By Pastor M. Isi Eromosele
We have before us one of the most remarkable and challenging
statements in the whole of the New Testament. Jesus said, “If anyone thirsts,
let him come unto Me and drink. He who believes in Me, as the Scripture has said,
out of his heart will flow rivers of living water" (John
7:38).
These words were spoken by Jesus to people who were
spiritually dry, empty and defeated. They are like many people of our day,
going through religious ritual and ceremony but finding no real meaning, life
and victory.
The Apostle John includes the commentary on the words of
Jesus. Verse 39 tells us that Jesus' statement about "rivers
of living water" is a reference to the Holy Spirit. When it comes to the doctrine of the Holy Spirit, it is
possible to go to extremes.
However, despite our fear of one extreme, we must not go to
the other extreme and be devoid of the person and power of the Holy Spirit.
Herein lies the power for life and ministry. The Holy Spirit is our power
source.
The 21st century church needs to be reminded of the purpose
and power of the third Person of the Trinity, the Holy Spirit. It seems that
the modern church has replaced the power of God with the performance of man.
Instead of singing, "Holy Spirit breathe on me," we are saying,
"Lights…cameras…action."
The setting of our Lord's words amplify their meaning. The
occasion was the Feast of Tabernacles, the third in a series of Jewish Feasts.
In the Old Testament, the Feast of Tabernacles lasted seven days. In the New
Testament the Feast of Tabernacles lasted eight days. It was a Thanksgiving
Feast.
The guidelines for the Feast are found in Leviticus
23. The people were required to leave their permanent residences and build
booths of willows and palm branches. During the Feast of Tabernacles they
would live in these booths made of branches as a reminder of their nomadic days
in the wilderness.
It was a time of remembering God's wonderful provision.
During the Feast of Tabernacles, the city of Jerusalem
and the Temple area were filled
with booths made from branches.
At the heart of the Feast was a daily procession. Priests
carrying Golden Pitchers would lead a parade or procession through the city to
the pool of Siloam singing the words of Isa.
12:3, "Therefore with joy you will draw water from the wells of salvation."
The great crowd of people would parade back to the Temple
and the Priests would pour the water from the pool of Siloam down upon the
Altar and the people would shout and wave palm branches.
This procedure went on for 7 days, but on the last day the
procedure was repeated with two significant exceptions. First, when the parade
of people returned from the pool of Siloam, the Priests would march around the
Altar seven times commemorating Joshua's victory at Jericho.
Secondly, the Priests would raise the golden pitcher over
the silver funnels as they had done each day previously, but this time there
was no water — only an empty pitcher. This signified the disobedient generation
that died in the Wilderness. Instead of a shout and the waving of palm branches
as the people had done each day, they now stood in silence.
It was in the moment of silence — this moment of
bewilderment, emptiness and meaninglessness — that Jesus cried out. You must
get the picture. Our Lord had been watching the people go through the motions,
perfectly following the order of service, but there was no meaning, no power, no
life. They found themselves right where they had started. Nothing was any
different.
Think of the great crowd of people who gathered annually
for this observation of the Feast of Tabernacles. Think about their lives,
their homes, their jobs, their communities and their churches.
Think about what they brought with them to the great Feast:
their hopes, their dreams and their expectations. Think about what they took
away when they returned to their homes. Were they any different? Or did they just
go through the same old motions only to conclude with an empty pitcher?
What happened to that crowd over two thousand years ago
still happens to people in our world every Sunday. People go to church filled
with hopes and dreams and expectations. And all too often they go away
unfulfilled and empty.
Fellow pastors and church leaders: are we sending our people
away empty? Do they come to the House of God in search for the Water of Life
only to hear the clanging of an empty pitcher? Do they hear the dipper banging
against the bottom of your bucket?
The Holy Spirit function comes to the preacher not in the
study, but in the closet. It is heaven's distillation in answer to prayer. It
is the sweetest exaltation of the Holy Spirit. It impregnates, suffuses,
softens, percolates, cuts and soothes.
It carries the Word like dynamite, like salt, like sugar;
Makes the Word a soother, an arraigner, a revealer, a searcher; Makes the
hearers a culprit or a saint, makes him weep like a child and live like a
giant.
Opens his heart and his purse as gently, yet as strongly as
spring opens leaves. This function is not a gift of genius. It is not found in
the halls of learning. No eloquence can woo it, no industry can win it. No prelatic
hands can confer it. It is the gift of God - a signet set to His own
messengers…It is given to those who have sought this anointed honor through
many an hour of tearful, wrestling prayer."
Jesus said, "If anyone thirsts…" Thirst is a
consciousness of an unsatisfied need. Thirst expresses desperation. Thirst will
kill faster than hunger. One can go weeks without food, but only days without
water.
Are you thirsty? Are you thirsty for God? God will
meet man on the level of his desire, man can have as much of God as he
wants."
Eric Alexander, the former pastor of St.
George's Tron, Church of Scotland, in Glasgow
once said, "We need to learn that the blessing of God is not a cheap commodity
lightly dispensed."
The Psalmist said, "As the deer pants for the water
brooks, so pants my soul for You, O God, my soul thirsts for God - for the
Living God" (Psalm. 42:1-2).
Do you have an unsatisfied need for God in your heart? Are
you thirsty for Him?
"Out of his heart will flow rivers of living
water…"
Jesus did not promise a trickle or a stream or a flow…He
promised a river. Can you get your mind around this? The Holy Spirit is like a
mighty rushing river…a life-giving river. He is like the mighty river found in Ezekiel
47 that produces life wherever it flows.
Pastor M. Isi Eromosele is a part of the Leadership Pastors
at God’s Intervention Center in New York.
He is also the Founder and CEO of Oseme Group, a global management
consulting company based in New York City.
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