| Introduction
The
Western church has often been compared with the church in Laodicea,
materially prosperous but spiritually “wretched, pitiable,
poor, blind, and naked” (Rev
3:17). We are often
arrogantly certain that we know in what form the next “move of God” will
come, meanwhile neglecting various foundational patterns laid down in
the Bible that are universal for all humanity.
Amazed by our own technology we have uniquely developed a “microwave
spirituality” fixated on rapid fire solutions and intense experiences. Since these foci, by their very nature, go against
the grain of God’s order, they cannot produce enduring fruit. Counter to these trends, especially among men,
God is restoring the essential order of genuine fathering.
“Behold,
I will send you Elijah the prophet before the great and awesome day of
the Lord comes. 6 And he will turn the hearts of fathers to their
children and the hearts of children to their fathers, lest I come
and strike the land with a curse.” (Mal 4:5 – 6)
By God’s own testimony, unless the ministry of Elijah precedes
a divine visitation, the result will be a curse.
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The
Problem with Men
Many
Australian men (notwithstanding differences between age groups) still
fit the emotionally detached, achievement driven stereotypes of masculinity.
Many males are quite isolated, lonely and unconnected. A great proportion
of church – going men are very under – pastored. Few are regularly visited
in their work place (or home) by their shepherd and interaction usually
occurs on the pastor’s territory and concerns church related activities. This is a poor reflection of God as an interested
Father.
The
frequency of many social problems in wider society - crime, recidivism,
domestic violence, sexual abuse, educational failure, divorce - can be
traced back to a lack of good fathering. This is a particularly acute problem for indigenous
people. As one very perceptive
young aboriginal woman said to me, “You see these young men wandering
the streets of Belmont,
they all have the same problem, none of them have fathers.” The reviving of the spirit and power of Elijah
is the divine solution to these problems.
The
Spirit and Power of Elijah
In
the tradition of Old Testament prophetic ministry Elijah alone has an
intimate and immediate successor, Elisha. At the heart of the relationship
between these two men is that the older imparts to the younger the power to make sons. This develops in a number of steps.
Persecuted
by Jezebel, depressed, alone, afraid and feeling like a helpless victim
(1 Ki 19), Elijah is commanded to pass on the baton, “Elisha …you shall
anoint to be prophet in your place” (1 Ki 19:16). Elijah instantly obeys God’s command, “So he
departed from there and found Elisha … and cast his cloak upon him.” (1 Ki 19:19). As a model disciple, Elisha leaves all behind
to follow his master (1 Ki 19:20-
21).
Knowing
his master must depart the earth (2 Ki 2:1, 4), Elisha steadfastly (2
Ki 2:2,4, 6) refuses to be separated from him and petitions, “Please let there be a double portion of your
spirit on me.” (2 Ki 2:9). Biblically,
this means that Elisha stands in relationship to Elijah as his first born
son, the one who is granted twice the inheritance of any other heir.
Crucially,
Elisha knows himself to be God’s choice as the beloved son of Elijah because
he witnesses his mentor’s ascent to heaven. “behold, chariots of fire
and horses of fire separated the two of them. And Elijah went up by a
whirlwind into heaven. 12 And Elisha
saw it and he cried, “My father, my father!....” And he saw him
no more.” (2 Ki 2:11
- 12). These words express a deep
inner knowledge of sonship, the young prophet senses in his spirit that
the anointing of Elijah now lives in him.
The outward sign that the authority of Elijah is imparted to Elisha,
is that his mantle, the sign of his prophetic office, immediately clothes
him with miraculous authority (2 Ki 2:13 - 14).
Elijah
was a solitary forerunner without precedent - he has no spiritual father(1 Ki 17:1). Elisha
however goes forth in the power of his prophetic father to parent many
other prophets (2 Ki 4:38; 6:1). This transmission and multiplication
of sonship is the spirit and power of Elijah. From this perspective we
can better understand the crucial nature of the New Testament Elijah figure,
John the Baptist.
The
Ministry of John the Baptist
“And
he (John) will turn many of the children of Israel to the
Lord their God, 17 and he will go before
him in the spirit and power of Elijah, to turn the hearts of the fathers
to the children, and the disobedient to the wisdom of the just, to
make ready for the Lord a people prepared.” (Luke 1:16
- 17)
This
angelic prophecy about John gives first place to his role in reconciling
family relationships. While the
Gospels do not explicitly show John exercising this ministry, certain
words of Jesus about him explain their force, “ “Elijah
does come first to restore all things….13 But I tell you that Elijah has
come….”” (Mark 9:12
- 13)
The
“restoration of all things” means the return of the whole of creation to its original
pre – fallen dignity. Biblical
thought traces the degradation of the world to the fall of the first created
“son of God” (Luke 3:38), Adam. His rebellion against
God as his Father distorted the image of fatherhood, divine and human,
that he passed on to the entire human race. With the foundational reality
of fathering corrupted, all other relationships have been spoiled. From
this perspective, the turning of the hearts of fathers to children, initiated
by John, was a prophetic sign that the heavenly Father
was about to renew the universe with a revitalized humanity at its centre. John’s ministry pointed to this end – time reality,
but Jesus brought it into being.
Jesus takes us to the Father
The
turning point for humanity’s restoration to the Father is Jesus’ ascension,
“go to my brothers and say to them, ‘I am ascending to
my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.’” (John 20:17). Seeing Christ’s return to heaven (Acts 1:6 -11)
was the final and climactic earthly revelation to the apostles that humanity
had been elevated to the glory Jesus enjoyed with the Father “before the
foundation of the world” (John 17:5).
Like Elisha, the apostles were permitted by God to witness the
reality of their future destiny in the heavenly realm, in the heart of
the Father (Col 3:1 -3).
Elisha
possessed an external mantle of authority and had sons after his own prophetic
likeness, but the disciples receive the “promise of the Father” and “are
clothed with power from on high” (Luke 24:48; Acts 1:4). This is the power
of the Holy Spirit poured out from the ascended Jesus (Acts 2:33)
at Pentecost. From now on, through
the power of the Spirit and by testimony to what has been accomplished
in Christ, men and women are changed from “children of wrath” (Eph 2:3)
to “sons of God” (Gal 3:26).
In
the heavenly Spirit (1 Pet 1:12), we know God in a new way, “Blessed
be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in
Christ with every spiritual blessing in the heavenly places,” (Eph 1:4).
Knowing the unconditional blessings of the Father’s heart, our hearts
are likewise turned to bless those sons and daughters that God has given
us. We have the power to multiply sons.
Returning to the Blessed Father
Paul
testified to the rarity of spiritual fathering, “For though you have countless guides in Christ, you
do not have many fathers. For
I became your father in Christ Jesus through the gospel.” (1 Cor 4:15). There are several reasons why such “fathers”
are uncommon. Firstly, their preparation
is a sovereign work of God. You
cannot be trained for fathering through any course, programme or emotional
experience. Secondly, such preparation is arduous. We learn
the ways of God through many tribulations, disappointments and struggles.
Thirdly, God’s work of preparing mature believers to care for his beloved
children takes many years of the Spirit’s ministry in your own life. You cannot take others where you have not been
yourself.
Nevertheless,
because “spiritual fathering” is so crucial for the stability and maturity
of the church, God perseveres with this purpose for decade after decade. Once the Father has raised up a cohort of true
fathers, the church can again become true to its nature as “salt” and
light”. Through these servants the corruption of society
(predominantly due to fatherlessness) can be reversed, and a standard
raised up about “the restoration of all things”. The elders are about to return to the gates
of the city.
Conclusion
It
is not popular charisma that brings us closest to the heart of God, but
the discipline and nurture of spiritual parents whose love images the
Father of our Lord Jesus Christ. I
am anticipating a release of a generation of earnest fathers amongst the
people of God, beginning, as always, amongst the faithful remnant.
If
these realities are true, you need to be asking of your life
- “Am I such a father, am I praying to be such a father?” Alternatively,
are you able to recognise that through Jesus God has already set such
a person in your life? If not, pray that he would bring such a person
to you.
All
of us need to share God’s own desire that very soon in this land every
(spiritually) young person will have the sort of mature, intimate and
focused care that genuine shepherding can provide? These are matters for sober reflection and earnest
prayer, for without this impending release of the spirit and power of
Elijah our land will remain under a curse (Mal 4:5 – 6 ). |