The Lord’s Day Evening
November 14, 2010
Acts 20:17-24
“To Spend and Be Spent
for Christ”
The Reverend Mr. Nathan D. Shurden
If you have your Bibles, turn with me to Acts chapter 20, Acts chapter 20.
And as you are doing so, I want to express my thankfulness to Josh and to
Gina for the opportunity to be here for this incredible occasion, a true
expression of God’s goodness to have brought you through this last season and to
see the way He has worked in your life, and to now, look to the future of what
He has called and commissioned you to do and to have that be, tonight, signed
and sealed in many ways. And we’re
looking at a passage tonight that I believe sets the tone for the beginning of a
ministry as we look towards the end of one of God’s greatest missionaries, if
not the greatest – the apostle Paul.
As he nears the end of his ministry, he gives us a beautiful portrait tonight of
what a faithful, leading servant of God is supposed to be about.
And so before we read God’s Word and we give our attention to it, let’s
pray and ask for His help and blessing.
Our Father in heaven, what a joy
it is to know that You abide with us at all times.
Lord, You are always as close to us as the Spirit that abides within our
hearts. And Lord, this means that on
an occasion such as this, and in a worship service such as this, that we can
rest in the truth of this fact, that the Lord Jesus Christ, right now, rules and
reigns, and that He has, by His grace, chosen men for the purpose of going into
the vineyard and laboring, going into the field and harvesting, and that Father,
tonight, we celebrate one of Your great providences in setting aside yet another
worker for the extension and the glory of Christ’s name.
Father, we pray that You would be pleased tonight as we look into Your
Word, as we submit ourselves to Your instruction.
And we ask Father, that You would guide us in the way of all truth.
We pray it in Jesus’ precious name.
Amen.
We’ll be looking tonight at Acts 20, verses 17 to 24.
This is God’s Word:
“Now from
‘You yourselves know
how I lived among you the whole time from the first day that I set foot in Asia,
serving the Lord with all humility and with tears and with trials that happened
to me through the plots of the Jews; how I did not shrink from declaring to you
anything that was profitable, and teaching you in public and from house to
house, testifying both to Jews and to Greeks of repentance toward God and of
faith in our Lord Jesus Christ. And
now, behold, I am going to
Amen, and thus far the reading of God’s holy Word.
As the apostle Paul writes this section, as we have this testimony of the
apostle Paul and his relationship to the church at
And that’s why we’re gathered here tonight – to be reminded of what it is to be
a minister in the vineyard of God and to serve Him faithfully.
What are the characteristics?
What is the quality of the work?
What are the challenges and the obstacles that one is going to face?
And indeed, how is one going to overcome them?
He gives us, I believe, six characteristics of faithful Gospel ministry.
And we have about two minutes for each of them, so stay tuned!
The first is this – humility. Notice
what he says in verse 19 – that he has “served the Lord with all humility.”
As the apostle Paul goes to the church at
One of the most difficult things, Josh, one of the most difficult things,
congregation, for a minister to keep in mind, is the fact that he abides under a
sovereign and holy God and that he has no power within himself as a vessel to do
the work that he’s called to do.
It’s so hard to be reminded of that, and to work from a place of lowliness and a
place of weakness and a place of radical dependence upon the grace of God for
every step that you take, for every word that you say, for every person that you
minister to. Paul ministered in
humility.
I remember a quote from a friend of mine who recounted a sermon that he heard.
These were his four laws of the spiritual life.
You’ve heard of the four laws of the Campus Crusade for Christ?
Well, he has his own four laws.
The first was this – that there is a God.
The second is – you are not Him.
The third is – your tendency is to forget law one and two.
That’s your tendency. And his
fourth law was – get it right. Get
it right. We tend to substitute law
two and law one. We begin to make
ourselves the center of the universe.
We begin to found our ministries upon pride.
And as soon as we begin doing that we make ourselves inefficient for the
work of the Spirit. Faithfulness
begins with humility.
But secondly, it begins with love and sincerity.
In many ways, this point comes from the whole tenor of these verses,
verses 19 all the way down to verse 24.
But you catch an intimacy in this passage that the apostle Paul loved the
church at
The beauty of this is that the love and sincerity of the apostle Paul cuts
against the showmanship that often comes with pastoral ministry that’s lost its
way, a pastoral ministry that has become a religious performance and has ceased
becoming true love and sincerity.
When a pastor forgets that he is preaching to those who will never die, that
everyone in this room is made in the image of God, that everyone here is lost in
sin and is in desperate need of God’s grace and without His grace there is no
hope for nobody here. That sense, in
the heart of the pastor, is absolutely essential to Gospel ministry - the love
and sincerity.
Thirdly we see that he’s courageous; he’s courageous.
We see in verse 19 that he goes and he ministers in
When you see these first three characteristics come together of humility and
love and sincerity and courageousness, you realize you need all three of these
in Gospel ministry. If you have
humility without courage, your tendency is simply to compromise.
If you have courage without humility, you tend to be self-insistent and
selfish in your designs. You just
want things to work out the way you’ve always planned them.
But when you combine love and sincerity, humility and courage together,
what you get is this soft strength, this sort of gentle power that comes from
being emptied of all sufficiency of self filled with the completeness of the
Spirit, and a boldness that says, even as we learned this morning from the
passage, “I’m willing to go wherever God would send me.
Even should my life be taken from me, I do it with joy.”
That’s the call of these first three characteristics.
Now where do you get humility, love and sincerity, and courage?
You get them from being a Word-centered man.
You get them from being a Word-centered man.
Notice what the apostle Paul tells us in verse 20, that he did “not
shrink from declaring to you anything that was profitable, and teaching you in
public and from house to house, testifying both to Jews and to Greeks of
repentance toward God and of faith in the Lord Jesus Christ.”
As the apostle Paul went to the church at
But notice, fifthly, that he’s a Spirit-led man.
He’s a Spirit-led man. It
says in verse 22, “Now behold, I am going to
And notice sixthly and finally, that Paul is a single devoted man.
He is only about one thing.
Look at verse 24 – “But I do not account my life of any value nor as precious to
myself, if only I may finish my course and the ministry that I received from the
Lord Jesus Christ to testify to the Gospel of the grace of God.”
There’s only one thing that you’re called to do, Josh.
There’s only one thing. There
is a one, single-minded focus to faithful ministry, that finishing the course
that the ministry of Christ has given you to testify of the Gospel of the grace
of God. There will be many who
whisper in your ear about many other avenues and areas and influences that you
can have, but there’s one calling the apostle Paul says here.
There’s many things to distract you, but there’s one calling that’s said
here. It’s a single-minded devotion
that the name of the Lord Jesus Christ would be praised in everything that I do
in word and in life – a single-minded devotion.
Now I hope, as you’re overhearing a discussion, you’re saying, “I want that to
be the nature of my life. For if a leading servant has been given this call, are
not all servants of God given this call – humility of Spirit, love and sincerity
for the brethren, a courageousness to reach across the fence to say hello to a
neighbor that we’ve never spoken to that we know doesn’t know the Lord and to
look for the open doors through which the Gospel of Christ can be proclaimed, to
be a people of the Book, that we would believe the Bible, that we would be
sensitive to the way the Spirit is moving our hearts even if it’s imprisonment
and affliction that’s ahead?” The
only way that you will ever become the person that God has put here, for Josh as
a minister, for any of us as servants of the Lord, is that this single-minded
devotion of verse 24 will truly be true of us, that we would quite being
distracted by the things of this world and that we would be willing to lay
everything on the bottom line of the Gospel itself.
And we understand that there is nothing of any greater value and so
there’s nothing that attracts us away from Him.
What a tremendous call. What
a tremendous call.
And Lord, by Lord’s grace, Josh, may God give you, may God give all of us, the
privilege and the blessing to see Him work mightily in ways that are far
exceeding your abilities, that we would be able to see a gifted man like you and
say, “Oh, those aren’t gifts. That’s
the Spirit of God at work.” May He
be pleased to do that.
Father, You are the only One that
we can come to for a request this great and a request this grand, that You would
give to us the humility of Spirit, that You would give to us a love and
sincerity of the brethren and all people, that You would give to us, Father, a
courageousness to be able to walk the trail that You have given us to walk,
regardless of what may come our way, that You would make of us a people that
hardly know to speak without the words of God rolling off our tongue, that You
would make us a people who are sensitive to the inclinations and the guiding of
Your Spirit, and who would, from this day forth, be single-minded in their
devotion to the Gospel of the Lord Jesus Christ.
Father, this is our request.
It is Your heart. Grant it we pray,
by grace, in Jesus’ name. Amen.
© First Presbyterian Church,
This transcribed message has been lightly edited and formatted for the web page. No attempt has been made, however, to alter the basic extemporaneous delivery style, or to produce a grammatically accurate, publication-ready manuscript conforming to an established style template.
Should there be questions regarding grammar or theological content, the reader should presume any website error to be with the webmaster/transcriber/editor rather than with the original speaker. For full copyright, reproduction and permissions information, please visit the FPC Copyright, Reproduction & Permission statement