Chariots!
Chariots represent the vehicles of life, and the word ‘vehicle’ here does not only refer to cars, buses and airplanes.
There are different types of chariots. Some carry your body like the airplane,
while some others carry your ideas, talents,
skills and character. A vehicle is that which
provides for you an avenue of expression, physically, mentally or in any other way. It brings you in contact
with other people, and
to some extent defines your scope of contact. Hence, there
are business
and professional vehicles. If you work in a bank,
the bank is your vehicle.
If you are a student,
your school is your vehicle for as long as you are a student.
These are the vehicles
of life.
So when the Holy Spirit
said to Philip,
“Go near and join thyself to this chariot,” He was speaking that day of a particular vehicle. Today, you are in a chariot;
where you work, school
or do business is that chariot. In that chariot,
you have to associate
with people, express your convictions,
and let your ideas come forth. When you grasp this truth, your life will take on a new meaning.
What God seeks to bring to our attention as Christians
is that He wants us to be in places where He can
give value to people’s
lives through the expression of His life in us. The
gospel of Jesus Christ is the power
of God unto salvation to everyone
that believes it (Romans 1:16). By placing us in different areas of life, thus bringing
us in contact with the peoples of the world, God wants us to bear witness of this gospel and share its goodness
with others. This is the purpose
of the chariot.
After the instruction from God, “Philip
ran thither to him, and
heard him read the prophet Esaias, and said, Understandest thou what thou
readest? And
he said, How can I, except some man should
guide me? And he desired
Philip that he would come up
and sit with him” (Acts 8:30-31).
Another thing to note is this:
though God instructed Philip to go and join himself to the chariot, Philip did not go there and say, “Hello, God sent me here to this chariot?”
That would have been a very wrong approach,
because the chariot did
not belong to him. He understood
that God’s target was not the Ethiopian’s chariot; there was something
more important on God’s mind.
Remember what the Lord Jesus said: “Again, the kingdom of heaven is like unto treasure hid in a field; the
which when a man hath found, he hideth, and
for joy thereof goeth and selleth
all that he hath, and buyeth that field” (Matthew
13:44). What was more important to the man was the treasure in the field, and not the whole field.
In the same way, there was a treasure in
the chariot that was more important
to God; the eunuch was the treasure
in the chariot. That was the reason God wanted
Philip in the chariot; He knew Philip would recognize the treasure, so He sent him to join himself
to the chariot.
When Philip got there, he did not stare in admiration at the beauty of the chariot;
rather he went for the treasure
in the chariot. The chariot would definitely have been very colourful and beautiful, since the Ethiopian eunuch was a man of great authority, but that did not get Philip’s attention. He was after the treasure.
God could trust him to know the difference
between the real and the shadow.
Can God send you to a chariot
and believe that you
will not go out there just for the chariot
but for the real treasure
in the chariot? Souls of men are very vital to God and you should be like-minded. God trusted Philip
that he would do what He wanted him to do in the chariot. Let God trust you too.
The preaching of the gospel is committed to our trust; it is not optional. It is not only for the evangelist like we have thought in the past; we have even taught
this in the Church. We expect pastors to be the ones preaching because
we don’t have much time due to our business.
But this is wrong. God already sent you into a chariot,
this is why you are on the job. Don’t get so busy that you don’t notice the treasure in the chariot.
Your office is your chariot. You may say
that everybody in your office
is a Christian, but this does not make any difference, you must share the gospel. You
must work hard to remain
in the chariot God has sent you to join. If you are careless
on the job, that will not be
a good testimony
and you may have to leave the job if
you don’t improve. Whether it is your private
business or not, if you are out of business, you are out of the chariot. So you must do well in your job
or business because it keeps you in
the business chariot and you can keep on winning people to Christ.

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