Summary: There are times to be definite, clear, even stubborn: when you know the truth, when you understand your own motives, and when you can turn your stand into good news. Parts of the sermon were drawn from testimonies solicited earlier in the service around

Indelibly etched on my mind is the photograph of one of our

members, now deceased. If you go to Frances Flippen’s

apartment, you can see a picture of her late husband, John,

a military man, in full battle dress, helmet and all, standing

with his legs spread apart and his arms folded, and with a

most determined look on his face. The message it gives out

is clear and unequivocal. “I shall not be moved.” “You are

not going to get past me.”

Strong, decisive, firm. Some might look at him and say,

“stubborn”. Well, of course he was stubborn. He was

charged with the defense of this country. And when that is

your charge, there is no room for anything else but stubborn.

What was our opening Scripture? “If the trumpet gives an

uncertain sound, who will follow?” Military men know that

orders must be decisive, commands must be clear, security

must be vigorous. You take a stand. Just so, Proverbs

speaks about the righteous not giving way to the wicked.

There are times to stand firm, times to hold the line, times to

be stubborn.

And there are times when stubbornness is just that and

nothing more. Some of us decide to hold the line on things

that do not matter. We are like the three-year-old child who

came to see his grandmother one day, and before she could

even say hello or offer him something to do, he just declared,

“Grandma, I won’t!” Whatever you are going to ask, I won’t.

We are like that. Just plain stubborn. It has nothing to do

with the righteous giving way to the wicked. We can simply

be stubborn.

There are times to be stubborn and there are times not to be

stubborn. How do you know the difference? The central

truth lifted up in this passage of Scripture is that we are to be

stubborn, as God’s people, in not giving way to wickedness.

We are to stand up for what is right and we are to hold to it,

solidly, definitely. But, having said that, there is much more

that will help us look at what that means.

I

First, this passage urges us to be stubborn when we know

something. Not when we feel something or guess

something. When we know something. Be stubborn, give

no room for mistakes if you are very sure that you know the

truth. Proverbs says, “Like a muddied spring ... are the

righteous who give way before the wicked”. “Like a muddied

spring .. “ Be stubborn if you know the truth.

Knowledge is a very powerful thing. But when it is muddied,

it does more harm than good. When we do not really know

the truth, we will do some very messy things. If we do not

know what the facts are, we will fall back on our feelings and

will take some very wrong directions.

If you are trying to make a moral decision, there are plenty of

people out there with so-called information that is not true. If

you are trying to determine whether sexual activity is right for

you, they will tell you that holding back your feelings is

harmful and that you won’t suffer any problems by sleeping

around. Before you jump into that muddied spring, get the

facts about AIDS and about emotional damage! They will tell

you that a little alcohol is good for the tummy and that binge

drinking is just harmless fun. Before you plunge into that

muddied spring, get the facts about alcohol-induced deaths

and about drunk driving accidents! They will tell you that

fudging on your tax returns is not cheating, just good

business. Before you drown in that muddied spring, get the

facts from the IRS code! Go with the facts, not the feelings.

When I was a college student, my pastor got caught up in a

big church fight. There were many accusations about what

he was supposed to have done. One of the deacons who

was on his case reported that the pastor had said nasty and

inappropriate things about sex to one of the young women in

the church just before her wedding. And, as it happened,

since that young woman had suffered an accident as a child

and had lost an arm, there was a special climate of sympathy

around her. People “felt” for this young woman, and were

out to hang the pastor! Well, when all the facts came out,

the young woman herself testified that the pastor had simply

given her a little booklet about the place of sexuality in

marriage; her parents had seen the booklet and had jumped

to a conclusion; and the deacon to whom they told their story

never even bothered to ask the bride what had happened.

They drank out of muddied springs! They did not actually

know what they were talking about.

Be stubborn, yes. Be sure. Be clear. But be stubborn on

the basis of what you know, not just what you feel or what

you want to believe. Be stubborn on the basis of what the

Bible really teaches, not just folk theology. Get the facts. I

once enlisted someone to lead Wednesday night Bible study.

He said to me, “I don’t know why you work so hard at

teaching the Bible. My thing is just to go into prayer meeting

and give them a passage and ask them how they feel about

it.” I say no; how you feel about the Bible doesn’t amount to

a hill of beans until you find out what the Bible actually says.

Be stubborn when you know the truth. And recognize that

knowing the truth is the only basis for a stubborn stance.

“Like a muddied spring ... are the righteous who give way

before the wicked.”

ILLUSTRATIONS FROM TESTIMONY GIVEN ABOUT THE

BELT OF TRUTH AND THE SWORD OF THE SPIRIT/THE

WORD OF GOD

“Like a muddied spring ... are the righteous who give way

before the wicked.”

II

It is good to be stubborn when you know the truth. It is right

not to be a muddied spring if you are trying to hold back

wickedness. But we need to look a bit deeper. We need to

dig out something else about ourselves. We need to look at

our motives for being stubborn. We need to know our own

hearts and see whether we are being stubborn because we

want to stand up for the truth, or whether there is some self-

serving reason in it. After all, there can be a lot of reasons

why people take stands. The story has it that one Sunday in

another church the preacher had left his sermon notes on the

pulpit; somebody went to retrieve them. What a surprise the

reader got when in the margin of the sermon notes, in the

preacher’s handwriting, was this instruction to himself: “This

is a weak point; pound the pulpit and yell like crazy.”

We can get very definite when we are trying to protect

ourselves and cover our own inadequacies. Motivation is the

key issue. Understand what Proverbs means when it says,

“Like a polluted fountain ... are the righteous who give way

before the wicked.” When we do not understand our own

hearts, we pollute everything we try to do.

I’ll be candid with you. I feel very wary when someone says,

“I just felt led of the Lord to do it.” “The Lord said to me, do

this.” I feel wary of that, not because I don’t think the Lord

leads people. I can still remember the day in 1958 when I

felt the Lord’s call to ministry, and nothing has changed that

feeling. But then we have to go to the next step and discern

our own hearts and find out what is really involved in “feeling

led of the Lord.” Motivation is the key issue.

You see, the Bible is quite realistic, and in Jeremiah it

teaches us that the heart of man is deceitful above all things.

Deceitful. That means that there is in us that constant desire

to make ourselves look good, justify ourselves, cover our

mistakes, polish our images. So many times when I hear

people talking about being led of the Lord, whatever they

want to do is designed to bring them power, prestige, profit,

or something self-serving. When we announce that the Lord

has called us to do something, we need to figure out whether

we want to do it for us or for the Kingdom. We need to

examine whether it fits into the spirit of the one who made

Himself of no reputation, but took upon Himself the form of a

servant. Selfish motives are like polluted fountains; out of

them flows a hostile, defensive, destructive stubbornness.

Selfish motives are like the Frankenfish out there in that

pond in Crofton; stubborn, persistent, voracious, destructive,

demonic. The whole pond is being poisoned because of a

few stubborn fish that want to consume everything in sight!

Be stubborn, certainly -- if you are confident that what you

are doing is not for yourself, but for others. If your brothers

and sisters in Christ discern that what you are after is

servanthood and not selfhood. Be stubborn if there is in your

motivation a purity of heart that wants not recognition, not

power, not position, but only the best for others. Be stubborn

if your motives are Christlike. Otherwise, “like a polluted

fountain ... are the righteous who give way before the

wicked.”

ILLUSTRATIONS FROM TESTIMONIES GIVEN ABOUT

THE “BREASTPLATE OF RIGHTEOUSNESS” AND THE

SHIELD OF FAITH

“Like a polluted fountain ... are the righteous who give way

before the wicked.”

III

When to be stubborn? Be stubborn and clear, not a

muddied spring, when you know the truth, and stand by that

truth. When to be stubborn? Be stubborn and pure, not a

polluted fountain, discerning your own heart and knowing

your own motives. But one more thing: be stubborn, be

definite in proclaiming the good news. Be consistent in

speaking the truth in love. Be stubbornly committed to

building up others and to sharing the good news of the

gospel.

What a wonderfully refreshing word comes from Proverbs!

Alongside speaking of muddied springs and polluted

fountains, he speaks of refreshment: “Like cold water to a

thirsty soul, so is good news from a far country.” “Cold water

to a thirsty soul .. “

Oh, brothers and sisters, if you ignore or forget all else from

today, at least remember this: that our calling is to be the

bearers of good news. Our calling is to share a cup of cold

water with a thirsty soul. Our calling is not just to be correct.

Our calling is not just to be pure in heart. Our calling is to be

the bearers of good news and to share cold water with a

thirsty soul. And so in this, above all, be stubborn.

Be stubbornly committed to building up one another, not

tearing down. Be stubbornly convinced that in every other

person there is the potential for Kingdom greatness, so that

your task is to help find it and encourage it, not to attack or

to demonize. Be stubborn about that.

Be stubborn about proclaiming Jesus Christ as Lord. In Him

as in no other is there hope for a life that means something.

Political correctness these days seems to water down the

uniqueness of Jesus. But I tell you, He is the only one in

whom there is truly good news. He is not just another good

man; He is the only savior. He is not just another sad story

of man’s inhumanity to man; He suffered death for us and

rose to life for us and is able to change us. And a watered

down Jesus is not cold water for a thirsty soul. Be stubborn

not just in your belief about Jesus but in your sharing Him

with others. Be stubborn, in season and out of season, with

the good news.

Be stubborn too about telling what Christ has done in you.

You and I have been to the far country, just like the young

man in the parable of the Prodigal Son. We have wandered

and wasted so much, but we have come home, and we have

a story to tell. “Like cold water to a thirsty soul, so is good

news from a far country.” We have been to that far country,

and we have good news. Never let anyone stop you from

telling your story. The Asian evangelist D. T. Niles spoke of

one beggar telling another beggar where to find bread. I’ll

take it a step further. Christian witness is one once thirsty

soul telling another thirsty soul where to drink the cooling

waters of forgiveness. Be stubborn about telling what Christ

has done in you.

ILLUSTRATIONS FROM TESTIMONIES ABOUT THE

SHOES OF THE PREPARATION FOR THE

PROCLAMATION OF THE GOSPEL OF PEACE, AND THE

HELMET OF SALVATION.

Indelibly etched on my mind is that photograph of one of our

members, now deceased. John Flippen, a military man, in

full battle dress, helmet and all, standing with his legs spread

apart and his arms folded, with a most determined look on

his face. Stubborn? Yes, of course. Stubbornness is built

into those who must lead in battle. But for them to be

effective, they must know what they are doing – no muddied

springs; and they must know why they are doing it – no

polluted fountains. But most of all, they can be stubborn

because they know that at the end of the battle, when the

heat of the day is spent and the struggle is over, there will

be good news, there will be cool waters for a thirsty soul,

there will be victory in Jesus.

About that, be stubborn!