Acts 11:19-30 · The Church in Antioch
Will the Real Christian Please Stand Up?
Acts 11:26
Sermon
by James Merritt
Loading...

The year was 1995. It was called "Global Mission with Billy Graham." It took over a year to pull off and by the end of the event it would be the largest single evangelistic effort in the history of Christianity.

Bob Williams, Director of International Ministries for the Billy Graham Evangelistic Association, had set an incredible goal: Through the medium of satellite technology, he wanted to reach the largest audience ever to hear a series of messages by Billy Graham. In order to appreciate the size and scope of what he was trying to pull off, these are just some of the things that were involved:

  • 185 countries participated by satellite.
  • The event was broadcast in 117 different languages.
  • It took over 300 hours of transmission time from 10 uplink antennas to 29 time zones, using 30 different satellites.
  • 1 billion people viewed the broadcast television special in 117 countries all at the same time.
  • It took 10 miles of video and audio cable.
  • 45 digital beta cam recorders (the most in any one location of the world)
  • Digital trans-Atlantic satellite transmission
  • 75 technical personnel on a 24 hour per day schedule
  • Equipment valued at $15 million

Can you imagine actually speaking to, and being heard by one billion people at the same time?1 Let me ask you a question. If you could speak to all 6 billion people in this world at one time, and you could only say one thing, and it could only be four words, what would you say? May I tell you what I would say? I would say what one-day every person who has ever lived is going to say: "Jesus Christ is Lord." In fact, if I only had four last words I could ever say, I would say "Jesus Christ is Lord," and I hope I do have last words to say.

I heard about two next-door neighbors who were talking across their fence, and one said to the other: "I understand that your dad died. Did he have any last words?" His neighbor said, "No, mother was with him right up to the end." Now I want you to think about those three names: Jesus-Christ-Lord. Every name is important.

His first name is Jesus. That name literally means "Jehovah saves." Jesus is his human name. As Jesus, he is our mediator. He stands between sinful man and holy God. As sinless man he takes the hand of God; and as saving God, He takes the hand of man and joins the two together and becomes our Mediator. "For there is one Mediator between God and men, the Man Christ Jesus." (1 Tim. 2:5)

His middle name is Christ. The name Christ literally means "Anointed One." Christ is His holy name. As Christ He is our Messiah. The Jesus of the New Testament is the Messiah of the Old Testament. You see, Jesus is not only the Gentile Savior, He is the Jewish Messiah.

But his last name is the focus of our message. For this is the name which is above every name, which one day everyone will say, and that is, Lord. Lord is His heavenly name. As Lord He is our Master.

Now the name Lord has several meanings. It could mean Sovereign, it can mean Master, it can mean Ruler, it can mean King. They are all so rich because they describe the way we relate to Jesus, and the way He relates to us.

He is Sovereign, we are subordinate; He is the Master, we are the slaves; He is the Ruler, we are the servants; He is the King, we are the subjects. Let me make something very plain. Jesus does not want a place in your life, He does not want prominence in your life, He wants preeminence in your life.

When you crown Him King, you crown Him as Lord. Let me tell you why this is so important. A great preacher once said:
"Let a man get right on the lordship of Christ and he is right all down the line on every issue. It means that the flagship of the fleet is the lordship of Christ, and if that ship leads all the other ships—church membership, fellowship, discipleship, stewardship, worship, will follow the flagship!"2

Now the question before you today is not is Jesus Christ Lord. That has been established whether you believe it or not. The question is: Is He your Lord? If He is, understand exactly what that means.

I. His Lordship Determines Our Spiritual Relationship

Let me ask you the following questions: Why did Jesus die? Why was Jesus buried? Why was Jesus raised from the dead? Why is He alive and reigning on the throne of the universe right now? Now the answer usually given to that is: "To save us from our sins." That is a true answer, but it's only a partially true answer. May I give you a more thorough answer to that question? Listen to this: "For to this end Christ died and rose and lived again, that He might be Lord of both the dead and the living." (Rom. 14:9)

Jesus didn't just die to cleanse you as Savior, He died to claim you as Lord. In fact, that is exactly the way we are to preach the Lord Jesus. "For we do not preach ourselves, but Christ Jesus the Lord, and ourselves your servants for Jesus' sake." (2 Cor. 4:5) Now Jesus is our Savior, and He is our Redeemer, and I'm to preach Him as both. But I am primarily to preach Christ Jesus, or Jesus Christ as Lord.

If you are saved today I want you to understand something. When God saved you, you made your greatest decision, you made your best decision, but in reality, you really made your last decision. Because the moment you come to Jesus Christ as Lord, He is to make all the decisions from then on. You are just to carry them out.

When the Apostle Paul met Jesus on the Damascus Road, he asked him the two greatest questions anybody could ever ask. The first question he asked was before he got saved; the second question he asked was after he got saved. The first question was: "Who are you Lord?" We understood just exactly who the Lord was and who the Lord is. His second question was: "Lord, what do you want me to do?" (Acts 9:5-6)

Jesus saves us as Lord, and therefore we are to serve Him as Lord. Now I want to remind you, you cannot be saved until you've surrendered your life to Christ as Lord of all. Rom. 10:9 says, "that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved." Now there is a controversy about whether or not you have to accept Jesus Christ as Lord in order to be saved.

Quite frankly, I don't know what the controversy is all about. First of all, why would anybody want to be saved if they did not want to accept Christ as Lord? Number two: That is the only kind of salvation there is. Jesus is not Savior or Lord. He is Savior and Lord. In fact, He is Savior because He is Lord.

If you are sitting there saying to yourself right now, "Well, I have accepted Jesus as my Savior, but I've never received Him as my Lord," I've got news for you. He's not your Savior either. You cannot treat Jesus like a cafeteria where you say, "I would like some Savior-hood, but I wouldn't care for any Lordship." You receive Him as Lord and Savior or you will have him as neither one.

By the way, you cannot make Jesus Lord. God has already beat you to the punch. "Therefore let all the house of Israel know assuredly that God has made this Jesus, whom you crucified, both Lord and Christ." (Acts 2:36)

In John 13:13 Jesus made a very revealing statement to his disciples. He said, "You call me Teacher and Lord, and you say well, for so I am." Now notice that He was not Lord because the disciples called Him Lord. They called Him Lord because He is Lord. You can believe on the Lord, you can receive the Lord, you can bow before the Lord, you can worship the Lord, you can serve the Lord, but you cannot make Him Lord.

I want to make this as plain as I can. If He is not your Lord, He is not your Savior. Jesus is called Savior in the New Testament 24 times; He is called Lord 433 times. If you're looking just for eternal fire insurance, don't come to Jesus because He's not an insurance agent, He is Lord.

If you understand that, that means you understand that He will be over, and you will under; He will be above, you will be beneath; He will command, you will consent; He will demand, you will deliver; He will give the orders, you will carry them out. You cannot limit His lordship and lordship carries with it leadership.

II. His Lordship Defines Our Personal Ownership

Now the verse that really says it all is Acts. 10:36, "The word which God sent to the children of Israel, preaching peace through Jesus Christ—He is Lord of all…" Now you can't make it any plainer than that. If He is your Lord, He is Lord of all of you. He is Lord of all that you are. He is Lord of all that you have, because you really don't have anything; He has it all because He is Lord of all.

S. M. Lockridge, the great black preacher, put it this way:
He didn't have to put his signature on the corner of the sunrise: He's the owner! He didn't have to put a laundry mark on the lapel of the meadow: He's the owner! He didn't have to carve his initials on the side of a mountain: He's the owner! He didn't have to put his brand on the cattle on a thousand hills: He's the owner! He didn't have to put a copyright on the songs He gave the birds to sing: He is the owner!3

I repeat. He is Lord of all; Lord of all you are and all that you have. He is Lord of nature, He is the Lord of creation, He is the Lord of time, He is the Lord of eternity, He is the Lord of life, He is the Lord of death, He is the Lord of humanity, He is the Lord of demons, He is the Lord of yesterday, He is the Lord of today, He is the Lord of tomorrow; everything bounded by time and space, and everything beyond time and space is under the lordship of Jesus Christ.

That's exactly where we struggle so much as Christians. A great puritan once prayed this prayer:

When you would guide me
I control myself;
When you would be sovereign
I rule myself;
When you would take care of me
I suffice myself;
When I should depend on your providings
I supply myself;
When I should submit to your providence
I follow my will;
When I should study, honor, and trust You
I serve myself;
I fought and correct your laws
To suit myself;
Instead of You I looked to man's
approval, and am by nature an idolater.
Lord, it is my chief design to bring
my heart back to You.4

But if Jesus Christ is Lord of all, that obviously means something else.

III. His Lordship Demands Our Financial Stewardship

If you believe that Jesus Christ is Lord of all, and you're going to live as if He is Lord of all, then He must be Lord of your clock, He must be Lord of your calendar, and He must be Lord of your checkbook. Now I'm going to give you four statements about your money that I want you to think about today, and if you will take down these four statements and get them into your heart, and believe them, live them, and practice them, you're going to enter into an area of victory in your Christian life that many of you have never known before in your entire life.

Here are those four statements:

a. You own nothing—God owns everything. "…the world is Mine, and all its fullness." (Psalm 50:12)

b. Everything you have—God gave to you. "Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, and comes down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow of turning." (James 1:17)

c. You are an owner of nothing, and a steward of everything. "As each one has received a gift, minister it to one another, as good stewards of the manifold grace of God." (1 Peter 4:10)

d. In eternity all that I will have in Heaven is what I give to God on earth. "But lay up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where neither moth nor rust destroys and where thieves do not break in and steal." (Matthew 6: 20)

If every church member could get those four statements down in their heart, and believe them and practice them and live them, it would be incredible what God would do through you for His work, and it would be incredible what God would do for you through your finances. But the only way that will happen is to make Jesus Christ Lord.

IV. His Lordship Decides Our Eternal Fellowship

"Therefore God also has highly exalted Him and given Him the name which is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, of those in heaven, and of those on earth, and of those under the earth." (Philippians 2:9-10) Think about this picture. We're all in eternity in God's throne room. You hear angels' wings fold as they bend the knee. You see the entire multitude of all of the people who have ever drawn a breath on this earth bow their heads and fall on their faces. You can even hear, if you listen, demons in hell bowing the knee and all will confess that Jesus Christ is Lord.

The word confess means "to proclaim publicly and agree with." Now that does not mean that everyone will do it joyfully, and willfully, and gladly. You see, there will be two groups of people who confess that Jesus Christ is Lord—there will be those who are just continuing to do what they did on earth, and there will be those being forced to do what they denied on earth.

But either way, the Lord Jesus is going to hear Madelyn Murray O'Hare, Adolf Hitler, Muhammad, Judas Iscariot, Napoleon Bonaparte, and every member of the ACLU confess that He is Lord to the glory of God the Father.

Yogi Berra, the famous catcher for the New York Yankees, was out on a road trip one night and he got hungry for pizza. He called a local pizza parlor and ordered a medium pepperoni. When he walked up to the counter to pick it up, the man said, "Yogi, when you called I forgot to ask you how you wanted me to slice your pizza. Do you want it cut into six slices or twelve?" Yogi thought about it and said, "You better make it six, I don't think I can eat twelve." Well no matter how you slice it, Jesus is Lord, and He deserves all of your life.

So the question is not: "Is He Lord?" That has been settled. The question is: "Is He your Lord?" Have you surrendered everything to Him?

Someone wisely wrote these words:

Make me a captive, Lord
And then I shall be free;
Force me to render up my sword
And I shall conqueror be.

That little poem carries on added meaning when you think about what a sword represented. The sword historically has been considered the most personal weapon that an officer can carry. When you surrendered your sword it became a token of complete submission. In fact, if an officer was found to disgrace the army, they would take his sword away from him and break the blade, because the sword is the mark of being an officer and a gentleman. But giving up your sword was the ultimate act of total surrender.

That is why this story carries on added meaning. Lord Nelson, the British Admiral, after a notable victory over the French, had the French Admiral to come to surrender. Well, the French Admiral came up to him somewhat with a smile, a smirk, his sword dangling by his side. As he walked onto the deck of that British ship, he put out his hand toward Lord Nelson to shake his hand in an act of friendship. But Lord Nelson did not put out his hand toward the French Admiral, but standing erect and at attention, he said, "First, your sword Sir."

The Lord Jesus is asking for your sword. Jesus Christ is asking you to take your clock, how you spend your time; your calendar, where you spend your priorities; and your checkbook, what you do with your finances; and surrender them all to Him. Will you do it? He deserves it because He is Lord of all.


[1] WWW.cookefilm.com/_/1995BI-1.html
[2]
[3]
[4] Arthur Bennett, ed., The Valley of Vision, (Carlisle, Penn.: The Banner of Truth Trust, 1975) 91.

ChristianGlobe Networks, Inc., Collected Sermons, by James Merritt