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The Divine Obsession

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Francis Frangipane

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There are three basic
categories of Christians. The largest group consists of people who, though they
try to avoid the darkness in the world, have no hope that the world can be
redeemed. Assuming Christ’s return is imminent, they retreat into what seems a
shelter of apathy concerning the non-Christian world around them. Yet most are
not truly apathetic. Their souls, like Lot’s, are vexed by the conduct of
unprincipled men (2 Pet. 2:7-8). Their compassion, though, is kindled even if
it’s limited. Rarely do they extend themselves beyond the needs of their
immediate family and closest friends.

They love the Lord, but they don’t know
how or what to do to change society or even to positively impact their
neighborhoods.

The second group of
Christians consists of those who would rather rail at the darkness than adjust
to it. Though much smaller in number than the first, they are by no means
apathetic; in fact, they appear exactly opposite. They rage at the depravity of
the ungodly and protest the audacity of the wicked. They pound the pulpit and
the pavement; they are both vocal and visible. Yet their ability to transform their
culture is, for the most part, neutralized by their negativity and rage. They
are dismissed as judgmental extremists. Most sinners simply cannot endure the
harshness of their approach.

Both groups sincerely
desire to see our culture transformed. Yet the same problem afflicts them: they
are troubled that the world is unchristian, without being troubled that their
own hearts are un-Christlike. They do not perceive the priority of God’s heart,
which is the transformation of the church into the image of Christ (Rom.
8:28-29).

World Changers
Needed

It is this very passion to be conformed to Christ that separates the third
group from the others. Though smallest in number, its members are the most
effective. Throughout history, these have been the world changers. These are
the individuals who have understood the priority of God. They know that the
Father’s highest passion is to behold His Son revealed in a believer’s soul. As
much as they are moved with compassion for the lost, their primary quest is not
to touch their neighbors’ hearts, but to touch the heart of God. They know if
they awaken the Father’s pleasure, the power of His Spirit will go before them.
God Himself will change the hearts of those around them.


It is my sincere quest in
life to be like Jesus in everything. It stuns me to know that if I am truly
conformed to Christ, I have the Spirit’s promise that I will also awaken the
pleasure of Almighty God. Here, in my transformation, is the power to touch
cities and redeem cultures, for it takes transformed people to transform
nations.

To Be Like Christ
Indeed, it was this hunger for Christlikeness that was the secret of Paul’s
success. His expressed vision was simply, “That I may know Him and the
power of His resurrection and the fellowship of His sufferings, being conformed
to His death”
(Phil. 3:10).

Paul’s passion was taken up
with this one heavenly goal of being conformed to the life and power of Jesus
Christ. The apostle’s quest was not only to win the world but to know Jesus
Christ. The works Paul accomplished – founding churches, writing almost half
the New Testament, winning the lost, demonstrating miraculous spiritual gifts,
and remaining faithful throughout times of terrible suffering – were all
by-products of his passion to know Christ.

Likewise with us, the
Father’s immediate, primary goal for the church is for us to be like Christ. He
rescues us so He can transform us. Some say that the Father’s goal is to win
the lost. Yet, if this were His highest priority, He would simply bypass the
church and save men Himself. Has He not proven, as seen in Paul’s conversion,
that His abilities to save people are without limit? Did He not change the
arrogant heart of King Nebuchadnezzar into a man of meekness who gave glory to
God? Who can resist Him who is irresistible? However, instead of revealing His
glory, it is His choice to reach to the lost through the agency of transformed
people.


This, my friends, is the
glorious mystery of our existence: the Almighty has purposed from eternity to
create a race of men and women who, though tested in a corrupt and violent
world, bear the image and likeness of Christ (Gen. 1:27). Christ calls this
heavenly-natured people “the church,” His “new creation” (2
Cor. 5:17 NKJV).

The Holy Obsession
To be in love is to be obsessed with one’s beloved; to be obsessed is “to
think continually about the same thing.” In this sense, the Father is
obsessed with filling the universe with the Spirit of Jesus Christ. Beginning
with eternity past, revealing the Firstborn in the womb of time, and continuing
with the transformation of the church, the Father desires all creation
ultimately to be summed up in Christ. Our goal is to participate in this “summing
up”
(Eph. 1:10) until all that we are is conformed to Christ.

Now, if the Father is
obsessed with His Son, let us also surrender not only to God’s will but also to
His obsession. Indeed, Jesus prayed that the very love with which the Father
loved the Son would be in His disciples (John 17:26). We can receive and be
flooded with the very same quality of love that the Father has for His Son. We
can know the divine obsession.

Therefore, let us ponder
and then pursue what it means to be Christ-like. Let us give ourselves to the
divine obsession of God: to see creation, starting with ourselves, summed up in
Christ. For it is here, in the transformation of our lives, that we discover
and fulfill the wondrous obsession of God: the unveiling of His Son in the
earth.
It is here, at the threshold of Christ in us, that we discover the
power one life surrendered to Christ has upon the heart of God.


Father, let my heart
become as obsessed with Your Son as You are. Let the fullness of my absorption
with Him displace all other pursuits until, at the mere glimpse of Jesus, my
whole being is flooded with the pleasure You Yourself feel.

About the author:·Francis
Frangipane is the founder of River of Life Ministries in Cedar Rapids,
Iowa, and has traveled throughout the world ministering to thousands of
pastors and intercessors from many backgrounds. In June 2009, he retired
from his position as senior pastor of River of Life Ministries and is
devoting himself to prayer and the ministry of God’s Word. For more
about his ministry, go to www.frangipane.org.

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