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Open Doors. God uses this metaphor in a few biblical texts to indicate where gospel progress is being made. For example, the Apostle’s letter to the church at Corinth includes these words: “I will stay (here), for a wide door for effective work has opened to me.” Seemingly antithetical, the verse finishes with the quip: “…and there are many adversaries” (1 Corinthians 16:9).
Adversaries might seem to indicate a door is closed. No so for the gospel-ly astute! I write to encourage you not to be dissuaded by difficulty. Open doors can be the hardest to walk through.
A friend of mine has a medium-sized lap dog. His dog safely roams between the indoor and outdoor parameters of the homestead. Once the dog gets too close to the edge of the property, an invisible fence will shock the dog’s visible collar. The dog sees what looks like an open door to the broader world and gets ‘shocked’ back into his more comfortable parameters. The dog’s predicament reminds me of the adversaries that surprisingly shock those who seek to advance the gospel.
Differently than the lap dog in the story mentioned above, we are called to take the shock in order to progress the gospel. We are to sacrifice the comfort of amenities, money, an easier life, personality preferences, and overall lifestyle desires for the advancement of the gospel.
Unreached peoples deserve to hear and we are the mouthpieces. Too often, we equate open doors with ease. The biblical witness is consistent on this one thing: open doors come with adversaries that shock evangelistic enthusiasm from you, that is, if you aren’t equipped. Here’s two equipping means God has granted you to make entry into new territory for the gospel.
First, Examples
. 1 Corinthians 16 gives us the examples of an older Apollos and a younger Timothy, the Macedonian givers, the Ephesian receivers, the Jerusalem needers, and the Corinthian opportunities. The Corinthian local church was reminded of examples in the faith. They were encouraged to labor together for the gospel and to help those missionaries taking the faith through open doors—open doors that were sure to shock!
Second, Truth . The enemy of the gospel wants to divide up truth from love. The enemy wants to create a false dichotomy between truth and love. He asserts, through many adversarial mouthpieces, if God is love then he must allow for my truth to be relative to my situation. Truth is common trans culturally. God gave us inscripturated words so that ethically, missionally, and ecclesiologically, the church may live out the same truth in many locations. All churches everywhere are to behave sexually moral, send missionaries, gather on the Lord’s Day, rightly preach the Word and administer the ordinances and exercise discipling privileges amongst covenanted members.
Truth is the body of God’s gospel project while love is the engine. When God joins something together, like love and truth, we ought not separate it.
With godly examples past and present, as well as truth imbued love, you have equipping for gospel advancement. You have the makings of spiritual wind at your proverbial sail. You can discern open doors and withstand the shock of adversarial entry. This is a war, Ephesians 6 describes, a spiritual war.
William Carey had a two decade stockpile of missions translation work done. Then, the collection was adversarially burned up in the night. He rebuilt it. Adversaries came along with Carey’s open door.
Adoniram Judson labored 7 years in Myanmar before he baptized his first convert. Judson was imprisoned and grieved during his mission there. Progress was slow but sure. Judson knew adversaries were part in parcel for open doors to the gospel.
Don’t be dissuaded by difficulty. The way of the cross was most difficult. Christ’s perspiration produced sweat drops of blood. Christ’s prayers were exhausted, exasperated pleas for relief—a relief that would only be offered in death. Filling up Christ’s afflictions doesn’t sound much like ease or comfort. It shouldn’t. Ours is an age of Christianized fog machines and light shows. We have conditioned air and no out of place hair. Perhaps the way of the cross evades us. The Reformer, Martin Luther, exhorted believers to the way of the cross over the way of personal glorification. If the presence of pain validates the absence of Christ in your own life, then you need to recalibrate. You’ve temporarily misunderstood Christ’s path to eternal life. In suffering servanthood, as we pursue open doors, Christ promises to be with us always, even unto the end of the age. He abides with you. He will never leave you nor forsake you. Christ was forsaken so you wouldn’t have to be. Open doors can be hard to walk through but you’re surrounded by a big batch of saints that have gone before you. Stick with the truth and follow faithful examples. It’s not too late.
What open door for the gospel is Christ calling you to walk through?
What hard entry must you proceed through for Christ’s sake?
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