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The Gift of Woundedness
. . . wounding
is inevitable if we are following Christ . . .
.
If we are going to walk the path of Christ, there will be times when we experience wounding and injustice. When God allows us to be wounded, He exposes those human boundaries and reveals what we lack of His nature. The path narrows as we seek true transformation. To be struck or rejected in the administration of our service can become a great offense to us, especially as we are waiting for, and even expecting, a reward for our good efforts. Yet wounding is inevitable if we are following Christ.
By Francis Frangipane
The world and all it contains was created for one purpose: to showcase the
grandeur of God's Son.
In Jesus, the nature of
God is magnificently and perfectly revealed; He is the "express image" of God (Hebrews 1:3 KJV).
Yet to gaze upon Christ
is also to see God's pattern for man.
As we seek to be like
Him, we discover that our need was created for His sufficiency.
We also see that, once
the redemptive nature of Christ begins to triumph in our lives, mercy begins to
triumph in the world around us.
How will we recognize
revival when it comes?
Behold, here is the
awakening we seek: men and women, young and old, all conformed to Jesus.
When will revival begin?
It starts the moment we say yes to becoming like Him; it spreads
to others as Christ is revealed through us.
Yet to
embrace Christ's attitude toward mercy is but a first step in our spiritual
growth.
The process of being
truly conformed to Christ compels us into deeper degrees of transformation.
Indeed, just as Jesus
learned obedience through the things that He suffered (Hebrews
5:8), so also must we.
And it is here, even
while we stand in intercession or service to God, that Christ gives us the gift
of woundedness.
"Gift?" you
ask.
Yes, to be wounded in the
service of mercy and, instead of closing our hearts, allow woundedness to crown
love, is to release God's power in redemption.
The steadfast prayer of
the wounded intercessor holds great sway upon the heart of God.
I do
not want to imply that there is a virtue found in punishing ourselves or
resorting to "the severe treatment
of the body" (Colossians 2:23).
What I am saying is that
if we are going to walk the path of Christ, there will be times when we
experience wounding and injustice.
How we handle these times
of offense can be a door to our destiny.
You see, even after we
come to Christ, we carry encoded within us preset limits concerning how far we
will go for love, and how much we are willing to suffer for redemption.
When God allows us to be
wounded, He exposes those human boundaries and reveals what we lack of His
nature.
The path narrows as we
seek true transformation.
Indeed, many Christians
fall short of Christ's stature because they have been hurt and offended by
people.
They leave churches
discouraged, vowing never again to serve or lead or contribute because, when
they offered themselves, their gift was marred by unloving people.
To be struck or rejected
in the administration of our service can become a great offense to us,
especially as we are waiting for, and even expecting, a reward for our good
efforts.
Yet wounding is
inevitable if we are following Christ.
Jesus was both "marred" (Isaiah
52:14) and "wounded"
(Zechariah 13:6), and if we are sincere in
our pursuit of His nature, we will suffer as well.
How else will love be
perfected?
Let us beware. We either
become Christlike and forgive the offenders or we will enter a type of
spiritual time warp where we abide continually in the memory of our wounding.
Like a systemic disease,
the hurtful memories infect every aspect of our existence.
In truth, apart from God,
the wounding that life inflicts is incurable.
God has decreed that only Christ in us can survive.
The Wounds
of a Prayer Warrior
Intercessors live on the frontier of change. We
are positioned to stand between the needs of man and the provision of God.
Because we
are the agents of redemption, Satan will always seek the means to offend,
discourage, silence, or otherwise steal the strength of our prayers.
The wounding
we receive must be interpreted in light of God's promise to reverse the effects
of evil and make injustice work for our good (see
Romans 8:28).
Since
spiritual assaults are inevitable, we must discover how God uses our wounds as
the means to greater power. This was exactly how Christ brought redemption to
the world.
Jesus knew that
maintaining love and forgiveness in the midst of suffering was the key that
unlocked the power of redemption.
Isaiah 53:11 tells us, "By
His knowledge the Righteous One, My Servant, will justify the many, as He will
bear their iniquities."
Jesus possessed
revelation knowledge into the mystery of God.
He knew that
the secret to unleashing world-transforming power was found at the cross, in
suffering.
At the
cross, payment for sin was made.
As Christ
forgave His enemies, heaven's power rent the temple veil in two. Christ's
stripes purchased our healing.
I am not
just talking about suffering, but the suffering of love.
The terrible
offense of the cross became the place of redemption for the world. Yet,
remember, Jesus calls us to a cross as well (see Matthew
16:24).
Wounding is
simply an altar upon which our sacrifice to God is prepared.
Listen again
to Isaiah's prophetic description of Jesus' life. His words at first seem
startling, but as we read, we discover a most profound truth concerning the
power of woundedness.
He wrote, "But the Lord was pleased to crush Him, putting Him to grief; if He would render Himself as a guilt offering, He will see His offspring, He will prolong His days, and the good pleasure of the Lord will prosper in His hand" (Isaiah 53:10).
How did the power of God's pleasure prosper in
Christ's hand?
During His
times of crushing, woundedness and devastation, instead of retaliating, Jesus
rendered Himself "as a guilt
offering."
The crushing
is not a disaster; it is an opportunity.
You see, our
purposeful love may or may not touch the sinner's heart, but it always touches
the heart of God.
We are
crushed by people, but we need to allow the crushing to ascend as an offering
to God. The greatest benefit of all is the effect our mercy has on the Father.
If we truly
want to be instruments of God's good pleasure, then it is redemption, not wrath
that must prosper in our hands.
If we are
Christ-followers, we must offer ourselves as an offering for the guilt of
others.
Conformed to
the Lamb
When Christ encounters conflict, though He is
the Lion of Judah, He comes as the Lamb of God.
Even when He
is outwardly stern, His heart is always mindful that He is the "guilt offering."
Thus, Jesus not
only asks the Father to forgive those who have wounded Him, but also numbers
Himself with the transgressors and intercedes for them (see Isaiah 53:12).
He does this because the Father takes "no pleasure in the death of the wicked" (Ezekiel 33:11), and it is
the pleasure of God that Jesus seeks.
Is this not
the wonder and mystery, yes, and the power, of Christ's cross?
In anguish
and sorrow, wounded in heart and soul, still He offered Himself for His
executioners' sins.
Without
visible evidence of success, deemed a sinner and a failure before man, He
courageously held true to mercy.
In the depth of terrible crushing, He let love attain its
most glorious perfection. He uttered the immortal words, "Father, forgive them; for they do not know what they are doing"
(Luke 23:34).
Christ could have escaped. He told Peter as the Romans came
to arrest Him, "Do you think that I
cannot appeal to My Father, and He will at once put at My disposal more than
twelve legions of angels?" (Matthew
26:53).
In less than
a heartbeat, the skies would have been flooded with thousands of warring
angels.
Yes, Jesus
could have escaped, but mankind would have perished.
Christ chose
to go to hell for us rather than return to heaven without us.
Instead of condemning mankind, He rendered "Himself as
a guilt offering" (Isaiah 53:10, italics mine).
He prayed the mercy prayer, "Father, forgive them" (Luke
23:34).
Jesus said, "He
who believes in Me, the works that I do, he will do also" (John 14:12).
We assume He
meant that we would work His miracles, but Jesus did not limit His definition
of "works" to the miraculous.
The works He
did --- the redemptive life, the mercy cry, the identification with sinners,
rendering Himself a guilt offering --- all the works He did, we will "do also."
Thus,
because He lives within us, we see that Isaiah 53 does not apply exclusively to
Jesus; it also becomes the blueprint for Christ in us.
Indeed, was
this not part of His reward, that He would see His offspring? (see Isaiah 53:10)
Beloved, we
are the progeny of Christ!
Read these
words from Paul's heart:
"Now I rejoice in
my sufferings for your sake, and in my flesh I do my share on behalf of His
body, which is the church, in filling up what is lacking in Christ's
afflictions" (Colossians
1:24).
What did the
apostle mean?
Did not
Christ fully pay mankind's debts once and for all?
Did Paul
imply that we now take Jesus' place?
No, we will
never take Jesus' place. It means that Jesus has come to take our place.
The Son of
God manifests all the aspects of His redemptive, sacrificial life through us.
Indeed, "as He is,
so also are we in this world" (1 John
4:17).
Paul not
only identified with Christ in his personal salvation, but he was also consumed
with Christ's purpose.
He wrote, "That I
may know Him and the power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His
sufferings, being conformed to His death" (Philippians 3:10).
For those
who blame others for the decline of our nation, to be a follower of the Lamb,
you must render yourself as an offering for their sin.
By your wounds they shall be healed. What a wondrous reality
is the "fellowship of His
sufferings."
Here, in
choosing to yoke our existence with Christ's purpose, we find true friendship
with Jesus.
This is
intimacy with Christ. The sufferings of Christ are not the sorrows typically
endured by mankind; they are the afflictions of love.
They bring
us closer to Jesus.
We learn how precious is the gift of woundedness.
Let's pray:
Father, I see You have had no other purpose in my life but to
manifest through me the nature of Your Son.
I receive the gift of woundedness.
In response, in surrender to Christ, I render myself an
offering for those You've used to crush me.
May the fragrance of my worship remind You of Jesus, and may You forgive, sprinkle and cleanse the world around me.
The preceding message was adapted from Francis Frangipane’s book, The Power of One Christlike Life, available at www.arrowbookstore.com. It also is a principle chapter in pastor's online school, In Christ's Image Training. More information at www.icitc.org.
Francis Frangipane was born in 1946
and grew up in Lodi, New Jersey. After graduating from high school in 1964,
Frangipane entered the U.S. Air Force, where he was discharged honorably as a
sergeant on February 2, 1969. He relocated briefly to Berkeley, California and
then Honolulu, Hawaii before returning to the mainland U.S. These were the days
when the hippie movement was emerging, and Frangipane, like countless other
young people, was searching for meaning. He traveled extensively throughout the
United States and Canada. Eventually his travels brought him to the Blue Ridge
Mountains of Virginia where he became a Christian on November 26, 1970. Five
months later he met his wife-to-be, Denise Piscitelli, and led her to the Lord.
In October of 1971 they were married.
In 1972 Francis and Denise received
ministerial training at Grace Chapel in Southern California; by early fall they
had moved to Hilo, Hawaii to start a church. Their little work grew to about
twenty-five people, most of whom they had personally led to Christ. They also
had their first child during this time.
After fourteen months, however, they felt
their time in Hawaii was complete. A church in the Detroit, Michigan area
offered them a pastoral position. For the remainder of the seventies, they led
a small church of approximately 100 people; they also planted eight churches
and home groups in southeastern Michigan and Ontario, Canada.
https://francisfrangipanemessages.blogspot.com/2020/08/the-gift-of-woundedness.html
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