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September 14, l986
Bethlehem Baptist Church
John Piper, Pastor


STRENGTHEN EACH OTHER'S HANDS IN GOD
1 Samuel 23:15-18

And David was afraid because Saul had come out to seek his life. David was in
the Wilderness of Ziph at Horesh. And Jonathan, Saul's son, rose, and went to
David at Horesh, and strengthened his hand in God. And he said to him, "Fear
not; for the hand of Saul my father shall not find you; you shall be king over
Israel, and I shall be next to you; Saul my father also knows this." And the two
of them made a covenant before the LORD; David remained at Horesh, and
Jonathan went home.

Today's message is an interruption in the series begun last Sunday from Ephesians.
The reason for the interruption is the deep conviction we feel about the need to
encourage all the members of Bethlehem to be a part of some kind of smaller group
where you help each other fight the fight of faith. And so our focus today is on
strengthening each other's hands in God.

We believe that eternal security is a community project. We believe that the
perseverance of the saints is a corporate responsibility. The same loving Lord who
said, "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me; and I give
them eternal life, and they shall never perish, and no one shall snatch them out of
my hand" (John 10:27-28), also said, "He who endures to the end will be saved"
(Matthew 24:13).

In other words those who are born of God are eternally secure in the hand of Jesus.
And those who are born of God must endure to the end in order to be finally saved.
And so the question rises: How has God ordained to keep his people persevering in
faith to the end so that he can infallibly fulfill the promise that they are secure and
that none shall be lost?

This morning we are focusing on one crucial part of the answer to that question:
namely, God has ordained that we be related to other believers in such a way that
we can help each other fight the fight of faith successfully day in and day out until
the end. The Biblical basis for this answer is Hebrews 3:12-14,

Take care, brethren, lest there be in any of you an evil heart of unbelief, leading
you to fall away from the living God. But exhort one another every day, as long as
it is called "today," that none of you be hardened by the deceitfulness of sin. For
we have shared in Christ, if we hold our first confidence firm to the end.

God has appointed a means by which he will enable us to hold our confidence firm
to the end. It is this: Develop the kind of Christian relationships in which you help
each other hold fast to the promises of God and escape the deceitfulness of sin.
Exhort one another day in and day out to stand fast and put on the whole armor of
God.

Children, junior highers, senior highers, college students, single people, married
couples, widows, widowers! Are you a part of a cluster of Christian friends who have
pledged themselves to help each other fight the fight of faith and protect each other
from the subtle encroachments of sin?

I do not say that you can't be saved without belonging to an organized small group.
But I do say, and I believe it is the word of God, that if you have no such cluster of
comrades in the faith, then you are neglecting one of the means appointed by God
for your preservation and endurance in faith. And to neglect the means of grace is
very dangerous for your soul.

So my goal this morning is very simple: to motivate you to belong to some smaller
cluster of Christians where you can exhort and be exhorted to fight the fight of faith
day in and day out. At the end of the message Peter Nelson will briefly present one
network of small groups available for your prayerful consideration.

The text is 1 Samuel 23:15-18. It is a simple and profound illustration of what needs
to happen in the ongoing fight of faith.

David is going from one place to the other in the Wilderness of Ziph about 30 miles
south of Jerusalem, trying to stay out of Saul's way. Saul, the King of Israel, wants
to kill David because he thinks he is a dangerous rival for the throne. Jonathan,
Saul's son, loves David and hears that he is in the Wilderness of Ziph, and goes
down to strengthen his hand in God.

This encounter between Jonathan and David illustrates at least four lessons
about helping each other fight the fight of faith.

1. The deepest saints and the strongest leaders need Christian comrades to
strengthen their hands in God.

David was deep, David was strong, and David needed Jonathan.

Christian camaraderie is not just for the new recruits. It is for every believer. We
never grow out of our need for the ministry of other Christians. If you think you are
beyond the need for daily exhortation in the fight of faith, then probably your heart
has already fallen prey to the deceitfulness of sin.

David was a man after God's own heart. He was a great warrior. He was no doubt
superior to Jonathan in strength and intelligence and depth of theological
understanding. But verse 16 says that Jonathan went and strengthened his hand in
God.

Don't ever think that a man is so strong that he does not need to be strengthened in
God. And don't ever think that someone is so far above you that you can't be God's
instrument to give strength.

Charles Spurgeon spoke for many Christian leaders when he wrote,

Some years ago, I was the subject of fearful depression of spirit. Various
troublous events had happened to me; I was also unwell, and my heart sank
within me. Out of the depths I was forced to cry unto the Lord. Just before I went
away to Mentone for rest, I suffered greatly in body, but far more in soul, for my
spirit was over whelmed. Under this pressure, I preached a sermon from the
words, "My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me?" I was as much qualified
to preach from that text as ever I expect to be; indeed, I hope that few of my
brethren could have entered so deeply into those heart-breaking words. I felt to the
full of my measure the horror of a soul forsaken of God. Now that was not a
desirable experience. I tremble at the bare idea of passing again through that
eclipse of soul; I pray that I may never suffer in that fashion again...
(Autobiography, 2, p. 415).

I mention this to drive home that the greatest saints, the most valiant warriors are
not above the need to have their hands strengthened in God. In fact the devil's
attacks on them may make their need even greater. So the first lesson from our text
is that you never outgrow your need for daily exhortation. The deepest saints and
the strongest leaders need comrades to strengthen their hands in God.

2. The second lesson is that strengthening a person's hand in God involves
conscious effort.

It is intentional. You don't just do it on the fly; you rise and go down to Horesh.
Verse 16: "And Jonathan, Saul's son, rose, and went to David at Horesh, and
strengthened his hand in God."

What a difference it would make in our church if when all of us woke in the morning
we would PLAN to strengthen someone's hand in God! Jonathan did not accidentally
meet David in Horesh, (though that happens at times!). He PLANNED to go and
strengthen him. The mark of Christian maturity is that you build into your life the
intention and the occasions to strengthen someone's hand in God. Whose hand are
you going to strengthen in God today? This week? Do you have a cluster of
comrades committed (intentionally!) to helping each other fight the fight of faith in
this way?

I've been reading the Memoirs of Samuel Pearce, one of the small group of pastors
that founded the first Baptist Missionary Society in 1792. Among others there were
John Ryland and John Sutcliff and Andrew Fuller and Samuel Pearce and William
Carey. One thing has stood out above all the others recently: these men loved each
other and then met together and were profoundly committed to strengthening each
other's hands in God. They did this even when they were far apart from each other.

Samuel Pearce waited over a year for his first letter from Carey after he had left for
India. But when it came, here is what he wrote to Carey,

The account you gave us inspired us with new vigor, and greatly strengthened our
hands in the Lord. We read, and wept, and praised, and prayed. O, who but the
Christian feels such pleasures as are connected with friendship for our dear Lord
Jesus Christ? (p. 58)

Isn't that a great phrase: "Friendship FOR our dear Lord Jesus Christ."

What I am really pleading for this morning is that you all form friendships FOR Jesus
Christ -- that you have a cluster of comrades in the faith with the mutual agreement
that you will continually point each other to Jesus Christ for hope and strength.

3. That is the third lesson. The strength we are to give each other is strength
in God, not in ourselves.

Verse 16 does not say that Jonathan came all that way to Horesh to strengthen
David's self-confidence. He didn't. It says he rose and went to David at Horesh, and
strengthened his hand in God.

This is the difference between Christian camaraderie and all other support groups
and therapy groups and self-help groups. The whole point of Christian camaraderie
is to point each other to Christ, not man for help and strength.

There is a kind of paradox here: On the one hand I say, I need you. God has
appointed you as a means of grace to help me endure to the end. But on the other
hand, I must say that the only way you can really help me is by saying something
or doing something that will cause me to depend on God and not you.

Here we are again with our most common theme it seems: a radical God-
centeredness in all we do, even in our human togetherness, our camaraderie, our
friendship. It must be a friendship FOR Jesus. Every Christian group that exists
ought to exist to strengthen each other's hands in God and not in man. That is the
third lesson in our text: "Jonathan rose and went to David at Horesh, and
strengthened his hand in God."

4. Finally, how did he do this? How do we do it?

Jonathan said (verse 17): "Fear not; for the hand of Saul my father shall not find you;
you shall be king over Israel, and I shall be next to you; Saul my father also knows
this."

How did Jonathan know that David would be king over Israel? They were deep friends
and so it is hard to imagine that David had not told Jonathan about the event in
chapter 16 when the prophet Samuel had annointed David as a boy to be king over
Israel. So the way Jonathan strengthened David's hand in God was to remind him of
a promise that God had made (1 Samuel 16:12). Saul could not succeed against
David because God was for him. So Jonathan strengthened David's hand in God by
reminding him of his destiny in the purposes of God.

And so it is with us. We strengthen each other's hands in God by reminding each
other about the promises of God that are especially suited for each other's needs.

What would you need to hear from your friends if you were William Carey 15,000
miles from home fighting the fight of faith with one comrade surrounded by millions
of unbelievers? You would need something like this, the words of Samuel Pearce, a
precious friend who knew how to strengthen Carey's hand in God. Listen to how the
promises of God saturate this letter from October 4, 1794.

Brother, I long to stand by your side, and participate in all the vicissitudes of the
attack -- an attack which nothing but cowardice can make unsuccessful. Yes, the
Captain of our salvation marches at our head. Sometimes he may withdraw his
presence (but not his power) to try our prowess with our spiritual arms and
celestial armor. O, what cannot a lively faith do for the Christian soldier! It will
bring the Deliverer from the skies; it will array him as with a vesture dipped in
blood; it will place him in the front of the battle, and put a new song into our
mouths --"These made war with the Lamb; but the Lamb shall overcome them."
Yes, he shall -- the victory is sure before we enter the field; the crown is already
prepared to adorn our brows, even that crown of glory which fadeth not away, and
already we have resolved what to do with it -- we will lay it at the conqueror's feet,
and say, "Not to us, O Lord, not unto us, but to thy name give glory," while all
heaven unites in the chorus, "Worthy the Lamb." (Memoir, p. 66)

Well, not all us us have the gift to strengthen our comrades with words like that. But
if you steep your mind in the word of God and meditate on it day and night as Psalm
1 says, then you will be a fountain of living water and will strengthen the hands of
many in God. The call of God to you this morning is: Come, let us strengthen each
other's hands in God! Amen

...