Neither do men light a candle, and put it under a bushel, but on a candlestick; and it giveth light unto all that are in the house. (Matt. 5:15)
What did Jesus say about letting our light shine? He wants us to put our lamp “on a lampstand” so “it gives light to all who are in the house.” The Greek word for “lampstand” here is luchnia, which referred to an elevated stand on which a lamp — luchnos —could be placed. Once the lamp, or luchnos, was filled with oil and the wick was lit, the amount of light it provided was determined by its position. In other words,the higher the light, the brighter the light.
Iif a lamp was simply placed in a corner, it would give light only to those nearest that corner. And if it was set on a table, it would provide enough light to illuminate everyone sitting around that table.
However, if that same lamp was placed on top of a lampstand, it would provide maximum light and illuminate all who were in the room!
In other words, the position of the lamp determined the influence it exerted. The amount of light produced from the lamp was actually the same, but its elevated position made its light much more effective.
So what does this have to do with our ability to lift our own light higher? Once we become born again, the oil of the Holy Spirit fills us, enabling us to let our light shine. But the degree to which we illuminate and bless others has everything to do with our faith! How much confidence and “gumption” do we have to step out of the corner with our gifts and abilities and let our light shine before others so that the Father is glorified through us?
Hindered by a Traumatic Experience
Perhaps I can help you answer that question for yourself by giving you a personal example of a time when I nearly allowed my light to be extinguished.
My mother and daddy had always raised me in church and put the Word of God into me, and I’m so grateful for their influence in my life. I was baptized in the Holy Ghost at the age of 14, and the call of God began to be awakened in my life at that time. Then when I was 17 years old and attending college, I wrote my first book. It was about the fivefold ministry gifts, and the finished manuscript was about 220 pages long. And wouldn’t you know it — the entire time I was writing that book, the devil bombarded my mind with thoughts such as, Who do you think you are to write this book? You’re just seventeen years old. You’re so arrogant to think that you have any worthwhile insights about the ministry. But I managed to push away that accusing voice, and I finally finished writing the book.
I thought my book was pretty good. I was studying journalism in college, and I worked in the newspaper department on campus. I was also learning to typeset, so by the time I was done, I had the entire manuscript ready to go the printer. But before I printed it, I sent it to a well-known minister in order to get his response to my work.
One day after my eighteenth birthday, this minister called me about my book. He said to me, “I’ve read your manuscript, and this is probably the finest material I’ve ever read on the fivefold ministry. Your book explains things about the apostolic and prophetic ministries better than any book I’ve ever read.” Then the minister asked, “How old are you, Rick?”
When I answered, “I’m eighteen,” the man literally became furious! He said, “How dare you even attempt to write a book like this when you’re just eighteen years old! Who do you think you are? You don’t have the experience to write a book like this!” (This was after he’d just told me that my book was filled with more revelation and insight than he’d ever read before.)
This minister verbally pounded me over the phone that day. By the time he was finished, my light was so smothered that I destroyed every copy of that manuscript I had! Then several years ago, I found a copy of the book that my mother had kept for me. As I held it in my hands, that minister’s words came back to me: Who do you think you are? But instead of tossing it aside this time, I began to reread some of the pages. And do you know what I realized? Revelation doesn’t have anything to do with age; it has to do with the oil of the Holy Ghost that’s on the inside of a person.
Isn’t it amazing how an experience like that can affect your obedience for years and years? For many years after that traumatic encounter, every time I approached a typewriter or computer to write, I’d hear that minister say, Who do you think you are? And I would back away from using my gift for writing. So for a long time, that ability just lay there under a bushel — until someone else came along years later and lit my wick!
Who can you encourage in your sphere to step out of the shadows and lift his or her light a little higher?
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Rick and Denise met while they were each on an individual quest to wholeheartedly follow God's plan for their lives. Rick was a college student, growing in his teaching ministry. Denise was a talented vocalist. She chose not to pursue a course that held the prospect of performing with the Metropolitan Opera so that she could instead pursue a relationship with Rick and fulfill her heart's desire to enter full-time ministry.
Rick and Denise's friendship has led to lifelong love and a powerful partnership in building the Kingdom of God. After a decade of ministry, first as pastor and then as itinerant ministers, Rick and Denise Renner embarked on an adventure of a lifetime. In January 1991, the Renners and their sons Paul, Philip, and Joel left behind all they knew to relocate their family to serve the region that only weeks earlier had become the former Soviet Union.
Rick and Denise remember kneeling together as a family and kissing the ground when they arrived at the airport in Latvia on that cold January day. At that moment, they all committed their lives to the will of God and to the people of their new homeland. The following year, Rick moved forward to launch and establish the first of its kind, and eventually the largest, a Christian television network in that region of the world.
Over the years, Rick and Denise pioneered three churches, a Bible school, and a ministerial association that serves thousands of Russian-speaking pastors throughout the former USSR as well as parts of the Middle East. As Rick began training and mentoring leaders in the early days, Denise also developed a women's ministry that is actively involved in changing the lives of women and their families today. Specifically, they minister to the needs of orphans, women prisoners, the homeless, and drug-and-alcohol addicts.
Rick, Denise, and their children began as a small circle of five, willing to go beyond their comfort zone to reach the uttermost parts of the world. Today that circle includes their sons' wives, six grandchildren, and a large ministry staff that helps the Renners extend their reach as they exalt Jesus Christ as the Hope of all nations.