ANOTHER COFFEE BREAK: KEYS OF THE KINGDOM VI
Jul 19, '10 12:40 PM
By Regner Capener
Howdy, Howdy!
My apologies to all the readers of this column for the long
break since the last posting in mid-June. We have been in the midst of a
transition from our location in Prosser, Washington to new quarters, and that
transition is not yet complete. In addition, we’ve been in Canada for the
better part of this past month participating in a prophetic conference
sponsored by Frontline Ministries in Sylvan Lake and Red Deer, Alberta, as well
as an Open Bible Faith Fellowship pastors’ conference immediately following.
(More on that in the days to come.) At the same time, we are losing some of our
long-time ministry staff who are moving on to other ministries and places as
God is opening doors for them. Actually, I should rephrase that to say that we
are sending them forth with our blessings and appreciation for their longtime
association and fellowship with us.
Robert
and Sandy Storer (and their son, Andrew) will be
leaving us for a ministry in Arkansas. Della told me some months ago that the
Lord had alerted her to the fact that He was going to be drawing them on to
other fields of activity and that we should be prepared for their departure. With
nearly 19 years of fellowship and ministry together that dates back to our days
at Trails’ End in Idaho, they have been faithful laborers in the Gospel and
effective intercessory prayer ministers – not to mention their musical
involvement and participation in our daily worship gatherings.
Sandra
Lopez, who has overseen our children’s ministry for most of the past four
years, has taken on nursing as a career, and is being drawn away from her
active involvement because of job responsibilities. Although we don’t expect to
lose her completely, her new schedule precludes her being with us on Sunday
mornings to minister to the children. She has been a good steward of the Gospel
and we bless her!
I
want to try and wrap up this series – or at least this portion of this series –
within the next couple of weeks and move on to share with you a prophetic
picture of the body of Christ that the Lord has given to Della and me through
parallel dreams within the past few days. By the grace of God we should be able
to do that in mid September. In order to accomplish this, I will be publishing
these Coffee Breaks every three or four days.
Now,
on to today’s discussion.
JESUS' OBJECTIVE IS REMISSION AND RECONCILIATION
Let’s take a look at
one more example in the Word that clearly outlines the heart’s desire of the
Lord before we shift gears in this study.
Matthew 18:11-20: 11For the Son of man is come to save that which was lost. 12How
think ye? if a man have an hundred sheep, and one of them be gone astray, doth
he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the
mountains, and seeketh that which is gone astray? 13And
if so be that he find it, verily I say unto you, he rejoiceth
more of that sheep, than of the ninety and nine which went not astray.
14Even so it is not the will
(thelema: desire,
pleasure, inclination) of your Father which
is in heaven, that one of these little ones should perish.
15Moreover if thy brother shall trespass (hamartano: err, miss the mark,
sin, commit an offense) against thee, go and tell him (elengcho: admonish, reprove,
rebuke [in love] with convincing evidence)
his fault between thee
and him alone: if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother. 16But
if he will not hear thee, then take with thee one or two more, that in the
mouth of two or three witnesses every word may be established. 17And
if he shall neglect to hear them, tell it unto the church (Ekklesia):
but if he neglect to hear the church, let him be unto thee as an heathen man
and a publican.
18Verily I say unto you, Whatsoever ye shall bind (deo: tie up, lock,
restrict, or stop) on earth shall be
[having been] bound in heaven: and whatsoever ye shall loose (luo: break up, dissolve,
unlock or put off) on earth shall be
[having been] loosed in heaven.
19Again I say unto you, That if two of you shall agree on earth as
touching anything that they shall ask, it shall be done for them of my Father
which is in heaven. 20For where two or three are gathered together
in my name, there am I in the midst of them.
What is Jesus getting
at with this discourse? It’s pretty simple, really. He’s describing some pretty
extreme circumstances to demonstrate that His first objective in every
situation is to bring forgiveness, remission of sin, and reconciliation between
brethren. With the example of the one lost sheep, He demonstrates His heart to
recapture and retrieve those who’ve fallen by the wayside, been ensnared and
are on the verge of losing their lives.
Next, Jesus launches
into the picture of dealing with deliberate personal offenses. In this parable,
He is not using the word, paraptoma (side
slip, lapse in judgment, error—intentional or unintentional, sin) that
He used with the disciples in Mark 11.
This time He uses hamartano —
the archery term — which defines a missing of the mark or the target (and is
used more often throughout the Greek text of the New Testament to define more
deliberate or repetitious sins and offenses).
Since His objective
is complete remission and reconciliation between His people, Jesus commands a
sequence of events which resolves disputes and offenses 99 percent of the time.
The first step is to go to the individual whose words or actions clearly
evidence wrongdoing towards you; show him in love the nature of the sin or
offense and seek to resolve and reconcile the issues. Most of the time, this
procedure is going to work — especially when you have two people who love the
Lord and are seeking to walk in harmony with Him.
If this fails,
however, the next step is to take one or two other brothers (or sisters) in the
Lord with you — either or both of whom have been witness to the sin or the
offense — who will be able to provide both affirming testimony and secondary
counsel to them. It is a rare set of circumstances in which this step does not succeed,
particularly when the offender has walked in a bond of love with all the
parties concerned.
SUMPHONEO PUT TO THE TEST
But Jesus doesn’t
leave it there. He is so committed to having agreement (sumphoneo: with the same sound, being in harmony, speaking the same
thing) between the members
of His body that He provides a third procedure should the first and second
fail. If the offending individual fails to hear and receive the rebuke and
admonition from the first and second (and even third, if present) brothers or
sisters, Jesus now commands that the individual be brought before the entire
body — the Ekklesia of which he is a part — and that
a serious, all-out effort be made by the entire body to bring healing and
remission and reconciliation.
Where there is real agape in operation in a body of believers, it
is hard to fathom any conceivable situation in which the offender could not or
would not hear and repent. We are talking about a pretty extreme situation in
which an individual would refuse to respond in these circumstances. Should it
take place, however, Jesus makes clear that this person can no longer be a part
of His Ekklesia — that they are now treated as the
“unsaved” who are unredeemed.
I hope you are
getting the picture here of Jesus’ immense love and heart’s desire to bring
this lost individual back!
They are indeed now
“lost.” They have refused to hear the counsel, the admonishment, the loving
rebuke of their peers in the body, and now must be treated as though they have
never been a part. Sounds pretty drastic, doesn’t it? But this is agape in motion. When an individual who has
been an integral part of a living organism (not an organization!) like this is
suddenly cut off from all spiritual life, the natural instinct is to do
whatever it takes to get that life back — and this is what Jesus is after. His
heart is not to cut folks off so completely that they are totally without
redemption, but agape gives
them that choice without forcing their decision. They have the opportunity yet
to repent and return — and we are commanded to remit their sin and erase it as
if it never happened.
Again Jesus uses the
example of the use of the Keys of the Kingdom when He says, Whatever you bind,
restrict or stop on earth shall be, having been already bound, restricted or
stopped in Heaven.
And whatever you break up, loose, dissolve or
put off on earth shall be, having already been broken up, loosed, dissolved or
put off in Heaven.”
What He is
effectively demonstrating is that once folks have had access to Heaven’s
resources, and those resources are suddenly cut off or stopped, there is an
awakening to their circumstances. If they turn again and see their error and
repent, the Keys of the Kingdom are used to once again unlock Heaven to them.
Notice how Jesus wraps up His discourse:
Matthew 18:19-20: 19 Again I say unto you,
That if two of you shall agree on earth as touching anything that they shall
ask, it shall be done for them of my Father which is in heaven. 20For
where two or three are gathered together in my name, there am I in
the midst of them.
See the picture? Sumphoneo. This is what He’s after: harmony,
agreement, speaking the same thing (and seeing the results manifested before
your eyes), demonstrating the Kingdom of God effectively before the world!
NONSTOP
REMISSION OF SIN
Peter now raises an
issue that an uncountable number of Christians have asked in the millennia
since.
Matthew
18:21-22: 21Then came Peter to him, and said, Lord, how oft shall my brother
sin (hamartano:
err, miss the mark, sin, commit an
offense) against me, and I
forgive (aphiemi: remit, dissolve, cause to cease to exist)
[the sins against]
him? till seven times? 22Jesus saith unto
him, I say not unto thee, Until seven times: but, Until seventy times seven.
490 times? In one
day? There aren’t that many hours in the day! You get the idea. It seems
utterly impossible, but this is what Jesus is getting at: absolutely unstoppable,
bottomless, always-replenishing forgiveness and remission of sin. Notice also
that Peter’s question comes within the same framework of Jesus’ previous
discourse. Jesus has just been talking about the means for bringing remission
and reconciliation between brethren and sisters when a sin or an offense has
been committed towards you.
So Peter with his big
heart says, “Do I forgive the offending brother as much as 70 times for the
same offense?”
Not bad, really. I
doubt any of us have ever had someone commit the same sin or offense towards us
as much as 70 times in our lives — much less in the same day! But Jesus makes
it clear that His ability to forgive and remit is bottomless towards those who
will repent. And there is the key to understanding the well of agape in the Lord Jesus Christ. It is always
replenishing, always ready to remit and erase all evidence of sin.
Get it? Jesus is
always READY to remit. His final parable in this discourse shows that access to
that well of agape requires
repentance on the part of the would-be recipient.
Matthew 18:23-35: (There isn’t sufficient room here to print the entire text, so suffice it to say that we have the picture of a man who is forgiven the equivalent of a billion-dollar debt — an unpayable amount — by the King to whom he owes the debt.) This man, now forgiven, goes out and throws another man into prison who owes him the equivalent of two dollars. The King finds out and reimposes the billion-dollar debt on the first man and has him given over to the “tormentors” — essentially evil spirits.
Jesus
wraps up the parable with this: And his lord was wroth,
and delivered him to the tormentors, till he should pay all that was due unto
him. So likewise shall my heavenly Father do also unto you, if ye from your
hearts forgive not everyone his brother their trespasses.
Can it be any clearer?
There is a place where there is no access to God’s love and mercy. That
place is holding onto unforgiveness.
In
our next Coffee Break we’ll consider the effect and effectiveness that
thanksgiving has in the use and operation of the Keys of the Kingdom. Remember:
the Keys of the Kingdom – as we have described them thus far in this series –
are authority and power, and they are given to us to use in accordance with the
Word – the rhema
– of God.
Be
blessed!
Regner
A. Capener
CAPENER MINISTRIES
RIVER
WORSHIP CENTER
Sunnyside, Washington 98944
Email
Contact: Admin@RiverWorshipCenter.org
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