Getting Into God
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About this ebook
Stuart Briscoe
Stuart Briscoe was born in England and left a career in banking to enter ministry full time. He served as senior pastor of Elmbrook Church in Brookfield, Wisconsin, for thirty years. Stuart has written more than 50 books, preached in more than 100 countries and now travels the majority of the year as a minister-at-large for Elmbrook. Stuart and his wife, Jill, share their powerful Bible teaching through Telling the Truth, their international broadcast ministry (www.tellingthetruth.org).
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Book preview
Getting Into God - Stuart Briscoe
Getting Into God
Copyright © 2013 by D. Stuart Briscoe
All rights reserved. Published 2013
ISBN 13 (paperback):978-1-61958-152-4
ISBN (e-book): 978-1-61958-153-1
Published by CLC Publications
U.S.A.
P.O. Box 1449, Fort Washington, PA 19034
UNITED KINGDOM
CLC International (UK) 51 The Dean. Alresford, Hampshire, SO24 9BJ
This edition October 2013
Unless otherwise noted, Scripture quotations are from The Holy Bible, English Standard Version® (ESV®) Copyright © 2001 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. All rights reserved.
Table of Contents
Introduction
PART I. GETTING INTO BIBLE STUDY
Chapter 1. The Tools of Bible Study
Chapter 2. How to Study a Book of the Bible
PART II. GOING DEEPER INTO PRAYER
Chapter 3. What Is Prayer?
Chapter 4. What Should I Pray?
Chapter 5. When Should I Pray?
Chapter 6. How I Learned to Pray More Effectively
Chapter 7. How to Grow in Prayer
PART III. REACHING OUT IN WITNESS
Chapter 8. What Is Witnessing?
Chapter 9. What Must I Do to Be a Witness?
Chapter 10. The Need to Bring Matters to a Conclusion
Chapter 11. The Need to Be Willing to Continue
PART IV. DISCOVERING GOD: A PERSONAL BIBLE STUDY
Discovering God
Endnotes
Introduction
Years ago I joined the Marines. Not out of choice, but compulsion. Arriving at the barrack gates, I found myself both elated and uneasy. The prospects of being a real live Marine were exciting to a young red-blooded kid who knew no better. And yet the strangeness of it all made me wonder. What would I have to do? Would I be able to do it? All the usual queries that accompany a new situation filled my mind.
The first few days served only to confirm my worst suspicions. I really had little idea of what was going on. Getting kilted out
was one experience I will never forget. We were marched into a long shed which had a counter stretching the length of one wall. Behind the counter stood men who turned out to be geniuses. With scarcely a glance at us as we moved past, they estimated our size, tastes and abnormalities and, quicker than it takes to tell, they hurled piles of strange uniforms and equipment in our direction. We caught them as best we could and emerged from the shed weary and heavy laden.
Dispirited too. As we looked at our newly acquired possessions, it became clear to us that we had no idea what they were for, where they went, or what we were supposed to do with them. I didn’t know whether to put them on my back, drape them round my neck, suspend them from my stomach, eat them, polish them, or salute them!
Christians sometimes get hit the same way. Having become excited about their new experience, they find themselves deluged with supplies and situations that are strange and vaguely disquieting. Big, black Bibles, shiny and obviously new. Hymnbooks full of strange tunes and strange expressions describing rocks of ages,
fountains of blood
and showers of blessing.
Prayer lists of the Lord’s servants
somewhere on the mission field
who covet our prayers.
Terminology was a problem in those early Marine days, too. We were told to develop esprit de corps.
Now, I had learned
French for six years (which was about six years more than most of my new friends), and I had little idea what they were talking about. You can see how enlightened the rest of the group was! Phrases were repeated with great solemnity, but one had the distinct impression there was not too much communication involved. For instance, one instructor insisted that we learn the phrase to facilitate fragmentation,
which was the answer he required to the question, Why does a hand grenade have grooves?
The terms to which a Christian must come are no less confusing. In Christian circles where there are no men and women, just brothers
and sisters,
people don’t get sick, they are afflicted.
They don’t die, they are called home.
To uninitiated ears, the will of God
and the Word of God
sound almost the same, apostles and epistles tend to get mixed up and the difference between First and Second Chronicles and First and Second Corinthians can easily be missed.
However, in all fairness, I must say that determined efforts were made to see that we young Marines began to understand the terms and find out where all the equipment fitted. In due time we began to function properly, and for this I was grateful.
The design of this book is to do something similar for Christians, both new and not so new, who feel a need for instruction in some basic practicalities of Christian experience. Its aim is to help us get into God.
Before we go further, a word about being a Christian seems necessary. As the name implies, a Christian is related in some way to Christ. He or she belongs to Christ, is identified with Christ in much the same way that an Asian is related to Asia or a musician is identified by his music. Christ being who He is, there is no difficulty seeing that mere humans are highly privileged to have a relationship with Him—the eternal Son of God. They also accept the fact that the relationship must be on His terms and not theirs.
Herein lies a problem for some people. They feel they can be Christian without relating to Christ on His terms. So they profess Christianity but know little of what Christ taught, less of what He promised and even less of what He requires. Professions of this order are highly suspect and should be carefully scrutinized by all concerned.
Christ taught that the Father had sent Him into the world to bring people to an experience of God which they once enjoyed and subsequently lost. To do this, it was necessary for Him to die on the cross for sin, be buried to show the reality of His death and to rise again from the dead as a demonstration of God’s acceptance of His sacrifice and an illustration of the extent of His victory over sin, death and hell.
It was on the basis of this teaching that Christ was free to make His demands. First, He demanded repentance. He left no illusions in people’s minds as to what He felt about sin and how He expected people to call sin sin and turn from it. Then, He insisted on faith—faith and dependence that stopped trusting anything or anyone but Himself for blessing and meaning. Third, He talked forcefully of repentance and faith becoming visible in terms of commitment to Him and what He was doing—the kind of commitment that would gladly acknowledge and accept His authority. A commitment like that of the centurion’s soldiers, who would go where he said to go and do what he told them to do and come when they were told to come (see Luke 7:8). All this coming
and going
—not to mention the doing
—is demanding, for it can mean going where you don’t want to go and doing what you have no desire to do and coming to Him when there are other things you prefer to do at that time.
But there is a resource to help in these difficult situations: the Holy Spirit. It is He—the third member of the Trinity—who lives within the repentant, dependent, committed Christian. He is there to stimulate, clarify, strengthen, encourage and, where necessary, prick. His function is to keep the Christian moving along in experiences ever-leading into deeper discoveries of what God wants to do. But besides this remarkable spiritual resource, God has given us many helps, pieces of equipment, practical aids, means of grace.
Call them what you will, so long as you use them. The Bible, prayer, fellowship, the church in all her functions—all are intended to aid the Christian in being what he became a Christian to be.
Now, I have no doubt that each of us is aware of these helps to spiritual living and growth. It would be difficult for us not to be aware, if only because of the Madison Avenue kind of approach that uses slogans to alert us to some of these things.
No Bible, no breakfast
was a favorite of Bible study pundits. But while the sentiment is admirable, there is no escaping the fact that most people find toast and tea more to their taste early in the morning than Timothy and Titus. This preference may be interpreted as lack of spirituality in some quarters, but this is hardly fair. It is more likely evidence of the fact that the person concerned has not been taught the necessity of daily Bible study and the advantages of doing it regularly early in the day.
Or how about Seven prayerless days make one weak.
The truth of