Before you begin your Bible study, as a believer
in the Lord Jesus Christ, be sure you have named your sins privately to God the
Father.
If we confess our sins, He is faithful and righteous to
forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.
(Known, Unknown and Forgotten sins) (1Jn 1:9).
You will then be in fellowship with God, Filled with the
Holy Spirit and ready to learn Truth from the Word of God.
"God is spirit, and those who worship Him
must worship in Spirit and Truth," (Joh 4:24)
THE TWELFTH
MAN ON THE TEAM
(Php 2:12-16)
On January 1,
1922, on the Dallas Fairgrounds, where now stands the Cotton Bowl, Texas
A&M College (Now University) played an important football game against a
prominent national team, known as Center College of Kentucky, or “The Praying
Colonels.” At that time Center was coached by the very famous “Uncle Charlie”
Moran. The underdog team was definitely Texas A&M, and their difficulties
began to multiply immediately.
By half-time the
Aggies were not only on the short end of the score, but were also very short of
players. Dana X Bible, who at the time was coach of the Cadets from College
Station, had not only started with an undermanned squad, but had also had so
many men hurt in the game, he realized that in the second half he would be able
to field a team of only ten men. A very discouraging day was in prospect for
Texas A&M College.
Up in the stands
was a young A&M student by the name of King Gill. (Now a medical doctor in
Corpus Christi, Texas) King Gill had gone out for the team; and though he was
too small, he maintained a tenacious mental attitude and determinedly stuck
with it. So all year, in spite of the fact that he was not even accepted as a
member of the team, he continued to work out with them. He learned the plays,
stayed in condition and kept up with them.
Finally, on this
particular day, when the Texas A&M squad ran short of players. Coach Bible
called King Gill out of the stands and told him to get into uniform — he would
play in the game — and play he did! As a result, the Texas A&M team was so
inspired that they won the game by a very close margin. It is a
never-to-be-forgotten event in the football annals of that school!
Afterward, of
course, one of the heroes was King Gill. He was called the “TWELFTH MAN.” He
had moved from the stands to the playing field as the twelfth man on the team.
Out of that particular game and situation came the famous tradition and song of
Texas A&M University — “The Twelfth Man on the Team.” The entire student
body is now regarded as the Twelfth Man. One of the finest types of school
spirit found anywhere, is on the campus of Texas A&M University. Some of
you know that the Aggie student body stands up during the entire game and the
students never stop cheering for the team. They never stop pulling their team
in! (Encouraging them) This splendid tradition now becomes the background for
the passage under discussion.
THE TEAM
In bringing this
analogy over into the Spiritual realm, let us first of all introduce the Team. The Team is made up of God the Father, God the Son, and God
the Holy Spirit. The Father has provided a tremendous plan of Salvation
for lost and sinful man. The Son, Jesus Christ, is the One who executed
Salvation’s plan. The plan is based on GRACE: billions of years ago, the Father
loved us and desired fellowship with every member of the human race. Jesus
Christ came to this earth to fulfill that plan by going to the cross and being
judged for YOUR sins and MINE. He took OUR PLACE; He provided this “so great Salvation.” (Heb 2:3)
Now that He is
risen, ascended and seated at the right hand of the Father, He has made it
possible for us to operate on this earth today, by sending God the Holy Spirit.
The Holy Spirit, as the Third Member of that Team, He dwells INSIDE every
believer to honor and glorify the Person of Jesus Christ. (Joh 14:17 Joh 16:14)
Everything that we will ever need, as children of God, has been provided for
us. He did all the doing; we do all the receiving! The moment we believe in
Jesus Christ as Savior, He becomes our Lord, and the Father provides: “...Abundantly
beyond all that we ask or think, according to the power that works within us”
(Eph 3:20) beginning with the gift
of God the Holy Spirit. (Act 2:38; Act 11:16-17)Everything
depends on God!
ALL BELIEVERS ARE ON THE TEAM
In, (Php 2:12-16) we find that every believer in
Jesus Christ is the TWELFTH MAN on the Team.
So then, my beloved, just as you have always
obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now much more in my absence, work out
your salvation with fear and trembling. (Php
2:12)
The phrase “my beloved” refers to our position as
the TWELFTH MAN on the Team. Technically, the word “Beloved” is used only of
One Person the Lord Jesus Christ; The Father loves the Son with an infinite
amount of love; and yet this term is now given to EVERY BELIEVER in Jesus
Christ.
Beloved, now we are children of God, and
it has not appeared as yet what we will be. We know
that when He appears, we will be like Him, because we will see Him just as He
is. (1Jn 3:2)
It doesn’t make
any difference how UNLOVELY you may be from the standpoint of the world, or how
undesirable you seem to other people; as far as God is concerned, we are
beloved. Why? Because Jesus Christ is
the Beloved One, and we are IN CHRIST! As believers in Christ, we are in union
with the Son of God — in union in such a way that
His life becomes our life.
And the testimony is this, that God has
given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. He who has the Son has the
life; he who does not have the Son of God does not have the life. (1Jn 5:11-12)
In this wonderful
position “in Christ,” “Therefore there is now no condemnation...” (Rom 8:1) We have Salvation because we are “accepted in the beloved.” (Eph 1:6) God the Father could not accept us
until Jesus Christ was accepted; after His resurrection and ascension.
Why did Jesus
Christ need to be accepted? As God He has always been accepted; but as Man He
had to fulfill the Father’s plan. When the plan was completed, (Heb 2:9-10) Jesus Christ entered into heaven and
was accepted as the God-Man. The Father said to Him, “SIT AT MY RIGHT HAND,
UNTIL I MAKE YOUR ENEMIES A FOOTSTOOL FOR YOUR FEET.’’ (Heb 1:13) Now
everyone who puts his trust in Jesus Christ enters into union with the Son of
God and becomes bone of His bone and flesh of His flesh, (Eph 5:30) a partaker of the
Divine nature, (2Pe 1:4) members of the body of Christ, (1Co 12:27) the TWELFTH MAN on the Team. Are you
on the Team?
But as many as received Him, to them He
gave the right to become children of God, even to those who BELIEVE in His
name. (Joh
1:12)
For you are all sons of God through FAITH in
Christ Jesus. (Gal 3:26)
Now it is as
though all believers are “standing by” today. Part of the Team is in heaven,
(And in every believer) the Father and the Son; God the Holy Spirit indwells
every believer; and we, as the Twelfth Man, are representing Jesus Christ here
on this earth. Therefore, if we are to represent the Person of Jesus Christ, we
must first of all be coordinated.
For
you have died and your life is hidden with Christ in God. When Christ, who is
our life, is revealed, then you also will be revealed with Him in glory. (Col 3:3-4)
COORDINATION
(Php 2:12) begins with the words “so then,’’ which has a connective
meaning “so then.” It connects us
with verse 27 of the previous chapter.
Only conduct yourselves in a manner
[Thought pattern] worthy of the gospel of Christ, so that whether I come and
see you or remain absent, I will hear of you that you are standing firm in one
spirit, with one mind striving together for the faith [Spiritual life] of the
gospel. (Php
1:27)
This verse
epitomizes Twelfth Man coordination. Many times people have lost a position on
a team, or have failed to qualify for a team because of lack of coordination.
A man may be
strong, he may be big, he may be physically powerful; but if he lacks agility
and coordination, he does not have the qualifications for a good athlete.
The same is true
in the Christian life. Very often we find people who know the gospel and who
verbally proclaim it, but they lack COORDINATION. They do not have the
coordination between life and testimony. They do not have the filling of God
the Holy Spirit that gives them the real power to animate the gospel and make
it clear. Our “manner of life” as
believers in Christ should be coordinated with what we have to say about the
gospel. The life must declare the truth of what the lips say. If the lips say
that Jesus Christ meets every need of the life, that Jesus Christ is the
answer, that Jesus Christ is the only One who can save, that Jesus Christ IS
“the way, the Truth, and the life,” then the life should also demonstrate that
fact. The life should prove it!
This coordination
can be brought about only through the filling of God the Holy Spirit, (“Standing firm in one Spirit” — through
application of, (1Jn 1:9) and knowledge
and application of Divine Thinking. When you are filled with God the Holy
Spirit and you are constantly in the Word and Occupied with Christ, your life
becomes a living demonstration of what is SAID — and
you have coordination.
MENTAL ATTITUDE
In addition to
coordination, there must be a mental attitude in playing a game — the desire to
play; the desire to win; but above all, the desire to make it a team effort.
Mental attitude, as you should know, is all-important in the Christian life. Believers
should have “ONE MIND — THE MIND OF CHRIST” — and should pull together as
one team. “One
Mind” is the result of knowing
“the Mind of Christ,” (1Co 2:16)
which is the Word of God. The Bible, therefore,
shapes the mental attitude. (1Pe 4:1)
THE TWELFTH MAN IN ACTION
Conditioning.
The words “striving together” mean to
work out, to be in condition. Many times an inferior team with better
conditioning is able to defeat a superior team which has had poor conditioning.
The best athlete in the world, out of condition, isn’t going to be a winner. No
matter how great a man is by way of strength, coordination or agility, he must
be in condition; otherwise, he will not be able to take it when the maximum
pressure is on. Believers are conditioned by
suffering, by testing, by trial. Then, in the
midst of that suffering and testing and trial, we become Occupied with the
Person of Christ as we trust Him. We “roll
with the punch” — we keep moving in spite of
all the difficulties, in spite of the problems of life. And the result? SPIRITUAL CONDITIONING!
“Striving together” not only has to do
with the conditioning which must accompany coordination, but also with
competing as an athlete on a team. Paul was interested in athletics and used
many athletic terms. He undoubtedly attended at least one of the four great
contests of his day — the Olympic, Isthmus, Pythian and Nemean Games.
Therefore, thoroughly conversant with athletic terminology and tremendously
enthusiastic for athletics, he often compares the Christian life with the
athletics of his day. That is exactly what he does in, (Php 2:12) and following.
Confidence.
The words “my beloved” also convey
another Thought — confidence! The Twelfth Man
in action must have confidence. Regardless of whether he seems to be winning or
losing, a player must have confidence that his team will come through. The believer must have confidence IN THE LORD. He
must use faith-rest. He must see his position in Christ; he must KNOW that he
is on the winning side and that he CANNOT LOSE! It is impossible for him to
lose because he is in Christ.
Do you have
confidence today? Do you realize that “The
eternal God is a dwelling place, And underneath are the everlasting arms..?”
(Deut 33:27) Do you have the assurance
of your Salvation? (Joh 10:28) Do you
recognize the fact that you belong to Christ, that you are one with Him — that
this situation can NEVER be changed? Do you know today that you are a member of
the family of God and a child of God, and that God the Father loves you just as
much as He loves His only begotten Son, Jesus Christ? (Rom 8:16-17) Do you know that you are in
“full-time Christian Service” and that God has a plan for your life? KNOWLEDGE GENERATES CONFIDENCE! (2Co 5:6-8)
OBEYING THE RULES
Then we notice
from the next phrase of, (Php 2:12)
that the Twelfth Man in action must be obedient, just as an athlete must obey
the rules of the game. So then, my
beloved, just as you have always obeyed, not as in my presence only, but now
much more in my absence...” When a believer
becomes Spiritually mature and self-sustaining, he obeys the Word of God,
regardless of who is present or absent.
Obedience in
Witnessing. We are Commanded by the Word of God to be witnesses for Christ.
(Act 1:8) We ought to be VIGOROUS in
witnessing for Jesus Christ. (Mar 5:19)
How has it been with you this week? Have you been obedient? (If and when there
is someone who wants to know) As the Twelfth Man on the Team, have you made
Christ known? Have you spoken a word? The greatest
joy in the world is to see someone receive Jesus Christ as Savior and or see
someone want to learn Truth.
I was talking to
a nurse in the hospital recently, and she wasn’t walking on the floor she — was
bouncing along in the clouds! She was so happy that she was beaming as she went
down the hall. When she saw me, she rushed up, bubbling all over, and she
exclaimed, “You know, I gave a man some Scripture, and HE ACCEPTED CHRIST AS
HIS SAVIOR! I want you to come down and visit him.”
I followed her to
his room, and that man had the same expression on his face — he was bubbling
over, too! Although he was dying, he was rejoicing in the fact that he had
found Jesus Christ as Savior, He KNEW where he was going — HE KNEW THAT HE HAD
ETERNAL LIFE — HE KNEW that his sins were blotted out!
Why was that
nurse so excited — so bubbling over? Because, you see, as the Twelfth Man on
the Team, she was witnessing for Christ Her obedience was fulfilled, and it
produced an inner joy that manifested itself in reflected glory on the outside.
Obedience in Our Relationships.
We are Commanded
to be obedient in the matter of relationship to other believers. Believers are
Commanded to “love the brethren.” (1Th 4:9;
1Pe 1:22; 1Jn
4:14) Oh, the joy and the strength and the impact and the united
testimony of the Twelfth Man on the Team when they are all together in the
matter of love! Remember that love is a mental
attitude produced by the filling of God the Holy Spirit and by the knowledge of
Divine Thinking. Love is freedom from mental attitude sins toward
others, such as envy, bitterness, hatred, lust, competition, vindictiveness,
implacability, etc.
Obedience in Rebound.
Unconfessed sin
among the members of the Team can stop the Team cold! In any game, an
infraction of the rules demands a penalty and sets the team back. Believers who
do not rebound (1Jn 1:9) hinder the
entire work and testimony of Christ, and
God cannot let it go. Divine discipline must come into play before the Team
can get moving again. (Heb 12:6) cf. Jos 7:1) thru (Jos
8:35) and (Act 5:1-11).
Obedience in Learning the Word.
Be diligent to present yourself approved to
God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, accurately handling the word
of Truth. (2Ti 2:15)
Obviously we can’t obey the Word if we
don’t know it. Knowledge of the Word is of
necessity the most important requirement of the Spiritual life! (Php 3:8) There is no production, no stability,
neither peace nor happiness apart from knowledge of the Word of Truth.
No game can be played without rules. The
Bible is the rule or absolute Standard for the Twelfth Man of God’s Team. (2Co 10:13) How much time did YOU spend in the
Word of God this week? “Living in the Word” is one of the five basic techniques
of the Christian way of life. (Others are: rebound — 1Jn 1:9; the filling of God the Holy Spirit — Eph 5:18; faith-rest — Heb 4:1-3; Occupation with Christ. Col 3:1-2)
Obedience in Prayer
The Twelfth Man
on the Team must spend time not only in the Word but in prayer. If you were to
go out to Rice Stadium or to the Astrodome right now, I’m sure you would find
them empty. Sometimes I’m afraid that the condition of prayer meetings in the
United States of America is like this much of the time — empty. But the Twelfth Man should be out there . . . down on the field . . . constantly on the
firing line! (1Th 5:17)
Now, there are
two types of prayer: public prayer together with other believers, and private
prayer. Our public prayer, to some extent, indicates our private prayer life.
What kind of a prayer life have you had? LACK OF PRAYER is the reason for many
failures in the Christian life today.
In a military or
a tactical situation, no body of men can move forward without artillery support
without a barrage out in front of them. Many times a military organization,
which has been in serious trouble, in a tactical situation, has been delivered
by artillery support. For example, suppose you were a member of “Baker
Company.” The rest of your battalion has been sliced to bits, and you are out
there with your company with no protection from the flanks. Everything else is
drawn back . . . chewed up. Now as you are sitting out there looking over some
kind of a parapet, you see something coming down the road . . . a lot of tanks
. . . infantry troops . . . all kinds of equipment moving in on you . . . and
there you are — one company with maybe a couple of automatic rifles, a couple
of BAR’S, possibly one light machine gun, but primarily just a group of
riflemen!
Now, what do you
do? Well, you get on your walkie-talkie and call back to the Command post,
“This is Baker Company; we need artillery support!” You give them the
coordinates: “Out there are so many tanks, so many infantry . . . and so on.”
When the support comes, you say, “Off target about fifty yards to the right.”
You keep on giving them corrections for your artillery until they knock out
that stuff coming at you. So, then, Baker Company can sit tight and be
perfectly comfortable in spite of everything that is coming their way because
of artillery support.
But suppose when
someone calls back there to get some of that stuff to help you out of a jam, the
answer comes back, “Well, we have the best equipment in the world . . . we have
this battery and that battery . . . we have a lot of 90-millimeters back here .
. . a lot of great equipment . . . we’ve got the men who know how to use it . .
. they can deliver a lot of stuff in a hurry . . . BUT sorry OUT OF AMMUNITION!
What happens then? Baker Company gets chewed up, too!
There are a lot
of people today out on the mission field who are in dire straits right now.
Letters asking for help come back every day. When I see them, I some- times
feel like taking those letters and sending them back written across the
envelope — SORRY, but NO AMMUNITION! Oh, how we need that barrage of prayer!
No ammunition!
How we need to pray for our missionaries! The problems with which they are
confronted today are tremendous. We cannot even imagine all that they are
facing out there. Then when they send back a call for help, we are out of
ammunition! We have the equipment here . . . we have all kinds of people . . . all
kinds of potential . . . BUT we’re out of ammunition. No prayer barrage! God
help us! As the Twelfth Man on the Team, WE MUST BE
OBEDIENT ON THE FIRING LINE OF PRAYER!
CARRYING THE BALL
Now, the next
phrase of, (Php 2:12) “work out,” is an athletic term in the
Greek, which means to pass the baton in a relay race or to carry a ball over a
goal line. It actually has the meaning of moving forward with something that
has to be carried forward. This could be translated today, “So then, Twelfth
Man, as you have obeyed, not in my presence only, but much more in my absence,
carry the ball for the touchdown, [To reach Spiritual maturity] of your own
Salvation...” We do not work for OUR Salvation, (Eph
2:8-9; Tit 3:5) but we are
to produce or let out that which we already possess. (Eph 2:10)
This is quite
different from the Twelfth Man tradition of Texas A&M University. There the
entire student body roots for the man with the ball; but here the Twelfth Man
IS the bail carrier! On the Spiritual Team, every believer carries the ball. And every Spiritually mature believer should score! Every time God leads us to witness for Christ or to lead
someone to the teaching of the Word; WE SCORE!
We need a lot of
ball carriers today. The tragedy is that most Christians have gotten away from
the Concept of carrying the ball. We have the ball — the
precious gospel of Christ and Divine Thinking, which is the MOST IMPORTANT
INFORMATION IN THE WORLD. We ought to be carrying it to the rest of the
world. We should be telling other people that Jesus Christ died for their sins, “So that whoever believes will in Him have
eternal life.’’ (Joh 3:15)
“Work out” is in the perfect tense in
the Greek, which means that we should not only carry the ball in the past,
(Since the day we accepted Christ) but continue to carry the ball with results
that go on forever. Every time you lead some person to Christ, the results will
go on forever. That person will be in heaven; that person will go out and win
others for Christ There will be a tremendous chain reaction from carrying the
ball . . . leading someone to Christ and or Truth . . . they will lead others
to Christ and His Thoughts, and they in turn will carry the ball.
You never know when you lead some person to Christ how far
the chain reaction will carry. But we do know God has Promised:
So will My Word be which goes forth from My
mouth; It will not return to Me empty, Without accomplishing what I desire, And
without succeeding in the matter for which I sent it. (Isa 55:11)
So we need this
tremendous ball-carrying action from the Twelfth Man on the Team!
THE ALL-OUT EFFORT
The next phrase, “Fear and trembling,” (Php 2:12) is the phraseology of athletic hustle.
The Twelfth Man must HUSTLE! But behind this hustle, there must be a mental
attitude. The mental attitude of an athlete can make the difference between a
good and a great athlete. What is the mental attitude that produces hustle in
the Twelfth Man? FEAR! Not fear of the action but fear of NOT SCORING! Fear of
fumbling the ball . . . fear of not carrying the ball . . . fear of not making
the first down . . . of not moving. . . MOVING … MOVING!
This is the only
kind of fear we can have in the Christian life — a fear of NOT DOING THE JOB
for the Lord Jesus Christ. It’s the kind of fear that the Marine Corps
instilled in its personnel during World War II. When the Marines went into
action — it wasn’t fear of death: it was fear of NOT doing the job! Well,
that’s the kind of fear that we need as believers the kind that produces a
sense of responsibility with regard to Phase Two.
Then the word
“trembling’’ is the Greek word for over exertion — for muscular reaction from
extreme exertion. Have you ever experienced a “muscle quiver’’ from extreme
exertion? Maybe as a spectator at a game you’ve wondered why the players stay
so long in the huddle, or why a runner remains immobile for a minute or two
after the race. Well, he has just run fifty yards down the field, or a mile
around the track. He has been exerting and exerting until his muscles start to
quiver. Those muscles have been overworked, and the reaction is an involuntary
trembling.
The “trembling’’
of an all-out effort in the Christian life is the kind of trembling of which
God approves. However, this exertion is NOT THE ENERGY OF THE FLESH, but comes
through the work of God the Holy Spirit in the life, as we shall see in the
next verse.
CALLING THE PLAYS
In, (Php 2:13-14) the Twelfth Man is back in the
huddle. You have seen him in action; now the play is over, and we go back to
the huddle. Back in the huddle, we are introduced to the Divine Signal Caller —
the Quarterback.
For it is God [The Holy Spirit] Who is at
work in you, both to will and to work for His good pleasure. (Php 2:13)
Football teams always face the problem of a quarter-back, because a
quarterback has to be so many things. Since
it is the quarterback who calls the plays, you need a man who can think on his
feet, a man who can spot defensive weaknesses, a man who can recognize the way
a defense is set. A quarterback should know whether the defense has been
setting for passing or for the climax running of a left halfback . . . for the
buck-lateral series . . . for the pitchout series . . . or for the fullback
trap up the middle.
Since the defense
usually has to set for at least one or two types of offensive action, the
quarterback begins to watch the opposing defense. He notes how they are set up,
and he receives information from the other players . . . the tackle is out too
far . . . the tackle is in too close . . . the linebackers are in too close . .
. the linebackers are too far back. Then he sets up his plays accordingly.
So a good
quarterback has to have the ability to keep coming up with the good plays.
God the Holy
Spirit is the “Quarterback.” He calls the plays; He calls the sequence. And when those plays are properly executed, the result is
a change of life in many people in this world as they come to know Jesus Christ
as Savior; and grow to Spiritual maturity!
Now, a
quarterback has to be something besides a play-caller, although this is one of
his primary functions. But more than that, the quarterback is actually the PLAY-MAKER. This is especially true of the split-T
and quarterback option plays. It is the way he handles the ball in the first
few seconds after the ball is snapped that very often makes the play. This
fools the defense enough so that they can be brushed-blocked, or moved out of
the play so that the holes can open up.
A quarterback who
habitually makes a high hand-off slows down the team in two ways: first of all,
when he hands off that ball too high, the runners have to go to the line
standing up when they ought to be down low — crouching — moving in hard. In the
second place, he gives the play away! It’s so easy to give a play away when the
hand-off is high. Thus the actual play making is in the hands of the
quarterback.
The believer’s “play making” is in the HANDS OF THE HOLY
SPIRIT. He is the One who starts the play
going. He is the One who provides for every situation and makes it possible for
us to score on EVERY PLAY! “Work” is operational power, which is a
specific reference to God the Holy Spirit, who is the working power for the
execution of Phase two in The Christian way of life. His hand-offs are ALWAYS
low and perfect; if there is any fumble, it isn’t His fault. Whether we go into
the line as a fullback, or are making our cut as a halfback; whether we go into
the game in the wrong position or the wrong attitude — regardless of how we go
— He makes the play perfect for us. We have a wonderful Quarterback calling the
signals back in the huddle!
A quarterback
should be a team leader. One of the most important things about the huddle,
aside from getting the signal, is the time it affords to relax for a
half-minute . . . so that you can keep going for the next play. So the
quarterback encourages the team, calms them down and gets them ready for the
next play. We have a Quarterback who tells us through the Word:
Do not fear, for I am with you; Do not
anxiously look about you, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, surely I
will help you, Surely I will uphold you with My righteous right hand. (Isa 41:10)
Casting all your anxiety on Him, because
He cares for you. (1Pe
5:7)
And my God will supply all your needs
according to His riches in glory in Christ Jesus. (Php 4:19)
I can do all things through Him who
strengthens me. (Who keeps pouring the power into me) (Php 4:13)
The steadfast of
mind You will keep in perfect peace, Because he trusts in You! (Isa 26:3)
He constantly
pours out comfort and strength. He brings the Word to our memories so that we
might move forward.
DELAYING THE GAME
Just as the
entire team must follow the signals given in the huddle for the play to be
successful, so the Divine signals must be obeyed.
Therefore, we read in, (Php 2:14) “Do all things without grumbling or
disputing” If there is ANYTHING that will RUIN a team in a hurry, it is to
get back in the huddle and engage in a hassle.
In the first
place, there is no time for a good hassle; there’s no time to stand around back
there and criticize what some other boy did in the last play: so-and-so didn’t
make his cut right . . . so-and-so didn’t go down fast enough on the secondary
. . . so-and-so didn’t buttonhook . . . so-and-so didn’t block . . . he didn’t
let that guard go in or he didn’t trap him . . . so-and-so didn’t run across
and knock him into the stands! There is no time to go into all that! Now
listen! No matter how great the football team, the saddest thing in the world
is for them to get back there and have a debating society. THEY ARE THERE TO MOVE THAT BALL FORWARD!
In too many
churches today, the Twelfth Men are spending all their time in the huddle
debating; and they have been penalized time after time for delaying the game.
WHY? Because everyone is running everyone else down . . . they knife each other
in the back . . . they criticize . . . they spend all their time maligning
other believers.
Any team where
one teammate starts to run down another has had it! Suppose one of the backs
has been overeager and held the ball slightly wrong; he was so anxious to get
to the hole at the right time and to make his cut properly, he forgot about the
ball, and it slipped out of his hand. Do the other guys go over there and jump
on him or clobber him? No! If a fellow has flubbed or fumbled or made some
mistake, why they usually pat him on the back and say, “that’s okay; we’ll get
them next time”
But when a
believer fumbles the ball, what happens? The other believers all go over and
“beat the tar out of him.” but this verse says, when you get back in the
huddle, “Do all things without grumbling
or disputing.” Nothing stops the forward movement of Christianity so
quickly as bickering and fighting among believers!
(Php 2:14) is designed to get that Twelfth Man
out of the huddle. The play has been called get out there and WIN SOULS FOR
CHRIST! HELP OTHER BELIEVERS move along the way! Help them to “grow in grace and in the knowledge of our
Lord and Saviour Jesus Christ...” (2Pe 3:18)
THE TWELFTH MAN IN TRAINING
So that you will prove yourselves to be
blameless and innocent, children of God above reproach in the midst of a
crooked and perverse generation, among whom you appear as lights in the world. (Php 2:15)
The players on a football team must qualify for their
positions. After a period of intensive
training, the coach places the best qualified on the first string,
second best on second string, etc.
God also trains
the Twelfth Man for his position on the Team.
(Php 2:15) presents four characteristics of the
believer’s purpose for which he is in training. First, he must be “blameless
and innocent.” The word “blameless” means to be free from censure, while the
word “harmless” means unmixed or unadulterated. It was used of the ancient
huckster who diluted his wine with water. The believer is not to be a huckster;
that is, he is not to dilute the TRUTH. He is not to adulterate the Divine
Viewpoint of the Word with human viewpoint.
Secondly, as “the
sons of God,” the Twelfth Man is QUALIFIED for the team. If you are a believer in Jesus Christ, as a child of God,
you ARE qualified to serve Him. And if you are qualified, then the thing
to do is to get into good Spiritual condition . . . to get into shape . . . to
keep in training.
Thirdly, we are
to be “Above reproach in the midst of a
crooked and perverse generation...” “Above reproach” is literally without
spot or blemish, and is a reference to the inner life of the believer. Though
he is qualified by merit of his position as a son, he must keep in shape for
service through the use of, (1Jn 1:9)
whenever necessary. He must be ready to move at all
times by maintaining fellowship with the Lord and daily “inhaling” Divine
Thinking.
The word
“crooked” is anything that does not hew to a straight line. “Perverse’’ is
another word for twisted, distorted or mixed up. (Literally)We are in the midst
of a MIXED UP GENERATION . The only way we can unscramble the situation is by
moving forward . . . by moving that ball . . . by carrying the ball . . . by
making Christ known . . . by witnessing for Him.
Fourthly, the
Twelfth Man is to shine as a light in the world. HOW? By reflecting the glory
of Christ through the filling of God the Holy Spirit. (Eph 5:8-18)
RECOVERING THE FUMBLE
This passage has
one more word of admonition to the Twelfth Man on the Team — the believer in
Jesus Christ: DON’T FUMBLE!
Holding fast the word of life, so that in
the day of Christ I will have reason to glory because I did not run in vain nor
toil in vain. (Php
2:16)
One of the
greatest offensive weapons for the opposition is to fumble! More damage is done
by fumbling the ball without recovery of it than perhaps any other single
mistake.
We as believers are likewise to HOLD ONTO THE BALL
— to “holding fast the Word of life!” If you go through life as a believer in
Jesus Christ in ignorance of the Word of God, without using the Word, without
absorbing the Word, without Thinking with the Word, without believing the Word,
then you are going to have FUMBLITIS! We can certainly do without fumblitis
today!
Why is it that
any well coached team doesn’t simply tackle the MAN? That is just part of the
job. How is the defense played today? They tackle the
BALL! The object is to jar the man loose from the ball. That is one of
the greatest objectives in a well-coached team — to hit that ball! Go for the
ball!
Now listen: the Devil is going to tackle the ball. (To stop us from the DAILY MAXIMUM intake of Divine Thinking)
The Devil is going to go for the ball. And he has given thorough instructions
to all in his camp — Make them fumble! MAKE THEM FUMBLE! MAKE THEM FUMBLE! I’ll
take care of ‘upstairs’ all right . . . I’ll go up every time they fumble and
say, ‘Look, Lord, so-and-so fumbled today.’
(Rev 12:10) So God has made
provision for our fumbling. He has made a way to overcome our failures.
If we confess our sins, He is faithful and
righteous to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness. (1Jn 1:9)
That is the way
you recover your own fumble. If you have to fumble, the best thing you can do
is to RECOVER IT, Don’t let the enemy get it! So we recover the fumble EVERY
TIME we confess our sins and get back into temporal fellowship. Now we still
have the ball WHAT SHOULD WE DO? KEEP MOVING! MOVE! MOVE! MOVE! And the only
way to move is THROUGH THE WORD!
Pay close attention to yourself [Your own
Spiritual growth] and to your teaching; persevere in these things, [Divine
Thoughts] for as you do this you will ensure salvation [Deliverance] both for
yourself, [From Satanic viewpoint and Divine discipline] and them that hear you
[Those you have influence over]
(1Ti 4:16)
You must have
Spiritual knowledge of the Word to become Spiritually self-sustaining and
adjusted.
MOVING OVER THE GOAL LINE
If the back can
keep those knees high and his head down, and he keeps moving right on through
the opposition, he will cross the goal line. Have you ever seen a boy make a
touchdown and just throw the ball up in the air and jump up and down? He’s the
happiest kid on the field at that moment, and the whole team joins in the
rejoicing!
That is what we
have here — “Holding fast the Word of
life; that I may rejoice in the day of Christ...” (Php 2:16) The day of Christ is a future day when
we will stand in His presence for either reward or loss of reward. And, if I
keep moving as a believer in Jesus Christ — no matter how difficult the
opposition — no matter how much the pressure — then
I’m going to be able to stand before Him and hear these WORDS.
Well done, good and faithful slave. You
were faithful with a few things, [Divine Thoughts] I will put you in charge of
many things; enter into the joy of your master. (Mat 25:21)
I hope you understand
that it isn’t the one who reaches the mountain top in the Christian life. . .
it isn’t the one who has had some great experience . . . or a series of great
experiences . . . it is the believer, wherever he is, whatever his
circumstances, who can MOVE! MOVE! MOVE! Every time he gets tackled, he gets up
and MOVES again. Every time he fumbles the ball, he recovers it he REBOUNDS . .
. he uses, (1Jn 1:9) . . . he gets back
into temporal fellowship.
Furthermore,
according to, (Php 2:16) it is UTTERLY
IMPOSSIBLE to move WITHOUT THE WORD OF GOD! If, as believers in Jesus Christ,
we are going to be in condition as the Twelfth Man on the Team . . . if we are
going to carry the ball . . . if we are going to move the ball toward the goal
line . . . if we are going to accomplish that purpose for which the Divine
Quarterback is calling the signals, WE MUST UTILIZE THE DIVINE DYNAMICS; the
power of God the Holy Spirit and knowledge of the Word of God. Then we will not
have “run in vain” (Energy of the flesh)
nor “labored in vain.” (To no purpose)
Because the mind
set on the flesh is hostile toward God; for it does not subject itself to the law [Thinking] of God, for it is not even able to do so, and those who are
in the flesh cannot please God. (Rom
8:7-8)
END
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