KINGDOM BIBLE STUDIES
"Teaching the things concerning the kingdom of God...
"
THE KINGDOM OF GOD
Part 21
POSSESSING THE KINGDOM
Canaan-what volumes the name speaks to us! Many are the songs written about
Canaan Land, yet the masses of believers entertain the mistaken notion that Canaan is a
type of heaven-that bright glory world above with streets of gold, walls of jasper and
gates of pearl. This cannot be, because the great mark of Canaan was that the land had to
be conquered and that God gave such glorious victories over enemies. There is warfare in
Canaan. There are giants in Canaan. There are hoards of enemies in Canaan. The battles in
Canaan make the experience in the wilderness look like a Sunday School picnic. The
possession of Canaan was for victory and through victory. The children of Israel crossed
the Red Sea to escape the enemy. They crossed the Jordan to conquer the enemy! Canaan
speaks to us of the realm of the Kingdom of God. If we are going to possess the Kingdom,
we are going to have to fight for it. The powers that are there will contest every foot of
it; as soon as we start to possess our inheritance in God, we will come face to face with
them, and we will find they are not easily defeated. We are no threat to them until we
begin our march to possess our inheritance.
Multitudes of Christians are settled upon their lees-they are satisfied with knowing the
joy of sins forgiven and hope to make heaven their home at last. There is no desire in
their hearts to attain to anything of value in the Kingdom of God or to any position of
responsibility and usefulness. It is said of Israel, "They despised the pleasant
land" (Ps. 106:24). Canaan was a land of fruitfulness, of heights and depths and
beauty and glory and power, a type of the Kingdom of God; but some of the people thought
it would cost them a great deal to possess it, and they would rather go without it. I have
read of certain Spaniards that lived where there was a great store of fish, but they were
so lazy they would not exert themselves to catch them, but begged of their neighbors. Such
sinful sloth is upon the masses of Christians that fill the pews of the church systems in
this hour, and though the Kingdom of Heaven be offered them, yet they will not yield to
the leadings and dealings of the Holy Spirit to possess it. They have only some faint
wishes or desires. "The soul of the sluggard wisheth, and hath nothing" (Prov.
13:4). Men could be content to have the Kingdom of Heaven if it would drop as a ripe fig
into their mouths, but they have no desire to pursue it, and their unsanctified hearts
would abuse, misuse, prostitute and profane it were it given into their hands. We cannot
have the world without labor, or any success or position or rank or responsibility or
recognition without applying ourselves, and do we think to have the Kingdom of Heaven
without paying the price?
Paul shows us how God's people under the Old Covenant, ransomed by grace, and set upon a
course of divine privilege and opportunity, were called to win the prize of their calling,
and missed it. They were delivered out of the hand of their enemies by the blood of the
Lamb. They were visibly under God's protecting wing, and led out of Egypt by a mighty
hand. They were set under the cloud of Yahweh's presence. All were led out of Egypt by a
door miraculously opened, and miraculously shut. Pharaoh's claims upon them were forever
cut off by the Red Sea. They had bread sent down from heaven as their daily supply. They
had water given them by grace, out of the rock smitten by the rod of law and judgment. The
water, after once bursting out of the rock known of old as Jacob's Pillar, continually
followed Israel in their wanderings through the desert (I Cor. 10:4).
Israel then was led as one family by God's appointed leader, and all were blessed alike and all promised alike. Must they not, therefore, all alike receive God's approval? Far from it! "But with many of them God was not well pleased: for they were overthrown in the wilderness" (I Cor. 10:5). The whole body of Israel received the same great privileges, and were set at the same starting line. But did all win the goal? Nay, they became "castaways," or were disapproved of God. God was not well pleased with Israel. Their privileges did not so place them under grace, as to put them beyond responsibility, and the call to obedience. The Lord displayed His disapproval of them, for they never gained the prize of their calling. What was that calling? An entry into the land that flowed with milk and honey! The possession of all the riches, beauty, resources, expansiveness, fruitfulness and power of the land! That was the object set before God's rescued ones. "I am come down to deliver them out of the hand of the Egyptians, and to bring them up out of that land unto a good land and a large, unto a land flowing with milk and honey" (Ex. 3:8). They were His people ransomed by blood, numbered by hundreds of thousands, and yet out of the delivered out of Egypt by grace-only two entered the land of promise, when it became a question of their believing God, obeying God, and possessing their possession! Among the number of the excluded were Moses the servant, and Aaron the saint of the Lord. God was not "well pleased." The proof was visible enough; they never entered the good land.
When God told the children of Israel to go into the land of Canaan, He said, "I have
given it to you." In a little while He added this striking admonition, "Go in to
possess it." These were potential terms. In the divine and sovereign council of
heaven God had already deeded the land to them, but they were not qualified yet to possess
it. The land was full of giants, and walled cities, and fierce armies, which required a
struggle for its possession. "We must through much tribulation enter into the kingdom
of God," our beloved brother Paul has told us. The simple meaning of the word
"tribulation" in the Greek is pressure. Ray Prinzing has
mentioned how we are pressured on every side, but as birth pangs it is pressing us into
His Kingdom, pressing us out of self's aspirations, pressing us into the plan and purpose
of God. Through intense pressure, great distress, much trouble and suffering, strenuous
effort and fierce warfare we enter the Kingdom-this realm of spiritual reality, fullness,
glory and power. The Kingdom is obtained through much pressure and steadfast discipline.
When Israel came to the end of their wilderness journey and arrived at the Jordan River,
it was a time of new beginnings. The old generation of disobedience and rebellion passed
away in the wilderness. And now a new generation camped at the Jordan, and was preparing
to cross over into their promised land of Canaan. It was the end of one era and the
beginning of a new day for the nation. Joshua would now lead the new generation of the
people of Israel across the Jordan and conquer and possess and inherit the glorious land
given to them by God. Wonderful things were to take place when Israel set foot in their
promised land. Although Israel would face great and strong enemies when they entered
Canaan, the Lord promised that He would drive out all those enemies from before them. He
further said, "Every place whereon the soles of your feet shall tread shall be yours:
from the wilderness and Lebanon, from the river, the river Euphrates, even unto the
uttermost sea shall your coast be. There shall no man be able to stand before you: for the
Lord your God shall lay the fear of you and the dread of you upon all the land that ye
shall tread upon" (Deut. 11:23-25).
The covenant of the old Land of Canaan is our example to prepare us to enter the new and
greater "land" of the Kingdom of God on earth. These words of Paul Mueller are
so very significant for us all at this present time. "The Psalmist said, 'The
righteous shall inherit the land, and dwell therein for ever' (Ps.
37:29). Not only shall the saints inherit the earth, but they shall inherit the land. This
land is a special place reserved for the elect. It is the place that corresponds in type
to Mt. Zion in Jerusalem, the place of David's throne. It is the glorious realm of
spiritual Zion, the "land" that corresponds to the Holiest of all in the
tabernacle or house of the Lord. That place, or land, is a land of the incorruptible and
immortal glory of the presence of the Lord. From that "land" the saints shall
rule and reign with Christ in incorruptible bodies, with incorruptible minds, the mind of
Christ.
"O that the wonderful spirit of revelation would enlighten us to the grandeur of
these promises of God! The wisdom and understanding of the Spirit is being given to us. We
are growing up to know the hope of our calling, and to see the glories that are reserved
for us in the realm of Spirit. Only as we are enlightened by the spirit of revelation can
we possibly comprehend the marvelous truth of our inheritance in Christ.
When we fully understand that Christ is our inheritance, the things of earth will indeed
grow dim. The world and all things of it will lose its attraction, and we will run with
patience the race that is set before us. Our glorious, risen Christ has already set down
the footprints, the steps, into the glory that is reserved for us. He has pre-destined our
walk unto His fullness. He has set aside an inheritance for us that makes the things of
this world look like the paltry dust and ashes that it is. Compared to the splendor of the
incorruptible and immortal Christ of glory, all else is corruption. He has reserved
Himself for us! He has set aside the Holiest of all, the place of His greater presence,
for the holy remnant who are now growing up into Him. What an inheritance! The steps to
that glory are there. Walk in the Spirit and the way will be made clear" -end quote.
Consider, precious saint of God, how vast and rich the land is! The land is unsearchably
great, unlimitedly rich. The dimensions of the land are the length, the breadth, the
height, and the depth of the Kingdom of God. The land is all the riches and the glory of
Christ Himself. Many saints have no desire to attain experientially to the fullness of
Christ Himself. They are more interested in a mansion over the hilltop, or a cabin in the
corner of glory-land, or some such foolishness. The land is peace, joy, righteousness,
incorruptible life, wisdom, knowledge, power, dominion and glory. All this is ours as
children of God, but only as we grow up into Christ and put on Christ do we become mature
and arrive in the position to assume this responsibility of possessing our possessions. We
are talking about the full stature of Christ within ourselves, not gold bath tubs in
heaven. By a mature understanding and a divine faith we see the way to enter the land and
take possession of all the riches and glory of full sonship to God.
Why have we not, then, fully possessed our land? The thing that kept Israel out of their
land was a heart of unbelief. "Let us therefore fear, lest, a promise being left us
of entering into His rest, any of you should seem to come short of it. For unto us was the
gospel preached, as well as unto them: but the word preached did not profit them, not
being mixed with faith in them that heard it. So we see that they could not enter in
because of unbelief" (Heb. 4:1-2; 3: 19). You remember how those that spied out the
land of Canaan brought back an evil report. On the one hand they said that the land was
exceptionally good, but on the other hand they said that it was impossible to enter. The
people were giants, they said, and the cities fortified and great. They asserted that
Israel could never conquer the land, and if they tried they would be utterly defeated and
devoured.
Ah, how often that wily devil of unbelief speaks the very same things within us! He says,
"Don't talk about overcoming every enemy. Don't talk about walking in the nature of
God. Don't talk about coming to perfection-nobody can be perfect in this world. Don't talk
about conquering death-everybody dies until the rapture. Don't talk about being manifested
sons of God-it is enough to join a good church, pay our tithes and be faithful Christians.
Don't talk about becoming exactly like Christ-nobody can measure up to Him. Don't talk
about putting on the mind of Christ. Don't talk about ruling and reigning with Christ-it
might go to your head. Don't talk about being kings and priests after the Order of
Melchizedek-that is too high for you. All of these things are good and wonderful. But it
is absolutely impossible for you to possess them. "
I do not doubt that even while some have been reading this message that devil of unbelief
has whispered such things in your ear! "You cannot possess the land, you cannot
attain to the high calling of sonship, you will never stand among the manifested sons of
God because you are weak, you are now old and feeble; you can't preach or teach the Word;
you are beset by physical ailments and disease, silly of you to think of overcoming sin
and death; you have already failed so many times to please your heavenly Father; God never
answers your prayers, anyhow; you have no church or fellowship, no one to encourage and
strengthen you; you have too many problems and hang-ups; you are young and inexperienced,
others have walked in this truth for years; your own home is out of order, you are
bedeviled by a carnal, opposing spouse and unruly, rebellious children; don't ever think
you can enter the good land of the Kingdom-it is far beyond your ability. You can never
make it!" The little devil of unbelief lurking within the carnal mind in each of us
is just waiting for the opportunity to inject his deadly venom and deliver to us the evil
report- "You are not able to go up and possess your inheritance!" Never
believe him!
"The inhabitants are giants," he will tell you. "and the cities have walls
that chariots run upon. You will be defeated and you know it. You will go by way of the
grave at last. You will miss the unveiling of the Kingdom glory in the earth, you will not
be a member of God's overcoming, conquering army." All this is an evil heart of
unbelief. It is a heart occupied by the evil one; so it is called an evil heart. The heart
is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked, saith the Lord! We must ask the
Lord to deliver us from the evil heart. We must take our stand with Joshua and Caleb and
proclaim by the faith of the Son of God within us that WE ARE ABLE TO GO UP AND TAKE THE
LAND! We must have faith in the power of His resurrection within ourselves. The mighty
power of God within us is able to do exceeding, abundantly above all that we ask or think,
above all that we dream or imagine. God will do the work as we follow on in patience,
faith and obedience, even as He did for Israel of old. "Let us go up at once, and
possess it; for we are well able to overcome it." That is the confession of the heart
of faith born of God. The Lord has promised it, but we must possess it. He has given it,
but we must experience it. It is our portion, but we must take it. The fullness of the
Kingdom is not presently our possession, but HE will cause us to take it, HE will enable
us to possess it. Our heavenly Joshua, Christ Himself in us, is taking the lead in His
army; He will go before us; He will fight the battle for us. All we need is such a vision.
Joshua received such a vision, and thereby the faith and assurance that God was with him.
And armed only with that faith, trust, and obedience he possessed the land!
The generation in the wilderness consented to the spying out of the land-no doubt they
really enjoyed the grapes and the figs and the pomegranates the spies brought back-but
they refused to enter in and possess the land. It is all right, this same unhelievinl,
veneration tells us today. to be baptized in the Spirit, speak in tongues, heal the sick,
prophesy, be slain in the Spirit and do some miracles-these things are all right. They
relish the firstfruits of the Spirit that the spies bring back, the little sample of the
richness of the land, but they do not want to hear about Christ appearing in glory in the
saints, or the manifestation of the sons of God. And as for people conquering death and
by-passing the grave -- that is definitely not for God's people today. True, God has it
for us, it is part of our inheritance, but we dare not try to lay hold upon it today. That
will take place, automatically, at the "rapture", or in the first resurrection
"at the last day"- not now. We cannot possess the land-the walls are too high,
the giants too tall, and the people too strong. The armies of the enemies have iron
chariots. I low utterly ridiculous to suppose that we can overcome such obstacles!
Oh yes, you can be filled with the Spirit, teach a Sunday School class, move in the gifts,
get into prosperity-but you cannot be conformed to the image of the Son, defeat Satan,
conquer sin and death, and ascend the throne of God to rule and reign with Christ over the
nations and all things. You can sneak in and seize a cluster or two of grapes from the
valley of Eschol, but it is positively absurd to try and take the whole valley of Eschol!
You can get some healing for your body, you can receive an occasional word of wisdom or
knowledge, you can get deliverance from habits and demons, and overcome everyday
weaknesses and sins- but you cannot have the mind of Christ replace the carnal mind, you
cannot be perfect, you cannot put on the nature and character of God until you are
sinless, you cannot put on incorruption and immortality, you cannot be caught away in the
Spirit as were Philip and Elijah, you cannot rule and reign in the Kingdom, you cannot be
a manifested son of God-today. We don't mind tasting the grapes of Eschol, but DON'T EVEN
THINK ABOUT MARCHING IN TO CONQUER THE WHOLE LAND!
It should be obvious to any thinking person that this is the mind-set of just about all
Christians today and the teaching of all the preachers and churches. Of course, many
churches don't even want their people to taste the firstfruits! The whole issue revolves
around this question: Are we going to settle for the "earnest" of our
inheritance, the "down payment" of the Spirit, or, are we going to arise from
the dust and rocks of this great and terrible wilderness and follow our Joshua across the
Jordan to lay hold upon, and enter into, and possess fully, ALL THE GLORIOUS INHERITANCE
OF THE LAND GOD HAS GIVEN US? Together we can praise God that there is
arising a new generation that has heard the trumpet call. Moses the servant of God is
dead, the old-order ministry is passing away, and a people is gathering in preparation to
follow their heavenly Joshua into the fullness of the glory and power of the Kingdom of
God. And there shall be a glorious victory! For God has promised the land is ours if only
we can hear His voice and obey. There are only two real enemies-fear and unbelief. But God
has promised, "Be strong and o a good courage...! will not fail thee, nor forsake
thee..."
THE VIOLENT TAKE IT BY FORCE
When our blessed Lord came teaching the Kingdom of God throughout the province of Galilee,
He made it abundantly clear that possessing the Kingdom is not an easy thing. It is not so
difficult to see the Kingdom, as Moses saw the promised land from the heights of mount
Nebo, but to possess the Kingdom takes a definite effort. Jesus spoke of this when He told
the Pharisees, "The law and the prophets were until John: since that time the kingdom
of God is preached, and every man presseth into it" (Lk. 16:16). It is doubtful if
any of those who heard these words had the remotest idea of the effort involved in
possessing the Kingdom. Let me put it this way. It takes an added effort after you have
already put forth an effort! Like a sprinting race, it is that final thrust at the end
where the contender puts forth all of his complete energy. He will press forth with all
the strength he can muster to win the race. In like manner it takes running, pressing, and
even violence in one's effort to take the Kingdom.
"And from the days of John the Baptist until now the kingdom of heaven suffereth
violence, and the violent take it by force" (Mat. 11:12). Some say that this is a
negative statement, that Jesus is not talking about the necessity of taking the Kingdom by
violent effort, but that in the hour when the Kingdom was announced many carnal people
sought by the violence of carnal effort to seize the Kingdom for their own ends. These
words of Jesus in Matthew are, however, a sequel to the words written by Luke. Matthew
says that since the days of John the Baptist, the Kingdom of God suffers violence-and the
violent take it by force. Luke says that since John the Baptist the Kingdom is preached,
and men press into it. Each of the Gospel writers expresses in his own words the thought
given by Jesus. The backdrop to this is the conquest of the land of Canaan, the Old
Testament type of our possessing our inheritance in Christ. No one can dispute that when
Israel went in to possess their inheritance that the land of Canaan suffered violence. Ah,
yes! they pressed their way into the land and violently took it byforce. That is the
picture the Holy Spirit has drawn of what it means to take the Kingdom!
These words-suffers, violence, violent and force-are all related words with much the same
meaning. They picture vital energy and activity used in forcing or crowding oneself into
something. To interpret these words of Jesus one needs to know the location of the Kingdom
of Heaven. Violence can only happen where an adversary is located. Surely, up in God's
eternal heaven, there is no violence, as Jesus taught us to pray, "Thy kingdom come,
Thy will be done in earth as it is in heaven." Today we
know that the Kingdom of God is within you (Lk. 17:20-21). Can we not see
by this that the Kingdom of Heaven can suffer violence only within the life of the
believer where both the Spirit of God and the spirit of the adversary function, where the
spirit and the flesh indeed war with one another, where the mind of Christ and the carnal
mind both exert themselves to control. I am sure that Jesus is not referring here to
armies or physical violence. The violence He is talking about is violence that is done to
SELF-the fleshly nature, the carnal mind, the human will-which wars against the life of
God and prevents one from entering into the Kingdom. Sometimes we must be violent in our
own land, with our self, with obstacles within and without, in order to possess the
promised Kingdom.
Never forget, beloved, that it is possible to enter and possess the Kingdom of God while
we live upon this earth right now. To possess the Kingdom within ourselves is going to
take a mighty effort. The spirit of this world, the spirit of your own natural mind,
resists you. The Greek word that is used for "presseth into it" is a strong
word. It is the word that is used for storming a city and forcing an entry. It could be
translated, "Everyone forces his way into it." One writer, commenting on this
verse, said, "The Kingdom of Heaven is not for the well-meaning but for the
desperate." In a violent sense we must fight our way through every adversary and
possess the land of Christ within our world. In this way we take the Kingdom of God by
force-violently. Possessing the Kingdom is no Sunday School picnic. It means resistance,
opposition, contention, struggle, confrontation, engagement, assault, attack, conflict,
fighting, battle-WARFARE! I can assure you, precious friend of mine, no one ever drifted
into the Kingdom, no one ever stumbled into the Kingdom, and no one ever possessed the
Kingdom by accident or unawares. To possess the Kingdom is something that demands effort
and which takes everything of mind and heart and spirit that a man can muster. To possess
the Kingdom requires a victory and a triumph and a conquest. We must struggle and battle
our way in, just as the Allies did in Europe in the second World War. All this is very
difficult, and the natural thing to say is that we can never do that by ourselves. Nor can
we! But the King who leads the battle is right within us to enable us to do the things
which by ourselves we could never have done.
Another possible rendering of the Greek in this passage would denote not so much "to force an entrance" as into a besieged city, but to "seize hold of" and carry off as plunder. It suggests the picture of a prize just coming within reach, which the bolder spirits immediately capture, without waiting for a signal. This would make the passage read: "The law and the prophets were until John; since then, the Kingdom of Heaven is taken forcibly, and the violent drag it towards them." The thought here is that the coming of John the Baptist marked the beginning of a new era. In former times the Kingdom had been merely prophesied and foreshadowed; now it had come so near that men could hasten their possession of it by a strong and mighty effort. They were no longer to wait passively for the Kingdom (God will bring it in His time), but hasten it by their own faith and action. Its powers were already manifesting themselves in the mighty works of the firstborn Son of God, and the nature of its new righteousness was powerfully proclaimed by Jesus. The great Day had drawn so near that a strong and united faith might break down the remaining barriers. Men might "take the Kingdom by force"-might "drag it towards them," and see its full realization in their day!
Jesus believed that the Kingdom could be apprehended by any who had the vision and the
faith. To that end the work which He laid on His disciples was not that of passive
waiting, but that of actively seeking the Kingdom. By hungering and thirsting after it, by
lifting their hearts to it with earnest desire and invincible faith, they were to hasten
the day of its coming forth. The blessed firstborn Son of God Himself became the example
and prototype of an all-conquering faith, revealing by His nature and His mighty works, by
His authority and dominion over all things, by His death and triumphant resurrection, the
accessibility of the Kingdom to every son of God. He taught men to cry out to God,
"THY KINGDOM COME! THY WILL BE DONE IN EARTH AS IT IS IN HEAVEN!" And this is the
message for those who have received the call to sonship in this significant hour
at the end of the age. We are now in the days when decisions are being made and portentous
events are in the offering. Some people are making conscious decisions by proclaiming,
"I will follow the Kingdom and I will pursue it like a dog pursues a fox." When
a hound chases a fox, he never gives up. He may lose sight of the fox, but he still has
its scent. Even though we may not have the Kingdom in sight, we will not give up either
because we know by faith that the Kingdom will come to pass in a people that presses
violently into it-but, blessed be God, we have the scent and we will follow on!
The marginal reading of one Old Version is even stronger-"the Kingdom of Heaven is
gotten by force and they that thrust men." You cannot win a good place in God's
Kingdom without a fight. I tell you I shall employ FORCE to possess the Kingdom. It will
not be the force of bullets. It will not be the force of guns. It will not be the force of
numbers. It will not be the force of personality. It will not be the force of organization
and promotion. I ask God to give me the mightiest force of all-the power and demonstration
of the Holy Ghost. Holy ones are looking down upon us and they are saying, "Rise up,
and take the Kingdom!" A great cloud of witnesses from all the centuries and all the
ages is looking down upon us from the battlements of that unseen realm of spirit as the
final battles of God's sons are fought for the possession of the Kingdom territory of God.
The last contest for the dominion of this earth is heating up. The supremacy of God's
Kingdom over every other kingdom and power is now to be asserted, without earthly weapons
of war, but with the spiritual weapons of prayer, faith and the power of God.
By the army of God the claims of the Kingdom of God are to be enforced; for all that is
within us, and all the world, must bow to the supremacy of God's Christ and the will of
the Father in heaven. The weapons of the Spirit are infinitely more potent than all the
guns that ever were fired, than all the battles that ever were fought, than all the bloody
fields that ever were won; for the Holy Spirit's conquests are made without any of the
weapons of men. They are made by a power greater than these. The Kingdom of God is gotten
by violence-by taking sin, sickness, sorrow, pain and death by the throat, and saying,
"You shall not rule this earth! Nor shall you rule this earth that I am! I am the
Lord's! The earth is the Lord's, and the fullness thereof!" That is the only way the
Kingdom of Heaven will ever be won-by violence, by those who know how to thrust men with
the sword of the Spirit, a two-edged sword that is sharper than steel.
The kind of faith God is looking for in His sons is tenacious faith-the
faith that embraces the promise and will not let it go. That is how Jacob became
Israel-"I will not let you go until you bless me." This is a warfare. The
Kingdom of Heaven suffers violence and the violent take it by force. I have never received
anything from God beyond mere merciful blessings that came easy. It has taken asking,
seeking, knocking, and pressing violently through until the victory is secured. Babies
can't get violent. But even they can cry until you act! Children aren't sent out to war.
The immature do not possess the Kingdom. The spiritually lazy do not become sons of God.
Salvation is free. The baptism in the Holy Spirit, with all of His gifts, is free. And
that is where all the children of God stop. But nothing beyond that is free. Everything
else in God costs. And the Kingdom of God will cost everything you have.
In order to gain this Kingdom we must aim high. There is an interesting passage of
scripture in Judges 3:31. "And after him was Shamgar the son of Anath, which slew of
the Philistines six hundred men with an ox goad: and he also delivered Israel." One
brother, in commenting on this verse, said, "Not failure, but low aim is the crime!
This has been the opinion of all the people who have greatly influenced this world, but it
has not been the opinion of those who have not. Is it yours? It was certainly the opinion
of Shamgar."
It is probable that many who read these lines have never heard of Shamgar. Except for the
one verse quoted above, there is no other mention of him in the whole Bible, but that one
single verse speaks volumes! Shamgar was a most remarkable man, and a type of all those
who refuse to be hindered from possessing the Kingdom. Shamgar must- be understood in the
light of his time. In those days the Philistines had conquered Israel and were oppressing
them ruthlessly. They had disarmed the entire population of Israel, systematically
confiscating all the swords and weapons of war and removed them from the land of Israel.
Then to make sure that Israel did not organize any resistance to their tyranny, they also
deported all the blacksmiths so that not only did they not have weapons, but they lacked
the skill and ability to produce them. The people were despondent and felt absolutely
hopeless in the face of their oppression. They had lost faith in themselves, but had also
lost faith in Yahweh. The situation, indeed, seemed beyond remedy! What could they do? The
Philistines were a strong and numerous people with powerful weapons of war and a well
trained army.
Enter a man named Shamgar. Shamgar was not a king, nor a general, nor a sergeant. He was
not even a private. There is no record of him ever having been in the army or having any
military training or experience. Shamgar was a farmer, a very good farmer, no doubt, but
only a farmer. He broke a yoke of oxen and used these oxen to plow his fields. At that
time this required great boldness and tenacity because when crops were planted, and after
much investment and toil, the harvest finally arrived - then the Philistines would sweep
down and carry away the crops. The whole land lay in desolation, the roads were overgrown
with grass and weeds, the villages were ghost towns, because the people were hiding in the
walled cities where they had at least a modicum of safety. The land was helpless before
the Philistines.
Shamgar was not satisfied to accept this state of affairs and so he went out, plowed his
fields with his oxen, and planted his crops. When harvest time arrived six hundred
Philistines armed with flashing swords swept down upon this one farmer. The only weapon at
Shamgar's disposal was an ox goad. An ox goad was usually made from the limb of an oak
tree. It would be from eight to ten feet long with the bark stripped off and a sharp iron
point affixed to the tip. It was used to jab the ox when he tried to get out of the
furrow. On the other end of the goad was a flattened piece of metal that was sharpened for
the purpose of scraping the dirt off the plow as it collected. Not a very sophisticated
weapon of war! But it was all Shamgar had in addition to his fierce determination, his
seething resolve, and his violent passion. This situation would not stand! One thing
Shamgar was efficient in-the use of an ox goad. In the hands of a man who had handled one
from his youth, it could become quite lethal. So when these six hundred Philistines swept
down upon Shamgar, he decided that he had had enough; and that he was going to do
something about it.
Excuses would have come easy. There was only one farmer with an ox goad and there were six
hundred soldiers with gleaming swords. What could any man do without a sword? There was no
way to resist such a formidable foe. The best thing to do would be to hide and just let
them have the crops. But that kind of reasoning was not to be found in Shamgar's heart.
Shamgar had a deep and profound faith in God. He also had a compassionate concern for his
people, and for his own dignity as an Israelite and a child of God. Armed with this
resolve, he determined to take a stand at whatever the cost. He stood in his field and as
the Philistines came upon him, he grabbed that ox goad and began to swing it! There must
have beer some astonished Philistines. And the battle that ensued became the battle of all
battles in the annals o: military history. There were sculls cracking all over the place.
That mighty oak limb with its iron tip or one end and its flat iron on the other was
whirling like the propellers of a helicopter. They must have thought that they had come
upon a hornet's nest because they were getting it from all sides. No one could even get
close enough to Shamgar to thrust him with a sword! They were jabbed and cut and pounded
on. When the dust settled there were six hundred dead Philistines scattered through the
fields. Then there is that remarkable little phrase that says it all: "He also
delivered Israel." What a warrior Shamgar was! What a mighty man of God! His
popularity soared so high that the people made him a Judge. He was the third Judge that
delivered and ruled the people of Israel.
From this farmer in ancient Israel there rings through the centuries and millenniums a
message for each of God's elect in this vital hour at the end of the age. The first lesson
has to do with the crime of low aim. Most Christians never really try to accomplish
anything significant in the Kingdom of God because they never really set any high goals.
They are satisfied to set their goals low or to set no goals at all and then they
generally hit them very accurately. It does not take too much aim to hit the target when
there is no target. The target of most Christians is to die and go to heaven. That is not
a hard one to miss! It takes no vision, revelation, purpose or violence to die and go to
heaven! That has nothing whatever to do with the Kingdom. Being filled with all the
fullness of God, conformed to the image of the Son, putting on the mind of Christ, laying
hold upon manifested sonship, overcoming death, delivering creation from the bondage of
corruption, and bringing in the Kingdom-ah, those are goals that challenge! Those are
goals that have the power to change the world and alter the course of history. Kingdom
goals! If you have no Kingdom goals in your life you will never possess the
Kingdom. Jesus never preached about dying and going to heaven. He said, "Seek ye
first THE KINGDOM OF GOD!" It pains me to say it, but I am certain that many in this
hour intellectualize the wonderful truths of sonship and the Kingdom of God, but their
hearts are not set on those goals; they have another set of goals that are unnamed,
undefined, but very real which control their affections and thus, their lives.
One of the tragedies of life is that many people live their whole lives without ever
finding out what they were here for. If they had only known what they were supposed to do
they might have done it. But like the faithless Israelites of old, they just wander in the
wilderness for forty years. They wander through thirty, sixty, eighty years of life never
really knowing where they came from or where they are going. They never see what the
purpose of God is in their lives. They have no sense of divine destiny. Like the animals,
they eke out a meager existence in their little insignificant and meaningless world of earthly
things and carnal pursuits. They never breathe the rarefied air
of the heavenlies, or catch a glimpse of the heights of Zion, or taste the powers of the
Kingdom of God. It reminds me of a baseball player wandering around inning after inning,
and after the ninth inning, finally finding out what the game was all about. If he had
only known! That is the way with the church world today. They don't know what the game is
all about! They have no idea whatever of what is really going on. But those who have heard
the sounding of the trumpet, and received the call to sonship and the Kingdom, are
expecting great and mighty things from God! And wonderful and glorious things are
happening in their lives in God's today!
Shamgar had a goal. Shamgar had a vision. Shamgar had a hope. Shamgar had a purpose.
Shamgar was stirred to radical action, to violent movement. Shamgar's goal was to get free
from bondage and to free his people from bondage. It was a high and noble and lofty goal.
It was not just an idea in his mind. It was not just an intellectual belief or a
theological position. I suppose that every Israelite in Israel secretly nursed the same
goal. But Shamgar set his affections upon that goal. Shamgar sought first that goal. It
became a burning passion in his heart. Shamgar found the wisdom of God as to how to attain
that goal. In spite of all the obstacles and limitations, he trusted God that somehow He
would use him to bring that goal to pass. He was going to take a stand and he was going to
do it now. He would press his way in, and take the victory by force. He would act
violently. And he did it! He delivered himself and his people, and they made him a Judge
in Israel. He was just a lowly farmer, and all alone, but they elevated him to the head of
the nation. This man who had never done anything but goad an ox became the leader of God's
nation on earth. Why? Because he would not take "No" for an answer! And by the
grace of God he did it! Advancement is from above. And God blessed him.
These words of brother Paul Mueller are so very pertinent here. "The great issue now
before the sons of God has to do with our entrance into the Kingdom of God. This is not a
question of our salvation, but of our approach to the throne realm of God's Kingdom where
we will eventually rule and reign with Him, making all the blessings and benefits of His
dominion available to others. We believe that it is of paramount importance for all sons
of God to be vitally concerned with our entrance into that Kingdom realm, thereby making
our calling and election sure. Jesus spoke to the people and admonished them: 'Strive to
enter in at the strait gate: for many, I say unto you, will seek to enter in, and shall
not be able' (Lk. 13:24). Since the Lord has revealed the value and importance of entering
into His rest, the word strive has not been in our vocabulary. However, when searching the
true meaning from the original, we find this word comes from a Greek word meaning to
struggle. Strong's Concordance gives three examples of this word: (1) to compete for a
prize, (2) to contend with an adversary, (33 to endeavor to accomplish something. With
this understanding, we can better comprehend its use and application in our lives. The
root word from the original Greek is AGON and indicates a place of assembly where a
contest is being held. Therefore, we might picture ourselves as sons of God struggling to
compete for a prize, contending with our adversary, and endeavoring to accomplish
something within the great arena of the universe where we are being observed by the whole
creation. Because we are aware that all creation is anxiously awaiting that attainment
unto full sonship, and that their full release and deliverance depends upon the
manifestation thereof, we will strive in the Spirit, not after the flesh, that we might
attain to that prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus"
-end quote.
This striving, this pressing, this violence, means that the myths that
spiritual warfare is gentlemanly, that you enter and possess and inherit the land
essentially unscathed, that it costs relatively little, that all you have to do is believe
and confess, that violent men no longer need to take the Kingdom by force-these myths must
forever end. The hour is late, the day of unveiling is at hand. Only an unreserved
commitment, only an indestructible faith, only a radical thrust will birth this manchild
of the ages and herald the dawn of that blessed age when the glory of the Lord shall fill
the earth as the waters cover the sea, and all peoples and all nations shall come and walk
in the light of the Lord, and there shall be no more curse anywhere forever. Sons of
God-let us arise with courage and boldness and give ourselves to the task!
To be continued...
J. PRESTON EBY