Friday, January 27, 2012

A CALL TO PRAYER !


“What the Church needs to-day is not more machinery or better, not new organizations or more and novel methods, but men whom the Holy Ghost can use -- men of prayer, men mighty in prayer. The Holy Ghost does not flow through methods, but through men. He does not come on machinery, but on men. He does not anoint plans, but men -- men of prayer.

Those are the words  of E.M. Bounds  (1835-1913). He was a pastor   around the time of the American Civil War , and his writings  on prayer remain  a great  challenge to  me . His words  remain relevant in an age where relatively  few  people  can  see their way  clear  to spend more time in prayer , let alone be a part of a corporate  prayer meeting of the Church .  God has commanded  prayer   to be  one of the chief disciplines  of the Christian church . It therefore ought not only to be the  habitual practice of every Christian , but  there should be evidence that the church engages in corporate prayer .  Absence of prayer  means an absence of confidence in  God , since  the simplest definition  of  prayer is  “speaking to God “. How can we not speak to our heavenly Father?

The apostolic method   used to sustain the life ,  health and progress  of the church  was by    prayer  and the ministry  of  the word  (Acts 6:1-7) , and we have  no  reason to change  these priorities in our day.

I write this as our church is  about to  embark  upon   a prayer week which we commonly have at the beginning of  each  year.   Prayer reminds us that  “our help is in the name of the Lord who has made  heaven and earth.” (Psalm 12:8)
Our church   had also  decided  a few years ago  that    we should  have  also   have a week of prayer  in the middle of the year, when our spirits  seem  to  be sagging.

We   are convinced  from  the Scripture that the church is  among other things  a  house of prayer. Our worship services ought to be punctuated with  all kinds  of  prayer , whether they be prayers of praise , confession, thanksgiving  or intercession.To pray is to worship.

In our evening services we pray for different countries of the world.  “Operation World”   helps  us to pray  for the progress of the gospel  in  every country of the world. A useful internet  link to help you  to do  this  is:  http://www.operationworld.org  . Another helpful  resource for world prayer  is  found at   http://www.gracechurchdirectory.com/world/index.htm



In many churches prayer sadly  no longer constitutes an act of worship. Surely,  if there'd   be  a  solid  argument  for what elements    should  constitute   regulative principles of  worship , then prayer must be a part of  that, and regular prayer meetings  of the  whole church  should be a given  fact and not an antiquated  and curious habit  of history  ! 



Friday, January 13, 2012

IN MEMORY OF MARTIN HOLDT - who went into the Lord's presence on New Years Eve, 31st December 2011.



Martin at Eastside with Caroline Slabber 
The news of the death of Martin Holdt  came unexpectedly. A week earlier (on Christmas day 2011, to be precise) he had sent me an e-mail wishing me  for my birthday on the 27th December. The words were written  in German – his mother tongue. 

He was due to be our speaker at our  annual prayer week of our church  at the end of January 2012. This was however not to be.  The Lord took him  in the midst of his labours.

 
I first met Martin Holdt  in my first  year as a student at the Baptist Theological Seminary in Cape Town (1986). He was  then known  in Baptist circles as   a “Reformed Baptist   pastor“.  His theological position was held by very few South African Baptist ministers in those days. We can only marvel  to think how much this  has changed. At a recent Spurgeon fraternal,  Peter Sammons of the Germiston Baptist Church  indicated  that there were  now more than 80 pastors on the list  who would   identify  with  the  "Reformed  Baptist position".

Martin's influence was mostly felt in  his  brand of preaching  and in the Reformed books which he freely distributed. He was keenly interested in young men who were interested  in  Reformed Theology. I know! I was one of them.

Martin counselling after a service at  at Eastside 
In  1990  I was called to be the pastor of my home church,   the Eastside Baptist Church in Windhoek, Namibia, and Martin immediately took an interest in me, knowing that I had developed a keen  interest in the theology of the Reformers. He asked me to write an article about my conversion and call to the ministry in a magazine called “Reformation Africa South“ which was published under the auspices of the Reformed Baptist Association  in South Africa. This article was read by Erroll Hulse  of the UK who  is well known for  encouraging   Reformed Baptist work, world wide. Erroll  Hulse came to visit me in Namibia  to encourage  me in the ministry. 
Martin preaching in Biskirchen, Germany
Both, Martin and Erroll  had simple advice for young pastors  like me who were eager to get their ministries reformed: "Preach the Word! Preach expositorially! Preach with passion! Prepare  prayerfully! "

Martin exhorted me in the words of Baptist pastor W.A.  Criswell  keep your mornings for God.” He  continuously exhorted young men to  read. He believed  that  the  ministry depended on  spending  time in the   counsel  of the wise, particularly  the  ministry of  a bygone era. With this in mind,  he exhorted us to read  the writings of the Reformers and the Puritans.

            
Martin  started a number of ministries to encourage pastors. Two stand out in my own mind. The annual  Grace Minister’s conference  and  the Spurgeon fraternal. Both have been tremendous  means of blessing to many, and particularly  to me.
Martin Holdt with Andre Bay ( missionary) in Germany
Allow me to tell you how the Spurgeon fraternal  was started.
1997   was a particularly challenging year  for me in the ministry. I had experienced many  trials accompanied by  a  loneliness in the ministry for a sustained  period  and I was longing to have something more than a conference. 
I needed a forum, a fellowship  where I and ministerial  colleagues could share our  burdens  and where   we could  encourage each other and pray for one another. I shared this burden  with Martin. There may have been others  who had the same  burden, but  it was Martin Holdt who got the  Spurgeon fraternal going. The fraternal is going strong  today and it  is ever increasing in  numbers  and influence. One could argue that SOLA 5  (An Association of  God centered Evangelicals  in Southern Africa)  was stated as a result of this fraternal. 

Martin visited us at Eastside Baptist Church on a number of occasions between 1990 and 2011.  I well remember the time  when he  spoke at an Easter Conference, after  his first wife, Beryl,  had died. 

He spoke at various “Prayer weeks”  which we usually have at  the beginning of a new year. He was  actually due to come  to our prayer week in January 2012, and he was looking very much forward  to it. He loved Namibia  for he had some happy childhood memories of this  place. His parents had  lived  here for sometime.   But it was not to be. The Lord  deemed  his work to be done.  I am happy for him  for I know that he is with Christ, enjoying  his well deserved eternal Sabbath rest.

I  do however   have  a sense of  great loss at  his  departure from us. My friend and brother in the ministry,  Roland Eskinazi  commented that  Martin  Holdt  in a sense  brought to an end an era of  great  Baptist preachers  and spiritual leaders in South Africa. 

I leave it to you to judge whether this is so.




ON THE PURPOSE AND USE OF THE SPIRITUAL GIFTS IN THE CHURCH

  In the last century, particularly in the in the 1980’s and 90’s the subject of spiritual gifts was hotly debated. John Wimber (1934-1997)...