Believer
is a popular word these days. Any
time I
meet someone who is a believer in anything, I am happy, because
that is a good
starting point. However,
believer is not
the word that describes the Christian life.
Believer is not our word. What
is
that word? I will tell you
in a moment,
but first a look at why believer not enough.
In
Acts
8, Phillip, one of the most trusted teachers in the early church,
went to the
city of Samaria and preached the word of God.
Many of the people responded, including a well-known
sorcerer named
Simon. He became a
believer and was
baptized in the name of Christ (verse 13).
Later,
when he saw Peter and others healing people, he offered them money
in an
attempt to purchase that ability.
What
follows is one of the most harsh and stinging replies in the
entire New
Testament. Peter said,
“May your money
perish with you, because you thought that you could buy the gift
of God… you
have no share or part in this ministry… for I see that you are
full of
bitterness and captive to sin” (verses 20-23).
Did
you
catch the problem? Simon
was a
believer, but his belief had not changed him.
He was still the same person that he was before. Belief is not enough.
The
word
that should describe us is “disciple” (Matthew 28:18-20). A disciple is a follower, a
learner or one who
is fully engaged. There is a huge difference between a believer
and a follower.
For example, it is
one thing to
believe that the International Space Station exists, but it would
be a
completely different thing to follow an astronaut and live up
there. Believing changes
nothing. Following would
change everything including
how you ate, slept, moved, communicated with your family and saw
the world. Nothing would
be left untouched.
In short, a believer
is an
observer, but a disciple is a participant.
God
is
not asking us just to believe something, he wants us to help us
become something. He is
not after new thoughts, but rather new
lives. “If anyone is in
Christ, he is a
new creation; the old is gone, the new has come!” (2 Corinthians
5:17)
The
adventure really begins when we obey this invitation: “Come follow
me!”
(Matthew 4:19).
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