SUCH AS I HAVE
As the apostles, Peter and John, were about to enter the temple in Jerusalem for prayer, they encountered a man who was lame sitting at the gate and asking for handouts. The man was over 40 years old, and had been born lame and never walked. When he saw Peter and John, the man asked them for some money. This man received healing that day because these two men were obedient to God and stopped to minister to the need. The record of this miracle can be found in Acts 3:1-8. Five things stand out to me that preceded this miracle, and these five things I believe are pre-requisite to becoming useful servants of God, and, ultimately, channels for miracles:
·
“And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him…” First, and foremost, before we can minister to others, we must be willing
to see their needs. It is too easy to
look past them, or worse, not see them at all, as we speed through our busy
schedules. The apostles were on their
way someplace else, but took the time to examine the need before them, and
invest themselves fully in it. We, too,
must be willing to stop and see what is before our eyes – the needs are
abundant – and be ready for God to use us as He would lead.
·
“And Peter…said, Look on us.” We should so live our lives that we are never ashamed to have people examine
our lives and see us as examples. We
should also be so confident as to believe that God will use us to minister to
the need that He has set before us. It’s
easier to have people look to someone else for the answers, but it is you and I
that God is wanting to use. We may feel
weak and foolish at times, and incapable of meeting anyone else’s needs; but, “God hath chosen the foolish things of the
world to confound the wise, and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to
confound the things which are mighty.” God
has chosen you, dear child of God!
·
“And he gave heed unto them, expecting to receive
something of them.” The world is
expecting something of us as Christians.
When we are bold to say, “Look on us,” then they are waiting to see what
we’ve got that is any different from the rest of the world and its religions
and philosophies. We must be ready and
able to show them Jesus. It is He, and
He alone, Who will save the lost, and heal the hurting. Men will give heed to us if we have God’s words
in our mouth and His love filling our hearts, and not just some empty
dogma. Men are expecting something of us
other than platitudes. It is Christ in
us, and the life that flows from Him, that can raise men’s expectations.
·
“Then Peter said, Silver and gold have I none; but
such as I have give I thee.” It is much easier to give of our things than it is to give of ourselves. Peter could have tossed the man a half shekel
and be done with it if he’d had one, but the man’s need would have been just as
great once that money was gone. What Peter and John did have, however, was
faith in the Lord Jesus Christ and His power to change men’s lives in
miraculous ways. It is important that we
learn to use such as we have also. Even
if we think that what we have is insignificant, God can bless it and multiply
it even as He did with the little boy’s lunch that fed 5000 men by the sea of
Galilee. God will take the gifts and
talents that we have and use them for His glory if we are willing to give them
and not hold them back.
·
“In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up
and walk.” The name of Jesus is above all other names. There is power and authority in the name of
Jesus Christ. One day every knee will
bow and every tongue will confess that He is the Lord of all. It is not we who possess any powerl, but
Christ in us Who works in and through us.
The officer of the law who pulls us over for speeding has no power in
himself to make us stop. It is the power
and authority that he wields in the name
of the law that puts fear and respect in our hearts. At the name of Jesus, people will rise up
from the things that have crippled them all their lives both emotionally and
spiritually. At the name of Jesus,
people will be able to walk, and leap, and praise God when before they were
barely able to stand under the weight of guilt, disappointment, and
heartache. And, yes, at the name of
Jesus, the blind will see, the deaf will hear, and the lame will walk again.
If we would keep
these five things in mind, and if they would become principles for us to live
by, there is no telling how many people our lives may touch, and how mighty the
Church would be. Open your eyes to the
needs and opportunities that are around you, and trust God to use you to
minister to those needs – not in your name, but in the mighty name of
Jesus Christ of Nazareth.
“And he took him by the right hand, and lifted him up: and immediately his feet and
ankle bones received strength. And he
leaping up stood, and walked, and entered with them into the temple, walking,
and leaping, and praising God.” (Acts 3:7, 8).
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