“Possibly
one of the most devastating things that can happen to us as Christians
is that we cease to expect anything to happen. I am not sure but that
this is not one of our greatest troubles today. We come to our services
and they are orderly, they are nice ‒ we come, we go ‒ and sometimes
they are timed almost to the minute, and there it is. But that is not
Christianity, my friend. Where is the
Lord of glory? Where is the one sitting by the well? Are we expecting
him? Do we anticipate this? Are we open to it? Are we aware that we
are ever facing this glorious possibility of having the greatest
surprise of our life?
Or let me put it like this. You may feel and
say ‒ as many do ‒ ‘I was converted and became a Christian. I've grown ‒
yes, I’ve grown in knowledge, I've been reading books, I've been
listening to sermons, but I’ve arrived now at a sort of peak and all I
do is maintain that. For the rest of my life I will just go on like
this.’
Now, my friend, you must get rid of that attitude; you must
get rid of it once and for ever. That is ‘religion’, it is not
Christianity. This is Christianity: the Lord appears! Suddenly, in the
midst of the drudgery and the routine and the sameness and the dullness
and the drabness, unexpectedly, surprisingly, he meets with you and he
says something to you that changes the whole of your life and your
outlook and lifts you to a level that you had never conceived could be
possible for you. Oh, if we get nothing else from this story, I hope we
will get this. Do not let the devil persuade you that you have got all
you are going to get, still less that you received all you were ever
going to receive when you were converted. That has been a popular
teaching, even among evangelicals. You get everything at your
conversion, it is said, including baptism with the Spirit, and nothing
further, ever. Oh, do not believe it; it is not true. It is not true
to the teaching of the Scriptures, it is not true in the experience of
the saints running down the centuries. There is always this glorious
possibility of meeting with him in a new and a dynamic way.”
Martyn Lloyd-Jones, on John chapter 4
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