Christians are simply beggars… if we do things right.

Thoughts which carry me to Jesus, and to the Cross:

“In other words, in Christ God was reconciling the world to himself, not counting people’s trespasses against them, and he has given us the message of reconciliation. Therefore we are ambassadors for Christ, as though God were making His plea through us. We plead with you on Christ’s behalf, “Be reconciled to God!”” (2 Corinthians 5:19–20, NET)

They are expressions of the one great heresy, which is as old as fallen mankind: Man refuses to accept the external word and the external means of grace and develops his own religion, which places man where God alone has the right to stand: “Ye shall be as gods!”

I have met Christians who were so intent upon winning souls to Christ that they would not talk to you about anything but God and His goodness!
Such a man was the Canadian, Robert Jaffray, one of our early pioneer missionaries. His family owned the Toronto Globe and Mail and as a young Christian he was disinherited because he chose to follow God’s call to China rather than join the family business.
That good godly man spent his lifetime in China and the south Pacific, searching for the lost—and winning them! He was always reading maps and daring to go to the most difficult places, in spite of physical weaknesses and diabetic handicap. He sought out and lived among the poor and miserable, always praying to God, “Let my people go!”

On my bookshelves I have numerous books about church growth, about having a missional spirit. Others talk about forensic apologetics and evangelism. Many of these approach the topic with a clinical approach, looking at statistics, looking for patterns that can be replicated, looking for logical presentations of the gospel that give overwhelming proof – which we hope will covert the heathen.

We know, for we ourselves our guilty, of the great sin of self-idolatry, of narcissism. Even in thinking “we” can prove the gospel, we are take up a burden that is rightfully the Holy Spirit. Far too often in the church, we create our own religion, putting ourselves in charge of saving the world.

Yet there are those, who in humility simply follow the Spirit, as they are compelled to not shut up about Jesus. Jaffray was one, Eric Liddell comes to mind, as does Barton Stone, and Wyneken and Luther. Each spent their lives, or a great deal of their lives not arguing, but pleading that people would be reconciled to God – a work already accomplished by Jesus.

I think that word pleading is important – it has the emphasis of desire built into the request. It doesn’t come from a place of power, or even authority, but of someone is so worried about the person they beg them to let God in, to receive the love and mercy. It comes from seeing people living without hope, without peace, assaulted by the world, and by their own guilt and shame.

And we have the antidote to that which poisons their life.

How can we get them to receive it? How can we get them to trust in a God they do not yet know of, that they have yet to experience, that they haven’t allowed to bring them to life, remove the guilt and shame of sin, and restore them?

This is the passion Paul had, this is why some cannot shut up about the love of God.

We can beg them, the Spirit opens their hearts, Christ has reconciled them to the Father.

This is our call… we simple beggers on a this journey called life…

Sasse, H. (2001). This Is My Body: Luther’s Contention for the Real Presence in the Sacrament of the Altar (p. 191). Wipf and Stock Publishers.

Tozer, A. W., & Smith, G. B. (2008). Mornings with Tozer: Daily Devotional Readings. Moody Publishers.

About A Broken Christian

I am a pastor of a Concordia Lutheran Church in Cerritos, California, where we rejoice in God's saving us from our sin, and the unrighteousness of the world. It is all about His work, the gift of salvation given to all who trust in Jesus Christ, and what He has done that is revealed in Scripture. God deserves all the glory, honor and praise, for He has rescued and redeemed His people.

Posted on July 22, 2025, in Ancient Future, Augsburg and Trent, Martin Luther, Theology in Practice, Tozer, Worship and tagged , , , , , . Bookmark the permalink. 2 Comments.

  1. As a right winger I honestly don’t think I’d even be welcome in church, it all seems liberal now. I try and pray every day for missionaries to other countries like Africa and South America with my Paul Washer Heart Cry calendar but the second I say I don’t want White people being ethnically cleansed in America or Europe I’m called a bad person, a racist, and I don’t understand why. But it’s why a lot of younger guys don’t feel welcome any longer if they are right wing and pro-White in any sense of the term, it’s like older people got tricked into thinking it was bad to even acknowledge your race after the civil rights stuff (all communist subversion, none of the MLK stuff was genuine or real). So I’m stuck alone, following my convictions, praying for all to be saved, and reading the Bible to myself as I feel everyone hates me, and I worry God is upset with me also, but I feel it’s wrong for ethnic cleansing and genocide to happen just because a group is European or White. America was our home, and it’s looking like a Jewish mafia has captured it and is wiping us out now and we don’t know how to warn everyone, and when we do we are treated like dirt, even if genuinely worried, not bred out of blind hatred.

  2. A Broken Christian

    Jim,
    You don’t know my church – you would be welcome here. We span the spectrum politically — because that doesn’t matter when we know Jesus.

    As to worrying about God being mad about you, if you feel that conviction, there might be something there to examine, to pray about. Just remember, that if we confess our sins God is faithful and will forgive those sins and cleanse us from all injustice. (1 John 1:9) If I am to warn every man and teach everyman (Col. 1:28) it is about God’s mercy, and the problems that will exist if we refuse that mercy. The rest of life, God has promised to work for good.

    That’s what the church is here for – to help sinners heal–to unite all in Christ.

    So, if you ever find yourself in Southern California – stop by…come hear of God’s love, and learn to live in epace, as GOd heal you, and those around you.

    You are in my prayer..

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