding His followers
Key Quotes
“He came to His own.” — Henry Blackaby
“I do not pray for the world, but for those whom You have given Me.” — Henry Blackaby
“Father, may they be one in Us.” — Henry Blackaby
Application Points
- Engage in prayer for understanding and insight into God's Word.
- Focus on nurturing the spiritual growth and unity of believers.
- Recognize the importance of keeping every member of the church in relationship with God.
