sermon

Discover, Delight In, Develop and Deploy Your Spiritual Gifts (Ephesians Sermon 25)

January 31, 2016

Sermon Series:

Scriptures:

We need to discover, delight in, develop, and deploy the spiritual gifts God has given us to bless those around us and bring him glory.

This morning I was pondering a question that came, you know, just because of current events, thinking about different things. And the question is what brings significance to your life? When you’re on your deathbed, and you look back on a successful life, what will you say was the most significant thing you were ever involved in, most significant thing you ever did, that you invested yourself in? What will be the crown jewel of your life’s work?

Two weeks ago, Glenn Frey founding member of the rock group the Eagles died, and various programs that I listen to were just ruminating with that thinking about the passing of an era. I watched an interview with him and he said these words, he said, “The greatest thing I ever did was to be part of the Eagles, to tour with them to record songs write songs with them. That was the greatest thing I ever did.” So I was thinking about that, and I thought about other such statements that I’ve heard from various ones. For example, I saw an interview with a NASA engineer that had been involved in the Space Race and been involved also in that amazing rescue of Apollo 13 that later there was a movie and he said, “The greatest moment of my life, is when we got those astronauts back safely from outer space back to Earth.” I knew a man some time ago, his name was Jim and he was a veteran of the Battle of the Bulge, and seemed like if you gave him three minutes, he would talk about the Battle of the Bulge decades later, and it seemed to be without a doubt, the most significant thing that ever happened to him, he was part of a group, he never missed the VBoB meetings, Veterans of the Battle of the Bulge and it was just seemed to define his whole life. Saw another interview with Ron Howard, and he was talking about what it was like to be part of two really significant TV shows, The Andy Griffith Show, and then Happy Days, and he made a similar statement, the greatest time in my life was to be part of those shows. And you see interviews from time to time with athletes, to talk about what it was like to be on that team that won the Super Bowl etcetera. And they use that same type of language.

And honestly for me as a Christian, all of that just seems empty. It all seems temporary, and the more I meditate on spiritual gifts, and the good works that God has for us to do, the more I see the incredible grace God has shown us in Christ to not just deliver us from condemnation, and wrath and judgment that we will be completely forgiven, and that we would be adopted into his family, but more than that, that we have been graced with gifts, spiritual gifts and ministries connected with that, that will have eternal consequences. That we’re delivered from wasting our lives, and that we’ll be able to say at the end of our lives. The most significant thing I ever put my hand to was the building of the Church of Jesus Christ. And I think that’s going to be abundantly clear to us on Judgment Day, when Jesus torches our “pile of works, and the gold, the silver, the costly stones, the wood, the hay and the straw, are all going to get tested by fire.” And then we’ll see the unifying theme of those things at last, those things they were done for the glory of God, by the power of the Spirit that brought him glory, and built the Church of Jesus Christ. That’s what’s going to last, and God has given us through these spiritual gifts and Avenue, a pattern of ministry that he wants us to do.

So this is our third sermon now, third time looking at the topic of spiritual gifts. What are spiritual gifts? Spiritual gifts are special abilities given to us by the grace of God, that enable us by the Spirit of God to build the Church of Jesus Christ. Special abilities. Now, big picture, we know that we have been saved, delivered from our sins, so beautifully unfolded for us in Ephesians 1-2, chosen before the foundation of the world, predestined to be adopted as His sons and daughters, predestined to be holy and blameless in His sight, Jesus shed His blood for our redemption, we, having heard the word of truth, were included in the Church of Jesus Christ by repentance and faith, that we have been saved, rescued from serving Satan, from being enslaved to Satan’s dark kingdom. And we’ve been delivered from that by the sovereign power of God, not by our own works. “For by grace we have been saved through faith, and this not of yourselves, it is the gift of God, not by works, so that no one can boast.”

But having said that, then we have that beautiful Ephesians 2:10, which says that, “we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works which God planned in advance that we should walk in them.” And what I am saying to you these spiritual gifts a third time we’ve had a chance to look at this, will organize many of the good works God has ordained for you to do. Many of them will come along the pattern of your spiritual gift ministry. And that’s a beautiful thing now in that same chapter, in Ephesians 2, we have this grand and glorious vision of a church, a holy temple, a spiritual dwelling place that’s rising, in the Lord, more and more glorious, all the time more and more ornate, bigger and bigger all the time. With every sinner that comes to faith in Christ. We are part of that. To bring it in language from 1 Peter 2, we are “living stones” set in that spiritual temple. And so that’s a glorious picture.

I get the picture of a medieval Cathedral, and there’s this master craftsman, this architect, that has the blueprints and the plans, and just runs the whole worksite. But then you have these skilled craftsmen, these stone workers, masons, you know these carpenters and glaziers, experts in glass and those majestic stain glass windows, and then common laborers, and all kinds of workers on this work site in this cathedral that just rises from the surface of the earth 120 feet off the ground. But this is even better, this is eternal, this is glorious and we all have a role to play. Every Christian has a role.

So what we’re going to do one final time, here is we’re going to look at spiritual gifts and organize it along the pattern of these four Ds that I commended to you. Discover spiritual gifts, delight in spiritual gifts, develop spiritual gifts, and deploy your spiritual gifts. So we’re going to look one more time at these. We’re going to start again with “discover,” and what we’re going to do is take the “discover” section, break it into two parts, discover generally about spiritual gifts, that work is mostly done. But I’m just going to go through Ephesians 4:7-16 one more time. So we understand what they are, generally. Then, we’re going to go over to Romans 12 and I’m going to use Roman 12, Romans 12:1-8, and I’m going to take you through that so you can already begin flipping there, or turning there, or pressing there. I don’t know what the verbs are anymore, but clicking there. But we’re going to get there Romans 12:1-8. I’m just going to walk through that text because I just don’t think there’s a better text in the New Testament for answering the question what yet, but “What are my spiritual gifts? What role do I personally play? How can I discover my personal gift?” So that’s the Discover section.

Secondly, I’m just going to exhort you. It shouldn’t be hard to just delight in this whole glorious thing. I want to give you a vision, again, of the heavenly in Jerusalem. I want you to delight in it, I want you to enjoy it, and I want you to delight, in your heart, in building it, I want you to do your gifts with the light. And then, thirdly, I’m going to advocate that all of us have to develop our spiritual gifts that you should be better if the Lord allows you to live, and doesn’t return. You should be much better at your spiritual gift package, in the ministry that corresponds to it, 10 years from now than you are now. You should learn how to do it better than ever before. I should be a better preacher and teacher and Pastor 10 years from now, than I am now if the Lord gives me time. And all of us should develop our gifts. And then finally, I’m just going to advocate that you do them, that you deploy yourself, get busy, and you’ve got an insert, and in your bulletin we’re going to look at that various avenues of service. I’m going to just look at that as an incredible menu, and you say, “Well I just don’t know what to do.” Well, there are ample ways and on-ramps into ministry here in this local church, and I want to talk about that. Okay, that’s a road map.

Let’s look first at “discover” generally one more time, look at the text in Ephesians 4:7-16. I just want to start at 4:7, “But to each one of us grace has been given as Christ apportioned it,” so the word “but” means we’re going to go in a slightly different direction. He was just talking about unity, “one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all who is overall, and through it all and in all.” Unity, unity, unity. But to each one of us grace. So unity, but not uniformity. We are all part of one body, but we don’t all have the same function, same role, we’ve already talked about that, “but to each one of us.” So every Christian has a spiritual gift package. I prefer that language than just to the singular spiritual gift because there’s just an array of abilities that God’s going to give you that line up with a pattern of ministry He wants you to do and He’s going to gift you for that, and that’s everybody, “but to each one of us,” grace. I already said why this is grace. God didn’t have to do this. How gracious of God to give you a role to play Amen.

You should be so thankful and see that you got far more than you deserve, but by the grace of God, you have this ministry and you can work hard and do things of eternal consequence, but to each one of us grace has been given, according to the measure of Christ. So Christ has measured out, the Greek word “metron.” I love the sense of careful thinking he has pondered you and has chosen a spiritual gift package, for you and a spiritual gift ministry, for you. According to the measure of Christ, we know also from other texts, that the Father has done this in the Spirit as well. So the Father, Son and Spirit together have gifted you, everyone. Now, in the next few verses, it talks about how these spiritual gifts are part of what Christ won for us by His victory at the cross and the empty tomb it pictures Christ as an ascendant victorious Conqueror who came down from Heaven to Earth to rescue sinners like us and then goes back up from Earth to Heaven, leading captives in his train. And just pouring out gifts to everybody.

And so it’s like booty, or plunder, something like that, a sense of the spoils of the victory and through the Spirit, he just gives us these good things. That’s the image in verses 8-10. And then he gives us some examples, but they’re not just any examples as we’ve talked about. “He gave some to be apostles, some to be prophets, some to be evangelists, some to be pastors and teachers.” Those are five gift type ministries, each of them has their own gifting. And we talked about this, but they unify around this one theme, the delivery system of the word of God from the mind of God through these gifted ones “apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers” to the people of God, the word of God is delivered. So the ministry of the word primes the pump for the use of spiritual gifts.

So, we go right from that to prepare God’s people for works of service. So God’s people are made ready by the ministry of the word of God, to do works of service. The works of service, do the building up of the body. Does that make sense? So all of the works of service, that’s what builds up the Body of Christ, so the Body of Christ may be built up, and that’s the goal of spiritual gift ministry, the maturation, the full maturity of the Body of Jesus Christ that were moved from “being infants blown back and forth by the waves,” immature doctrinally immature in our understanding of Christ and of the church, and of the world to full maturity in Christ-likeness. And so, when every individual elect person has been brought from death to life through evangelism and missions, and then discipled and trained by a healthy church ministry, up to full maturity and then even more in glorification. When we graduate the ultimate graduation moving from earthly life to heavenly life, when all of the elect have been glorified then the work is finished. And that’s what spiritual gifts are given to do. And that’s a glorious thing. And so as each part does its work, the Body of Christ is built to full maturity. So spiritual gifts are vital to this whole redemptive plan of God. And as we individually use our gifts and as we’re out and about using the gifts, and then as we’re receiving other people’s gifts, all of us grow up, we grow up by serving and we grow up by being served with the spiritual gifts and that’s what a local church is all about. It’s so sweet and powerful. So that’s the picture, generally. So water spiritual gifts, Ephesians 4:7-16 really gives us a glorious overall picture.

I. Discover Your Gifts (Romans 12:1-8)

Now, let’s get to specifically,. “discover” my gifts, “how would I do that?” Well look at Romans 12:1-8, let’s zero in on that in particular. Romans 12:1-8 is almost like a step-by-step field manual in how to discover your spiritual gifts. Often, people quote Romans 12:1-2, and sever it from the flow of thought that follows. So I think a real impact comes in connecting the famous Romans 12:1-2 with the not-so-famous Romans 12:3-8. Keep them together and you will see a powerful image and we’re going to walk through Romans 12:1-8, and just bring it back again and again, to the touchstone of spiritual gifts. How can I know what my spiritual gifts are? Romans 12:1-8 is the biblical answer to that. Okay, we start with this. “Therefore brothers, in view of God’s mercies, I urge you to present your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God, this is your spiritual act of worship. Do not be conformed any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you’ll be able to test and approve what God’s will is, his good, pleasing and perfect will. For by the grace given to me I say to every one of you do not think of yourself more highly than you ought” and he goes off to talk about spiritual gifts. So just start at the beginning, Romans 12:1-2 and see it in the light of spiritual gifts. So how do I know what my spiritual gifts are? Well, begin by having a view through the scripture, through faith of the overarching glorious mercies of God, Romans 1-11, or Ephesians 1-3. The overarching picture of the redemptive plan of God start there in view of or seeing God’s mercies in Christ.

Next, “present your bodies to him as living sacrifice.” So I would say in view of God’s mercy, just starts with faith in Christ. This is for believers, not for non-believers. If you ask, “Okay, you know I’m a visitor here and I’m not a Christian, but I’m interested in spiritual gifts.” Can I just say set that aside, that’s not what you need. When they came to Jesus and said, “What must we do to work the works of God?” He said to them, unregenerate people. This is the work of God, believe in the one he is sent, so you need to trust in Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins that’s the mercies of God.

God sent his Son to die in your place, to take your wrath on Himself, and to give you His perfect righteousness that’s the mercy of God. You don’t have any spiritual gifts, you don’t have any spiritual life, if you’re not a Christian, if you’re not born again so don’t leave this place “dead in your transgressions and sins,” but repent and trust in Him right now, and then immediately you’ll receive the gift of the Holy Spirit and He will work a spiritual gift ministry in you that’s the order. So, in view of God’s mercy, then Christian present your body to Him as a living sacrifice.

So what is this presentation? Well, Romans 6 makes it very plain what it is but basically used to offer the parts of your body in slavery to sin, now offer the parts you of your body to God. And so here’s the thing, the image I have here is you’re just presenting, you’re saying, “I am yours to command, I want to use my life for your glory, I offer myself to you, to serve you.” Now you say, “When do I do that?” Well, in one sense you do it once for all, at conversion. When you come to faith in Christ, you said “I am yours, you are my king, I am your servant. I’m yours.” And that’s true, but the image here is one of continual presentation and we get that from the idea of a living sacrifice. Old Testament was all about a dead sacrifice. It was an animal blood poured out and its body burned, and send it up, and it was an offering, but now we’ve got a different idea, same idea of sacrifice, but now your body offered to God continually, as a living sacrifice. So in your morning quiet time. Yes, but throughout the day. Abiding in Christ continually thinking about him and just saying, I’m yours, I’m yours, I’m yours, I’m yours to command all the time, continual offering of yourself, your hands, your feet, your eyes, your mouth, every part of you.

And then he says “holy and pleasing to God.” You will be able to discover your spiritual gifts, better and better the more you put sin to death, if there’s no sin clouding your judgment, there’s no wickedness going on in your life. If those things are going, you will not be able to discern what your spiritual gifts are. That’s not the top priority for you. And we’re never going to be perfectly holy, but our discernment and our ability to understand the spiritual gifts of God are in proportion to being holy and pleasing to Him. And he says, “this is your spiritual act of worship.” This is what worship is for you, this ongoing presentation of your body holy and pleasing to him. So how do I know what my spiritual gifts are? Start there in Romans 12:1, do that, and then he says, “do not be conformed” or masquerade or act like, “the world any longer.” Don’t do that, don’t. Another translation, “don’t let the world squeeze you into its mold.” Don’t be conformed.

All right, so it was after the spiritual gift and the lifestyle that flows from it. Don’t think like the world about your life, don’t have worldly goals for your life. Learn now, what is going to be “gold, silver, and costly stones” on Judgment Day, and live for that and not for the stuff that’s “wood, hay, and straw,” which is going to get burned up. Live for Christ, live for His kingdom. “Seek first His kingdom and his righteousness and all these things will be added to you.” And these things that get added or not while you’re alive. And so, don’t think like the world about your life anymore. Don’t think like the world about your time and energy and money and how you’re investing yourself. Don’t think like the world about your career and what you want to achieve, but instead “be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” Now though the word of God is not specifically mentioned here, we all know that’s the only power there is to do that. How do you think differently? It’s the power of the Holy Spirit who uses the word of God in changing the way you think, and if you change the way you think you will change the way you live. I’ll talk about this more later in Ephesians 4. New thinking leads to new living.

And so “be transformed by the renewing of your mind,” be in the word, be listening to good preaching. Be getting good teaching, be reading good Christian books, be in the word every day your quiet time all the time, then, he says, As you are transformed more and more by the renewing of your mind, you will be able, and I like the NIV’s translation here. They unfold the Greek word, I think pretty well for us. You’ll be able, equipped, to test and approve what God’s will is, for you. “His good, pleasing, and perfect will.” So the big question we’re asking is “discover.” “What are my gifts?” This is just leading you by the hand to answer the question. You’ll be able to test and approve. Well, what do we mean by test and approve?

Well, one of the images I have here is of the Great Gold Rush, the minor 49ers and all that in 1850 and all that, and they go to the California and they’re getting rocks out of rivers and out of mines, and they’re bringing them to a place called an assayer’s office, and the assayer is an expert at looking and saying, “That’s fool’s gold, that’s real goal. The quality of it silver too,” whatever, that’s what they do, they’re able to assess what’s on the table in front of them and say, what it really is. Well, that’s you, you’ll be able to test and approve God’s will for you, this is God’s will for me. And not only is it God’s will, I know what it is, but I like it, I approve it, I want it, that’s something good for me. So already we’ve come a long way. Romans 12:1-2 just gives you step-by-step how to answer the question, “What is my spiritual gift?”

But Paul is not done 4:3, “by the grace given to me,” and that’s code language for spiritual gifts, later in the same text in Romans 12:6, I think it is. We have different gifts according to the grace given to us, that’s exactly what he’s thinking about. “Okay, by my spiritual gift of Apostle I say to you X.” That’s the language he’s using. “By my spiritual gift package of being an apostle, I’m going to give you some advice about your spiritual gifts.” So, “by the grace given to me I say to every one of you,” and the first thing he says is, “do not think of yourself more highly than you ought.” He starts right away with humility, humble yourself, don’t think of yourself as a first round draft pick on God’s team, okay? Don’t think of yourself as indispensable. “God is lucky to have me.” Every one of us is dispensable, every one of us is replaceable, be humble about that. Think how blessed you are already to even be on this team doing this work. Humble yourself.

And that’s going to be even more true as you progress and develop your spiritual gift and God uses you more and more and gives you a wider and wider platform of ministry, and you see fruit and you start to get tempted to be elevated and forget where it all came from, and how you can’t do anything apart from Jesus, and He’s just being gracious to you to even let you be involved and any change that ever happened in another person’s life, it’s been happening by the word of God in the Spirit. If you are the avenue the conduit of it, praise God, be happy. But it was God that did it. And so don’t think of yourself more highly than you ought, but now comes a hidden step, which is so vital, but the more I talk about it, it just makes perfect sense. But think about yourself, do think about yourself.

So you’re like, “All right, how do I discover what my spiritual gifts are?” Ponder yourself, like the thinker. Who am I? I’m pondering not my spiritual naval, but I’m pondering my tendencies, my habits, my patterns, my proclivities, my likes and dislikes, pondering what I do, and specifically in the light of spiritual gifts. “What kinds of ministries do I enjoy? What kinds of ministries have come to me, and I’ve done them and I’ve enjoyed doing that. And this is the beauty of being a really healthy church. I’ve gotten a feedback loop of encouragement from the Body of Christ.” And so, I think you discover your spiritual gifts, the more you get involved in a local church, a healthy local church, will help you discover what your gifts are. That’s just a plug for being a covenant member of a healthy local church, know and be known on spiritual gifts, know other people’s gifts, and let them know your gifts.

So I’m just going to do a brief segue here. Stay in Romans 12. But just in your mind, a corresponding thing you are thinking about yourself, you also want others thinking about you. And those things come together  for discovering your gift, right? So who should think about you? The church, the local church, how? Hebrews 10:24, it says, “Let us consider one another, to spur toward love and good deeds. Not neglecting meeting together as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another and all the more as you see the day approaching.” That’s a partner to think about yourself with sober judgment. They’re partner verses. So you think about yourself as sober judgment and get some good friends to think about you as sober judgment, let them consider you, “Who are you? What are you good at?” And they should, lovingly, encourage you about what you’re good at, and what you’re blessed at. See? I’m blessed by that.

And so I was thinking about that and I pondered it, and I have all of these examples of encouragement that I wrote. I think about different people who have blessed me. Now, if you’re listening to this and you’re like, “I know I’m that person,” All right? Well, you probably are, but I didn’t put any names in here, but I’m just blessed all the time, by members of this Body of Christ. So I think about people who have the gift of hospitality and I want to say to that brother or sister, “You have such a gift when you open your home you make me feel like you’re doing me a favor for us being there, like you’re so incredibly blessed to have 43 people come to your home for home fellowship.” That’s just a gift of hospitality. There’s not a sense of burden at all, it’s a gift, Thank you, praise God for that.

Or the gift of service. Brother, thank you for coming every Sunday morning and making coffee for so many people. 12 pots one after the other, all different types of flavors. Very few people may see you do it, but thank you for that gift of service. I’m encouraged by the way you serve. Or evangelism. “Brother, when you go out witnessing and you just get in these conversations and it just seems to flow, and even though you don’t know them, they don’t know you, pretty soon you’re talking to a lost person, so easily about the Gospel. I just want to ride your coattails, I want to be with you. Can I just come and watch it and get credit for doing evangelism? I just want to do that, because you have such a gift.” I love that.

And then, the gift of mercy. “You have such a heart for the poor and needy, sister. I’ll tell you what, when I drive through this community, I don’t see it the way you do. But you see needs, you see avenues of service, you see people whose lives are broken, and you have such a heart of compassion for them. I am so blessed by that.” The gift of prayer. “I love praying with you, I just love the way you pray, I just feel like we’re in the presence of God, the way you pause and the way you have your tone of voice and the things you say in prayer. I’m blessed by that, you have a gift. And I’m blessed by that.” The gift of leadership, “I love the way you organize mission trips, the way you organize ministries, the way you think about details, the way you cast a vision for it, the way you’re able to call people to make sacrifices for that vision, and to move out and go in that direction. I’m blessed by your gift of leadership or the gift of giving, you just give so regularly, and so faith filled, I know that God’s blessed you and abundantly.”

But you don’t see those things as yours ultimately you see them as God’s, and you give generously. You give generously to missions, you fund mission trips, you fund laborers for the harvest field, you give tithes and offerings to the local church as well. I’m just blessed by the way you give. The gift of teaching. “When you open up the Scripture, I hear things in the word that I hadn’t, I see things that, they’re there, but I never saw them and I’m blessed by that. Thank you for showing me things in the word of God that strengthen my faith.” Or the gift of music or worship. “The way you play your instruments, and the way you sing. I feel like I’m just laid on the heavenlies, and that my emotions flow, and there’s just such a beauty to the gift of music.”

And then the gift of administration, of organization, the caring center ministry, so many details. Clothing comes in, clothing goes out. There’s money, there’s all these things, the whole thing’s set up so well. “Thank you sister for the way you have organized the caring center. Your gift of administration with a gift of counseling. “Our marriage was not doing well, but we sat down with you as a couple, and you showed us sin, patterns in our lives, and you counseled with us, from the word of God, and you really saved our marriage. Thank you.”

Now, when all of those practical ministries are being done and there’s that beautiful feedback loop. I couched all of that in light of encouragement. The Body of Christ encourages people to “loving good deeds.” And so, it’s our job to think about ourselves, definitely think about ourselves, but we need to think about one another too. We need to think about each other. And so, as that happens, we can discover our spiritual gifts, what they are. So think about yourself with sober judgment. Get involved in ministries. You’re going to get a chance at the end of this message to look at it. Don’t worry if you don’t know what your spiritual gifts are, you really don’t know. Just get busy. Do some things along the pattern of the ministries we suggest and just see how you are, see how you fly like that balsa wood airplane, the way that the wings are set. Are you going to do a barrel roll, are you going to fly for distance? What are you? Are you going to curve left or right as you get the air under the wings you’re going to show your tendencies? Get busy. So think about yourself with sober judgment in accordance with the “measure of faith that God has given you.” And then he goes on to teach about spiritual gifts.  So I would just step by step by step go through Romans 12, and you’ll discover what your gifts are. Okay?

II. Delight in Your Gifts

Now, at the end of that section, he says this, and we’ll come back to Romans 12:6-8 on the final D. But it says, “if it is encouraging, let him encourage. If it is contributing to needs of others, let him give generously. If it is leadership, let him govern diligently, if it is showing mercy, let him do it,” what? “Cheerfully.” “Cheerfully.” I think about 2 Corinthians 9:7, talking about financial giving, says, “not reluctantly or under compulsion,” why? “Because God loves a cheerful giver.” You have to have a delight in your heart when using your spiritual gifts, you have to delight in it, and I think the best way to delight to be a cheerful giver is to see the glorious vision of what you are doing. I’ve already given it to you, I’ll give it to you again. It is the heavenly Zion of Isaiah 62 “Arise and shine O Zion for your light has come and the glory of the Lord shines upon you.”

It’s the New Jerusalem that at some point in the future is going to “come down out of Heaven like a bride, beautifully dressed for her husband.” It is this city, this golden, glorious, transparent amazing city that’s radiant with the glory of God. And you know what occurred to me? All local church ministry is temporary. All of it. But the eternal church is eternal, and get this. I love this. I gave you guys that image of the small cover or cloud cover. Sometimes you have to fly up above the clouds, and see, from a heavenly perspective, the New Jerusalem, and you know what the Lord is saying to my heart about that? Yes, local church ministry is temporary lots of changes, lots of things happen, but things are looking really good from up here. The New Jerusalem every day gets a little bigger and a little more glorious, a living stone gets put in the wall. Every day, there’s not a single backward step, for the New Jerusalem. Jesus has gone to prepare a place for us and He’s doing it, and oh it’s glorious! It is glorious. So you should be very cheerful using your spiritual gift, you should delight in it, because you’re doing an eternally glorious work.

II. Develop Your Gifts

All right, thirdly, “develop.” How do we develop our guests? Well, you developing by using them, etcetera, but that you should develop the gift. I’m just wanting to command this one text. 1 Timothy 4:15, all right? I’m just going to read 1 Timothy 4:13-16, and we’ll talk briefly about “develop.” There, Paul, the mentor says to his protegé, Timothy, about pastoral ministry about preaching and teaching, and shepherding, and doing the work of an evangelist all the things that go into being a pastor, he says, “until I come,” 1 Timothy 4:13-16, “until I come, devote yourself to the public reading of the word of scripture to preaching into teaching.” Devote yourself to it. Then he says, “do not neglect your gift, which was given you through a prophetic word when the body of elders laid their hands on you.” Don’t neglect your gift. Another place he says, “fan it into flame.” That’s going to be the same image but I’m zeroing in here.

1 Timothy 4:15, “Be diligent in these matters, give yourself wholly to them so that everyone may see your progress.” So, Timothy, let it be said there in Ephesus that when they come five years later they’ll say, “Timothy, you’re a much better preacher now than you were five years ago.” Don’t be hurt by that, be happy, be encouraged. Be a better preacher in five years, be a better shepherd in five years. Well, I’m just taking that idea and extend it to all the spiritual gifts, all of them. Devote yourself fully to your spiritual gift ministry, so that everyone may see your progress. Be a better giver. 10 years from now than you are now. Be better at administration or leadership 10 years from now than you are now. Study it, as a science, as an art, however you want to say it devote yourself to your spiritual gift ministry and get better at it. That’s all. He says “watch your life and your doctrine closely. Persevere in them because if you do, you’ll save both yourself and your hearers.”

I think that’s true of all spiritual gifts. That as we use our spiritual gifts, we will be instrumental in the salvation of the saved. Like huh, well you said save both yourself Timothy and your hearers. He’s saved doesn’t he? But yes, Already, not yet. He is saved, but he’s not done being saved. And so as we use our gifts and progress in them, we will see the church growing more and more toward maturity in Christ. That’s salvation.

IV. Deploy Your Gifts

So we’ve seen discover, delight in the gifts, develop, now, finally deploy. Deploy is kind of a military term, I guess, to some degree. First time I went through this years ago, I used the word “use,” but I’ve been inspired by my alliteration friends. So you got to have all the same letter, do you know it’s the same letters all the time, is Ds and Ps and all that? Poor letter Z or X, I mean whoever does alliteration with those? I guess kids on Mother’s Day if they can get 26 ways that they love their mom. Don’t use the word Xerox. She’s not going to be encouraged by that. That’s not good. But deploy. It’s a military image, it’s like God is going to deploy us on the battlefield. This gifted Church, He’s going to deploy. So I’m urging you to deploy your gifts, use them. So there we go back to Romans 12:6-8, “we have different gifts according to the grace given us. If a man’s gift is prophesying, let him use it in proportion to his faith, if it is serving, let him serve. If it is teaching, let him teach. If it is encouraging, let him encourage, if it is contributing to the needs of others, let him give generously. If it is leadership, let him govern, diligently if it is showing mercy, let him do it cheerfully.” Do it. What good is the gift if you’re not using it, and this is where I just want to convict you, look at your lifestyle, look at your pattern. Are you using your gifts? Are you involved in a regular pattern of spiritual gift ministry?

And as I’ve said a few weeks ago, if not the first thing you really did need to do is to repent, say, “Lord, I have wasted some time up to this point, I’ve not really been using my gifts, I’ve not been investing in the Church the way I need to, and I want to do that. I’ve been worldly. I’ve been living for worldly goals, and I don’t want to do that anymore, I really want to get involved in ministry.”

So “deploy.” You know remember the parable or the talents, the five talents two talents, the one talent? You don’t want to be the one that got a talent and hid it in the ground. Matthew 25-25, he said, “so I was afraid and went out and dug a hole and hid your talent in the ground.” Here’s what belongs to you. All of our gifts, we’re going to give them back ’cause they’re not ours. He’s going, “I want to know the interest. What did you do with it? Did you invest it? Show me the increase, show me the growth.” That’s what Judgment Day is going to be like for all of us. So let’s deploy our gifts. Let’s get involved.

Now, you might say, “How do I do that? How do I do that?” Well, this is a really encouraging brochure that some on the staff put together, did a great job, and it breaks opportunities for service into three main categories. Ministry teams, those are run by the deacons in a beautiful way, but so many ministries flow through these ministry teams, many of them have to do the infrastructure and the strength and health of the Church, and you can see them Children’s Ministry, there are various needs there, Encouragement Ministry, Meals and Preparations, it’s like Meal Baby. Or if there’s a bereavement issue such a blessing for people to step up and do that. Facilities ministry just taking care of the building, etcetera. Host Ministry is just how we present ourselves to visitors. How do we make ourselves open and welcoming to visitors and they just do a phenomenal job with that. The Host Ministry does. And then there’s Membership Assimilation.

New members come in. We’re going to have a New Member Sunday real soon, and we’re going to see a bunch of new people and they’re going to be like, “Okay, here I am. Teach me about FBC how can I get assimilated?” And the new member assimilation team does a great job of getting those folks assimilated. Then there’s Men’s Ministry and later because it’s alphabetical, but Women’s Ministry, both of those focused on issues relevant to men’s discipleship and women’s discipleship, and there are teams of people that are doing both of that and you may have a heart for that and want to get involved.

Security Ministry, there are needs there. Homebound Ministry, Senior Adult Ministry, etcetera. Worship Ministry, including Lord’s Supper preparation. Then I see what we call International Connections. Tremendous out-reaching opportunities. I don’t think there’s an easier way to do evangelism in our church right now, than through international ministry. Every Wednesday, they come here wanting to learn English, and let me put it gently, willing to put up with Bible or Gospel to get the English. And you know how we’re fishers of men, and we can draw people in, and they have felt needs and somewhere in there that might be a turn and say, “I came here for English, I found Christ.” And how sweet is that just how beautiful is that? To just sit down, in our building, with a lost person and talk to them about their background. They’re very intelligent gifted, talented people, but they need Christ. That’s the IC ministry that’s there.

Isn’t this awesome? So many opportunities. Then there’s Home Fellowship, and Home Fellowship is a great platform for spiritual gift ministry. You think all of the gifts there are they’re all at work during home fellowships, hosting, teaching, welcoming, administration aspects. It’s a wonderful way to use your gifts. And then there’s just outreaches that we can be doing, they’re all listed here. Recently, my wife and I went to Cheesecake Factory. I’m blown away by their menu. I don’t know, what they have, 50 different chefs back there? They’ve got page after page after page after page after page in 12 major categories. It’s like, “how can it be? How can they be good at all of these things equally?” I don’t think they are. But this is like that. I was going to use Golden Corral, but I decided Cheesecake Factory better, all right?

All of the opportunities you’re like, “I don’t know what to do, there’s no on-ramps, there are on-ramps to serve, so just find a place to serve. Find a place. Friends, our life is going to be over soon. “It’s a mist, it’s a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes.” Only one life ‘twill soon be past, only what’s done for Christ will last. Build the church, build the church.

Close with me in prayer. Father, thank you for the time we’ve had three weeks now, looking at spiritual gifts. God please, unleash this church, unleash the members of this church into patterns of spiritual gift ministry, that you have thought out, and prepared them for, that this church may become rich with good works and rich with maturity and rich with converts that are new disciples and are growing, God, make us rich we pray in Jesus’ name, amen.

The ancient Greeks crafted a MYTHOLOGICAL story for how the city of Athens got its name

Two deities were competing for the right to be the protector of the city… the human king, Kekrops, decided that whichever deity gave the city the most valuable gift would be chosen as the patron of the city

The god of the sea, Poseidon, took his powerful trident and struck the top of the hill that became later known as the Acropolis, and a fresh water spring bubbled forth. The people were impressed with this valuable gift

THAT IS… until Athena, the goddess of wisdom gave her gift. She had chosen wisely… a new kind of tree they had never seen before… the olive tree. Its fruit was nutritious and delicious for eating; its pressed oil useful for burning in lamps; and its wood excellent for construction. It could multiply into groves which grew abundantly in that climate… and thus it would provide a lucrative cash crop in trade with other nations. Athena’s gift won, and the city was named Athens in her honor

Christ’s gifts to us, however, are infinitely more valuable than those given by these fake man-made deities

Ephesians 4:7 BUT to each one of us grace has been given as Christ apportioned it.

Ephesians 4 portrays Christ as a VICTORIOUS CONQUEROR who rides a victory parade to heaven and lavishes gifts on the adoring population:

Ephesians 4:8-10 This is why it says: “When he ascended on high, he led captives in his train and gave gifts to men.” 9 (What does “he ascended” mean except that he also descended to the lower, earthly regions? 10 He who descended is the very one who ascended higher than all the heavens, in order to fill the whole universe.)

For the third week, we are going to contemplate the powerful doctrine of SPIRITUAL GIFTS… one of the most astonishing truths imaginable, if you take the time to ponder it scripturally. Christ has specifically pondered YOU, and has made you and shaped you and prepared you to play a specific role in his glorious church. And you MUST play that role if you are to grow into maturity, and if the church as a whole is to grow into final perfection. Spiritual gift ministry is not optional. This is not window dressing… this is not some extra frill in the redemptive plan of God. It is ABSOLUTELY ESSENTIAL that each part does its work.

SPIRITUAL GIFTS ARE special abilities given differently to each one of us by the special grace of God through Christ and through the Holy Spirit that God uses to build up the Body of Christ.

So this text is staring you in the face… like a mirror. And you are called to study your life… study the way you spend your time, the way you engage the church, other Christians. ARE YOU FULFILLING YOUR SPIRITUAL GIFT PURPOSE???

REVIEW:

1) Living a life WORTHY OF OUR CALLING:

Ephesians 4:1 As a prisoner for the Lord, then, I urge you to live a life worthy of the calling you have received.

Ephesians 4:2-6 Strong sense of UNITY

Ephesians 4:3-6 Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace. 4 There is one body and one Spirit– just as you were called to one hope when you were called– 5 one Lord, one faith, one baptism; 6 one God and Father of all, who is over all and through all and in all.

Then… “BUT…” = DIVERSITY… spiritual gifts, specialization

Ephesians 4:7 BUT to each one of us grace has been given as Christ apportioned it.

Vs. 7 “to each one” = universality of spiritual gifts… EVERY SINGLE CHRISTIAN has a spiritual gift

“grace has been given” = spiritual gifts are amazing grace from God to the church (both to us individually and to the church corporately)

“as Christ apportioned it” = according to the wise measure of Christ; not all gifts given equally, but all gifts given intentionally, as the fruit of careful consideration by Christ of each of us… WHAT GIFT YOU GET, and HOW MUCH OF THAT GIFT… a wise measurement

Vs. 8-10: Paul quotes Psalm 68 and applies it to Christ… these spiritual gifts are part of Christ’s resurrection victory!!

Ephesians 4:8-10 This is why it says: “When he ascended on high, he led captives in his train and gave gifts to men.” 9 (What does “he ascended” mean except that he also descended to the lower, earthly regions? 10 He who descended is the very one who ascended higher than all the heavens, in order to fill the whole universe.)

Vs. 11: “He gave some to be Apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, teachers…” = examples of spiritual gifted servants that Christ has given to the church, to build the church up to maturity; also, all of those gift have one thing in common: THE WORD of GOD!! They are a delivery system for the Word of God

Vs. 12: “to prepare God’s people for works of service so that the Body of Christ will be built up” = as the Word primes the pump, the people do the works, and as the people do the works, the body of Christ is built up

Goal… perfect conformity to Christ

SPIRITUAL GIFTS are special abilities given by Christ through the Holy Spirit to individual Christians to enable them to build the Church to spiritual maturity…

Flourish not function:

Like the wind at the perfect angle to the way your sails are set

I.   God’s Goal: Perfect Conformity of the Church to Christ (vs. 13, 15)

A.  Concept: Hostile, fractured human race brought into perfect UNITY by CONFORMITY to Christ

Ephesians 4:13 until we all reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature, attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.

The word “mature” is sometimes translated “perfect”… the Greek of verse 13 is fascinating…

ESV Ephesians 4:13 until we all attain to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to mature manhood, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ

CSB Ephesians 4:13 until we all reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of God’s Son, growing into a mature man with a stature measured by Christ’s fullness.

“to a mature man” = the concept of a male who has grown from infancy through toddlerhood, to boyhood, through the teen years, to early manhood… finally to MATURE MANHOOD

[Paul chose a strongly masculine image here… perhaps to link back to Jesus’ own development to perfect humanity

Luke 2:52 And Jesus grew in wisdom and stature, and in favor with God and men.

Fully mature in ALL RESPECTS… mature in mind, heart, body, relationships with other people and with God

Unity comes by our increasing CONFORMITY to Christ as we grow more and more like Him

Also, verse 14-15…

Ephesians 4:14-15 Then we will no longer be infants, tossed back and forth by the waves, and blown here and there by every wind of teaching and by the cunning and craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming. 15 Instead, speaking the truth in love, we will in all things grow up into him who is the Head, that is, Christ.

A strong picture of growth to maturity… not an infant, but a mature adult…

Unity by conformity to the Head… we will all be made LIKE CHRIST… LIKE HIM

B.  Conformity to Christ

Ephesians 4:13 until we all reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature, attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.

1.  Conformity of the MIND: to think what Christ thinks about everything… to agree with Jesus about everything there is to think about; to ponder what Christ ponders, to think only what is TRUE, NOBLE, RIGHT, PURE, LOVELY, ADMIRABLE… all the time

2.  Conformity of the HEART: to love what Christ loves and hate what Christ hates with the same intensity with which he loves and hates… perfectly conformed to Christ’s heart in everything… yearning for what he yearns for, celebrating what he celebrates, willing what he wills, rejecting what he rejects

3.  Conformity of the BODY: to have a resurrection body as glorious as his…radiantly shining with the glory of God; completely free from all corruption and from death itself

C.  Who? ALL THE ELECT… from every tribe, language, people, nation… all over the world… that every elect male and female will be brought to perfect conformity to Christ and therefore to each other… NOT A SINGLE ONE LOST!!

D.  When? Progressively now… perfected only in heaven

E.  Goal: Doctrinal Unity

Ephesians 4:13 until we all reach unity in the faith and in the knowledge of the Son of God and become mature, attaining to the whole measure of the fullness of Christ.

1.  Unity in “THE FAITH”

2.  Unity in the faith AND IN THE KNOWLEDGE of the Son of God

F.  Doctrinal Maturity Clearly in View in verse 14

Ephesians 4:14 Then we will no longer be infants, tossed back and forth by the waves, and blown here and there by every wind of teaching and by the cunning and craftiness of men in their deceitful scheming.

G.  Speaking the Truth in Love

Ephesians 4:15 Instead, speaking the truth in love, we will in all things grow up into him who is the Head, that is, Christ.

H.  All This Maturity Happens as each Member Uses His/Her Gifts

Ephesians 4:16 From him the whole body, joined and held together by every supporting ligament, grows and builds itself up in love, as each part does its work.

1.  The Process of Actually Using Your Gift is the Matrix of Your Own Growth

2.  AND Your Exercise of Your Gift is Essential to Other People’s Growth

3.  Paul Strongly Emphasizes Human Works Here

a.  He knows that God builds the church

Psalm 127:1 Unless the LORD builds the house, its builders labor in vain.

b.  He knows that Christ builds the church

Matthew 16:18 I will build my church, and the gates of Hades will not overcome it.

4.  But yet, he says the church GROWS AND BUILDS ITSELF UP IN LOVE… AS EACH PART DOES ITS WORK

5.  Our spiritual gifts are essential to this growth

I.  As all these WORKS OF SERVICE, this work of the ministry is done, the WHOLE CHURCH GROWS UP into maturity in Christ

II.   Discover Your Gifts (Romans 12:1-8)

Romans 12:1-8 Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God– this is your spiritual act of worship. 2 Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is– his good, pleasing and perfect will. 3 ¶ For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the measure of faith God has given you.

SPIRITUAL GIFTS COMES NEXT!!!:

4 Just as each of us has one body with many members, and these members do not all have the same function, 5 so in Christ we who are many form one body, and each member belongs to all the others. 6 We have different gifts, according to the grace given us. If a man’s gift is prophesying, let him use it in proportion to his faith. 7 If it is serving, let him serve; if it is teaching, let him teach; 8 if it is encouraging, let him encourage; if it is contributing to the needs of others, let him give generously; if it is leadership, let him govern diligently; if it is showing mercy, let him do it cheerfully.

So, this is a great passage to turn to to answer the question, “How can I discover my spiritual gifts?”

A.  Step 1: Live in light of God’s gospel…

Romans 12:1 Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy…

Ephesians 4:1 As a prisoner for the Lord, then, I urge you to live a life worthy of the calling you have received.

Matthew 6:31-33 So do not worry, saying, ‘What shall we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’ 32 For the pagans run after all these things, and your heavenly Father knows that you need them. 33 But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.

Matthew 16:26 For what will it profit a man if he gains the whole world and forfeits his soul?

B.  Step 2: Present your body to God

Romans 12:1 Therefore, I urge you, brothers, in view of God’s mercy, to PRESENT your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God– this is your spiritual act of worship.

SACRIFICE is something costly, offered to God as His

This means to give your physical body to serve God’s purpose in this world… to give him your strength, your mind, your hands and feet, your mouth, your time and effort and money and everything…

LIVING SACRIFICE: as opposed to the dead sacrifices of the OT… I think of it as a CONTINUAL sacrifice… constantly, moment by moment saying to God, “I am yours to command… whatever you want from me, I will do!!”

This continual presentation of YOURSELF to God is the essence of your life of WORSHIP… this is PURE RELIGION, a REASONABLE/SPIRITUAL

sacrifice offered continually to God PRAYER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Asking God what His will is for you!!!!!

HOLY and PLEASING to God: if you are living in sin, God will not use your spiritual gifts… he will not teach you what your gifts are, or he will not put them to use

SO… NON-CHRISTIANS: repent of your sins and come to faith in Christ;

Christians: be certain that there is no known sin in your life that you are not actively starving to death by the Spirit

C.  Step 4: Don’t be conformed to this world

Romans 12:2 Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world…

The word is literally, “do not masquerade” or be PRESSED INTO THE FORM of the world

Understand the wickedness of this worldly system… of the selfish pride and burning lusts for sinful pleasures that are continually corrupting the hearts of sinful people in this world

TO DISCOVER YOUR SPIRITUAL GIFTS, you need to turn away from the pattern of this world, to repent from the sinfulness of the worldly mindset that dominates the question: “Why am I alive? What am I living for? What do I want in this life?” If you think like a worldly person, you will not discover, develop, or deploy your spiritual gifts!

D.  Step 5: Be transformed by the renewing of your mind

Romans 12:2 Do not conform any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind.

Amazing “transformation”… made like Christ, glorious in your mind, able to think as Christ does… to see yourself and your life as Christ does…

The renewing of the mind is ESSENTIAL to discovering your spiritual gifts… This happens by the STUDY of God’s holy Word… by the constant flowing of truth through your brain:

“river rock”… made gradually perfectly smooth by the word of God

As you study the Bible every single day, you are made more and more able to understand God’s overarching purposes in the world, and your specific place in it… this will result in the next step

E.  Step 6: Made able to DISCERN God’s will for you

Romans 12:2 Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is– his good, pleasing and perfect will.

One Greek word, but the NIV 1984 nails it with two words… “by testing its nature, you will approve it…”

Illus. “assayers office” during California Gold Rush of 1849… bring him your rocks, he will be able to test and prove its nature… is it real gold or fool’s gold?

If you want to DISCOVER YOUR SPIRITUAL GIFT, you have to follow these steps

You will find out how the Lord Jesus Christ has APPORTIONED GRACE to you, and you will DELIGHT in it, and approve it and embrace it!!

F.  Step 7: Do Not Think Too Highly of Yourself!!

Romans 12:3 For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought

God means for us to be BOTH HUMBLE AND INCREDIBLY FRUITFUL in the use of our gifts… so as we seek to discover our spiritual gifts, we have to be continually HUMBLE and not arrogant… and we need not to covet gifts that are NOT GIVEN to us…

G.  Step 8: Think of yourself with sober judgement

Romans 12:3 For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the measure of faith God has given you.

Easy to miss the simple, clear instruction given to each one of us… THINK OF YOURSELF!! Ponder who you are, what you are good at, what you enjoy doing for the Body of Christ! Do it with SOBER JUDGEMENT, but do it!

Ponder your track record of service to Christ… ponder your level of fruitfulness, the results that have come from your service… ponder where you FLOURISH and where you merely FUNCTION

George MacDonald: “A man ought to try to look at his own work as if it were none of his, but not as with the eyes of other people. That is an impossibility, and the attempt a bewilderment. It is with his own eyes he must look, with his own judgment he must judge. The only effort is to get it set far away enough from him to be able to use his own eyes and his own judgment upon it.” The Seaboard Parish, Chapter 27

C.S. Lewis in Screwtape Letters:

“Thousands of humans have been brought to think that humility means pretty women trying to believe that they are ugly, and clever men trying to believe they are fools. [God] wants to bring the man to a state of mind in which he could design the best cathedral in the world, and know it to be the best, and rejoice in the fact, without being any more (or less) or otherwise glad at having done it than he would be if it had been done by another. [God] wants him, in the end, to be so free from any bias in his own favor that he can rejoice in his own talents as frankly and gratefully as in his neighbor’s talents.” (Chapter 14)

The key concept here is that all of your spiritual gifts are just that, GIFTS from God… He gave them to you as a stewardship… and someday God will call you to account for what He gave you

1 Corinthians 4:7 For who makes you different from anyone else? What do you have that you did not receive? And if you did receive it, why do you boast as though you did not?

You are supposed to assess your work objectively, with sober judgment… see what God has put in you, and what He expects of you

Christ is the ultimate fruit inspector, and He will judge all of our works on Judgment Day… but He is eager to give you a sober assessment of your works now so you can discern your spiritual gifts

i)  “sober judgment” is the way you should assess your life

ii)  With God’s help, you will discern what gifts He has given you

b. By the measure of your faith

i)  “according to the measure of faith” means recognizing by faith what God has put in you

ii)  Not everyone has the same measure of faith or the same measure of spiritual gifts

iii)  Not all preachers equal each other in gifts, nor do all givers, or encouragers or administrators etc.

H.  Step 9: Get Input from the Body of Christ… have OTHERS ponder you

KJV Hebrews 10:24 And let us consider one another to provoke unto love and to good works

We are to PONDER ONE ANOTHER… and encourage each other’s gifts and service to help each other DISCOVER our spiritual gifts… what they are, and what they aren’t

Having pondered each other, we are to SPUR ONE ANOTHER ON to love and good deeds… and getting other people to use their spiritual gifts is a great way to do it

ENCOURAGEMENT is a great “spur” to love and good deeds

Mark Twain: “I can live for two weeks on a good compliment, with nothing to eat!”

Encouragement is a tremendous spur to action… if brothers and sisters ponder your patterns of service and speak words of encouragement:

·        [Hospitality] “Dear sister, you have a tremendous gift of hospitality! Every week you open your home to our home fellowship with such warmth and thoughtfulness, we feel like we are doing you a favor to come… but actually it is you who bless us!”

·        [Service] “Brother, thank you for preparing the coffee for the whole church week after week! Very few people see you do it or know that you do it, but we all benefit from your humble service! You do so many things behind the scenes to help us flourish as a church!”

·        [Evangelism] “When I go out witnessing with you, I am strengthened and encouraged! You have such a loving boldness and directness… you easily get into spiritual conversations with total strangers and they seem to like talking to you. Getting into those conversations is so hard for me… but you have such a gift!”

·        [Mercy] “You have such a heart for the poor and needy. I am ashamed to admit it, but I can easily drive by this neighborhood and not notice all the struggles these folks are having. But every week, you pour yourself out to bless the poor in this community. I learn so much from watching your heart of mercy.”

·        [Prayer] “I love praying with you! You have such a strong faith; you seem to pray as though you can actually see the invisible God! And when I hear you pray with such faith, it makes me sense God’s power and love and presence too! It makes me want to pray as I never have before!”

·        [Leadership] “I love the way you lead our church! You have such a clear vision of where we need to go, and you give clear directions for that in a way that is winsome and powerful… it makes me want to follow! And God has given you such a wisdom in knowing where we need to go and how to get there!”

·        [Giving] “You have such an amazingly generous heart! You see that God has lavishly blessed you financially, but you also are so open-handed and generous… you know that every dollar you have has come from God and you give so much to invest in eternity… you support missionaries and Christian works, on top of faithfully giving your tithes and offerings to the church.”

·        [Teaching] “Whenever you open the scriptures, I feel like new things are just jumping off the page! I must have read that passage a hundred times and never saw what you explained to us tonight at Bible study! I understand much more clearly what Paul meant when he wrote that passage!”

·        [Music] “I am so blessed by your musical gift! The way you present your skill so plainly to the Holy Spirit to use you, and the way your music just flows into my heart, carrying the words with astonishing power, I am lifted up to the heavenlies in worship by your gifts!”

·        [Administration] “The Caring Center ministry is so complex, with lots of people and lots of moving parts! I see how skillfully you put that whole outreach together, calling people, getting everything to run so smoothly, looking after a thousand details I would never have noticed. In fact, whenever you organize something, it runs so smoothly! Thank you!!”

·        [Counseling] “Honestly, our marriage was really struggling, with so many conflicts we couldn’t resolve. But you showed us God’s wisdom from scripture and we could see our sin more clearly, and specific steps we needed to take to live more tenderly with each other. Thank you for saving our marriage!”

·        [Healing] “

I.  Step 10: Do lots of these kinds of ministries… SERVE IN A WIDELY VARIED WAY

Romans 12:6-8 We have different gifts, according to the grace given us. If a man’s gift is prophesying, let him use it in proportion to his faith. 7 If it is serving, let him serve; if it is teaching, let him teach; 8 if it is encouraging, let him encourage; if it is contributing to the needs of others, let him give generously; if it is leadership, let him govern diligently; if it is showing mercy, let him do it cheerfully.

III.   Develop Your Gifts

A.  Spiritual Gifts Need to Be Developed

Perhaps the most overwhelmingly talented musical genius in history was Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart. At the age of five he was already beginning to compose minuets. At the age of six, he was traveling all over Europe with his father giving concerts for kings and archbishops.

But he was also fanatically serious about developing his God-given talent… he devoted himself to fourteen hours a day of practice on the piano

Charles Spurgeon was perhaps the most naturally talented preacher in history. Possessed of an astounding eloquence, a powerful voice and a remarkable intellect, he was preaching to huge crowds of thousands before he twentieth birthday. But he never stopped developing his craft, studying the techniques of preaching… of powerfully reaching the hearts of men and women with the life-changing gospel. He developed his gift to a sharper edge more and more with each passing year.

Over and over again in history, we have seen incredibly talented men and women take those gifts and develop them to the glory of God…

But I have also seen God-given talents go wasted…

When I was a student at MIT, I studied with some of the best and brightest students in the country. But I noticed that there were some lazy geniuses who had the ability to coast and did so… they got by, even with excellent grades… but their gift was not fully developed

1.  Spiritual gifts do not come fully developed

2.  The lesson of Paul’s advice to Timothy in several places is clear: you must develop your spiritual gifts to full maturity

2 Timothy 1:6 6 For this reason I remind you to fan into flame the gift of God, which is in you through the laying on of my hands.

1 Timothy 4:14-16 Do not neglect your gift, which was given you through a prophetic message when the body of elders laid their hands on you. 15 Be diligent in these matters; give yourself wholly to them, so that everyone may see your progress.16 Watch your life and doctrine closely. Persevere in them, because if you do, you will save both yourself and your hearers

3.  The work and effort and zeal involved is a large measure of the worship we give to God in using our gifts

4.  It also is in complete harmony with God’s usual way of dealing with us… all things grow and develop

B.  We Develop Them by Using Them

C.  We Develop Them by Studying Them

1.  Timothy’s gift of teaching…. NEEDED DEVELOPMENT!!

2 Timothy 2:15 Do your best to present yourself to God as one approved, a workman who does not need to be ashamed and who correctly handles the word of truth.

a.  Those with the gift of administration still need to learn the best way to organize ministries and to lead people winsomely

b.  Those with the gift of giving still need to study the best way to earn money and the best way to give it away

Illus. Gift of giving… Randy Alcorn Money, Possessions, and Eternity… small group; DVD of giving warriors from history… R.G. LeTourneau

R.G. LeTourneau (1888-1969) was the father of the American earth moving industry, inventing and developing HUGE machines for moving earth… mostly responsible for equipping the Allied invasion of Normandy with machinery during World War II. His life was changed by the realization that he could serve God as a businessman. LeTourneau’s first business went bankrupt, sending him into debt by $5,000, a large sum in his day. However, a pastor friend told him that God needed businessmen as well as pastors. Eventually he found a construction job and became successful. Amidst his success, LeTourneau remembered God’s faithfulness and gave 90 percent of his earnings to Christian endeavors. LeTourneau lived by the statement, “If you’re not serving the Lord, it proves you don’t love him; if you don’t love him, it proves you don’t know him.”

Someone with the gift of giving DEVELOPS his/her own gift by studying how others have done it

c.  Those with the gift of hospitality would still need to study how to minister to people of different cultures, perhaps, or with different lavish display of welcome and greeting… they can learn from some women, perhaps, who have been making guests feel at home for decades

D.  We Develop Them by Submitting to the Input of Others

1.  We should submit our ministries to more skilled and more mature Christians who also have those same gifts

2.  We should submit our ministries to the Body as a whole for help in discerning the best ways to grow

E.  Bottom line: we must DEVELOP our spiritual gifts so we become even more skillful at them

IV.   Deploy Your Gifts

A.  Deploy… STARTS WITH “D”!!! USE your gift… be deployed like a soldier on D-Day!!

Romans 12:6-8 If a man’s gift is prophesying, let him use it in proportion to his faith. 7 If it is serving, let him serve; if it is teaching, let him teach; 8 if it is encouraging, let him encourage; if it is contributing to the needs of others, let him give generously; if it is leadership, let him govern diligently; if it is showing mercy, let him do it cheerfully.

B.  Non-Christians: trust in the gospel of Jesus Christ!

1.  Spiritual gifts are given to Christians to help build up the Body of Christ

2.  If you are not yet a Christian, you are on the OUTSIDE of this glorious building project… you are excluded, under the judgment of God for your sins…

3.  God sent His Son into the world to die on the cross for sinners like you and me

4.  TRUST IN CHRIST! God raised him from the dead on the third day to give eternal life to all who call on his name

5.  If you call on his name, he will forgive you… and he will give you the gift of the Holy Spirit… you will be immediately involved in building the Church by your gifts!!

C.  FBC Members… DO YOU HAVE A MINISTRY?

1.  Is there a regular pattern of service in your life?

2.  Are you devoting yourself to the use of your spiritual gifts?

3.  LOOK IN THE MIRROR:

James 1:22-25 Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says. 23 Anyone who listens to the word but does not do what it says is like a man who looks at his face in a mirror 24 and, after looking at himself, goes away and immediately forgets what he looks like. 25 But the man who looks intently into the perfect law that gives freedom, and continues to do this, not forgetting what he has heard, but doing it– he will be blessed in what he does.

This morning I was pondering a question that came, you know, just because of current events, thinking about different things. And the question is what brings significance to your life? When you’re on your deathbed, and you look back on a successful life, what will you say was the most significant thing you were ever involved in, most significant thing you ever did, that you invested yourself in? What will be the crown jewel of your life’s work?

Two weeks ago, Glenn Frey founding member of the rock group the Eagles died, and various programs that I listen to were just ruminating with that thinking about the passing of an era. I watched an interview with him and he said these words, he said, “The greatest thing I ever did was to be part of the Eagles, to tour with them to record songs write songs with them. That was the greatest thing I ever did.” So I was thinking about that, and I thought about other such statements that I’ve heard from various ones. For example, I saw an interview with a NASA engineer that had been involved in the Space Race and been involved also in that amazing rescue of Apollo 13 that later there was a movie and he said, “The greatest moment of my life, is when we got those astronauts back safely from outer space back to Earth.” I knew a man some time ago, his name was Jim and he was a veteran of the Battle of the Bulge, and seemed like if you gave him three minutes, he would talk about the Battle of the Bulge decades later, and it seemed to be without a doubt, the most significant thing that ever happened to him, he was part of a group, he never missed the VBoB meetings, Veterans of the Battle of the Bulge and it was just seemed to define his whole life. Saw another interview with Ron Howard, and he was talking about what it was like to be part of two really significant TV shows, The Andy Griffith Show, and then Happy Days, and he made a similar statement, the greatest time in my life was to be part of those shows. And you see interviews from time to time with athletes, to talk about what it was like to be on that team that won the Super Bowl etcetera. And they use that same type of language.

And honestly for me as a Christian, all of that just seems empty. It all seems temporary, and the more I meditate on spiritual gifts, and the good works that God has for us to do, the more I see the incredible grace God has shown us in Christ to not just deliver us from condemnation, and wrath and judgment that we will be completely forgiven, and that we would be adopted into his family, but more than that, that we have been graced with gifts, spiritual gifts and ministries connected with that, that will have eternal consequences. That we’re delivered from wasting our lives, and that we’ll be able to say at the end of our lives. The most significant thing I ever put my hand to was the building of the Church of Jesus Christ. And I think that’s going to be abundantly clear to us on Judgment Day, when Jesus torches our “pile of works, and the gold, the silver, the costly stones, the wood, the hay and the straw, are all going to get tested by fire.” And then we’ll see the unifying theme of those things at last, those things they were done for the glory of God, by the power of the Spirit that brought him glory, and built the Church of Jesus Christ. That’s what’s going to last, and God has given us through these spiritual gifts and Avenue, a pattern of ministry that he wants us to do.

So this is our third sermon now, third time looking at the topic of spiritual gifts. What are spiritual gifts? Spiritual gifts are special abilities given to us by the grace of God, that enable us by the Spirit of God to build the Church of Jesus Christ. Special abilities. Now, big picture, we know that we have been saved, delivered from our sins, so beautifully unfolded for us in Ephesians 1-2, chosen before the foundation of the world, predestined to be adopted as His sons and daughters, predestined to be holy and blameless in His sight, Jesus shed His blood for our redemption, we, having heard the word of truth, were included in the Church of Jesus Christ by repentance and faith, that we have been saved, rescued from serving Satan, from being enslaved to Satan’s dark kingdom. And we’ve been delivered from that by the sovereign power of God, not by our own works. “For by grace we have been saved through faith, and this not of yourselves, it is the gift of God, not by works, so that no one can boast.”

But having said that, then we have that beautiful Ephesians 2:10, which says that, “we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ Jesus to do good works which God planned in advance that we should walk in them.” And what I am saying to you these spiritual gifts a third time we’ve had a chance to look at this, will organize many of the good works God has ordained for you to do. Many of them will come along the pattern of your spiritual gift ministry. And that’s a beautiful thing now in that same chapter, in Ephesians 2, we have this grand and glorious vision of a church, a holy temple, a spiritual dwelling place that’s rising, in the Lord, more and more glorious, all the time more and more ornate, bigger and bigger all the time. With every sinner that comes to faith in Christ. We are part of that. To bring it in language from 1 Peter 2, we are “living stones” set in that spiritual temple. And so that’s a glorious picture.

I get the picture of a medieval Cathedral, and there’s this master craftsman, this architect, that has the blueprints and the plans, and just runs the whole worksite. But then you have these skilled craftsmen, these stone workers, masons, you know these carpenters and glaziers, experts in glass and those majestic stain glass windows, and then common laborers, and all kinds of workers on this work site in this cathedral that just rises from the surface of the earth 120 feet off the ground. But this is even better, this is eternal, this is glorious and we all have a role to play. Every Christian has a role.

So what we’re going to do one final time, here is we’re going to look at spiritual gifts and organize it along the pattern of these four Ds that I commended to you. Discover spiritual gifts, delight in spiritual gifts, develop spiritual gifts, and deploy your spiritual gifts. So we’re going to look one more time at these. We’re going to start again with “discover,” and what we’re going to do is take the “discover” section, break it into two parts, discover generally about spiritual gifts, that work is mostly done. But I’m just going to go through Ephesians 4:7-16 one more time. So we understand what they are, generally. Then, we’re going to go over to Romans 12 and I’m going to use Roman 12, Romans 12:1-8, and I’m going to take you through that so you can already begin flipping there, or turning there, or pressing there. I don’t know what the verbs are anymore, but clicking there. But we’re going to get there Romans 12:1-8. I’m just going to walk through that text because I just don’t think there’s a better text in the New Testament for answering the question what yet, but “What are my spiritual gifts? What role do I personally play? How can I discover my personal gift?” So that’s the Discover section.

Secondly, I’m just going to exhort you. It shouldn’t be hard to just delight in this whole glorious thing. I want to give you a vision, again, of the heavenly in Jerusalem. I want you to delight in it, I want you to enjoy it, and I want you to delight, in your heart, in building it, I want you to do your gifts with the light. And then, thirdly, I’m going to advocate that all of us have to develop our spiritual gifts that you should be better if the Lord allows you to live, and doesn’t return. You should be much better at your spiritual gift package, in the ministry that corresponds to it, 10 years from now than you are now. You should learn how to do it better than ever before. I should be a better preacher and teacher and Pastor 10 years from now, than I am now if the Lord gives me time. And all of us should develop our gifts. And then finally, I’m just going to advocate that you do them, that you deploy yourself, get busy, and you’ve got an insert, and in your bulletin we’re going to look at that various avenues of service. I’m going to just look at that as an incredible menu, and you say, “Well I just don’t know what to do.” Well, there are ample ways and on-ramps into ministry here in this local church, and I want to talk about that. Okay, that’s a road map.

Let’s look first at “discover” generally one more time, look at the text in Ephesians 4:7-16. I just want to start at 4:7, “But to each one of us grace has been given as Christ apportioned it,” so the word “but” means we’re going to go in a slightly different direction. He was just talking about unity, “one Lord, one faith, one baptism, one God and Father of all who is overall, and through it all and in all.” Unity, unity, unity. But to each one of us grace. So unity, but not uniformity. We are all part of one body, but we don’t all have the same function, same role, we’ve already talked about that, “but to each one of us.” So every Christian has a spiritual gift package. I prefer that language than just to the singular spiritual gift because there’s just an array of abilities that God’s going to give you that line up with a pattern of ministry He wants you to do and He’s going to gift you for that, and that’s everybody, “but to each one of us,” grace. I already said why this is grace. God didn’t have to do this. How gracious of God to give you a role to play Amen.

You should be so thankful and see that you got far more than you deserve, but by the grace of God, you have this ministry and you can work hard and do things of eternal consequence, but to each one of us grace has been given, according to the measure of Christ. So Christ has measured out, the Greek word “metron.” I love the sense of careful thinking he has pondered you and has chosen a spiritual gift package, for you and a spiritual gift ministry, for you. According to the measure of Christ, we know also from other texts, that the Father has done this in the Spirit as well. So the Father, Son and Spirit together have gifted you, everyone. Now, in the next few verses, it talks about how these spiritual gifts are part of what Christ won for us by His victory at the cross and the empty tomb it pictures Christ as an ascendant victorious Conqueror who came down from Heaven to Earth to rescue sinners like us and then goes back up from Earth to Heaven, leading captives in his train. And just pouring out gifts to everybody.

And so it’s like booty, or plunder, something like that, a sense of the spoils of the victory and through the Spirit, he just gives us these good things. That’s the image in verses 8-10. And then he gives us some examples, but they’re not just any examples as we’ve talked about. “He gave some to be apostles, some to be prophets, some to be evangelists, some to be pastors and teachers.” Those are five gift type ministries, each of them has their own gifting. And we talked about this, but they unify around this one theme, the delivery system of the word of God from the mind of God through these gifted ones “apostles, prophets, evangelists, pastors, and teachers” to the people of God, the word of God is delivered. So the ministry of the word primes the pump for the use of spiritual gifts.

So, we go right from that to prepare God’s people for works of service. So God’s people are made ready by the ministry of the word of God, to do works of service. The works of service, do the building up of the body. Does that make sense? So all of the works of service, that’s what builds up the Body of Christ, so the Body of Christ may be built up, and that’s the goal of spiritual gift ministry, the maturation, the full maturity of the Body of Jesus Christ that were moved from “being infants blown back and forth by the waves,” immature doctrinally immature in our understanding of Christ and of the church, and of the world to full maturity in Christ-likeness. And so, when every individual elect person has been brought from death to life through evangelism and missions, and then discipled and trained by a healthy church ministry, up to full maturity and then even more in glorification. When we graduate the ultimate graduation moving from earthly life to heavenly life, when all of the elect have been glorified then the work is finished. And that’s what spiritual gifts are given to do. And that’s a glorious thing. And so as each part does its work, the Body of Christ is built to full maturity. So spiritual gifts are vital to this whole redemptive plan of God. And as we individually use our gifts and as we’re out and about using the gifts, and then as we’re receiving other people’s gifts, all of us grow up, we grow up by serving and we grow up by being served with the spiritual gifts and that’s what a local church is all about. It’s so sweet and powerful. So that’s the picture, generally. So water spiritual gifts, Ephesians 4:7-16 really gives us a glorious overall picture.

I. Discover Your Gifts (Romans 12:1-8)

Now, let’s get to specifically,. “discover” my gifts, “how would I do that?” Well look at Romans 12:1-8, let’s zero in on that in particular. Romans 12:1-8 is almost like a step-by-step field manual in how to discover your spiritual gifts. Often, people quote Romans 12:1-2, and sever it from the flow of thought that follows. So I think a real impact comes in connecting the famous Romans 12:1-2 with the not-so-famous Romans 12:3-8. Keep them together and you will see a powerful image and we’re going to walk through Romans 12:1-8, and just bring it back again and again, to the touchstone of spiritual gifts. How can I know what my spiritual gifts are? Romans 12:1-8 is the biblical answer to that. Okay, we start with this. “Therefore brothers, in view of God’s mercies, I urge you to present your bodies as living sacrifices, holy and pleasing to God, this is your spiritual act of worship. Do not be conformed any longer to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you’ll be able to test and approve what God’s will is, his good, pleasing and perfect will. For by the grace given to me I say to every one of you do not think of yourself more highly than you ought” and he goes off to talk about spiritual gifts. So just start at the beginning, Romans 12:1-2 and see it in the light of spiritual gifts. So how do I know what my spiritual gifts are? Well, begin by having a view through the scripture, through faith of the overarching glorious mercies of God, Romans 1-11, or Ephesians 1-3. The overarching picture of the redemptive plan of God start there in view of or seeing God’s mercies in Christ.

Next, “present your bodies to him as living sacrifice.” So I would say in view of God’s mercy, just starts with faith in Christ. This is for believers, not for non-believers. If you ask, “Okay, you know I’m a visitor here and I’m not a Christian, but I’m interested in spiritual gifts.” Can I just say set that aside, that’s not what you need. When they came to Jesus and said, “What must we do to work the works of God?” He said to them, unregenerate people. This is the work of God, believe in the one he is sent, so you need to trust in Jesus Christ for the forgiveness of your sins that’s the mercies of God.

God sent his Son to die in your place, to take your wrath on Himself, and to give you His perfect righteousness that’s the mercy of God. You don’t have any spiritual gifts, you don’t have any spiritual life, if you’re not a Christian, if you’re not born again so don’t leave this place “dead in your transgressions and sins,” but repent and trust in Him right now, and then immediately you’ll receive the gift of the Holy Spirit and He will work a spiritual gift ministry in you that’s the order. So, in view of God’s mercy, then Christian present your body to Him as a living sacrifice.

So what is this presentation? Well, Romans 6 makes it very plain what it is but basically used to offer the parts of your body in slavery to sin, now offer the parts you of your body to God. And so here’s the thing, the image I have here is you’re just presenting, you’re saying, “I am yours to command, I want to use my life for your glory, I offer myself to you, to serve you.” Now you say, “When do I do that?” Well, in one sense you do it once for all, at conversion. When you come to faith in Christ, you said “I am yours, you are my king, I am your servant. I’m yours.” And that’s true, but the image here is one of continual presentation and we get that from the idea of a living sacrifice. Old Testament was all about a dead sacrifice. It was an animal blood poured out and its body burned, and send it up, and it was an offering, but now we’ve got a different idea, same idea of sacrifice, but now your body offered to God continually, as a living sacrifice. So in your morning quiet time. Yes, but throughout the day. Abiding in Christ continually thinking about him and just saying, I’m yours, I’m yours, I’m yours, I’m yours to command all the time, continual offering of yourself, your hands, your feet, your eyes, your mouth, every part of you.

And then he says “holy and pleasing to God.” You will be able to discover your spiritual gifts, better and better the more you put sin to death, if there’s no sin clouding your judgment, there’s no wickedness going on in your life. If those things are going, you will not be able to discern what your spiritual gifts are. That’s not the top priority for you. And we’re never going to be perfectly holy, but our discernment and our ability to understand the spiritual gifts of God are in proportion to being holy and pleasing to Him. And he says, “this is your spiritual act of worship.” This is what worship is for you, this ongoing presentation of your body holy and pleasing to him. So how do I know what my spiritual gifts are? Start there in Romans 12:1, do that, and then he says, “do not be conformed” or masquerade or act like, “the world any longer.” Don’t do that, don’t. Another translation, “don’t let the world squeeze you into its mold.” Don’t be conformed.

All right, so it was after the spiritual gift and the lifestyle that flows from it. Don’t think like the world about your life, don’t have worldly goals for your life. Learn now, what is going to be “gold, silver, and costly stones” on Judgment Day, and live for that and not for the stuff that’s “wood, hay, and straw,” which is going to get burned up. Live for Christ, live for His kingdom. “Seek first His kingdom and his righteousness and all these things will be added to you.” And these things that get added or not while you’re alive. And so, don’t think like the world about your life anymore. Don’t think like the world about your time and energy and money and how you’re investing yourself. Don’t think like the world about your career and what you want to achieve, but instead “be transformed by the renewing of your mind.” Now though the word of God is not specifically mentioned here, we all know that’s the only power there is to do that. How do you think differently? It’s the power of the Holy Spirit who uses the word of God in changing the way you think, and if you change the way you think you will change the way you live. I’ll talk about this more later in Ephesians 4. New thinking leads to new living.

And so “be transformed by the renewing of your mind,” be in the word, be listening to good preaching. Be getting good teaching, be reading good Christian books, be in the word every day your quiet time all the time, then, he says, As you are transformed more and more by the renewing of your mind, you will be able, and I like the NIV’s translation here. They unfold the Greek word, I think pretty well for us. You’ll be able, equipped, to test and approve what God’s will is, for you. “His good, pleasing, and perfect will.” So the big question we’re asking is “discover.” “What are my gifts?” This is just leading you by the hand to answer the question. You’ll be able to test and approve. Well, what do we mean by test and approve?

Well, one of the images I have here is of the Great Gold Rush, the minor 49ers and all that in 1850 and all that, and they go to the California and they’re getting rocks out of rivers and out of mines, and they’re bringing them to a place called an assayer’s office, and the assayer is an expert at looking and saying, “That’s fool’s gold, that’s real goal. The quality of it silver too,” whatever, that’s what they do, they’re able to assess what’s on the table in front of them and say, what it really is. Well, that’s you, you’ll be able to test and approve God’s will for you, this is God’s will for me. And not only is it God’s will, I know what it is, but I like it, I approve it, I want it, that’s something good for me. So already we’ve come a long way. Romans 12:1-2 just gives you step-by-step how to answer the question, “What is my spiritual gift?”

But Paul is not done 4:3, “by the grace given to me,” and that’s code language for spiritual gifts, later in the same text in Romans 12:6, I think it is. We have different gifts according to the grace given to us, that’s exactly what he’s thinking about. “Okay, by my spiritual gift of Apostle I say to you X.” That’s the language he’s using. “By my spiritual gift package of being an apostle, I’m going to give you some advice about your spiritual gifts.” So, “by the grace given to me I say to every one of you,” and the first thing he says is, “do not think of yourself more highly than you ought.” He starts right away with humility, humble yourself, don’t think of yourself as a first round draft pick on God’s team, okay? Don’t think of yourself as indispensable. “God is lucky to have me.” Every one of us is dispensable, every one of us is replaceable, be humble about that. Think how blessed you are already to even be on this team doing this work. Humble yourself.

And that’s going to be even more true as you progress and develop your spiritual gift and God uses you more and more and gives you a wider and wider platform of ministry, and you see fruit and you start to get tempted to be elevated and forget where it all came from, and how you can’t do anything apart from Jesus, and He’s just being gracious to you to even let you be involved and any change that ever happened in another person’s life, it’s been happening by the word of God in the Spirit. If you are the avenue the conduit of it, praise God, be happy. But it was God that did it. And so don’t think of yourself more highly than you ought, but now comes a hidden step, which is so vital, but the more I talk about it, it just makes perfect sense. But think about yourself, do think about yourself.

So you’re like, “All right, how do I discover what my spiritual gifts are?” Ponder yourself, like the thinker. Who am I? I’m pondering not my spiritual naval, but I’m pondering my tendencies, my habits, my patterns, my proclivities, my likes and dislikes, pondering what I do, and specifically in the light of spiritual gifts. “What kinds of ministries do I enjoy? What kinds of ministries have come to me, and I’ve done them and I’ve enjoyed doing that. And this is the beauty of being a really healthy church. I’ve gotten a feedback loop of encouragement from the Body of Christ.” And so, I think you discover your spiritual gifts, the more you get involved in a local church, a healthy local church, will help you discover what your gifts are. That’s just a plug for being a covenant member of a healthy local church, know and be known on spiritual gifts, know other people’s gifts, and let them know your gifts.

So I’m just going to do a brief segue here. Stay in Romans 12. But just in your mind, a corresponding thing you are thinking about yourself, you also want others thinking about you. And those things come together  for discovering your gift, right? So who should think about you? The church, the local church, how? Hebrews 10:24, it says, “Let us consider one another, to spur toward love and good deeds. Not neglecting meeting together as some are in the habit of doing, but let us encourage one another and all the more as you see the day approaching.” That’s a partner to think about yourself with sober judgment. They’re partner verses. So you think about yourself as sober judgment and get some good friends to think about you as sober judgment, let them consider you, “Who are you? What are you good at?” And they should, lovingly, encourage you about what you’re good at, and what you’re blessed at. See? I’m blessed by that.

And so I was thinking about that and I pondered it, and I have all of these examples of encouragement that I wrote. I think about different people who have blessed me. Now, if you’re listening to this and you’re like, “I know I’m that person,” All right? Well, you probably are, but I didn’t put any names in here, but I’m just blessed all the time, by members of this Body of Christ. So I think about people who have the gift of hospitality and I want to say to that brother or sister, “You have such a gift when you open your home you make me feel like you’re doing me a favor for us being there, like you’re so incredibly blessed to have 43 people come to your home for home fellowship.” That’s just a gift of hospitality. There’s not a sense of burden at all, it’s a gift, Thank you, praise God for that.

Or the gift of service. Brother, thank you for coming every Sunday morning and making coffee for so many people. 12 pots one after the other, all different types of flavors. Very few people may see you do it, but thank you for that gift of service. I’m encouraged by the way you serve. Or evangelism. “Brother, when you go out witnessing and you just get in these conversations and it just seems to flow, and even though you don’t know them, they don’t know you, pretty soon you’re talking to a lost person, so easily about the Gospel. I just want to ride your coattails, I want to be with you. Can I just come and watch it and get credit for doing evangelism? I just want to do that, because you have such a gift.” I love that.

And then, the gift of mercy. “You have such a heart for the poor and needy, sister. I’ll tell you what, when I drive through this community, I don’t see it the way you do. But you see needs, you see avenues of service, you see people whose lives are broken, and you have such a heart of compassion for them. I am so blessed by that.” The gift of prayer. “I love praying with you, I just love the way you pray, I just feel like we’re in the presence of God, the way you pause and the way you have your tone of voice and the things you say in prayer. I’m blessed by that, you have a gift. And I’m blessed by that.” The gift of leadership, “I love the way you organize mission trips, the way you organize ministries, the way you think about details, the way you cast a vision for it, the way you’re able to call people to make sacrifices for that vision, and to move out and go in that direction. I’m blessed by your gift of leadership or the gift of giving, you just give so regularly, and so faith filled, I know that God’s blessed you and abundantly.”

But you don’t see those things as yours ultimately you see them as God’s, and you give generously. You give generously to missions, you fund mission trips, you fund laborers for the harvest field, you give tithes and offerings to the local church as well. I’m just blessed by the way you give. The gift of teaching. “When you open up the Scripture, I hear things in the word that I hadn’t, I see things that, they’re there, but I never saw them and I’m blessed by that. Thank you for showing me things in the word of God that strengthen my faith.” Or the gift of music or worship. “The way you play your instruments, and the way you sing. I feel like I’m just laid on the heavenlies, and that my emotions flow, and there’s just such a beauty to the gift of music.”

And then the gift of administration, of organization, the caring center ministry, so many details. Clothing comes in, clothing goes out. There’s money, there’s all these things, the whole thing’s set up so well. “Thank you sister for the way you have organized the caring center. Your gift of administration with a gift of counseling. “Our marriage was not doing well, but we sat down with you as a couple, and you showed us sin, patterns in our lives, and you counseled with us, from the word of God, and you really saved our marriage. Thank you.”

Now, when all of those practical ministries are being done and there’s that beautiful feedback loop. I couched all of that in light of encouragement. The Body of Christ encourages people to “loving good deeds.” And so, it’s our job to think about ourselves, definitely think about ourselves, but we need to think about one another too. We need to think about each other. And so, as that happens, we can discover our spiritual gifts, what they are. So think about yourself with sober judgment. Get involved in ministries. You’re going to get a chance at the end of this message to look at it. Don’t worry if you don’t know what your spiritual gifts are, you really don’t know. Just get busy. Do some things along the pattern of the ministries we suggest and just see how you are, see how you fly like that balsa wood airplane, the way that the wings are set. Are you going to do a barrel roll, are you going to fly for distance? What are you? Are you going to curve left or right as you get the air under the wings you’re going to show your tendencies? Get busy. So think about yourself with sober judgment in accordance with the “measure of faith that God has given you.” And then he goes on to teach about spiritual gifts.  So I would just step by step by step go through Romans 12, and you’ll discover what your gifts are. Okay?

II. Delight in Your Gifts

Now, at the end of that section, he says this, and we’ll come back to Romans 12:6-8 on the final D. But it says, “if it is encouraging, let him encourage. If it is contributing to needs of others, let him give generously. If it is leadership, let him govern diligently, if it is showing mercy, let him do it,” what? “Cheerfully.” “Cheerfully.” I think about 2 Corinthians 9:7, talking about financial giving, says, “not reluctantly or under compulsion,” why? “Because God loves a cheerful giver.” You have to have a delight in your heart when using your spiritual gifts, you have to delight in it, and I think the best way to delight to be a cheerful giver is to see the glorious vision of what you are doing. I’ve already given it to you, I’ll give it to you again. It is the heavenly Zion of Isaiah 62 “Arise and shine O Zion for your light has come and the glory of the Lord shines upon you.”

It’s the New Jerusalem that at some point in the future is going to “come down out of Heaven like a bride, beautifully dressed for her husband.” It is this city, this golden, glorious, transparent amazing city that’s radiant with the glory of God. And you know what occurred to me? All local church ministry is temporary. All of it. But the eternal church is eternal, and get this. I love this. I gave you guys that image of the small cover or cloud cover. Sometimes you have to fly up above the clouds, and see, from a heavenly perspective, the New Jerusalem, and you know what the Lord is saying to my heart about that? Yes, local church ministry is temporary lots of changes, lots of things happen, but things are looking really good from up here. The New Jerusalem every day gets a little bigger and a little more glorious, a living stone gets put in the wall. Every day, there’s not a single backward step, for the New Jerusalem. Jesus has gone to prepare a place for us and He’s doing it, and oh it’s glorious! It is glorious. So you should be very cheerful using your spiritual gift, you should delight in it, because you’re doing an eternally glorious work.

II. Develop Your Gifts

All right, thirdly, “develop.” How do we develop our guests? Well, you developing by using them, etcetera, but that you should develop the gift. I’m just wanting to command this one text. 1 Timothy 4:15, all right? I’m just going to read 1 Timothy 4:13-16, and we’ll talk briefly about “develop.” There, Paul, the mentor says to his protegé, Timothy, about pastoral ministry about preaching and teaching, and shepherding, and doing the work of an evangelist all the things that go into being a pastor, he says, “until I come,” 1 Timothy 4:13-16, “until I come, devote yourself to the public reading of the word of scripture to preaching into teaching.” Devote yourself to it. Then he says, “do not neglect your gift, which was given you through a prophetic word when the body of elders laid their hands on you.” Don’t neglect your gift. Another place he says, “fan it into flame.” That’s going to be the same image but I’m zeroing in here.

1 Timothy 4:15, “Be diligent in these matters, give yourself wholly to them so that everyone may see your progress.” So, Timothy, let it be said there in Ephesus that when they come five years later they’ll say, “Timothy, you’re a much better preacher now than you were five years ago.” Don’t be hurt by that, be happy, be encouraged. Be a better preacher in five years, be a better shepherd in five years. Well, I’m just taking that idea and extend it to all the spiritual gifts, all of them. Devote yourself fully to your spiritual gift ministry, so that everyone may see your progress. Be a better giver. 10 years from now than you are now. Be better at administration or leadership 10 years from now than you are now. Study it, as a science, as an art, however you want to say it devote yourself to your spiritual gift ministry and get better at it. That’s all. He says “watch your life and your doctrine closely. Persevere in them because if you do, you’ll save both yourself and your hearers.”

I think that’s true of all spiritual gifts. That as we use our spiritual gifts, we will be instrumental in the salvation of the saved. Like huh, well you said save both yourself Timothy and your hearers. He’s saved doesn’t he? But yes, Already, not yet. He is saved, but he’s not done being saved. And so as we use our gifts and progress in them, we will see the church growing more and more toward maturity in Christ. That’s salvation.

IV. Deploy Your Gifts

So we’ve seen discover, delight in the gifts, develop, now, finally deploy. Deploy is kind of a military term, I guess, to some degree. First time I went through this years ago, I used the word “use,” but I’ve been inspired by my alliteration friends. So you got to have all the same letter, do you know it’s the same letters all the time, is Ds and Ps and all that? Poor letter Z or X, I mean whoever does alliteration with those? I guess kids on Mother’s Day if they can get 26 ways that they love their mom. Don’t use the word Xerox. She’s not going to be encouraged by that. That’s not good. But deploy. It’s a military image, it’s like God is going to deploy us on the battlefield. This gifted Church, He’s going to deploy. So I’m urging you to deploy your gifts, use them. So there we go back to Romans 12:6-8, “we have different gifts according to the grace given us. If a man’s gift is prophesying, let him use it in proportion to his faith, if it is serving, let him serve. If it is teaching, let him teach. If it is encouraging, let him encourage, if it is contributing to the needs of others, let him give generously. If it is leadership, let him govern, diligently if it is showing mercy, let him do it cheerfully.” Do it. What good is the gift if you’re not using it, and this is where I just want to convict you, look at your lifestyle, look at your pattern. Are you using your gifts? Are you involved in a regular pattern of spiritual gift ministry?

And as I’ve said a few weeks ago, if not the first thing you really did need to do is to repent, say, “Lord, I have wasted some time up to this point, I’ve not really been using my gifts, I’ve not been investing in the Church the way I need to, and I want to do that. I’ve been worldly. I’ve been living for worldly goals, and I don’t want to do that anymore, I really want to get involved in ministry.”

So “deploy.” You know remember the parable or the talents, the five talents two talents, the one talent? You don’t want to be the one that got a talent and hid it in the ground. Matthew 25-25, he said, “so I was afraid and went out and dug a hole and hid your talent in the ground.” Here’s what belongs to you. All of our gifts, we’re going to give them back ’cause they’re not ours. He’s going, “I want to know the interest. What did you do with it? Did you invest it? Show me the increase, show me the growth.” That’s what Judgment Day is going to be like for all of us. So let’s deploy our gifts. Let’s get involved.

Now, you might say, “How do I do that? How do I do that?” Well, this is a really encouraging brochure that some on the staff put together, did a great job, and it breaks opportunities for service into three main categories. Ministry teams, those are run by the deacons in a beautiful way, but so many ministries flow through these ministry teams, many of them have to do the infrastructure and the strength and health of the Church, and you can see them Children’s Ministry, there are various needs there, Encouragement Ministry, Meals and Preparations, it’s like Meal Baby. Or if there’s a bereavement issue such a blessing for people to step up and do that. Facilities ministry just taking care of the building, etcetera. Host Ministry is just how we present ourselves to visitors. How do we make ourselves open and welcoming to visitors and they just do a phenomenal job with that. The Host Ministry does. And then there’s Membership Assimilation.

New members come in. We’re going to have a New Member Sunday real soon, and we’re going to see a bunch of new people and they’re going to be like, “Okay, here I am. Teach me about FBC how can I get assimilated?” And the new member assimilation team does a great job of getting those folks assimilated. Then there’s Men’s Ministry and later because it’s alphabetical, but Women’s Ministry, both of those focused on issues relevant to men’s discipleship and women’s discipleship, and there are teams of people that are doing both of that and you may have a heart for that and want to get involved.

Security Ministry, there are needs there. Homebound Ministry, Senior Adult Ministry, etcetera. Worship Ministry, including Lord’s Supper preparation. Then I see what we call International Connections. Tremendous out-reaching opportunities. I don’t think there’s an easier way to do evangelism in our church right now, than through international ministry. Every Wednesday, they come here wanting to learn English, and let me put it gently, willing to put up with Bible or Gospel to get the English. And you know how we’re fishers of men, and we can draw people in, and they have felt needs and somewhere in there that might be a turn and say, “I came here for English, I found Christ.” And how sweet is that just how beautiful is that? To just sit down, in our building, with a lost person and talk to them about their background. They’re very intelligent gifted, talented people, but they need Christ. That’s the IC ministry that’s there.

Isn’t this awesome? So many opportunities. Then there’s Home Fellowship, and Home Fellowship is a great platform for spiritual gift ministry. You think all of the gifts there are they’re all at work during home fellowships, hosting, teaching, welcoming, administration aspects. It’s a wonderful way to use your gifts. And then there’s just outreaches that we can be doing, they’re all listed here. Recently, my wife and I went to Cheesecake Factory. I’m blown away by their menu. I don’t know, what they have, 50 different chefs back there? They’ve got page after page after page after page after page in 12 major categories. It’s like, “how can it be? How can they be good at all of these things equally?” I don’t think they are. But this is like that. I was going to use Golden Corral, but I decided Cheesecake Factory better, all right?

All of the opportunities you’re like, “I don’t know what to do, there’s no on-ramps, there are on-ramps to serve, so just find a place to serve. Find a place. Friends, our life is going to be over soon. “It’s a mist, it’s a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes.” Only one life ‘twill soon be past, only what’s done for Christ will last. Build the church, build the church.

Close with me in prayer. Father, thank you for the time we’ve had three weeks now, looking at spiritual gifts. God please, unleash this church, unleash the members of this church into patterns of spiritual gift ministry, that you have thought out, and prepared them for, that this church may become rich with good works and rich with maturity and rich with converts that are new disciples and are growing, God, make us rich we pray in Jesus’ name, amen.

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