The
Empowered Christian
Ps 18: 31 37 & Eph 6: 13
18
The experience of 2 great men, David and Paul
that God empowers, He enables His children to be victors
Many Christians have trained themselves to
expect defeat, disaster. This is the devils design and not Gods. Both David
and Paul speak of the empowering of Gods people so that their immediate experience
should be one of deliverance and victory.
David is old when he speaks of His experience
with God. This is almost identical to Davids prayer in 2 Sam 22.
Ps 18: 28 32 speaks of the supernatural
power of God and the fact that God Himself is our defence. Not only is He strong but He
grants me strength, says David.
Trained for war
But verse 34 shows another aspect of being
empowered. Here we find the man of war. Our Ephesians text provides a detailed explanation
of this.
Pursuing your enemies
Not only did David find that God is His rock of defence, but he was enabled to
pursue his enemies (verse 37), and overtake them. This is true
empowerment! Weapons of defense are crucial and we must know what it is to hide in the
Rock of our Salvation before we can go on the offensive. The greatest enemies
which you are to pursue and overtake them, are the sins of your own heart.
Repentence and trust in Christ must be part and parcel of the victorious life. David (and
Paul) are using military language to describe the spiritual battle.
Hinds feet
In the midst of the battle training and military
metaphor is a unique description of the other side of empowerment. Consider verse 33
makes my feet like hinds feet. The delicacy and
instinctive ability of this mountain deer to climb
the rocky crags and stay stable, sure-footed, and high above the rest of the world, is
given by the same God who trains your hands to war. He makes his servant to be nimble,
able to adjust to new heights sets my feet upon high places.
And in verse 36, my feet did not slip
How is all of
this possible?
Must we climb up to get there? No, Ps 18: 35
declares that He gives the shield of victory to His servants and that
God stooped down to make me great. This is the Christmas, the Gospel story.
Illustration: An old (American) Indian chief constantly
spoke of the Lord Jesus and what He meant to him. Why do you talk so much about
Jesus? asked a friend. The old chief did not reply, but slowly, deliberately
gathered some sticks and bits of grass. He made a circle of them. In the circle he placed
a caterpillar. Still silent, he struck a match and lit the sticks and grass.
They watched the caterpillar. As the fire caught around the circle, the trapped
caterpillar began to crawl around rapidly, seeking a way to escape. As the fire advanced,
the helpless caterpillar raised its head as high as it could. If the creature could have
spoken, it would have said, My help can only come from above.
Then the old chief stooped down. He extended his finger to the caterpillar which crawled
up his finger to safety.
The serious chief said, That was what the Lord Jesus did for me! I was lost in sin.
My condition was hopeless. I was trapped. Then the Lord Jesus stooped down in love and
mercy and He drew me out of the horrible pit of sin and shame. How can I help but love Him
and talk of His wondrous love and care?
The Hebrew word hen is often used for Gods
showing of underserved favour, grace to one who is lower than Him. The Lord show
grace unto thee, etc. His stooping down, His grace, is to lift us up. If
we choose to stay down in our sins then His grace has not reached us.
When David wrote these words he had seen something of Gods
character, the God who stooped down hundreds of years later to become man, for
us. The apostle Paul, in his magnificent incarnation
passage states, "Christ Jesus: who, being in very nature God, did not consider
equality with God something to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the very
nature of a servant, being made in human likeness" (Phil 2:5-7). C. S. Lewis
wrote, "The Son of God became a son of man, that sons of men might become sons of
God".
To lift something up we must first bend down. The religious leaders the Priests,
Pharisees and Scribes, in Jesus day, were men who stood erect, upright and proud. It
is doubtful if they ever understood the concept of a stooping God.
But the concept of a God who stoops was not new - for it is embedded firmly in the creation story.
In it we see God stooping down to breathe life in to his first created child - Adam
in a form of mouth-to-mouth life infusion. This kiss of life to man necessitated a
stooping God. In fact the God who stoops can be found throughout history, from Genesis to
Revelation.
Yet, the ultimate act of condescension was when
God stooped down to become a man. He was as Wesley put it Love divine all
loves excelling joy of heaven to earth come down. Love stoops to find
us to lift us to restore us to welcome us and to rejoice over us. Jesus
gives the kiss of eternal life. As you repent and trust in Him He will do as He promised
come in and sup with you.
"I can do all
things through Christ who strengthens me" (Phil. 4:13)