Since January 6, 2011, the Holy Spirit has been directing me to write this book. Since it was published a few days ago, He's been directing me to post the whole book on this blog so that you and those you know can read and apply it. I pray that you will.
The subject is how nations should compete in increasing their fruitfulness for Him.
At a time when most nations don't give much thought to the Lord, it's an important message.
May God bless you, your family, and all you do in the name of Jesus!
With best regards, much appreciation, and all good wishes,
Donald Mitchell
For More Information about The 2,000 Percent Nation
Monday, May 28, 2012
The 2,000 Percent Nation--Front Matter and Copyright Notice
The 2,000 Percent Nation
God’s Plan for Increasing
a Country’s Fruitfulness
Donald Mitchell
Coauthor of The 2,000 Percent Solution
Author of Adventures of an Optimist,
Witnessing
Made Easy, Ways You Can
Witness,
2,000
Percent Living, and Help Wanted
400 Year Project Press
Weston, Massachusetts
United States of America
Other 400 Year Project Books by Donald Mitchell
The 2,000 Percent Solution (with
Carol Coles and Robert Metz)
The Portable 2,000 Percent Solution (with
Carol Coles)
The 2,000 Percent Solution Workbook (with
Carol Coles)
The 2,000 Percent Squared Solution (with
Carol Coles)
The Irresistible Growth Enterprise (with
Carol Coles)
The Ultimate Competitive Advantage (with
Carol Coles)
Business Basics
Adventures of an Optimist
Witnessing Made Easy (with
Bishop Dale P. Combs, Lisa Combs, Jim Barbarossa, and Carla Barbarossa)
Ways You Can Witness (with
Cherie Hill, Roger de Brabant, Drew Dickens, Gael Torcise, Wendy Lobos, Herpha
Jane Obod, and Gisele Umugiraneza)
2,000 Percent Living
Help Wanted
The
2,000 Percent Nation
God’s Plan for Increasing a Country’s Fruitfulness
Copyright © 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012
by Donald W. Mitchell.
All rights reserved.
No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or
transmitted in
any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or
other
electronic or mechanical methods without the prior written
permission of the
publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in
critical reviews
and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
Scripture quotations marked (NKJV)
are taken from the New King James Version.
Copyright © 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Used by permission. All rights reserved.
ISBN: 978―1470077525
1470077523
For information, contact:
Donald W. Mitchell
400 Year Project Press
P.O.
Box 302
Weston,
Massachusetts 02493
781-647-4211
Published in the United
States of America
This book is dedicated to:
Faithful Christians who are helping to create and to improve 2,000
percent nations
while giving God all the credit.
May adding many more complementary 2,000 percent solutions
always be ahead of them!
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: How God Measures a Nation’s Fruitfulness
Chapter 2: What Governments Should and Should Not Do
Chapter 3: What Churches Should Concentrate On
Chapter 4: What Actions
Christian Ministries
Should Emphasize
Chapter 5: What Christian Nonprofit Organizations Should
Accomplish
Chapter 6: What Schools, Colleges, and Universities Should
Engage In
Chapter 7: What Voluntary Associations Should Achieve
Chapter 8: What Purposes Foundations Should Seek to Fulfill
Chapter 9: What Social Enterprises Should Work On
Chapter 10: What For-Profit Companies Should Seek to Do in
Serving Godly Purposes
Chapter 11: What Activities Independent Professionals Who
Work with Organizations Should Make Their Top Priority
Chapter 12: What Professional Tutors of Godly Breakthrough
Methods Should Teach
Chapter 13: What a Nation’s Visitors Should Do
Chapter 14: Practices Citizens and Long-Term Residents Can
Use to Contribute More
Chapter 15: What Foundational Tasks Individual Christians
Should Perform
Appendix:
Author’s Testimony
Acknowledgments
Oh, give thanks to the LORD!
Call upon His name;
Make known His deeds among the
peoples!
— 1 Chronicles 16:8 (NKJV)
I thank
Almighty God, our Heavenly Father, for creating the universe and all the people
on the Earth; our Lord and Savior, Jesus Christ, for providing the way for us
to gain Salvation; and the Holy Spirit for guiding our daily paths towards
repentance and righteousness. I also humbly acknowledge the perfect guidance I
received from God through His Holy Spirit and His Word to write this book.
I am grateful to Peter Drucker for encouraging me to write about
2,000 percent solutions and to continually seek simpler ways to help people
learn how to employ them. His faith in this method for solving problems caused
me to take the opportunity to share what I had been doing much more seriously
than I otherwise would.
I appreciate all those who have permitted me to share 2,000
percent solution methods with them. I thank them for all the insights I have
gained into teaching these methods from observing their wonderful work.
I would like to express gratitude to the members of my family
for allowing me the time and peace to work on such a huge and awe-inspiring
project for God. They made many sacrifices without complaining and were a
continual inspiration.
I appreciate my many clients who held off on their demands for
my help so that this project could receive the attention it required over the
past seventeen years. Their financial support also made it possible for me to
give this time to the Lord and to invest in the expenses required to make this
book available.
Finally, I am most appreciative of the many fine improvements
that the editor, Bernice Pettinato, made in the text. This is the thirteenth
book where she has helped me to make the messages clearer and more pleasant to
read. As always, she was a delight to work with. Her kindness made the writing
much easier. I value all she has taught me
about
writing.
I accept sole responsibility for any remaining errors and
apologize to my readers for any difficulties and inconvenience that they
encounter as a consequence.
The 2,000 Percent Nation--Introduction
Introduction
Open the gates,
That the righteous nation
which keeps the truth may enter in.
— Isaiah 26:2 (NKJV)
The 2,000 Percent
Nation: God’s Plan for Increasing Your Country’s Fruitfulness is written
from the perspective of a Bible-believing, born-again Christian informed by Whom
I believe to be the Holy Spirit. If you share that perspective, I’m sure you
will be comfortable with the book’s contents and its way of explaining God’s
plan.
During the course of asking
advance readers to comment on the book, I was happily surprised to find that
people who aren’t Bible-believing, born-again Christians were interested in its
contents. I was cautioned that my writing didn’t always feel loving toward such
readers. I repented of that error and went back to correct the fault as best I
know how. I apologize to any unloving content that remains and ask for
forgiveness.
As a Christian, I love everyone
equally. I am concerned about the spiritual condition of those who aren’t
Christians because of what the Bible tells us about the consequences of not
repenting of sins and not following Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior. As a
result, I seek to be sure everyone has a chance to gain that knowledge so each
person can make an informed decision about Salvation. Only the Holy Spirit can
draw someone to want to accept Salvation. If that occurs for some readers of
this book, I will be delighted. If someone who doesn’t know the Bible’s
messages concerning Salvation learns them from my writing, I will be equally
blessed. In all circumstances, I pray that all readers of this book will feel
my love and concern for them.
The 2,000 Percent Nation: God’s Plan for Increasing Your Country’s
Fruitfulness will change your thinking about what a nation is, its
importance, and what its leaders, citizens, residents, and visitors should seek
to accomplish. My purpose is to show how
the Godly effects of your actions on all nations can be increased by at least
twenty times. The result will be to increase the righteousness of nations,
something encouraged in Isaiah 26:2.
Before expanding on the book’s
purpose and its benefits for readers, let’s first put a spotlight on how God
sees and interacts with nations. You may be surprised by what the Bible has to
say. I certainly was.
While many people think of
themselves and orient many of their views in terms of what their nation’s
Earthly interests are, God doesn’t see nations as being very important. He
wants all His children to focus first on advancing His Kingdom by obeying Him.
To God, a nation is just a large group of His children operating under a human
leader. Unless nations are encouraging His ways, these national entities are
definitely unimportant to God:
Behold, the nations are as
a drop in a bucket,
And are counted as the small dust
on the scales;
Look, He lifts up the isles as a
very little thing.
And Lebanon is not sufficient to
burn,
Nor its beasts sufficient for a
burnt offering.
All nations before Him are
as nothing,
And they are counted by Him less
than nothing and worthless.
(Isaiah 40:15-17, NKJV)
He brings the princes to nothing;
He makes the judges of the earth
useless.
Scarcely shall they be planted,
Scarcely shall they be sown,
Scarcely shall their stock take
root in the earth,
When He will also blow on them,
And they will wither,
And the whirlwind will take them
away like stubble.
(Isaiah 40:23-24, NKJV)
In addition, a nation that is led
by those who are godless or who oppose God can become a fertile field for the
enemy who is in the world to tempt people into rebellion and sin, just the
opposite of what God wants.
Righteousness exalts a nation,
But sin is a reproach to any
people. (Proverbs 14:34, NKJV)
God clearly favors righteous
nations and wants to have more of them. What about nations that don’t share His
interests? Let me remind you of the risks to godless and disobedient nations.
God permanently destroyed some nations (such as Sodom
by fire from heaven and Tyre by sending
invaders), severely punished others (such as when deadly plagues affected Egypt prior to the Israelites leaving), and
killed and removed many disobedient people from still others (such as when
Assyria overran Israel and Babylon conquered Judah).
While many such nations may
suffer from His wrath, God has an unexpected role for a few of them: He
sometimes uses nations that oppose Him as tools for punishing faithlessness.
When righteous nations have been few, He has at times strengthened violent,
godless nations to chasten, destroy, or remove nations that have fallen away
from Him or are in rebellion against Him as He did with the Chaldeans in
violently conquering Judah and being cruel in removing a remnant of Israelites
to Babylon:
“Look among the nations and watch
—
Be utterly astounded!
For I will work a work in
your days
Which you would not
believe, though it were told you.
For indeed I am raising up the
Chaldeans,
A bitter and hasty nation
Which marches through the breadth
of the earth,
To possess dwelling places that
are not theirs.
They are terrible and dreadful;
Their judgment and their dignity
proceed from themselves.”
(Habakkuk 1:5-7, NKJV)
As a result, citizens and
residents of any nation that isn’t making good progress toward increasing the
number of people following Him with clean hearts and dedicated lives should be
concerned about its future, no matter how glorious its past has been or its
present is.
I was reminded of this point
recently while observing someone wearing a shirt proclaiming Jesus as his Lord
and Savior that noted it was illegal to wear the shirt in fifty-three
countries. Such a perspective can, unfortunately, encourage some people to
compare their nations to others in the wrong ways, drawing false comfort if
their nation isn’t as “bad” as some other nation. Beware! Before being
destroyed, that confidence-creating “bad” nation may be used as a scourge to
help cleanse a “good” nation that is self-satisfied, backsliding, and falling
into more sin and rebellion against God.
As God told the Israelites in
Deuteronomy 11:26-28 (NKJV), He will bless the nation that follows Him and
curse one that rebels against Him. Even a nation that’s unconcerned about or
indifferent to receiving His Earthly benefits should desire to avoid His
curses.
Such statements about God’s views
concerning nations may shock you. As you react to the words, recall the anger
that Jesus displayed against the self-satisfied Pharisees who followed their
tradition of righteousness to the letter in hypocritical ways while He met
sincerely repentant sinners, the lame, the discarded, the despised, and the
poor with complete patience and kindness.
Be aware that I write these words
about what the Bible says in love, to encourage you and others to draw closer
to Him and His infinite love … and for the words to rebuke and caution only
those who are convicted by His Holy Spirit as they read these pages. Remember
that God loves you and wants to have a wonderful relationship with you.
Salvation is freely available to all no matter what a person has done. The
price for all sins has already been paid by the death of Jesus Christ.
These words of warning should be
thought of as being like a shout of “Stop!” to the driver of a vehicle who is
about to have an accident. Although it’s unpleasant to receive such a warning,
it’s much better than suffering the consequences of the accident.
Keeping His love in mind, let’s
next consider the eternal dimensions of what God has promised. Disobedient
people who don’t repent their sins and accept and follow Jesus Christ as Lord
and Savior will experience eternal punishment after death as the just
consequence of their unredeemed sins. Because God is perfectly holy and just,
He cannot act otherwise.
While remembering the benefits of
avoiding such horrible eternal harm, consider additionally the eternal rewards
that can be received by following Jesus and contributing to a nation that
becomes more fruitful for God: more people spend eternity in heaven with God,
and the saved gain more heavenly rewards for their fruitfulness while on Earth.
What better way could there be
for nations to satisfy their desires to compete with other nations than by
contributing to more people becoming so eternally blessed in heaven? There can
be no losers in such competition.
While remembering God’s promises
in the Bible concerning nations and individuals, please also consider The 2,000 Percent Nation’s sources
before taking its words seriously and acting on them. I believe that in writing
this book I am merely transmitting directions that I received from the Holy
Spirit. I also rely on God’s Word, the Bible, to ground and amplify the
Spirit-led directions I received. In addition, I have prayed for additional
guidance and signs, and I have received many of them. I pray that I have
faithfully relied on these sources so that you will be blessed by what you read
and by what you do in applying your reading to live more righteously in support
of your nation and other nations.
To help you evaluate the book,
let me put it and its sources in context by explaining more about it origins.
In 1995, I heard from Whom I believe to be the Holy Spirit (as described in
Chapter 2 of Adventures of an Optimist
[Mitchell and Company Press, 2007]) to launch the 400 Year Project
(www.fastforward400.com — to demonstrate by September 2015 how the global rate
of improving all aspects of life could be increased by at least twenty times
during 2015 through 2035, accomplishing in just twenty years what would
normally take 400 years). By 2010, I had received additional directions and
instructions for how to create, display, and write about such improvements in
the twelve 400 Year Project books that preceded The 2,000 Percent Nation.
While working on Business Basics (400 Year Project Press,
2012), I anticipated that my book writing for the 400 Year Project would end
with that volume. I was wrong about God’s plans. There were, instead, more
revelations and unexpected writing and implementation tasks ahead for me.
In the early morning of October
6, 2010, I was unexpectedly awakened, and a voice in my mind gave me detailed
directions for how my students should lead spiritual, educational, and economic
revivals in every nation. These directions surprised me. I didn’t expect the
400 Year Project to go beyond performing research, running some tests, and
conducting a few small-scale experiments prior to September 2015. The
directions were transmitted to me in the same way that I was told to begin the
400 Year Project. Consequently, I believe that I was again guided by the Holy
Spirit. I began implementing the new directions later that morning.
On November 27, 2010, I was again
awakened early and given further verbal details for how to accomplish project
implementation tasks that had puzzled me since I had received the October 6,
2010, directions. I was greatly relieved to receive the wisdom in these new
instructions, and I began putting the amplified directions into effect later
that day.
During the predawn hours on
January 6, 2011, I next received detailed instructions from a voice in my mind
for writing a book to be called The 2,000
Percent Nation. The directions made many references to expanding on parts
of what I had written in 2,000 Percent
Living (Salvation Press, 2010) concerning Christians becoming more fruitful
for God and Help Wanted (2,000
Percent Living Press, 2011) describing how to teach Christians to be more
fruitful for Him.
Because I was still in the middle
of finishing Help Wanted and drafting
Business Basics, I was quite
surprised by this new writing assignment and its timing. I didn’t feel that I
could start yet another book without stopping one of the two that I had already
been directed to write by Whom I believe to be God’s Holy Spirit. As a result,
I dutifully made notes about what I had heard concerning The 2,000 Percent Nation and did my best to speed up completing the
two books that were in process. I also began praying for His guidance in
performing these tasks.
In the early morning of January
25, 2011, I received further verbal details for what to write in this book
about how nations and their citizens should measure themselves to know how well
they were following God’s plans. This message emphasized that commonly used
economic measurements for physical outputs, such as gross domestic product
(GDP), were unimportant and should not receive any attention by those looking
to increase a nation’s fruitfulness for God.
Then during the wee hours of the
morning on April 27, 2011, I was provided with still more detailed verbal
directions for what to write in The 2,000
Percent Nation concerning the roles of governments, churches, Christian
nonprofit organizations, foundations, voluntary associations, and individual
Christians in serving God.
Let me emphasize that these
combined instructions contained many more writing directions than I had
received for writing most of the previous 400 Year Project books. Clearly, The 2,000 Percent Nation has some
important role to play in God’s plans, and He wants the book to be just right.
I’m delighted that He has helped me in so many ways and has decided to draw you
to His instructions, as I have done my best to convey them.
On August 16, 2011, my writing of
Business Basics finally reached a point where I could begin
drafting The 2,000 Percent Nation.
Since then, I have strived to be faithful and accurate in sharing with you what
I was directed to write.
Because some people receive false
messages intended to deceive from the enemy who is in the world, you should be
sure to test the book’s contents as you read them through your own Bible
studies and prayers as the Apostle Paul directs in 1 Corinthians 14:29 (“Let
two or three prophets speak, and let the others judge.” NKJV).
Let’s look now at how the book is
organized. The 2,000 Percent Nation explains
how to understand and increase national fruitfulness for God from fifteen
perspectives:
1. How God measures a nation’s
fruitfulness
2. What governments should and
should not do
3. What churches should
concentrate on
4. What actions Christian
ministries should emphasize
5. What Christian nonprofit
organizations should accomplish
6. What schools, colleges, and
universities should engage in
7. What voluntary associations
should achieve
8. What purposes foundations
should seek to fulfill
9. What social enterprises should
work on
10. What for-profit companies
should seek to do in serving Godly purposes
11. What activities independent
professionals who work with organizations should make their top priority
12. What professional tutors of
Godly breakthrough methods should teach
13. What a nation’s visitors
should do
14. Practices citizens and
long-term residents can use to contribute more
15. What foundational tasks
individual Christians should perform
In emphasizing these fifteen
perspectives, keep in mind that there are many other perspectives that I have
not addressed. I don’t include any other perspectives because I have only been
directed to write about these fifteen.
You may have been called to add
perspectives to what I have addressed in The
2,000 Percent Nation. If so, please pray to confirm that calling and then
follow whatever the Holy Spirit’s directions are.
May God bless you as you read
this book and draw on it to do His will!
Copyright
© 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012 by Donald W. Mitchell.
All rights reserved.
No part of
this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in
any form
or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other
electronic
or mechanical methods without the prior written permission of the
publisher,
except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews
and
certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
Scripture
quotations marked (NKJV)
are taken
from the New King James Version.
Copyright
© 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Used by
permission. All rights reserved.
The 2,000 Percent Nation--Chapter 1
Chapter 1
How God Measures
a Nation’s Fruitfulness
And He said: “Behold, I make a covenant.
Before all your people I will do marvels
such as have not been done in all the earth, nor in any nation;
and all the people among whom you are shall see the work of
the LORD.
For it is an awesome thing that I will do with you.
— Exodus 34:10 (NKJV)
Jesus said to them, “Have you never read in the Scriptures:
‘The stone which the builders rejected
Has become the chief cornerstone.
This was the LORD’s doing,
And it is marvelous in our eyes’?
“Therefore I say to you, the kingdom of God will be taken from you
and given to a nation bearing the fruits of it.
And whoever falls on this stone will be broken;
but on whomever it falls, it will grind him to powder.”
— Matthew 21:42-44
(NKJV)
Originally, there were no nations. There were only families.
God knew that bigger things were to come after His people multiplied in number
due to His grace, and He began preparing His followers to form nations.
Here’s an example. When Abram
(whose name meant “father is exalted”) doubted at age ninety-nine that he would
ever father a child by his almost-as-old wife Sarai (whom God later renamed as
Sarah, meaning “princess”), God repeated His promise that Abram would become
the father of great numbers of descendants, promised that Abram would also
become the father many nations, and renamed Abram as Abraham, which means “father
of a multitude.” (Genesis 17:4-6, NKJV)
Through Moses, God made it clear
to the Israelites and those who accompanied them out of Egypt what was expected from the
new nation that He directed them to form in the Promised Land, in keeping with
an earlier promise to Abram and later to the renamed Abraham:
Now the LORD had said to Abram:
“Get out of your country,
From your family
And from your father’s house,
To a land that I will show you.
I will make you a great nation;
I will bless you
And make your name great;
And you shall be a blessing.
I will bless those who bless you,
And I will curse him who curses
you;
And in you all the families of
the earth shall be blessed.”
(Genesis 12:1-3, NKJV)
Behold, I set before you today a
blessing and a curse: the blessing, if you obey the commandments [referring to
the ten commandments as repeated in Deuteronomy 5 (NKJV)] of the LORD your God
which I command you today; and the curse, if you do not obey the commandments
of the LORD your God, but turn aside from the way which I command you today, to
go after other gods which you have not known. (Deuteronomy 11:26-28, NKJV)
Here are the ten commandments:
“You shall have no other gods
before Me.
“You shall not make for yourself
a carved image — any likeness of anything that is in heaven
above, or that is in the earth beneath, or that is in the water
under the earth; you shall not bow down to them nor serve them. For I, the LORD
your God, am a jealous God, visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon
the children to the third and fourth generations of those who hate Me,
but showing mercy to thousands, to those who love Me and keep My commandments.
“You shall not take the name of
the LORD your God in vain, for the LORD will not hold him guiltless who
takes His name in vain.
“Observe the Sabbath day, to keep
it holy, as the LORD your God commanded you. Six days you shall labor and do
all your work, but the seventh day is the Sabbath of the LORD your God. In
it you shall do no work: you, nor your son, nor your daughter, nor your
male servant, nor your female servant, nor your ox, nor your donkey, nor any of
your cattle, nor your stranger who is within your gates, that your male
servant and your female servant may rest as well as you. And remember that you
were a slave in the land of Egypt, and the LORD your
God brought you out from there by a mighty hand and by an outstretched arm;
therefore the LORD your God commanded you to keep the Sabbath day.
“Honor your father and your
mother, as the LORD your God has commanded you, that your days may be long, and
that it may be well with you in the land which the LORD your God is giving you.
“You shall not murder.
“You shall not commit adultery.
“You shall not steal.
“You shall not bear false witness
against your neighbor.
“You shall not covet your
neighbor’s wife; and you shall not desire your neighbor’s house, his field, his
male servant, his female servant, his ox, his donkey, or anything that is
your neighbor’s.” (Deuteronomy 5:7-21, NKJV)
Some may wonder if the Genesis 12
and Deuteronomy promises apply to nations other than Israel. Galatians 3:8-9 (NKJV)
indicates that the promises extend to those who are saved by repentance,
believe in Jesus, and follow Him:
And the Scripture, foreseeing
that God would justify the Gentiles by faith, preached the gospel to Abraham
beforehand, saying, “In you all the nations shall be blessed.”
So then those who are of faith are blessed with believing Abraham.
As the Bible shows, God later
revealed more requirements to His followers. For instance, through His Son,
Jesus Christ, information, instructions, commissions, and commandments were
added that changed what individuals should do for God. Consider Jesus’
explanation of how to be born again and to gain Salvation, a new covenant
that’s totally independent of following the ten commandments and making animal
and grain sacrifices to atone for sin (through the rules spelled out in the
book of Leviticus for the Israelites):
Jesus answered and said to him,
“Most assuredly, I say to you, unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom
of God.”
Nicodemus said to Him, “How can a
man be born when he is old? Can he enter a second time into his mother’s womb
and be born?”
Jesus answered, “Most assuredly,
I say to you, unless one is born of water and the Spirit, he cannot enter the kingdom
of God.
That which is born of the flesh is flesh, and that which is born of the Spirit
is spirit. Do not marvel that I said to you, ‘You must be born again.’ The wind
blows where it wishes, and you hear the sound of it, but cannot tell where it
comes from and where it goes. So is everyone who is born of the Spirit.”
Nicodemus answered and said to
Him, “How can these things be?”
Jesus answered and said to him,
“Are you the teacher of Israel,
and do not know these things? Most assuredly, I say to you, We speak what We
know and testify what We have seen, and you do not receive Our witness. If I
have told you earthly things and you do not believe, how will you believe if I
tell you heavenly things? No one has ascended to heaven but He who came down
from heaven, that is, the Son of Man who is in heaven. And as Moses
lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of Man be lifted
up, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have eternal life. For
God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever
believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life. For God did not
send His Son into the world to condemn the world, but that the world through
Him might be saved. He who believes in Him is not condemned; but he who does
not believe is condemned already, because he has not believed in the name of
the only begotten Son of God. And this is the condemnation, that the light has
come into the world, and men loved darkness rather than light, because their
deeds were evil. For everyone practicing evil hates the light and does not come
to the light, lest his deeds should be exposed. But he who does the truth comes
to the light, that his deeds may be clearly seen, that they have been done in
God.” (John 3:3-21, NKJV)
Jesus also increased the
requirement for loving others to include self-sacrifice [expressed as agape in Greek], following His precious
example during His ministry and especially on the cross at Calvary:
“A new commandment I
give to you, that you love one another; as I have loved you, that you also love
one another.” (John 13:34, NKJV)
“This is My commandment, that you
love one another as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, than
to lay down one’s life for his friends. You are My friends if you do whatever I
command you.” (John 15:12-14, NKJV)
Just before Jesus ascended into
heaven following His resurrection from the dead that was witnessed by more than
500 people (1 Corinthians 15:4-8, NKJV), He told His disciples to make more
disciples throughout the world, a command that applies to all believers today
because people cannot choose to repent and accept Salvation without first
knowing about it and how to gain it (Romans 10:14, NKJV):
And Jesus came and spoke to them,
saying, “All authority has been given to Me in heaven and on earth. Go
therefore and make disciples of all the nations, baptizing them in the name of
the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, teaching them to observe all
things that I have commanded you; and lo, I am with you always, even to
the end of the age.” (Matthew 28:18-20, NKJV)
My directions for writing this
chapter told me to address five types of measurements for a nation to use in
assessing its own fruitfulness for God: spiritual, moral, health, emotional,
and physical. In each of the next five sections, I describe measurements for
one of these kinds of fruitfulness from God’s perspective, how we might measure
such fruitfulness to help guide our human activities, and what some of the
benefits are that these measurements can provide us. Let’s start with spiritual
fruitfulness measurements.
God’s Spiritual Fruitfulness
Measurements
We then, as workers
together with
Him
also plead with you
not to receive the grace of God in vain. For He says:
“In an acceptable time I
have heard you,
And in the day of salvation
I have helped you.”
Behold, now is the accepted
time; behold, now is the day of salvation.
— 2 Corinthians 6:1-2 (NKJV)
God knows how many souls have been
saved among those who live in and are visiting a nation. He has a handy
reference guide in the Lamb’s Book of Life (Revelation 21:27, NKJV). It’s an
obvious measure for Him to be aware of because being saved is the minimum step
for entry into heaven and starting to become more like Jesus during life on
Earth.
While God
certainly knows who has and hasn’t been saved, we often don’t know. Our best
Earthly substitute for His perfect awareness is explaining to everyone in a
nation how to receive Salvation by sharing Romans 10:8-10 (NKJV) and then
asking each person if he or she is saved:
But what does it say? “The word is near you, in your
mouth and in your heart” (that is, the word of faith which we
preach): that if you confess with your mouth the Lord Jesus and believe in your
heart that God has raised Him from the dead, you will be saved. For with the
heart one believes unto righteousness, and with the mouth confession is made
unto salvation.
While some
people may not answer the question or answer, instead, with a lie, explaining
about Salvation in a loving, caring way and asking if she or he is saved can
still provide value by causing unsaved people to examine themselves. When
people indicate that they aren’t saved, it becomes natural and easy for
Christians to share more about the Gospel and to help people decide if they
want to repent their sins, to accept Jesus as Lord and Savior, and to follow
Him.
In just the last
few months, God has shown me how important it is to ask if someone is saved:
Some people I thought were saved weren’t. Because of my asking, some of these
people examined themselves, repented, and chose to accept Salvation. Praise God
for prompting me to ask!
Another
important measure of fruitfulness for God is how many Christians in a nation
share the Gospel about Salvation by using the correct information from the
Bible. God knows who shares effectively, but we don’t.
In addition, God
is surely interested in how often Christians correctly share the Gospel of
Salvation and with how many people. Once again, He knows, but we don’t.
For us, surveys
among saved and unsaved people could be the basis for reasonably precise
national estimates of accurate Gospel sharing. By publishing such estimates,
activity levels could be tracked. By increasing awareness of the frequency of
these important communications, at least some Christians would become more
active in this way … thus increasing their fruitfulness.
While working
with my coauthors to prepare Witnessing
Made Easy (Jubilee Worship Center Step by Step Press, 2010) and Ways You Can Witness (Salvation Press,
2010), I was astounded to learn that only a small percentage of Christians in
the United States have ever discussed Salvation with anyone outside of their
own families. It should come as no surprise, as a result, when surveys report
that most Americans believe that “all good people go to heaven,” in
contradiction to what the Bible clearly says. Because of witnessing inactivity
encouraged in part by this false view of Salvation, the number of missed
opportunities to serve God by sharing the Gospel of Salvation must be enormous
over a lifetime! Consider the significance of such omissions as expressed by
Romans 10:14 (NKJV):
How then shall they call on Him in whom they have not
believed? And how shall they believe in Him of whom they have not heard? And how shall they hear without a preacher?
Since the Holy Spirit saves people
and no one can be forced or persuaded by a mere human to accept Salvation, we
shouldn’t measure the results of any individual’s witnessing in terms of how
many people choose to accept God’s free gift of Salvation. It’s also rare for
someone to choose Salvation after conversing with just one person. Sharing the
Gospel of Salvation until someone is saved almost always requires ongoing
teamwork; and the bigger the team, the more likely someone is to seriously
investigate the opportunity to be saved.
Once saved,
people are drawn by the Holy Spirit to change how they lead their lives to
become more like Jesus. While any positive works by saved people don’t contribute
to their gaining Salvation (a free gift of God’s grace that’s totally
undeserved), the works can certainly help confirm in ways evident to us mere
humans that Salvation has occurred.
While God knows
what’s happening in each saved person’s life, our Earthly information is much
less accurate. For us to learn more abut sanctification, those who know saved
people well could track their progress in becoming more like Jesus in terms of
whatever harmful habits, bad actions, and strong temptations the saved people
had previously struggled with. An indirect benefit of such measurements would
be to make the saved people’s transformations more noticeable to their unsaved
family members and friends, potentially encouraging some more soul searching
among people about seeking Salvation.
Keeping in mind
that repenting and accepting Salvation will then begin to affect the behavior
of saved people, let’s look next at measurements of moral fruitfulness for a
nation.
God’s Moral
Fruitfulness Measurements
Walk in the
Spirit, and you shall not fulfill the lust of the flesh.
For the flesh
lusts against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh;
and these are
contrary to one another, so that you do not do the things that you wish.
But if you
are led by the Spirit, you are not under the law.
Now the works
of the flesh are evident, which are:
adultery,
fornication, uncleanness, lewdness, idolatry, sorcery, hatred,
contentions,
jealousies, outbursts of wrath, selfish ambitions, dissensions, heresies,
envy,
murders, drunkenness, revelries, and the like;
of which I
tell you beforehand, just as I also told you in time past,
that those
who practice such things will not inherit the kingdom of God.
But the fruit
of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness,
goodness,
faithfulness, gentleness, self-control. Against such there is no law.
And those who are Christ’s
have crucified the flesh with its passions and desires.
If we live in
the Spirit, let us also walk in the Spirit.
Let us not
become conceited, provoking one another, envying one another.
— Galatians 5:16-26 (NKJV)
As Galatians 5:16-26 (NKJV) points
out, there should be large differences in moral behavior between those who are
subject to the lusts of their flesh because they aren’t saved and those who are
trying to follow the Holy Spirit’s guidance after being saved. God keeps track
of any such bad behavior that isn’t repented of and covered by the precious
blood of Jesus Christ so it will be justly punished. For those who are saved,
He also credits many types of moral behavior toward heavenly rewards. Upon
death, Jesus will present us with these records of our behavior.
Our current
Earthly records of immoral and moral behavior in a nation are, by contrast,
woefully inadequate. It’s as though we don’t think that reducing immoral
behavior and increasing moral behavior are important.
What information
do we have now? Nations already collect some information about fleshly behavior
in the form of statistics for criminal acts such as murders, violent
contentions and outbursts of wrath that are reported to the police,
drunk-driving arrests, and certain public acts of hatred. It’s far rarer for a
nation to keep careful statistics about the occurrences of acts that exhibit
love, joy, peace, longsuffering, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness,
and self-control.
What are some
potential benefits of measuring more kinds of fleshly and Holy-Spirit-led acts?
Many of the fleshly acts listed in Galatians 5:16-26 can be observed by other
people. In addition to offending many of those who see such acts that are
contrary to God’s will, other people may be directly harmed by certain of the
acts. When we keep track of the total number of such incidents, we can have a
better sense of the total harm being done in a nation by immoral acts.
When citizens
and visitors recognize that so many of a nation’s problems relate to people not
repenting their sins, gaining Salvation, and following Jesus, the amount of
Christian witnessing is bound to increase at least as fast as do the calls for
governments to enact stricter laws and to provide more prisons, tougher judges,
and larger police departments. As a result, more people will be saved, more
moral acts will occur, the number of fleshly, harmful acts will decline, and
less harm will be done to others.
In recent years,
police in some cities have reported great success in reducing certain kinds of
crime by focusing their attention wherever most of those crimes occur. Similar
statistics about the locations of fleshly acts of immoral behavior could be
used by Christians to focus where to do more witnessing. Such information would
probably increase witnessing the most in communities where reported crime rates
are low, but the frequency of immoral, but legal, behavior is high.
Studies of crime
statistics have also shown that unlawful acts are mostly performed by the small
percentage of the whole population who are career criminals and who may break
laws thousands of times. If we knew which unsaved people were doing the most
lustful acts of the flesh who were not serving jail or prison time for a crime,
witnessing activities could be concentrated on being sure that these specific
people received the most information about how much God loves them, that their
many sins have already been forgiven and atoned for, and that God wants a
relationship with them after they accept Salvation. Such targeted witnessing
could greatly contribute to decreasing a nation’s immoral behavior.
Now, let’s
consider what can be learned from measuring and tracking moral acts. While some
might believe that the number and frequency of moral acts would perfectly
correlate with where Christians live, work, and travel, the facts may be quite
different from such beliefs. Some people who gain Salvation work much harder
and more effectively at following Jesus than do other Christians. In addition,
some people have been Christians longer than others, which may have helped them
to develop greater desires and abilities to act righteously. Further, many
Christians behave one way in certain public circumstances and differently in
other private ones. Finally, unsaved people may well act morally, too.
Survey
information could regularly capture how often moral acts of various kinds are
encountered in various nations. Such information could become as influential as
crime statistics are for influencing which nations attract the most legal
immigrants, long-term visitors, and vacationing tourists. Nations that were
performing poorly in the frequency of moral acts would probably find it
desirable to encourage more of such behavior. Increasing moral behavior could
become an important focus of public policy in most nations, regardless of what
the predominant local religious beliefs were.
Capturing
information about the number of moral acts for smaller geographical areas
within a nation could also influence where people choose to live, to work, to
invest, and to shop. Consequently, prices paid for homes, businesses, and other
property could be raised or lowered compared to other areas. Such measurements would
also probably increase concentrations of people who like to perform and to
benefit from moral acts. As a result, children who grow up in such areas might
experience fewer temptations and develop better personal habits.
In addition,
some people who want to spread the light of God’s goodness into areas of moral
darkness might have an easier time picking places where their own moral acts
would provide the greatest contrast with the typical lack of moral behavior. As
a result, activities of churches, Christian nonprofit organizations, and
secular organizations might be more effectively directed to where their
examples could do the most good among those seeking a better way to live.
For both fleshly
and Spirit-led acts, survey information based on asking about recent
experiences of individuals in observing others will be the most accurate and
lowest-cost sources of measurements. Experience with household crime surveys
has long demonstrated that such surveys are more accurate than crime statistics
for picking up incidences of criminal behavior. Since we have so little
information about moral acts, a greater improvement in measurement accuracy is
bound to be observed for capturing the frequency of fleshly acts that aren’t
criminal.
Many fleshly
acts have negative health consequences in addition to whatever spiritual and
moral harm they create. Let’s look next at measuring health fruitfulness.
God’s Health
Fruitfulness Measurements
Or do you not
know that your body is
the temple of
the Holy Spirit who is in you,
whom you have
from God, and you are not your own?
For you were
bought at a price;
therefore glorify God in your body and in your
spirit, which are God’s.
— 1 Corinthians 6:19-20 (NKJV)
Surely God is measuring our health
fruitfulness by how physically able we are to accomplish what He has called us
to do and for how many years we have such physical capabilities. Since our
callings vary, what is fruitful health for a high-profile athlete who is to be
a Christian role model may be quite different than fruitful health for someone
who is primarily called to write about what the Bible says.
One of the great
ironies about “wealthy” nations is that many aspects of health decline for some
people when their incomes increase. That’s true in part because some choose to
spend more money on harmful food while also becoming less physically active
(such as by riding more often in vehicles rather than walking, running, or
riding a bicycle). Surely such self-directed health declines are not part of
how God intended our temples of the Holy Spirit to be maintained for
accomplishing His purposes.
By contrast,
many people think about health primarily in terms of longevity: how long they
and others live. While that’s certainly one health measure, it’s one that can
be very misleading. Since many children in lesser developed nations die from
preventable diseases and treatable conditions, looking just at how long people
live who don’t succumb to such childhood problems misses a big part of God’s
purpose. He undoubtedly wanted most of the deceased children to live longer so
they could have served Him as adults.
In addition,
what good is longevity for serving God if people are so weighed down by ill
health that they cannot be very active in any aspect of their lives? And it
certainly can be a great trial to be in ill health, pulling some people toward
indulging their flesh in ways they might otherwise avoid.
Many people
wonder why God “sends” so many people poor health. Such wondering can be
mistaken. God doesn’t intend for most people to have poor health. Before sin
entered the Garden of Eden, God intended that Adam and Eve would live forever
in their natural bodies. Even after the fall, the Bible reveals that people
formerly lived much longer than today and were able to do more at advanced ages
than most elderly people can now accomplish.
Many physicians
and scientists argue that most ill health is brought about by poor lifestyle
decisions. Consider what happens to many people who regularly consume lots of
alcohol, use illegal drugs, and practice dangerous activities (such as sharing
intravenous needles and smoking). Since being overweight leads to many serious
diseases, the lesson about avoiding poor lifestyle decisions includes those who
eat too much or too many harmful foods (such as those high in refined sugar and
trans-fatty acids).
In nations where
governments are ineffective in providing enough low-cost potable water,
immunizations, and antibiotics, much avoidable suffering occurs. Some of the
same nations fail to share basic information about hygienic practices and how
to avoid the transmission of communicable diseases. As a result, everyday
behaviors can lead to avoidable illnesses and premature death. In places
plagued by malaria, many people don’t know how much using mosquito nets for
sleeping can help reduce new infections.
In places where
there are few Christians or limited knowledge of faith-based healing, there may
also be many people who are plagued with infirmities that could be overcome
through prayer and faith. In such instances, God’s potential to heal may be
mostly ignored. Remember how many times Jesus is described by the Bible as
healing all those who asked for His touch.
As with the
other types of fruitfulness, God is well aware of how healthy each of His
children is. In that knowledge, He is way ahead of us.
Medicine today
often places more attention on treating illnesses than on sustaining and
improving basic health. Consequently, most people will tell you that they are
perfectly healthy with no problems just before having a serious heart attack or
stroke, becoming a diabetic, experiencing a detached retina, or having a fall
that fractures a calcium-deficient hip.
One of the
wonders of God’s creation is how effective our bodies are at healing
themselves. For example, when left untreated, most severe incidents of back
pain disappear within two weeks. With better lifestyle choices, accepting God’s
free gift of Salvation, prayer, and faith, many aspects of health are bound to
improve.
Surveys today
report that some people are more concerned about how long they can lead
“healthy,” active lives rather than how long they will live. Increased interest
in being active is encouraging for increasing fruitfulness.
If we begin to
measure all the behaviors that we understand can affect health, both for good
and for harm, we have a better starting point for letting a nation know how its
culture, practices, and habits could be beneficially adjusted. If, in addition,
many individuals can receive tailored information about the consequences of
what they are doing for adding to or reducing the risk of ill health, more
people will change what they do for the better.
As a personal
example, I have a hard time keeping the level of triglycerides (fatty acids) in
my blood as low as research suggests is desirable. My physicians share that
information with me after each physical. In response, I have tried a lot of
things involving diet and exercise, but nothing worked well enough. After
reading that oatmeal was good for lowering cholesterol (with which I have a
minor problem), I decided to start having oatmeal daily for lunch. To my happy
surprise, my triglyceride level dropped to acceptable levels for the first time
in decades. My cholesterol and many other blood measures also improved. Even better
news is that I love to eat oatmeal. Praise God!
Without such
measurements, I consider it unlikely that I would have become such a lunchtime
devotee of oatmeal. And there any many other people who could benefit from
making a similar change, but won’t, unless health measurements and good
information about what to do point them in the right direction.
Medications
taken and treatments received are also useful health measures to consider.
There have been rapid expansions in people taking prescription pharmaceuticals
for decades just to “maintain” them at a certain level of ill health. It would
also be good to measure how various activities can contribute to avoiding such
long-term use of medications. There are very few molecules that don’t present
their own long-term health challenges, such as through uncontrollable side
effects and especially in causing irreversible liver damage.
Increasingly,
people are also using pharmaceuticals to manage their moods, suggesting that
there are widespread problems with emotional health. Let’s shift to considering
measurements of emotional fruitfulness.
God’s
Emotional Fruitfulness Measurements
This I say,
therefore, and testify in the Lord, that you should no longer walk
as the rest
of the Gentiles walk, in the
futility of their mind,
having their
understanding darkened, being alienated from the life of God,
because of
the ignorance that is in them, because of the blindness of their heart;
who, being
past feeling, have given themselves over to lewdness,
to work all
uncleanness with greediness.
— Ephesians 4:17-19 (NKJV)
Emotional distress and depression
incapacitate many more people in most economically advanced nations from being
fruitful than do injuries and chronic illnesses combined. While a focused
person who is ill may still serve the Lord in some ways, someone who is
overcome by negative emotions or emotional distress may be as inactive for God
as someone who is totally paralyzed.
In addition to
knowing who is saved and who is not, God can certainly tell who is emotionally
on an even keel and who is not. The Bible tells us in one of my favorite Bible
verses: “Rejoice in the Lord
always. Again I will say, rejoice!”
(Philippians 4:4, NKJV).
While God has
told us that we will have troubles, He has also promised to be with us through
our troubles (Matthew 28:20 and Psalm 23, NKJV). In addition, when we love God,
He will work for our good … often turning what seems to be trouble into a
blessing:
And we know that in all things God works for the good of
those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose. (Romans
8:28, NKJV)
What, then, is
emotional fruitfulness from God’s perspective? It’s actually pretty simple. He
wants our rejoicing to be so uplifting that it not only stirs us to action for
Him according to our calling, it also raises the emotions of others who need
encouragement, including those who don’t follow Him, to draw closer to Him and
to do His will, such as by witnessing:
A cheerful heart is good medicine, but a crushed spirit
dries up the bones. (Proverbs 17:22, NKJV)
As to Earthly
tools for measuring emotional fruitfulness, asking questions through surveys is
again our best method. We should ask about unsaved people drawing closer to God
and the Godly actions Christians take as well, as the encouragement received
from others that contributed.
So far in this
chapter, we have focused on people and their actions as they relate to helping
save souls, drawing forth moral actions, decreasing immoral actions, improving
physical health, and inspiring Godly actions through having and sharing
uplifting emotions. You may be wondering about what it means for there to be
more physical fruitfulness. We look next at that dimension of fruitfulness.
God’s Physical
Fruitfulness Measurements
When it was
evening, His disciples came to Him, saying,
“This is a
deserted place, and the hour is already late.
Send the
multitudes away,
that they may
go into the villages and buy themselves food.”
But Jesus
said to them,
“They do not
need to go away. You give them something to eat.”
And they said
to Him, “We have here only five loaves and two fish.”
He said,
“Bring them here to Me.”
Then He
commanded the multitudes to sit down on the grass.
And He took
the five loaves and the two fish, and looking up to heaven,
He blessed
and broke and gave the loaves to the disciples;
and the disciples gave to the multitudes.
So they all
ate and were filled,
and they took
up twelve baskets full of the fragments that remained.
Now those who
had eaten were about five thousand men,
besides women
and children.
— Matthew 14:15-21 (NKJV)
“Therefore I
say to you, do not worry about your life,
what you will
eat or what you will drink;
nor about
your body, what you will put on.
Is not life
more than food and the body more than clothing?
Look at the
birds of the air,
for they
neither sow nor reap nor gather into barns;
yet your
heavenly Father feeds them.
Are you not
of more value than they?
Which of you
by worrying can add one cubit to his stature?
So why do you
worry about clothing?
Consider the
lilies of the field,
how they
grow: they neither toil nor spin; and yet I say to you
that even
Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these.
Now if God so
clothes the grass of the field, which today is,
and tomorrow
is thrown into the oven,
will He not much
more clothe you, O you
of little faith?
Therefore do
not worry, saying,
‘What shall
we eat?’ or ‘What shall we drink?’ or ‘What shall we wear?’
For after all
these things the Gentiles seek.
For your
heavenly Father knows that you need all these things.
But seek
first the kingdom
of God
and His righteousness,
and all these
things shall be added to you.
Therefore do
not worry about tomorrow,
for tomorrow
will worry about its own things.
Sufficient
for the day is its own
trouble.”
— Matthew 6:25-34 (NKJV)
We are spiritual beings who inhabit
physical bodies. God knows that our physical lives need to be sustained and
nourished for us to be able to serve Him as spiritual beings. He will gladly
provide for us after we gain Salvation, seek to serve Him first, and act
righteously. Praise God for His provision. As the feeding of the five thousand
men (plus more women and children) shows, God has more than enough power to
provide whatever is good for us.
In particular,
God wants us to have the physical resources we need to be active in following
our callings. His desire is for us to have Bibles and Bible study materials,
teachers to help us learn about Him, enough of the right foods, clean water to
drink and to wash in, comfortable places to rest at night, supportive
surroundings, ways to exercise that we enjoy, and whatever information and
tools are needed to accomplish our callings.
We have only to
look around us to see and to read about other places to realize that many
people don’t have all their physical needs met. Unfortunately, many people also
aren’t saved, and even among the saved some people aren’t yet putting God’s
kingdom first by engaging in their callings from Him as their top priority.
Let’s look at
the problems that are created by such disconnection and disobedience. When
aspects of our physical needs aren’t met, we can be as limited as by paralysis
or by a debilitating disease. In addition, lacking certain nutritional needs
(such as essential vitamins and minerals) can cause disease, reduce our ability
to act, and shorten life.
In many cases,
our physical needs may be unmet simply due to our own poor choices. The person
who watches so much television that no walks occur nor any exercise taken will
suffer from lack of activity just as much as someone who is physically unable
to walk or to exercise.
If Christians
are active in witnessing and mentoring new believers, many of the unmet
physical needs will melt away as God provides for His people who are following
Him. Nevertheless, Christians and unsaved people can also help to provide for
those who aren’t following Him. Such human-based provision can be another way
to show His love and to encourage more to gain Salvation and to follow their
callings.
Surveys again
are what we can use to measure how we are doing in accessing physical resources
and to locate opportunities to improve our physical fruitfulness. Designing
such surveys will be quite simple in some ways, such as by asking about water
quality and availability.
Difficulties
present themselves when it comes to defining physical needs for engaging in an
individual’s specific calling. As an initial challenge, unsaved people may have
little sense of what God is calling them to do in serving Him. In some cases,
the best we may be able to do is to ask about the physical needs for doing what
an unsaved person likes to do or regularly does that isn’t harmful.
Measuring
potential for an individual’s physical fruitfulness is an important activity.
There’s a great need for Christians to develop skill in helping believers to
find their callings, to define what physical support is required and what
physical resources are needed for greatest fruitfulness, and to identify the
best ways to gain the needed physical resources.
Here’s an
example. Most people will be more effective witnesses for Christ after
receiving some practical training and then being mentored by a fellow believer
in applying what has been learned. While witnessing, most people find that they
can interest people more by sharing a written testimony that’s relevant to the
hearer. If the witness is often unavailable for follow-up conversations, it
will be good to have a witnessing partner who is almost always available. Such
witnessing will also make a bigger impression if there are lots of Christian
radio stations in the area so that unsaved people can easily acquire more
information while scanning for something good to listen to. While I could add
more dimensions of physical resources to this example, notice that the list of
physical needs for greatest effectiveness is pretty lengthy.
Naturally, God
can draw on supernatural resources to supply any lack in physical resources for
fulfilling a calling, such as by causing an unsaved person to have an
experience that draws her or him closer to wanting God in his or her life … or
by directly providing the need from someone else through the Holy Spirit’s
direction.
Notice that the
missing physical elements in this example may already exist but just may not be
readily available to the person who needs to learn how to be a better witness.
Becoming aware of what’s missing can be enough in some cases for a committed
believer to fill in any physical lacks for fulfilling a calling. In other
cases, developing skill in creating and implementing 2,000 percent solutions
and combining complementary breakthroughs will usually be more than sufficient
to supply anything that’s physically lacking.
The essential
elements for physical fruitfulness are probably most limited by individuals
being ignorant about what their unmet physical needs are. God has bountifully
provided for what we need, but we aren’t always attuned enough to fruitfulness
to start stocking up on what we need.
After a nation
has become highly fruitful for Him, virtually everyone will know what physical
resources he or she needs and how to obtain them. Until that self-awareness
universally exists, a few Christians and some organizations are going to be
required to take the lead in filling in for ignorance.
Fruitfulness
Measures Summarized
You did not
choose Me, but I chose you and appointed you
that you
should go and bear fruit, and that your fruit should remain,
that whatever
you ask the Father in My name He may give you.
— John 15:16 (NKJV)
Before leaving this chapter, let me
summarize how God considers these five types of fruitfulness for Him while
examining a nation:
1. Spiritual
a. Number of
saved people
b. How many saved people correctly apply the Bible while
sharing the Gospel
c. How often
saved people correctly share the Gospel
2. Moral
a. Number of moral acts inspired by the Holy Spirit that
are occurring as described in Galatians 5:16-26 (NKJV)
b. Number of immoral acts inspired by the lusts of the
flesh that are occurring as described in Galatians 5:16-26 (NKJV)
3. Health
a. Number of people whose health enables them to fulfill
His callings for them
b. How long these people have had sufficient good health
to fulfill their callings
4. Emotional
a. Number of people who are emotionally able to fulfill
His callings for them
b. Number of people who are able to lift the spirits of
others so that they fulfill their callings if they are already believers, or
seek Him if they are not yet saved
c. Number of actions taken to fulfill His callings and
to seek Him as a result of receiving emotional encouragement from Christians
5. Physical
a. Number of people who have enough resources to sustain
a healthy, active life
b. Number of Christians who have the resources they need
to draw closer to God and to fulfill their callings for Him
As a reminder of
what to do, let me also summarize how we humans should be measuring these same
types of fruitfulness through national polls and surveys conducted with samples
of randomly selected people:
1. Spiritual
a. Explain to all people in a nation what it means to be
saved and ask if they have repented of their sins, believed in their hearts
that Jesus rose from the dead, and dedicated their lives aloud to following
Jesus as Lord and Savior
b. Ask saved people how their lives and behaviors have
changed since accepting Salvation
c. Ask family members who know saved people well what
changes they have observed in increased good behavior and decreased bad
behavior as defined by Galatians 5:16-26 (NKJV)
d. Ask nonfamily members who know saved people well what
changes they have observed in increased good behavior and decreased bad
behavior as defined by Galatians 5:16-26 (NKJV)
e. Routinely ask national samples of saved people how
and how often they have shared the Gospel message with unsaved people in their
own families
f. Routinely ask national samples of saved people how
and how often they have shared the Gospel message with unsaved people who are
not in their own families
g. Routinely ask national samples of unsaved people how
and how often someone has shared the Gospel message with them
2. Moral
a. Routinely ask randomly selected national samples of
people how often they have observed or experienced a list of moral acts (as
defined in Galatians 5:16-26, NKJV) done by others in the prior week
b. Routinely ask randomly selected national samples of
people how often they have observed or experienced a list of immoral acts (as
defined in Galatians 5:16-26, NKJV) done by others in the prior week
c. Routinely ask randomly selected local samples of
people how often they have observed or experienced a list of moral acts (as
defined in Galatians 5:16-26, NKJV) done by others in the prior week
d. Routinely ask randomly selected local samples of
people how often they have observed or experienced a list of immoral acts (as
defined in Galatians 5:16-26, NKJV) done by others in the prior week
3. Health
a. Annual physical examinations supplemented by
laboratory tests to measure factors that accurately describe the current and
future level of full functioning, longevity, and the ability to perform each
person’s calling from God
b. Written information about what the measurements mean
and how to improve the underlying circumstances that lead to the measured
results
c. National usage information about medications and
therapies employed to ameliorate unhealthy medical conditions that limit full
functioning, longevity, and the ability to perform each person’s calling from
God
4. Emotional
a. Routinely ask a randomly selected national sample
about saved people’s emotional ability to fulfill their personal callings from
God to serve Him
b. Routinely ask a randomly selected national sample of
unsaved people about the frequency of receiving emotional encouragement that
led them to draw closer to God
c. Routinely ask a randomly selected national sample of
believers about the frequency of receiving emotional encouragement from
Christians that led them to take actions to fulfill their callings from God
5. Physical
a. Routinely ask each person about the availability of
whatever they need to sustain a healthy, productive life
b. Routinely ask each person about the personal habits
that encourage or endanger physical fruitfulness
c. Routinely ask Christians about the availability of
whatever they need to draw closer to God and to fulfill their callings for Him
In the next
fourteen chapters, we examine how to make the necessary measurements and to
create the appropriate awareness of these measurements. We begin in Chapter 2
by considering what governments should and should not do in encouraging and
affecting fruitfulness.
Copyright
© 2007, 2010, 2011, 2012 by Donald W. Mitchell.
All rights reserved.
No part of
this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in
any form
or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other
electronic
or mechanical methods without the prior written permission of the
publisher,
except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews
and
certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.
Scripture
quotations marked (NKJV)
are taken
from the New King James Version.
Copyright
© 1982 by Thomas Nelson, Inc.
Used by
permission. All rights reserved.
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