Introduction
There’s
a story about a vicar on a funeral visit, who became more and more desperately
desperate to find a parking space. Eventually he parked his car illegally because
he was already 5 minutes late. So he quickly wrote a note under the windscreen
wiper, and this is what the note said: “I have gone round this block ten times.
I’m really sorry but I couldn’t find a space by a meter. But as the Lord’s
Prayer says, Forgive us our trespasses.”
When
he got back an hour later, he found a parking ticket for £70 and a little note
attached. This is what the note said; “I have been a Traffic Warden on this
block for ten years. If I don’t give you a ticket I lose my job. As the Lord’s
Prayer says, Lead us not into temptation!”
“Praying
always and serving together, sharing Jesus’ love in our communities.” That’s
our vision - and I have a hunch that even the most strident atheist might be
tempted to mutter a quick prayer when he or she is late and desperate for a
parking spot.
What we are doing
between now and September is exploring what our vision actually means for us as a church. What
difference is it going to make to the way we live our lives?
What
will it mean for us to ‘pray always?’ Basically, it means that we want to place
prayer at the heart of what we do. We believe in the power of prayer. We think
prayer changes things and in fact prayer changes us.
We
saw last week that prayer is evidence of faith. People who don’t think prayer
really makes any difference won’t bother with prayer. People of prayer are
people of faith.
I
had to think of four aspects of biblical prayer for this series – ‘faith’, ‘perseverance’
and ‘unity’ are three. I just felt, surprisingly perhaps, that the fourth
should be ‘desperation’.
Why
desperation? Why didn’t I choose something a bit more moderate, a bit more
restrained? We don’t really like desperation. It’s a bit sweaty, a bit intense
isn’t it? Anglicans like things a bit more middle of the road and stoic.
Desperation is not terribly Church of England.
But sometimes, in
real life, desperation is where we are. Especially if we’re Frank and Betty
Spencer. We can all sympathise with the desperate but doomed prayer of the
schoolboy who was coming out of his exam and was heard to pray, “Oh, God, please make Madrid the capital of
Turkey!”
When
our children were young, Kathie and I were both involved up front in a church
service one morning. We were busy setting everything up when we noticed that
Nathan, who was one year old and only just walking, was nowhere to be seen. I
thought Kathie had him. Kathie thought I was looking after him. We both looked
around. Nothing. We started searching the building – he was nowhere.
Those
of you who are parents know this - there comes a tipping point when you go from
trying to look calm to being unable to appear anything other than terrified. A visceral
feeling of dread and panic comes over you. You pray under your breath maybe,
but it’s the prayer equivalent of an alarm bell - you can’t really string words
together.
What
if he’s been abducted? What if he’s wondered out onto the road? That’s desperation. We looked in the
side rooms, we checked the toilets and he wasn’t there. All the possible places
our son might be in that church were exhausted.
We
burst out of the church, looked up and down the busy street and found a car
with its driver’s door wide open and hazard lights on, and the driver, in the
middle of the road, looking around confused, holding our little boy, wondering
who on earth he belonged to.
I
expect all of us, at some time, have experienced something like that feeling of
dread, of absolute desperation.
Jehoshaphat’s Plight
I
think that’s exactly how King Jehoshaphat would have felt in the reading we had
just now.
Jehoshaphat
was a good king: his heart was devoted to the ways of the Lord. The Bible says that
the Lord was with him because he followed in David’s footsteps.
But
in 2 Chronicles 20 God permits his enemies from the south and east, Moab and
Ammon, to conspire against him. It is a national emergency. It’s a crisis.
Jehoshaphat
has that feeling of dread, of panic, of alarm - and he sets himself to seek the
Lord. He proclaims a fast throughout the land and representatives from the
entire nation come together to ask God to intervene.
Where
else can we go in an emergency?
- when our lives are endangered
- when our families are threatened
- when our faith is failing
- when our marriages are at risk
- when bad teaching worms its way into church and undermines God’s word
Whenever
Satan attacks, I want us to be people who, in sheer desperation, earnestly seek
the Lord in prayer and fasting.
I
want us to pray like Jehoshaphat prays in v6-12.
He
starts by standing his ground and declaring truth about God’s might and
sovereignty. Even when we are most desperate, and fear is churning up inside us,
I want us to be people who confidently ascribe greatness to God like
Jehoshaphat does.
- You are God in heaven
- You rule over every nation
- No one can withstand your awesome power
If
you nourish your minds with truth about who God you will be armed to the teeth
with spiritual strength in the day of desperation.
Jehoshaphat
calls to mind God’s amazing acts in days past.
- You drove out depraved and evil nations as you said you would
It’s
really faith-building to remember the times God has answered prayer before and
speak that out.
Jehoshaphat
is completely honest about the plight they are in with their enemies coming
against them.
Imagine
a Jeremy Paxman interview with Jehoshaphat:
“Tell
me Jehoshaphat, what do you make of the build-up of troops in Ammon and Moab?”
“Well,
I’d say that our neighbours are absolutely intent on driving us out of our land.
I’m hoping that God will judge them for it.”
“Hoping?
Is that all? And what message do you have for the nation you’re supposed to be
in charge of?”
“To
be honest, it looks like our national defence is not up to the challenge. We
are clueless and we don’t know what we’re doing.”
“What
are you actually going to do about
this crisis that has blown up on your watch?”
“The
country will be reassured to hear that, as Moab and Ammon point their weapons
at us, our eyes are firmly on God.”
God Can Do It Here
2
Chronicles 20 is not just a fairy story from 860 years before Christ. It
illuminates the profound truth that God, sovereign over the affairs of nations,
is able to do extraordinary things when people come before him in sheer
desperation and terror, faced with absolute calamity, and ask him to rend the
heavens and intervene.
I want to
show you that similar things are occurring in our lifetime. Did you know that there
has been a national-scale move of God in Uganda in the last four decades?
In the
1970s, Uganda was ruled by a man called Idi Amin. Under his rule, violence
prevailed, churches were closed, the suffering of the people was immense, and
no one came to their rescue. It was brutal and relentless. There was political
repression, ethnic persecution, widespread assassinations, rampant nepotism, systemic
corruption, and gross economic mismanagement. Apart from that, it was great…
The
number of people killed as a result of Idi Amin’s regime is estimated by Amnesty
International to have reached as many as 500,000..
John
Sentamu, Archbishop of York, was imprisoned by Idi Amin but he escaped in 1974.
His wife Margaret once said, “As Christians during the Amin regime, we
continued to pray the Lord’s Prayer. But… when we prayed ‘your will be done’ [we
weren’t just saying whatever will be, will be], we were asking that God would
intervene in this dreadful situation we found ourselves in, which lasted nearly
ten years.” “Your will be done” means “Let heaven invade earth.”
Well,
during the 1970s, a community of believers gathered in underground caves. In
desperation they prayed, “Lord, we don’t know what to do. We have no power to
face what has come against us. But our eyes are on you.” They prayed round the
clock. They prayed desperate, deep, groaning prayers that would not take no for
an answer.
Jackson
Senyonga, an amazing man of God in Uganda today, gives this testimony about
what happened afterwards:
“Today…
Uganda is one of the most transformed nations on the face of the earth.
At
8am in the State House, people pray. The Parliament doesn’t want to discuss
things until they pray. The judges don’t want to hear cases until they pray.
The police are faxing prayer requests. The crime rate is dropping - down by 70%
in some communities. A major bank in the capital city Kampala plays praise and
worship music on all 11 floors of its head office.
People
are dreaming dreams. We’ve had Muslims and witch doctors come to our church
saying, ‘I have never been to church in my life, but I had a dream. In my
dream, I was putting on rotten rags. Somebody was saying that I should come to
church to get clean, white clothes. So I am here to find out if you give out
clothes.’ They don’t understand the dream. When you tell them the meaning of
it, they burst into tears and give their lives to Jesus.
At
one point, AIDS in Uganda was at 33.3%. The World Health Organization predicted
that Uganda’s economy would collapse because there would be only widows and
orphans left. So people sought the Lord and prayed. Today, AIDS has dropped to
5%.”
All
that started out as prayers of desperation in the 1970s. Can God move that way in
our nation? Of course he can. Our vision is serving together for the
transformation of our communities by sharing the love of Jesus, but we have put
‘praying always’ at the beginning because no spiritual harvest has ever before
been reaped without months or years of watering the ground in prayer.
The
Office for National Statistics a few years ago published data which showed how badly
our country needs Jesus Christ. Here are some highlights from that research: Every day in Britain at least 27
schoolgirls become pregnant, 2 under the age of 13. 20 women are victims of
rape. 75 children are added to child protection registers in England alone. At
least 90 children are taken into Care. 280 children run away from home. At least
470 babies die through abortion. 150 people are convicted for drug offences. This
is every day. Somebody calls The
Samaritans every 2 minutes and there are 2 burglaries and 3 car crimes every 60
seconds. Crime costs more than £5 billion every year. And so the list went
on....”
That’s
our country. How does that make you feel? Jehoshaphat cries to the Lord:
"O God, we are helpless. We do not know what to do.” Desperation. “But our eyes are on you."
That
is how the children in George Müller’s
Ashley Downs orphanage in in Bristol must have felt. It is time for breakfast
and there is no food on the table, only plates and empty mugs. The kitchen
cupboards are bare and there is no money in the orphanage bank account. This is
desperation isn’t it?
Müller prays a simple prayer. “Dear
Father, we thank you for what you are going to give us to eat. Amen.” The
children all say “Amen.” They look down at the empty table and hear a knock at
the door. When they open the door it is the local baker. Mr Müller,” he says, “I couldn’t sleep last
night. I felt you had no bread for breakfast, so I got up at 2 o’clock and
baked some fresh loaves. Here they are.” Müller thanks the baker and gives
praise to God.
Not long afterwards, there is a second knock at the
door. It’s the milkman. His milk float has just broken down right in front of
the orphanage. He has to empty the float to repair it, so he offers to give the
children the whole lot if the orphanage can use it.
Desperation:
"O God, we are helpless. We do not know what to do. But our eyes are on
you."
The Battle Is the
Lord’s
In
response to Jehoshaphat’s amazing and desperate prayer the Spirit of God falls on
a prophet named Jahaziel and this is what he says in v15:
“Listen,
King Jehoshaphat and all who live in Judah and Jerusalem! This is what
the Lord says to you: “Do not be afraid or discouraged because of
this vast army. For the battle is not yours, but God’s.”
‘Do
not be afraid.’ What are you desperately afraid of?
- Losing your job?
- Your spouse walking out on you?
- Getting medical test results back?
Sometimes,
God prevents an attack from getting anywhere near us.
Sometimes,
God allows an attack, but leads us to victory over it.
But
even in death, and we will all taste death unless the Lord returns first, even
then, God can defend us from fear and unbelief and hopelessness.
Listen to Mary’s story: “I had just returned from the UK to an African
country in 2008 when there was an attempted coup. The expatriates were gathered
together in a school and we dived under tables as the fighting and shelling
came very close to the school. French soldiers were on the roof.
We shared any Psalms we could remember with each other and then started singing “In Christ Alone”. The line that really resonated was “No fear in death…this is the power of Christ in me”. We realised that it was true – despite an unexploded grenade landing in the school!
Those of us that knew Christ had a sense of peace that couldn’t be explained by the circumstances. It wasn’t just the absence of fear, or wishful thinking, denial or an adrenaline rush. This was a state of peace for the situation.”
We shared any Psalms we could remember with each other and then started singing “In Christ Alone”. The line that really resonated was “No fear in death…this is the power of Christ in me”. We realised that it was true – despite an unexploded grenade landing in the school!
Those of us that knew Christ had a sense of peace that couldn’t be explained by the circumstances. It wasn’t just the absence of fear, or wishful thinking, denial or an adrenaline rush. This was a state of peace for the situation.”
Verse
17: You will not have to fight this battle. Take up your positions; stand firm
and see the deliverance the Lord will give you.”
We’ve had a real encouragement recently about our
detached outreach in Preston Park. We thought there would be a battle. We didn’t
need to fight at all. The battle is the Lord’s. Read all about it in In Touch.
Ending
Jehoshaphat
responds to the prophetic word about not having to fight by falling facedown and
worshiping. Verse 18: "Then Jehoshaphat bowed his head with his face to
the ground, and all Judah and the inhabitants of Jerusalem fell down before the
Lord, worshiping the Lord.”
I
wanted to sing “My Jesus My Saviour” today for two reasons. Firstly, because I
love it and I’m leading the band this morning so I can choose the songs I want!
Secondly, because it’s a song, like at the end of our Bible passage, that came
out of desperation.
It
was written by Darlene Zschech during a difficult time in her life. Her parents
were going through a divorce, she was battling with bulimia, she was recovering
from a miscarriage, she was weighed down with financial worries and struggling with
the stresses of raising a young family.
One
desperate day, she just sat on a piano stool, played a few notes and started to
sing out some truths from the Psalms that she was hanging onto by a thread.
This
is what she said about that experience: "I wrote “Shout to the Lord” when
I was feeling discouraged. I felt I could either scream and pull my hair out,
or praise God. The line ‘Nothing compares to the promise I have in you’ was
something I clung to when our circumstances seemed so bleak. I think that rings
true with anyone going through tough times."
Nothing
compares to the promises you have in Jesus.
So
let me end by reading out a tiny selection of those promises. As I read them,
especially if you find yourself in the place of desperation today, receive them
in faith and hold them fast to your heart:
- The water I give will be a fountain springing up to eternal life
- I will acknowledge you before my heavenly Father
- I will never send you away
- You will know the truth and the truth will set you free
- I will give you rest
- Nothing will be impossible to you
- You will have treasure in heaven
- I give you authority over snakes, scorpions and all the power of the enemy
- I will give you words and wisdom that none of your adversaries will be able to answer
- Your faith will not fail
- You will do the same kind of things I do and even greater works that these
- My joy will abide with you and your joy will be full
- You will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes upon you
- I am with you always until the end of the age
Sermon preached at All Saints' Preston on Tees, 7th June 2015
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