John MacArthur
Stained-Glass Saints?
If you've ever visited
the great cathedrals in Europe,
you'd think the apostles were larger-than-life stained-glass saints with shining halos who represented an exalted degree of
spirituality. But actually, they were very, very common men.
It's a shame they
have so often been put on pedestals as magnificent marble figures, or portrayed in paintings like some kind of Roman gods.
That dehumanizes them. They were just twelve completely ordinary men-human in every way-and we shouldn't lose touch with who
they really were.
So what qualified
those men to be apostles? The truth is, it wasn't any intrinsic ability or outstanding talent of their own. They were Galileans.
They were not the elite. Galileans were considered low-class, rural, uneducated, people. They were commoners, nobodies. But
those nobodies would become the preeminent leaders of the fledgling church-its very foundation!
Now when it comes
to church leadership, there are some rather clear moral and spiritual qualifications that men must meet. The Bible sets the
standard extremely high (see 1 Timothy 3:2-7; Titus 1:6-9; Hebrews 13:7).
But you know something?
The standard isn't any lower for the rest of the church. Leaders are to be examples for all others who strive to meet the
same standard. There is no such thing as an acceptable "lower" standard for rank-and-file church members. In fact, in Matthew
5:48, Jesus said to all believers, "Be perfect, just as your Father in heaven is perfect."
That's a tall order!
Frankly, no one meets such a standard. Humanly speaking, no one "qualifies" when the standard is utter perfection. What joy
there is in knowing that it is God Himself who must save sinners, sanctify them, and then transform the unqualified into instruments
He can use.
The twelve were
like the rest of us; they were selected from the unworthy and the unqualified. They were, like Elijah, men "with a nature
like ours" (James 5:17). They did not rise to the highest usefulness because they were somehow different from us. Rather,
their transformation into vessels of honor was a divine work and their incredible influence is a result of the divine message
they preached.
Why God Chooses Us
Do you ever become discouraged
and disheartened when your spiritual life and witness suffer because of personal sin or failure? We tend to think we're worthless
nobodies-and left to ourselves, that would be true! But be encouraged-worthless nobodies are just the kind of people God uses.
If you think about it, that's all He has to work with!
But have you ever
stopped to consider why that's true? Listen to this: God chooses the humble, the lowly, the meek, and the weak so that there's
never any question about the source of power when their lives change the world. It's not the man; it's the truth of God and
the power of God in the man. Next time you're reading through the gospels or the book of Acts, take a few minutes to consider
the work of God in the apostles. They were slow to believe, slow to understand, and had horrendous memories! Sound familiar?
Don't worry-that
is perfectly consistent with the way the Lord always works. 1 Corinthians 1:20-21 says, "Where is the wise? Where is the scribe?
Where is the disputer of this age? Has not God made foolish the wisdom of this world? For since, in the wisdom of God, the
world through wisdom did not know God, it pleased God through the foolishness of the message preached to save those who believe."
That is the very reason there were no philosophers, no brilliant writers, no famous debaters, no distinguished teachers, and
no men who had ever distinguished themselves as great orators among the twelve Christ chose. They became great spiritual leaders
and great preachers under the power of the Holy Spirit, but it was not because of any innate oratorical skill, leadership
abilities, or academic qualifications they had. Their influence is owing to one thing and one thing only: the power of the
message they preached.
On a human level,
the gospel was considered a foolish message and the apostles were deemed unsophisticated preachers. Their teaching was beneath
the elite. They were mere fishermen and working-class nobodies. Peons. Rabble. That was the assessment of their contemporaries
and that has been the majority opinion of the genuine church
of Christ throughout history and to this very day! "For you see your
calling, brethren, that not many wise according to the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are called" (v. 26).
But think about
this: "God has chosen the foolish things of the world to put to shame the wise, and God has chosen the weak things of the
world to put to shame the things which are mighty; and the base things of the world and the things which are despised God
has chosen, and the things which are not, to bring to nothing the things that are, that no flesh should glory in His presence"
(vv. 27-29). God's favorite instruments are nobodies, so that no man can boast before God. In other words, God chooses whom
He chooses so He might receive the glory. He chooses weak instruments so no one will attribute the power to the instruments
but rather to the God who wields the instruments. Those who pursue their own glory will sadly find God's strategy unacceptable-and
they'll miss out on true glory and true joy.
With the notable
exception of Judas, the apostles were not like that. They certainly struggled with pride and arrogance like every fallen human
being. But the driving passion of their lives became the glory of Christ. And it was that passion, subjected to the influence
of the Holy Spirit-not any innate skill or human talent-that explains why they left such an indelible impact on the world.
Adapted from
Twelve Ordinary Men, by John MacArthur. © Copyright 2002. All rights reserved.