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From the Manse August 2005
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Dear friends
We’re
coming together to the end of our sermon-series on the life of King
David. We’ve traced his story from his teenage years when Samuel
anointed him king-to-be, up to his old age when he handed the kingdom
over to Solomon. We’ve watched a young lad mature, come to his prime,
decline and grow old.
David was very young when he was first called into a
position of leadership. We don’t know exactly how old he was when he
defeated Giant Goliath, but his brothers still thought of him as a
naughty child, and we’re told that Goliath despised him for his
youthfulness. He may have been fifteen or sixteen. Yet from that day,
he was the man who led Israel into battle, the man marked out to be
king. The women of Israel sang about him,
‘Saul has slain his
thousands but David his tens of thousands..’
Timothy again can only have been a teenager when Paul
took him on as his assistant and trainee. Yet very quickly he became
Paul’s right-hand man. Paul was prepared to send him into the most
dangerous and sensitive situations. Timothy was in the first months of
his apprenticeship when Paul sent him to Thessalonica - the city from
which Paul himself had been driven by an angry mob. He was in his early
twenties when Paul sent him to sort out the problems and divisions in
the church in Corinth - a church so unruly that Paul himself never went
there without fear and trembling! Twenty years after Timothy began his
ministry, Paul had to say to him, ‘let
no man despise your youth’! If people thought Timothy at forty
was too young for the job, what must they have made of him when he first
took up his work?
Generally speaking, the people we look to for
leadership will be mature in years. The very title that the New
Testament gives to church-leaders tells us that. They are ‘elders’ -
seniors. Yet God in his wisdom may equip a man for leadership at any
age. David at sixteen was more mature than many men at sixty.
Physically, mentally, spiritually, he had been trained by years looking
after his father’s sheep. Before ever he fought Goliath, his courage
and skill had been tested by fights with lions and bears. He was
ready. Timothy too had years of preparation behind him when Paul
enrolled him. He had known the Scriptures since infancy. He already
had the confidence of the church in Lystra (Acts 16:2).
Whitefield was 25 when his open-air preaching triggered the great
revival of the eighteenth century. He was ready for the work God had
prepared for him.
Spurgeon was sixteen when he preached his
first sermon, eighteen when he was called to his first pastorate, twenty
when he became pastor of New Park Street Chapel, the most famous and
historic baptist church in London. From the day he took up his work,
there were conversions. Within two years he was
the most famous preacher in the British Isles. That young man was ready
for the extraordinary ministry to which he was called.
Calvin was twenty-seven when he wrote the
Institutes, the most influential work of systematic theology ever
written. Still young, he was ready to shape the course of the
Reformation and world-history.
Henry
Martyn sailed for India at the age of
twenty-four; Hudson Taylor left for China at the age of twenty-one.
William Bradford was thirty-one when he took on the leadership of the
New Plymouth colony. Iain Murray was twenty-five when he founded the
Banner of Truth Trust. Young in years, these were grown men, ready for
huge responsibilities.
And we shouldn’t forget the women too.
Ann Judson
was twenty-one when she met
Adoniram Judson,
twenty-three when she sailed with him for Burma.
Amy Carmichael
was sixteen when she started her work among factory girls in the
slums of Victorian Belfast: by the time she was twenty-two she had built
a mission-hall for them, seating three hundred.
Many pastors today are deeply frustrated by the shortage
of young people willing to take on responsibility in the churches.
Their young people are too busy ‘being young people’ to settle to take
on the workload. They want to carry on being members of ‘the youth
fellowship’... ‘the Teens and Twenties group’... ‘the Thirty-Somethings’..indefinitely.
And my pastoral friends ask, ‘when are
they just going to start being grown-ups’?
I suppose it’s a reflection of the world we live in. Our
society does not encourage young people to think of themselves as ready
for the responsibilities of adult life. Many young people go through
their teens and twenties without ever thinking of themselves as ‘grown
up’. They hop from one short-term job to another. They put off
thinking about marriage, setting up a home, having children. They
become perpetual students, doing one course after another. They go off
for years on end exploring the world and ‘discovering themselves’. It’s
as if they’re still waiting for their real life to begin.
Many young men, especially, are reluctant to take on
long-term commitments and responsibilities. They want to stay
‘footloose and fancy-free’, ready to move on to the next girlfriend, the
next rented flat, the next experiment. Perhaps they’re frightened of
growing up.
Go back fifty years and it was all so different. Lads
left school at fifteen, took a job which they reckoned on doing for the
next fifty years, started thinking about marriage and a home of their
own. It was a simple transition. While you were at school you were a
child. After you left school you were an adult and expected to behave
like one.
Go back a few years further again. Remember that many of
the men who led our RAF bomber squadrons over Germany were still in
their early twenties. They never had the opportunity to be ‘young
people’. In a time of crisis, they were called to be men.
Well, I’m proud of the younger people in our
congregation. So much of our work depends on men and women who in many
other churches would be thought of as still growing up. Many of the
most responsible jobs in the church are done by men and women in their
twenties or early thirties. By the world’s standards, they are young in
years, but we see that they’re mature in grace and faith.
And I’m proud of our teenagers. I’m proud that a girl of
fifteen should be prepared to take on the weekly responsibility of
playing the piano in our evening services as well as in Sunday-school.
I’m proud that we could trust a man of eighteen to be down at our
meeting-place every Sunday morning putting out chairs, welcoming folk.
I’m proud that another should be walking the streets with me each week,
talking to the lost youngsters of the area. I’m proud that our
teenagers aim to be in our midweek meetings; that they pray thoughtfully
and contribute helpfully to discussion. I’m proud to see them
shouldering responsibility already.
They’re preparing themselves. It’s by doing these
duties faithfully that they prepare themselves for leadership in the
years ahead.
I
want to believe that among our teenagers there will be those who will go
on to become outstanding servants of God while they’re still young:
Davids, Timothys - and Marys! Never forget: God entrusted the
most responsible job in the world to a girl in her teens. He laid on
Mary of Nazareth the task of nurturing and training his own Son.
There’s no more responsible job for a young woman than the job of
mothering the next generation.
Anne and I plan to take eight of the teenagers from the
church away in the next few weeks. We’re all going up to our house in
Haverigg to spend five days together. We want it to be a happy
holiday. But more than that, it’s a time for training. We’ll be
spending the evenings talking together about the big choices in life -
marriage, work, Christian service. And we’ll be asking just how
teenagers can prepare themselves to be men and women of God.
Do
pray for us while we’re away. And not only while we’re away.
These young people face challenges and temptations that those of us who
are a bit older, never had to face. God grant them courage, wisdom and
maturity beyond their years.
God’s
blessing on you all, Stephen
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