For to Moses He says, “I will have mercy on whomever I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whomever I will have compassion.” So then it is not of him who wills, nor of him who runs, but of God who shows mercy. Rom. 9:15-16
But go and learn what this means, “I desire mercy and not sacrifice,” for I did not come to call the righteous, but sinners. Matt. 9:13
The morning nourishment in one of the morning revival portions speaks about God's sovereign mercy. I could relate my experience with all the points as experienced by brother Witness Lee. These days my experience has also been matching the truths I have been pursuing and this testifies to the genuineness of brother Lee's ministry. It's amazing, the truth of the Bible is similarly experienced by many saints!
God’s mercy is absolutely according to His sovereignty. Being a vessel of mercy is not the result of our choice; it originates with God’s sovereignty. It is of God’s sovereignty that He created us vessels of mercy to contain Himself. His sovereignty is the basis of His selection.
If we would serve God in His New Testament economy, we need to know that it is wholly a matter of God’s sovereign mercy. Through many years of experience I have become strongly and deeply convinced that everything that happens to us is of God’s mercy. All is a matter of God’s mercy. The more we see this, the more we shall spontaneously bear our responsibility before the Lord. However, even the bearing of responsibility is of God’s mercy. Why is it that some believers are willing to bear their responsibility and that others are not? The answer lies in God’s mercy. In Romans 9:15 Paul quotes the Lord’s words, “I will have mercy on whomever I will have mercy.” Because of God’s mercy we responded to the gospel when others did not respond, we received a word about Christ as life when others refused to receive it, and we took the way of the Lord’s recovery when others drew back from taking this way. (The Conclusion of the New Testament, pp. 1184-1185)
I have no more words to say except amen and amen to the above statement. I am what I am today because of the Lord's mercy. I never thought about this before, I never labor for it nor sought for it, but the Lord just made me what I am today. Be it my personal life or family life or Christian life or church life or service life, all are because of God's sovereign mercy. To all these, I can only worship the Lord God Almighty. Looking back at my life story and looking at what is happening now, everything indeed is because of the Lord's mercy.
As I have received so much mercy from the Lord, I also must exercise and show mercy to the saints especially to the ones serving with me. Cases of serving ones not being faithful in their services have been brought to my notice. Generally, I trust all the serving ones. But there always is an exceptional case. In this regard, there are two brothers who have not been doing well in their services and of late, their services have come under a scanner. If it were someone else in place of me, I guess these ones would have been fired already. But the Lord's mercy has been so fresh to me and firing would be the last thing I would do as long as the Lord placed me in my service and responsibility.
As for me, I would rather pray and try to make things work. I look at all the serving ones as my own brothers and sisters. Most of them have families to care for and their only source of income is the support from the literature service. My heart really sympathizes with them. At the same time, I must also be faithful to the responsibility the Lord assigned to me. Wherever possible, I tried my best to balance between responsibly and mercy. Most often, mercy triumphs over responsibility and I would still care for the serving ones who should actually have been fired.
In fact, a brother once called me up and asked me why one particular brother has been kept in his service to date when he was found to be unfaithful in his service. I did not reply neither in the positive nor negative. I simply shrug off the question with a simple ok. In order to shepherd them, I had called for fellowship and made a couple of phone calls. Even then, still paid them what was righteously due to them, and beyond. In fact, last month, one brother's support was less than half of his general income. It was so because of the little quantity of work he produced. But out of much mercy, we paid him extra support to make sure that his family has sufficient for the month.
I believe, in the future too, cases like this will come up again and again. As long as the Lord graces me on in my service, I will still apply the Lord's mercy upon everyone even as I applied to myself. Lord, continue to show mercy on us. Praise the Lord for His mercy!
“I will have mercy on whomever I will have mercy, and I will have compassion on whomever I will have compassion.”