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  • You are here: Blogs Directory / Devotionals / Glory to the King Welcome Guest
    Glory to the King
          Weekly (generally) messages from Glory to the King Ministries International.

    Sun, Feb 19th - 6:08AM

    Apostles Today



    APOSTLES TODAY

    by Rev. Lynn Fowler

     

    There has been some discussion in the circles in which I move about the whole question of apostles: Can there be apostles today? Were there only the twelve? If there are apostles today, what is their role? Obviously, to fully answer these questions would require much more than one short message, however today I felt to address the most basic issues.

    Some people believe that there were only ever the twelve apostles who were personally appointed by Jesus, with Judas being replaced by Matthias after Jesus' death and resurrection, and Paul being thrown in as a "bonus".

    However, Ephesians 4:8-11 says, "This is why it says: "When he ascended on high, he led captives in his train and gave gifts to men."(What does "he ascended" mean except that he also descended to the lower, earthly regions ? He who descended is the very one who ascended higher than all the heavens, in order to fill the whole universe.) It was he who gave some to be apostles, some to be prophets, some to be evangelists, and some to be pastors and teachers" This is clearly saying that what we refer to as the 5-fold ministries were given after Jesus had ascended. For this reason they are also sometimes referred to as the "ascension gift ministries."

    The twelve were appointed whilst Jesus was on earth. They were not ascension gift ministries, because at the time of their appointment, Jesus had not yet died, risen and ascended. Matthias was chosen on the same terms as the twelve to replace Judas. This was in order to maintain the number 12, corresponding to the 12 tribes of Israel. To say that there were only ever the 12 plus Paul would be to make Paul the only ever ascension gift apostle.

    Ephesians goes on to give the reason for the ascension gift ministries: "to prepare God's people for works of service, so that the body of Christ may be built up until we all reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature, attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ." If this is the reason God gave the ascension gift ministries – all five of them – then we must believe that those ministries will remain in the Church till God's purposes for them have been fulfilled. Has the Church yet reached the unity of the faith? With hundreds of different groups teaching hundreds of different things, it is obvious that we haven't! Has the Church become mature? With large numbers of Christians comfortably asleep, with many others interested only in what they can get from God, with petty squabbles about positions and titles, with blatant witchcraft passing itself off as spiritual gifts, with selfishness, greed, self-promotion, carnality... The list goes on and on, prompting a resounding NO! as the only possible answer. Has the Church attained to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ? Does the world look at us and see nothing but Jesus? I won't even bother answering that one! The work for which God gave the ministries of apostle, prophet, evangelist, pastor and teacher is nowhere near complete. That means that all five are still relevant, and still operating in the Church today.

    So what is the role of the apostle today? Many define an apostle as a "sent one", but in a very real sense every Christian is a "sent one". There is not one person in the Body of Christ who is exempted from the command, "Gointo all the world and preach the good news to all creation." (Mk 16:15. NIV) What each of us needs to determine is not that we are sent, but where we are sent, and what we are sent to do. That, however, is another message. Beyond simply being sent, the apostle's role, in broad terms, is outlined in this Scripture: to prepare God's people for ministry, and to build up the body of Christ.

    In specifics, the apostle is a pioneer and a foundation builder. The apostle is the one who breaks new ground, both in the natural by pioneering new works and breaking open new territories, and in the spiritual by leading God's people to new places in God. The apostle cannot be content to sit where it is comfortable, either in the natural or in the spirit. There is always a "beyond" that needs to be pressed into and taken for God. There is always a new "promised land" with its own particular giants waiting to be brought into submission to the Lord Jesus Christ.

    The apostle is one who builds up. Ideally, he/she works with the prophet, whose job it is to tear down the altars of Baal and everything that exults itself against God. The apostle then clears the rubble and lays the foundations of truth. The apostle also builds individuals, establishing truth in their life, establishing them in sound relationships within the Body of Christ, encouraging them to take up the thing to which God has called them, and mentoring, training and releasing them in the ministry.

    The ministry of the apostle is marked with a high level of authority. Firstly in the spirit realm, the apostle must come to a place where he/she understands the authority which he/she has been given in Christ, not jut at the intellectual level, but at the level of owning it. As a front-line general in the army of God (an army which has no "desk generals") the apostle will be challenged and opposed not only by low-level demons and spiritual forces, but by principalities and powers. He/she needs to know how to stand agains these and to command their submission to the Lord Jesus Christ.

    In the natural the apostle also has authority in the Body of Christ, particularly in relation to those who come under his/her covering. However, this authority is not something to be forced (that is control, which equals witchcraft) but something which is freely recognized and accepted by those who come under it. In fact, this recognition and acceptance of his/her authority is one of the marks of a true apostle.

    Paul speaks of the apostle and prophet as foundational ministries. Unfortunately, many in the Church today see these two ministries as the "glamour jobs" of the Church, and think that being called to these ministries gives prestige, honour and power. When you look at a building, however, you do not look at the foundations and exclaim, "Oh what wonderful foundations! Look how beautiful they are! Look how strong they are!" No, when you look at the house you may comment on the beauty of the house, or how well it is designed or built (or how badly!), but you don't even notice the foundations.

    Think you want to be an apostle? Listen to Paul's description of the job: "For it seems to me that God has put us apostles on display at the end of the procession, like men condemned to die in the arena. We have been made a spectacle to the whole universe, to angels as well as to men. We are fools for Christ, but you are so wise in Christ! We are weak, but you are strong! You are honored, we are dishonored! To this very hour we go hungry and thirsty, we are in rags, we are brutally treated, we are homeless. We work hard with our own hands. When we are cursed, we bless; when we are persecuted, we endure it; when we are slandered, we answer kindly. Up to this moment we have become the scum of the earth, the refuse of the world." (1 Cor 4:9-13. NIV) Still want the job? Of course, this does not mean that all apostles will be "hungry and thirsty, ... in rags, ... brutally treated, we are homeless." What it does mean is that those who are called to be apostles must have a heart attitude which is willing to be all those things, and more, if that is what it takes to fulfill their purpose to bring the Church to the "whole measure of the fullness of Christ."

    Much, much more could be said about the role of the apostle. This ascension gift is still needed, still relevant, and still very real in the Church today.

    © Lynn Fowler, 2005.

    Rev. Lynn Fowler is the Founder and International Director of Glory to the King Ministries International. Visit us at http://glorytotheking.com

    and Glory to the King Apostolic Network: http://glorytotheking.com/apostolicnetwork.html

    Would you like to reprint this article on your web site, or in your online group or print publication? Go to http://glorytotheking.com/reprint.html



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    Sat, Feb 11th - 6:57AM

    The Martyr Heart



    THE MARTYR HEART

    by Rev. Lynn Fowler

     

    This week as we were praying over Glory to the King Ministries International and the Apostolic Network, the Lord gave us a word that He wanted to release over the Network an anointing of a martyr heart. He gave us the Scripture from Revelation 12:11, "They overcame him (satan) by the blood of the Lamb and the word of their testimony, and they loved not their lives unto death." I saw a great army rising up, an army which is the end time church, an army which will be absolutely unstoppable because they have nothing left to lose.

    What is a martyr heart? In our world today there are those of some world religions who call themselves martyrs, but they are not really so. Their heart is not a willingness to lay down their own lives, but a desire to destroy the lives of others – and if, in doing that, they have to lose their own lives, then they are willing.

    The martyr heart which the Lord wants to give us – not just GTK Apostolic Network, but the whole end time church – is very different. We must be willing to lay down our lives, not in order to destroy as many others as we can with us, but to bear witness to our Lord and Saviour. We are to be martyrs not to bring death, but to bring life.

    To have a martyr heart does not just mean being willing to face physical death. Some will face that ultimate decision, many will not. All of us need to have the same kind of heart that Jesus had. Before Jesus ever faced the Sanhedrin, before He endured the whip and the thorns, before the nails secured Him to the cross, He had entered repeated levels of death.

    Just being born, for Jesus, was a form of death. For all eternity He had enjoyed the love and fellowship of the Father and the Holy Spirit. He had rejoiced in infinite power, infinite knowledge and infinite holiness. He had filled all of existence, unlimited in space or time. From the beginning of creation He had been acclaimed, honored and worshiped by the host of heaven and the creatures of the earth. Yet to rescue the one species on earth that did not serve Him faithfully – man – He laid all that aside, died to all His power and prerogatives, and became a helpless infant. He did not love His life as God so much that He was unwilling to lay it down. That's a martyr heart.

    Do we have position, power, privilege? Do we reason that it has been given to us by God, and therefore we should not have to let it go? Do we cling to it, offended that anyone would even suggest that we may need to step down? God wants to give us a heart which will willingly lay aside all that is ours, in order that we may rescue those who are perishing without Christ.

    In coming to earth, Jesus left the perfect world with which He was so familiar, to come into a world which was totally alien to Him. A world made filthy by sin. A world made ugly by man's hate and greed. A world thrown into chaos by man's disobedience. Have you ever pondered how uncomfortable this world must have been for the sinless Son of God? How difficult it must have been for Him to live with the attitudes and behaviors of even the best of His friends and acquaintances, never mind those who blatantly opposed Him? He had to die to His own comfort, in a sense even to His own standards of acceptability – not that those standards were ever lowered.

    Do we hold on to our comfort, clinging to what is familiar? Do we feel it would be beneath our dignity to walk among those who do not conform to our standards? Do we have trouble tolerating the shortcomings of others? God wants to give us a heart which is willing to die to those things we hold most dear, in order to reach those very people.

    Scripture tells us that Jesus "became obedient." Not that He had ever been disobedient, but because He had never before known what it was to have to obey. There was no disharmony between Him and the Father, so His life in eternity had not been a matter of obedience. With the Father and the Spirit, He had framed the laws by which the universe operated. From the beginning of creation, He had been the one who was obeyed. Now, He was placed in a position of subjection, not only to the Father, but to His earthly mother and stepfather, and to the governing authorities of both Israel and Rome. He had to learn to choose to follow the will of another, even when that will was contrary to His own, even when He knew that what was being asked of Him was mistaken, or foolish, or unnecessary. That obedience reached its ultimate conclusion at Gethsemane when, with every fibre of His human nature screaming that it should not be so, He nonetheless bowed before the Father's will and accepted the cup of human sin and guilt. That was a death far more potent than the physical death which He was about to face.

    Do we cling fiercely to our own will? Do we want to "do it our way"? God wants to give us a heart which will be totally submitted to Him, willing to accept His will, plans and purposes for our lives even when everything in us wants something different.

    In short, God wants a people who are dead: dead to their own power and privilege, dead to their own comfort, dead to their own will. When we come to that point, the question of whether we are willing to face physical death becomes a non-issue.

    There is a story of a young man in the 19th Century who was going as a missionary to one of the wild countries of Africa. Some of his friends were horrified, and tried hard to dissuade him. "You could be killed!" they told him. His reply was simple: "I am already dead. I died when I came to Christ. Whether He chooses to allow this body to continue on earth or not, is His prerogative." That's a martyr's heart.

    © Lynn Fowler

     

    Rev. Lynn Fowler is the Founder and International Director of Glory to the King Ministries International. Visit us at http://glorytotheking.com

    Sponsor a needy child: http://glorytotheking.com/childspons.html

    Sponsor an indigenous pastor: http://glorytotheking.com/pastorspons.html

    Would you like to reprint this article on your web site, or in your online group or print publication? Go to http://glorytotheking.com/reprint.html



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    About Me

    Name: Lynn Fowler
    ChristiansUnite ID: revlynn
    Member Since: 2005-12-12
    Location: , Australia
    Denomination: Pentecostal
    About Me: Founder and International Director of Glory to the King Ministries International.

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