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I have a friend who is a Jehovah's Witness. We have
spent time discussing whether there is a class distinction
in the Kingdom of God. As a Witness, he believes
that there is a special group of 144,000 people
who will make it to heaven. The rest of those who
believe, have a hope to live in paradise on earth.
This larger multitude will not see God, nor come
to know Him personally, but will be ruled by the
"Anointed Class" during Christ's millennial reign
over the earth.
I do not see such class separation
in the scriptures. The very thought of this doctrine
runs contrary to the core tenets of my faith: That
all men are fallen and in need of the same salvation,
that man was created for the purpose of fellowship
with God, that by faith we may all receive the same
Spirit and become members of the family of God,
and that the problem of class and ethnic divisions
are solved through the cross of Christ.
Strangely, I do not have to go to
the Kingdom Hall to find class distinctions. The
very Church I love (all true believers in Christ)
has this problem. It is not to the same degree,
nor is it based upon a faulty interpretation of
scripture, but it exists nonetheless. You see, we
too have crowned an anointed class, and honor them
undeservedly.
Our anointed class is just that
- anointed. They have been empowered by God to perform
certain tasks for the growth of His Kingdom. Some
heal. Some teach. Some preach the simple Gospel,
and lead people to Christ. Some administrate large
organizations, and church bodies. Some prophesy.
Some plant churches. Some sing. Some write books.
I do believe that we should honor
those who labor among us. But, often the degree
of our honor is undeserved. None of "the anointed"
is special because they are skilled, or talented.
It is God, Who gave them the skills, Who is special.
He deserves the greatest degree of the honor. Do
you think for a moment that God is impressed with
the power in the life of a believer? Of course not!
He gave that power as a gift, and the empowered
individual did nothing but believe, and receive
that gift.
What then, is the value in the life
of the believer which is impressive to the Lord?Holiness
is the value God seeks the most.
We revere numbers, accomplishments,
personal charisma, intelligence, beautiful buildings,
learned skills, performances, and sound leadership
decisions. These often take precedence over personal
relationships, and a careful examination of the
soul. The larger our programs, the greater these
tendencies. (Someone has to keep those wheels turning!)
God honors the submitted souls who
walk the way of the cross, and surrender their personal
ambition in order to die to self, and live unselfishly.
He adores the restoration of broken relationships,
the difficult choices to do right, even when it
is inconvenient, and the sacrifice of personal comforts
for the sake of another.
In the small gathering, we are faced
with each others' flaws. We know each other intimately,
and we quickly come to the conclusion that there
is really no anointed class after all. There is
only one group of "bozos," all chosen to be participants
in the work of God's kingdom. Some are honest. Some
are not. Some are giving. Some take, take, take.
Some are doing their best to walk the way of the
cross, and some are walking the fence. Some are
not really the Lord's at all, and we may not even
know it.
The longer I walk with God, the
less impressed I am with the accomplishments of
the "anointed class," and the more impressed I am
with those who live a surrendered life. I would
gladly give up every ounce of anointing I have been
given, to simply be more like Jesus in holiness.
Those with the character of holiness
have developed it in loneliness, trial, struggle,
and pain. Those who simply do great things apart
from this trait of holiness, have done so to the
applause of the adoring crowds. They honor anointing
over character, doing over being, accomplishments
over relationships, and power over love. Like King
Saul, they are anointed to rule, but rejected of
God.
There are only two places we can
"work out our salvation with fear and trembling:"
1) Alone before God Almighty, and 2) In the intimacy
of the fellowship of small groups.
Here enters the power of a small
church, a home cell group, or other close relationships
of accountability. In these settings, we can work
on the values which God most desires: Holiness,
faithfulness, surrender, and selflessness . Here
in these settings, we can begin to realize that
there truly is no "anointed class," but that we
are all a "peculiar people" with the same need:
To be restored to the glory which was intended for
man. That glory is the image and likeness of a holy
God.
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