One Can Make a Difference
Notes
Transcript
Intro
Intro
This is the true story of George Phillips of Meridian, Mississippi, who was going to bed when his wife told him that he’d left the light on in the shed.
George opened the door to go turn off the light but saw there were people in the shed in the process of stealing things.
He immediately phoned the police, who asked, "Is someone in your house?" and George said, "No," and explained the situation. Then they explained that all patrols were busy, and that he should simply lock his door and an officer would be there when available.
George said, "Okay," hung up, counted to 30, and phoned the police again.
"Hello, I just called you a few seconds ago because there were people in my shed. Well, you don't have to worry about them now because I've just shot them all."
Then he hung up. Within five minutes three squad cars, an Armed Response unit, and an ambulance showed up. Of course, the police caught the burglars red-handed.
One of the policemen said to George, "I thought you said that you'd shot them!" George said, "I thought you said there was nobody available!"
I. The Model of the Savior
I. The Model of the Savior
His meat is to do the will of his father
He was weary and tired, yet the spiritual was more important than the material
The disciples thought someone else had brought him food
Again we see that living for God, obeying God is more fulfilling than the temporary things of this world
It is an amazing thing when you get to see one get saved
Summer Bible Time
Jr. Camps
We ought not mind our money, employment, health more than the things of God. Sooner or later all of these will fade away.
All that you do for God will never fade away.
He points out to his disciples that there are many more like this woman who are ready to be saved.
The fields are white unto harvest
He warns of procrastination
The harvest may come where we least expect it
The Jews normally go another way to Galilee, the disciples were no different
The disciples were not expecting a harvest in Samaria, the fields were ripe and ready
We never know how God has been working the hearts of those whose paths we cross.
Maybe a hard time in their life, loved one just passed away, a divorce, etc
You don't know what kind of seeds have been planted
The disciples judged the Samaritans were good enough to trade with, but never dreamed of telling them the messiah was outside of their town.
The woman was a better apostle than they
Christ never asks his followers to do something he himself would not do.
II. The Mimicking of the Samaritan
II. The Mimicking of the Samaritan
I doubt she was ever told she needed to go and tell others
It was instinctive
Her testimony was enough to excite curiosity
They came to hear and judge for themselves
Personal faith
I can only imagine how the man she was living with reacted when she returned without her water pot
All living faith begets faith
She doesn’t say come see a man who told me strange things concerning religious worship
She says see a man who has told all that I’ve done. All my sins!
No more shame. All has been forgiven
Illustration of one person can make a difference
There was a humble German carpenter who loved the Lord and lived in Romania around the time of the second world war. He loved to pray, and he loved to share his faith, but the cry of his heart and his one prayer was to lead just one Jewish person to faith in the Messiah.
He was old, sick and poor, and there were no Jewish people in his area, but he prayed earnestly that God might bring just one Jewish person with whom he could share the good news of Yeshua.
Just one... and you’ll never guess what God did...
Christian Wölfkes knew that God was more than able to answer his prayers, and sure enough, in time, God brought a Jewish person to him. The man he brought was a left-wing intellectual, fluent in nine languages, a stock broker by trade, and an atheist. His name was Richard Wurmbrand. Richard had previously read much of the Bible and found it uncompelling, but his indifference and intellectual objections were no match for the store of prayers and tears that Mr Wölfkes had invested over the years. God was mightily at work, and His supernatural power would cause the Bible that this carpenter gave to Richard to come alive in his hands.
For a long time, Wölfkes was silent and let God work, only praying for his new friend. Eventually, he asked what Richard thought of the Bible. Admitting that he had wept over the pages in conviction, he said, “I can see wonderful things, but I know that they are not for me, because I am a Jew”. At this point, Wölfkes was able to gently show his Jewish friend the fulfilment of the messianic prophecies in the Bible, and the love that God has for the Jewish people, for the sake of their forefathers. Wurmbrand says that Wölfkes was God’s instrument to tear the veil from his eyes, and that in time, God opened his heart, so that he was able to believe the gospel.[1]
Wurmbrand leads others in a supernatural walk of faith
Richard Wurmbrand and his wife, Sabina, went on to lead many other Jewish people to faith in Yeshua, and in time, he became a pastor of a Messianic congregation. But his influence did not stop with the hundreds of believers in his care; as I will explain in a minute, Wurmbrand went on to become one of the most influential believers of his time, and was even voted to be in the top five of most influential Romanians in history [2]. He led those following him to daringly share the gospel in the most dangerous of circumstances; they would throw Bibles into passing trains of invading Russian troops, and sneak into forbidden areas, in order that they might share God’s love with their enemies. Even though the vast majority of the Jewish population that they knew were wiped out in the Holocaust, including Sabina’s entire family, they did not refuse a Nazi soldier refuge when he was being hunted later by the Communists. They modeled not only passion for the gospel but also love for their enemies in a way that is totally supernatural.
Imprisoned and tortured for his faith
While a lot of Jewish believers managed to escape from Romania to Israel, both Richard and his wife were arrested and imprisoned for many years for their faith by the Communists. During his imprisonment, Richard not only experienced horrific torture, but he was kept in solitary confinement for several years. Yet even in prison, they continued to share the gospel – at one point tapping in morse code to the man in the cell next to him, and leading him to faith in Yeshua. Even more remarkable than that, Richard and his fellow prisoners would share the God’s love and forgiveness with their guards and torturers, some of whom were so overwhelmed by the power of that love that they couldn’t resist embracing Yeshua too.
Wurmbrand’s legacy – Voice of the Martyrs
When they were miraculously released, the Wurmbrands started an organization, now called Voice of the Martyrs, which exists to share the gospel where it is banned, and support persecuted believers across the world, helping them to love their enemies. They have flown Scriptures into China and North Korea by balloon, proclaimed the gospel over the border from South Korea by loud speaker, floated tracts into Cuba, smuggled Bibles into many Communist and Muslim countries and supported those suffering for their faith.
It is impossible to calculate the number of lives that have been eternally affected through the life of this one Jewish man, transformed by the gospel.
The story behind the story of the German carpenter
After his release, Wurmbrand was weak and broken, but had been asked to share a few words about his life with villagers who had gathered to hear his story in Romania. As he shared about how a dear carpenter had led him to this journey of faith, he noticed a man weeping in the crowd. Richard recalls, “After the meeting was over, I started to talk to him. He told me that his name was Pitter, that he was a wheelwright, and that it was he who had brought Wölfkes to faith. Up to then, he had believed that all he had accomplished in his life was to convert a carpenter.”
Just one.
You might only touch one person, but you never know who that person could be. Pitter only ever led one person to faith. Wölfkes prayed for just one Jewish person to come to know the Messiah. Through their contributions of just one, many millions of others will be in eternity with us. Please recognise the power of your prayers and efforts to share the gospel, even if they seem small and insignificant to you.
As Mother Theresa said, “I alone cannot change the world, but I can cast a stone across the waters to create many ripples”. You might drop only one stone of prayer, or share the gospel with just one person, but who knows how far the ripples will reach out.