Tuesday, April 06, 2010

Christ Arose, Part Two -- Rejoice, Rejoice, O Christian!

The good news of Easter is, not only can you know Jesus, but he can be close to you all the time, through every situation. The risen Lord offers to share his victory with you, to take you through whatever you must face as your close and competent Companion who will never, never leave you.

Some of you have to face very serious problems this week. Some confront what looks like the end of their hopes and dreams. Fears and anxieties, loneliness, emptiness, heartache and sorrow are before them. But the good news of Easter is, you don't have to face any of that alone.

Listen to Jesus' exact words, from Revelation 3:20:

"Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If any one hear my voice, and open the door, I will come into him and will live with him and he with me."

That is the promise that millions have trusted. They have asked Jesus to enter their lives, to come and dwell with them, to go with them through life, not only through death. To their joy they found that every word was true. They can face tomorrow because He lives. And that strength is available to each one of us today. That is what makes this day a celebration of the resurrection, and a time for the greatest rejoicing.
Do you love God? Is Jesus Christ Your Lord and Savior? Is He the Lord of your life, not just on Sunday morning but on every day and night of the week? Is so, then enjoy this beautiful bright festival of the Resurrection of our Lord!

Are you His grateful servant?

Then rejoice and enter into the joy of their Lord!

Have you worked hard in the fields of our Lord doing good deeds, helping the poor, the hurting, the lonely? Then rejoice and receive you’re the blessing He won for you on the cross!  Praise His Holy Name!

Christ Arose -- The Exulatation of the Resurrection! Part One

It was Paul who included the great Christ Hymn of Philippians 2:5-11, stating that there is coming a time when, at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue confess that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father. That is our future. Our Lord will come again and set all things right.

Remarkably, however, the very first news of Easter was not good news at all. It was terrible news that Mary Magdalene brought to the Apostles Peter and John when she came running with the announcement that the body of Jesus had disappeared. What a shock that must have been.

When the body of Abraham Lincoln was almost stolen back in 1876, some years after his death, to be held for ransom, our entire nation was shocked and dismayed. Thankfully, the plot to steal the body was uncovered at the last minute. But it caused his son Robert Lincoln to make sure his father’s body was put in a permanent tomb, buried ten feet deep under 4000 pounds of cement in 1901, so that no future plots could disturb his dad’s remains..

We can only imagine the shock of these disciples of Jesus, smitten and numbed as they already were at the unexpected death of their Lord, when they heard Mary's hysterical announcement.

On hearing this, both Peter and John immediately left for the tomb, running through the streets of Jerusalem and through the Damascus Gate to the tomb. John, the younger of the two, outran Peter and, stooping down, he looked into the tomb. They both saw that Jesus was not there. And they did not understand the full meaning of it all. The New International Version renders that verse: "They still did not understand from the Scripture that Jesus had to rise from the dead." That suggests that Peter and John did not believe that Jesus had risen.

That brief account focuses first upon the sobbing of Mary, standing outside the tomb, still convinced that her Lord was dead and his body had been stolen. Then, looking in, she saw two young men, "angels" we read, sitting inside. "Woman, why are you weeping?" they asked her. In the early light of dawn they seemed to be looking not at her, but at someone behind her. Turning, she saw a man standing there whom she took to be the gardener, who asked her the same question, "Woman, why are you weeping?"

There is a gentle rebuke inherent in that twice-asked question. It is saying, "This is no time for weeping, but for rejoicing, praise and thanksgiving." It implies that she could and should have known that. Jesus had clearly said several times, as the Gospels record, that he would rise again on the third day. One of the striking phenomena of the Gospels is the deafness of the disciples to the consistent revelations of Jesus concerning his resurrection. He had great difficulty convincing them that he was going to die in the first place. It was only as they saw the opposition closing in on him that they realized his words were true. But even then none of them seemed to grasp that every time he mentioned his death he also added that he would rise again on the third day.

This is a legitimate part of the message of Easter. It does indeed give us a glorious hope when we face death's door. You know, there are three questions we all ask of ourselves at one time or another, "Where do I come from?" "Why am I here?" and “what happens when we die/” We Christians have the answer to that, but still we often ask the question. "Is it really necessary to leave?"

Most of us wish we didn't have to say "Yes" to the third. But that is not what comforted Mary or any of the disciples at this point. It never crossed their minds that this event would give them a hope in the hour of death. What brought them deliri But Mary was just like us! Have you ever found yourself in a distressing circumstance, when the sky seemed to come crashing down on you, and Christian that you are, sometimes you temporarily forget all the promises of God? You felt sorry for yourself, you became anxious and upset. I have. We so quickly forget the promises of God.

Martin Luther once spent three days in a black depression over something that had gone wrong. And he had lots of things go wrong. On the third day his wife Katie came downstairs dressed in mourning clothes, all dressed in black. "Who's dead?" he asked her. "God," she replied. Luther rebuked her, saying, "What do you mean, God is dead? God cannot die." "Well," she replied, "the way you've been acting I was sure He had!"

Many of us have been caught in that trap. We forget who is in charge. We forget whose children we really are. This is also what had happened to Mary.

But Jesus has to speak but one word to her to open her eyes. With indescribable tenderness he simply uttered her name -- not Mary, which is what the account here says, but "Miriam," as he reverted to their native Aramaic. Mary instantly recognized his voice, just as any one of us would recognize a loved one's voice on the telephone. Responding in Aramaic, Mary flung herself at his feet and cried, "Rabboni!" (which means "Teacher"). She seized him by the feet and began to weep tears of joy.

Jesus said, "Do not hold on to me, for I have not yet returned to the Father. Go instead to my brothers and tell them, 'I am returning to my Father and your Father, to my God and your God.'"

And Mary Magdalene went to the disciples with the news: "I have seen the Lord!" And she told them that he had said these things to her. She was the Apostle to the Apostles. She told them that Jesus Lives. He lives!

I believe this is the first and the chief "good news" of Easter. Most celebrate Easter as a reminder that there is hope on the day when they have to leave this earth -- that Easter means because he lives we shall live also. The hymn says,

Jesus lives, and so shall I,

Death, thy sting is gone forever.

ous gladness of heart was the realization, "Jesus is back again! We haven't lost him! He is here with us, and he will always be with us!"

That is the truly good news of Easter. Through two thousand years of Christian witness what has sustained the hearts of millions is the realization that Jesus can enter one's life and go with you through the trials, pressures, tears and joys of life right here on earth. He will be with you at the hour of death, yes, but not as a stranger just then entering your experience. He will already long have been a trusted Friend, not merely a comforting Companion, but as Lord, Sovereign, authoritative and able to work through the difficulties you face. No one wants to face pressures all alone; it helps to have someone with you. And not only someone like yourself, one who can understand how you feel, but if it can also be someone who has authority and power, one who can work out solutions to your seemingly insoluble problems, what a comfort that is!

At the Cross Where I First Saw the Light!

In Sequoia National Park in California, There is a big tree that stands 275 feet high and is 36 feet in diameter. It is called the Christ – General Sherman. It is known as the biggest tree in the world. Today I want to talk to you about a tree that reaches from earth all the way to heaven and reaches all away around the world! And extends itself throughout all eternity!

I speak of the Tree - The Cross of Our Lord and Savior Jesus Calvary’s Tree!

You see the devil had made a road for man to travel that led straight to a place called Hell But Praise God - God did not want man to go to hell – So God slammed a Cross right in the middle of the road and said to man I love you and don’t want you to go to hell and if man goes to hell – He has to go around the Cross!

Just think God created the tree that He knew His Son would be crucified on!

There was a Savior before Sin – There was Grace before Guilt – There was Promise of Life before Death – There was a Heaven before there was a Hell.

Where sin did abound – Grace did much more abound! Adam sold us out – But Praise the Lord Jesus bought us back! HALLELUJAH FOR THE CROSS – IT IS THE POWER OF GOD UNTO SALVATION!

THE CROSS IS A CONSTANT REMINDER OF GOD’S LOVE

Every time you see the cross – it should remind you of the marvelous Love of God!

John 3:16 – For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son that whosoever believeth in Him should not perish but have everlasting life! Romans 5:8 – But God commendeth His love towards us in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us. Romans 8:32 – He that spared not His own Son, but delivered Him up for us all.

The love of God is greater far than tongue or pen can ever tell; it goes beyond the highest star and reaches to the lowest hell

WHEN THE DEVIL COMES AND TRIES TO TELL YOU GOD DOES NOT LOVE YOU – TAKE HIM TO THE CROSS!

THE CROSS IS A CONSTANT REMINDER OF GOD’S GRACE

Eph. 2:8,9 – For by Grace are you saved through faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift of God: Not of works lest any man should boast.

GRACE – The Unmerited Favor of God --- G.R.A.C.E – God’s Riches At Christ Expense!

Grace is free but it is not cheap – It cost Jesus His life on the cruel cross of Calvary!

THE CROSS REMINDS US OF THE PAYMENT FOR SIN!

When the devil comes –Jesus paid it all – All to him I owe – Sin has left a crimson flow – He washed it white as snow!

At the cross – At the cross – Where I first saw the light – and the burdened of my heart rolled away –

What does the cross mean to the church? What does the cross mean to you?

Galatians 6:14 contains an important answer: “May I never boast except in the cross of our Lord Jesus Christ, through which the world has been crucified to me, and I to the world.” The Apostles Creed declares, “I believe in Jesus Christ who was crucified.” When we say those words, we mean that the Son of God was murdered on a Roman cross at a place called Skull Hill outside the city walls of Jerusalem. We believe it literally happened — that if you and I had been there, we would have seen with our own eyes the slow, agonizing death of Jesus of Nazareth. We would have witnessed the humiliation of Christ as he died between two thieves, we would have seen the blood drip from his wounds, we would have heard him cry out, “My God, My God, why have you forsaken me?”  He did it all for us -- AT THE CROSS -- Praise His Holy Name!

Monday, March 22, 2010

People Get Ready -- Jesus is Coming Again, Part Two

Some Christians in every generation since then have believed the same thing. For instance, Christopher Columbus thought that his voyages were part of God’s ordained plan and that Jesus would return in the year 1650 (or thereabouts). In the 1840s a man named William Miller convinced his followers to sell all their worldly goods because he believed that the Second Coming was at hand. The 20th century has seen many similar predictions: 1914 (connected with World War 1-"The war to end all wars") … 1975 (a date suggested by the Jehovah’s Witnesses) … 1982 (connected with an unusual planetary conjunction) … 1988 (predicted by a Bible teacher who wrote a book that sold hundreds of thousands of copies) … 1994 (suggested by a prominent radio Bible teacher). 2000 – suggested by many. 2012 -- Suggested by the Mayan calendar, and some Christians think God may have revealed it to them so that non-beleivers might eventually come to Christ.

All these dates have this in common: they were all wrong. In fact, every date for the Second Coming that has been suggested over the last 2000 years has been proven wrong. That should tell us something. It is not for us to know the exact date and time. But Jesus told us that fact long ago! Why do not people read the Bible?

Jesus says in Matthew 24:36 "No one knows about that day or hour, not even the angels in heaven, nor the Son, but only the Father.”

Despite this clear, black and white statement people still continue to examine the details of prophecy to calculate when Jesus will return. It is like well, maybe we cannot know the day or hour but maybe the week or month or year! Verse 36, is very clear “no one knows” means no one can. Not the angels, not even Jesus himself. But this knowledge is only known by God the Father.

But, brothers and sisters, Prophecy has lost its purpose when it merely becomes predicting the future. Prophecy is for warning and a calling to repent. We are all called to repent! We are all called to get right with God through our faith in Jesus Christ and in confessing our sins to Him. People get ready – the Lord is coming. He desires us to be ready for His return!

Though, we do expect that on the day Jesus returns there will be something special happening, some forewarning, some change in the wind, a feeling in our bones, writing in the sky, a spiritual discernment, an announcement in the newsletter, something… but this is the thing, Jesus introduces to us the mundane of advent. Jesus emphasises the monotony, the humdrum of the second coming. Jesus likens the second coming to the times of Noah (v37-39):

37 As it was in the days of Noah, so it will be at the coming of the Son of Man. 38 For in the days before the flood, people were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage, up to the day Noah entered the ark; 39 and they knew nothing about what would happen until the flood came and took them all away. That is how it will be at the coming of the Son of Man.
It took Noah quite a long time to build the ark. A lot of planning, a lot of hard work, a lot of mockery. In contrast to the length of time it took the flood was swift, it was sudden. Jesus doesn’t emphasise the sinfulness of the people in Noah’s time instead he emphasises something else to make his point. The people of the time were simply living life. “People were eating and drinking, marrying and giving in marriage...” nothing sinful here, just life. Life was merely rolling along as it usually did. This is what Jesus wants to make clear about his return is that people will still be doing the normal things of life. Back then, you would have been able to see Noah building the ark and back then you would have heard as to why, but as life went on no one cared. Life just rolled on until it was too late.

Jesus gives two other examples to emphasise, in (v40-41): Two men will be in the field; one will be taken and the other left. Two women will be grinding with a hand mill; one will be taken and the other left.

Do you want to be the one life behind? Like the image of division in the parable of the sheep and the goats (25:31-46) there is a dividing between those who live life without God, who have lived with God as their purpose for living.
We are saved through faith but this faith is not merely a mental ascent or agreement but a living faith; a faith in action, of obeying Christ, of loving Him and loving others. Our life of obedience to Jesus is what gives our faith substance; our love for Jesus flows into an action of love for the people/world around us whom need to know – to taste the sacrificial love of which Jesus is our example. This, then, is how we live a life of expectation and readiness for Jesus’ return. The whole message of advent and our response to the second coming is about “being ready”.Jesus tells us to"Therefore keep watch, because you do not know on what day your Lord will come.

44 So you also must be ready, because the Son of Man will come at an hour when you do not expect him.

Keep watch or watching and be ready, Jesus says. The purpose of prophecy is to serve as warnings to be ready. They’re not to tell you the exact “when” in the future to get ready for, but to get ready now! I ask you now: Are we ready for that day – that glorious day – that day where Jesus who once came into the world to be judged will be the judge of the world – are we ready for that day – that day when Jesus breaks in as Saviour & King – the last day – that day of His glorious return?  Are you friends ready?  Is your family ready?  Are you ready?

We Must Be Ready -- Jesus is Coming Again! Part One

Let me be straight to you up front. As sure as I have a voice that you can hear or a face that you can see, you can write it down in the book of your heart – Jesus saves! He is the only way to our salvation. If you believe in Him you shall have eternal life. There is a heaven. There is a hell. You want to go to heaven. You do not want to go to hell. But some of you may end up there if you do not repent and embrace the Lord Jesus Christ as your Lord and Savoir. No asbestos suit will save you. No earthly riches wills save you. Only Jesus Christ can save you. Amen?

Yes, people get ready. The Lord Jesus Christ is coming again. The “second” coming of Jesus Christ is the contrast to his first coming in the virgin birth. Through the incarnation Jesus arrives as a helpless, crying, baby; that needs to be fed, changed and entertained. In Christ’s return he comes as a glorious, powerful, authoritative judge over the entire world. And we do not know exactly when that will be, but we know we are closer now than ever before. Every day we get a little bit closer to that blessed day when He shall return and set things right.

This is truly an astounding thought. The same Jesus who was born in Bethlehem is coming again. The same Jesus who grew up in Nazareth is coming again. The same Jesus who turned the water into wine is coming again. The same Jesus who walked on water is coming again. The same Jesus who healed the nobleman’s son is coming again. The same Jesus who raised Lazarus is coming again. The same Jesus who wept over Jerusalem is coming again. The same Jesus who was betrayed by Judas is coming again. The same Jesus who was whipped, beaten, scourged, mocked, and condemned to death is coming again. The same Jesus who died on Mount Calvary is coming again. The same Jesus who rose from the dead on Easter Sunday morning is coming again. The same Jesus who ascended into heaven is coming again.

That’s what we mean when we say that Jesus is coming again. The actual, historical figure who lived 2000 years ago on the other side of the world is returning to the earth one more time.

Kind of blows your mind to think about it, doesn’t it?

Now I must tell you that there is a lot of information out there of an end times nature, and a lot of it is not scriptural, or is just partly scriptural. So beware what you read and here – test it with the Bible before you swallow it hook, line and sinker. Today, apocalyptic imagery is everywhere: in … corner bookstores, where the prophecies of Nostradamus, The Bible Code, and an array of American Indian and New Age books are hot sellers; and in theaters, where movies like Contact and The Seventh Sign of the last decade, and Knowing and 2012 of this past year draw viewers with their apocalyptic themes. Huge disasters like tsunami of a few years back and Haiti and Chile in the past few month make people pause and think.. And on television, glimmerings of Armageddon flicker across the screen – in fictional tv shows and in news footage on the news programs.

None of this should surprise us since Christians have always believed in the Second Coming of Christ. Jesus himself declared, “I will come back” (John 14:3). And when Christ ascended into heaven, the angels promised the disciples that “this same Jesus, who has been taken from you into heaven, will come back in the same way you have seen him go into heaven” (Acts 1:11). Belief in the Second Coming has always been considered one of the fundamental truths of our faith. Even though we have often argued about the details surrounding his return, Christians of every denomination have agreed on this fact: Jesus Christ is coming again. By that we mean that Jesus himself ("this same Jesus") is coming back to the earth. Physically, visibly, bodily, personally.

Let me prove it to you that this has been a long time Christian belief – stand and recite with me the beliefs of our Christian faith as written in the Apostle’s Creed – no. 8 in your hymnal.  The Apostle's Creed clearly states the Christian beleif that "From heaven Jesus will come again to judge the quick (the living) and the dead."

Yes, He is Coming Again!  Here’s an interesting corollary to that truth. Because Christians have always believed in the Second Coming, there have always been Christians who believed that Jesus would come back in their own lifetime. It’s clear that the earliest Christians expected Christ to return to the earth in just a few years. That’s why the Apostle Paul could say in 1 Thessalonians 4:16-17 that “the dead in Christ will rise first. After that, we who are still alive and are left will be caught up together with them in the clouds to meet the Lord in the air.” Paul clearly believed that Jesus would return in his own lifetime. He never expected to have his head chopped off in Rome; he fervently thought that he would live to see the Second Coming.

Open Our Eyes Lord, Part Four -- The Story of Elisha and His Servant and the Chariots of Fire!

Travel back with me to the city of Dothan in the eighth century B.C. It’s the era of Elisha, prophet of the Lord and successor to Elijah. Mighty Syria is determined to subdue little Israel.  The story is found in 2 Kings 6:8-23.

The king of Israel is advised by Elisha (whose name means “God is salvation”), who informs him of the location of the Syrian Troops, to the great frustration of the Syrian King. Eventually, the king learns that Elisha is the culprit—it is he who, with prophetic insight, briefs the Israelite king on “whatever you speak in the privacy of your bedroom. So, King,” said his servants, in effect, “your problem is not a traitor problem: what you have is prophet problem”

Spies were sent out, and they found Elisha in Dothan. The king immediately assembled a large army and marched to Dothan. The force, complete with horses and chariots, and traveling under the cover of darkness, surrounded the city of Dothan. A mighty army circles a city in pursuit of one man!

Early the next morning Elisha’s personal servant rises from sleep. He walks out to the cool of the early dawn, shakes the cobwebs from his eyes, and what he sees fills him with terrible fear. His eyes scan the hills about Dothan, and they make 360 degree circuit. Wherever he looks, he sees horses and chariots and the great Syrian host. Completely shaken, outwardly and internally, he rushes to awaken Elisha. With fear and trembling he asks the only question available to him: “Master! What shall we do?” In other words -- “We’re surrounded. What shall we do? Our capture is inevitable, and our fate uncertain. What shall we do?”

People still ask s, “What shall we do?” When perverted power holds sway, what shall we do? When conscienceless power suppresses powerless conscience, what shall we do? When mean—spirited people speak with ungodly audacity, what shall we do? When gripped by the terrible twins of helplessness and hopelessness what shall we do? When gossip and tale bearing idly is bantered about our community by evil-spirited people with serpentine tongues, what shall we do?

When these words stumbled out of the servant’s mouth, Elisha the man of God simply stood up in the strength that comes from another quarter, and said calm assurance, “Fear not; we’re in the majority.”

You see, We Need To See Beyond the Physical

Now, you know what this servant is thinking: What’s wrong with Elisha today? Can’t Elisha see what I see? Has this sudden unexpected happening affected his rationality? What’s wrong with his vision? Doesn’t he see those Syrian soldiers, with horses and chariots, all around Dothan? He says, “Fear not: we’re the majority. Majority? You and me? Don’t you see what I see? “Yes,” I imagine Elisha saying to him, “I see what you see. But I also see more than you see! We’re not alone! We’re buttressed. We’ve got a support system. They that are with us are more than they that are with them. We are the majority.”

Then the prophet proceeds to pray. Not a panic prayer. Instead, he prays for his panic-stricken servant: Lord, I pray thee, open his eyes that he may see. He has eyesight, but he needs sight beyond sight. He can see the visible; he needs to see the invisible. He sees the temporal; he needs to recognize the eternal. Open his eyes that he may see. He sees defeat and destruction. He sees doubt and disillusionment. Help him to see faith and certainty. He sees the valley of the shadow of death. Lord, help him to see goodness and mercy.

Lord, open his eyes that he may see! He sees the king of Syria. Help him to see the King of kings. He sees with the naked eye; help him to see beyond the horizon. Lord, open his eyes that he may see.”

Oh, there is a kind of seeing that transcends eyesight. There is a kind of vision that optometrists cannot measure. There is the kind of perception that comes only by prayer. And when the prophet prays, the Divine Ophthalmologist begins His healing work. He removes scales from the eyes. He takes away the disease of doubt, and He removes the cataract of uncertainty. He gives you a new kind of vision that soothes you doubts and calms your fears—I hope somebody knows what I’m talking about!

When Elisha prayed, God answered. Yes! The Lord answered. The Lord opened the eyes of the young man, and he saw. He sees the mountain full of horses and chariots of fire. He sees horses from another stable. He sees royal steeds from the stable of His Majesty on high. He sees horses of regal bearing and hears the hoofbeats of eternity. He sees horses and unusual chariots, chariots of fire. And these horses and chariots have a missionary purpose. They are not doing battle with the Syrian hosts. No, they are simply gathered round about Elisha. The young man is seeing clearly now.

My brothers and my sisters, whenever you see clearly, when the Lord opens your eyes, then you begin to understand! Now the young man understands how it is that Elisha can declare without hesitations and without reservation, “Fear not! We’re the majority. They that are with us are more than they that are with them. We are in the majority. The majority that matters!”

In a world like we live in today, where evil is so pronounced and where mercy is so rare, I’m glad that I can see. I’m glad that I’ve had an encounter with the second person of the adorable Trinity. I’m glad I have been touched by the hand of Jesus, and when He touched me I came back seeing, Ijust like Amazing Grace says -- once was blind, but now I see.  Praise the Lord!

Open Our Eyes, Lord, Part Three -- Psalm 119:18

There is great truth in Psalm 119:18. "Open my eyes, that I may behold wonderful things from Your law." This verse combines prayer and the Word, and we need to see how, so that we can combine them this way in our lives and in our church. There are three things that we learn from this verse.

One is that there are wonderful things in the Word of God. "Open my eyes, that I may behold wonderful things from Your law." The word "law" is "Torah" and means "instruction" or "teaching" in this psalm. There are wonderful things in God's teaching to us. In fact, they are so wonderful that when you really see them, they change you profoundly and empower holiness and love and missions (2 Corinthians 3:18). Which is why reading and knowing and meditating on and memorizing the Word of God is so crucial.

The second thing we learn from this verse is that no one can see these wonderful things for what they really are without God's supernatural help. "Open my eyes, that I may behold wonderful things from Your law." If God does not open our eyes, we will not see the wonder of the Word. We are not naturally able to see spiritual beauty. When we read the Bible without the help of God, the glory of God in the teachings and events of the Bible is like the sun shining in the face of a blind man. Not that you can't construe its surface meaning, but you can't see the wonder, the beauty, the glory of it such that it wins your heart. The Holy Spirit does that for us. He gives us spiritual contact lenses, so to speak.

Which leads to the third thing we learn from this verse, namely, that we must pray to God for supernatural illumination when we read the Bible. "Open my eyes, that I may behold wonderful things from Your law." Since we are helpless in ourselves to see spiritual beauty and the wonder of God in the teachings and events of the Bible without God's gracious illumination, we should ask him for it. "Open my eyes."

And God just needs to open our eyes so that we can see that He is with us and we can live lives as children of the Living God, as ambassadors of Christ, as Chrsitian soldiers, not afraid, but bold in our love of God and the things of God.

Open Our Eyes, Lord, Part Two

In Ephesians Chapter One, Paul wanted our eyes to be opened so we can see our hope. But he also wanted our eyes opened so we see …18 “… what are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints,”
Paul wanted us to see the riches bestowed upon us in Christ! Some people may get carried away with the idea that God wants all of us to become wealthy with money in this life, but I think if God had wanted us to be rich He would have seen to it that Christians of all time would have been wealthy. But history reveals that God chooses to call both the rich and the poor, yet he bestows HIS RICHES on them all!

The richness of the glory of God’s inheritance is so much more than money!

Paul began describing the riches of our inheritance in verse seven of Ephesians chapter one.
Eph 1:7 In Christ we have redemption through His blood, the forgiveness of sins, according to the riches of His grace

Our riches are found in knowing that a King, the God of all Creation, took our punishment in order that we could be forgiven of our sins! That is rich! We were guilty and He was innocent! Peter exclaimed that we were not redeemed with silver or gold, but by the precious blood of Jesus Christ. We are loved that much by God! How can you put a price on that? Then again--

10 … in the of the fullness of time He will gather together in one all things in Christ,
God’s plan is to gather us together in His love. Our sins forgiven, our wounds healed, and He would draw us all together as His Family in a way that is pure and lovely where we will all be able to walk together in harmony! Being rich is to be cherished by God and by your fellowman!

Lord, open our eyes to your calling, to your riches, and to your power! Paul included one more item which we need to see with spiritual eyes:

19 and what is the exceeding greatness of His power toward us who believe,

There is a power from God that is working in His Church which destroys the power of sin and brings deliverance to the captives! We may see ourselves as being helplessly caught in the situations of life and having no hope of deliverance. That is not true! Through faith in Christ, you and I have “exceeding great power from God to overcome!  Does that mean that we are in charge of the universe? No. God is. But as we follow the dream He has given to us … obey the calling … we can meet the challenges of life with a voice of victory! We have been made rich in the love of God and we can be loving and kind and powerful in prayer!

Paul describes this power as being … Eohesians 1:19 ….. according to the working of His mighty power 20 which He worked in Christ when He raised Him from the dead and seated Him at His right hand in the heavenly places, 21 far above all principality and power and might and dominion, and every name that is named, not only in this age but also in that which is to come.

Talk about power! When Christ was raised from the dead it was an act of creation similar to the one of creating the world! God the Father gave Him the authority to be seated as God in heaven and have authority over everything in the spirit realm and in the realm of the natural! That is the mighty power that is at work in us as we follow the calling which God has given to us!

Open Our Eyes Lord, That We May See! How Good is Your Spiritual Vision? Part One

Did you ever play pin the tail on the donkey? It is a children’s game that gives us an idea of how difficult it is to not have the physical sense of sight. The Bible shows us that it is sometimes even more difficult if we lose our spiritual way, if we are spiritual blind.

Jesus is in the business of opening blind eyes, both physically and spiritually. We all know how he healed the blind – remember the story of the healing of blind Bartimeus in the Gospel of Mark, chapter 10? In Luke 4:18 Jesus says in his famous “mission Statement”, quoting Isaiah 62:1, that he is in his earthly mission to “preach good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim freedom for the prisoners and recovery of sight for the blind, to set free the oppressed and the imprisoned.”

Sometimes we pray for Jesus to open people’s eyes so that they can see the great offer of salvation that He died on the cross so that they might be free. There are a lot of people who walk around in darkness and do not see His lights. Sometimes we pray for Jesus to help people to open their eyes and see the blessings God has for them, but they are not receiving them, because their eyes are closed – blessings right in front of them – just like a good meal but someone is too lazy to lift their fork or to smell the aroma of the feast. Paul prays in Ephesians 1 for spiritual eyes to be opened. It is a prayer we can also pray.

In his great prayer of Ephesians 1 – A wonderful prayer for us to learn from and to imitate in praying for each other, for our families and friends, for our Christian brothers and sisters, Paul prays for the eyes of the minds of the believers to be enlightened. Paul prayed for the Spirit of God to enlighten the Christians in in that they would know the hope of God's calling ; and what are the riches of His inheritance among the saints; and that they would know the exceeding greatness of His power that works in them. Those are great prayers for us today. All of us need the Holy Spirit to open our spiritual eyes that we may see.

John Calvin wrote – “It is true that our eyes are instruments of God’s power and goodness by which he makes us enjoy the light, but that is something common to all. But here St. Paul shows us that we are blind and that we understand nothing of God’s spiritual grace, unless he opens our eyes and takes away the veil that is before them, and even gives us a new sight which we do not have. For our eyes are worse than put out until he enlightens them by his Holy Spirit.”

The apostle Paul wants us to have a spirit of wisdom and revelation that we may be able see how great the things are which God has provided for us! Faith arises in us when God enlightens our minds with His Holy Spirit. We pray and we read the Word and it becomes a living instrument in our hands as God speaks to us through it!

When we have the revelation provided by the Holy Spirit … we begin to see with eyes of faith!

But what did Paul want us to see?  18 “… that you may know what is the hope of His calling,”

He wanted us to know the Hope which is ours because of God’s calling. Our hope lies in Him alone and without Christ we are without Hope!

Much of the world lives without hope. They have nothing good to anticipate. There is not expectation of change or fulfillment. But Jesus did not intend for any of us to live without hope! Hope declares that we have a future … we have a destiny!

Satan does all that he can to destroy hope! In his world he creates dreams, expectation and possibilities and then does his best to pull them out from under you! All of Satan’s expectations are like the euphoria of a hallucinogenic drug. You feel things that are not real, you see things that are not real, your senses are heightened … and then you come down to withdrawals, pain, and emptiness! The pleasures of sin are delightful for a season … but then reality sets in and the pain begins!

The hope in Christ is not like that at all! The hope that Christ provided for us comes from His calling. Jesus is the real Dream Giver! His has given you a calling … a dream! You have a specific reason for living which God has given to you and you alone! You have been chosen by Him from before time began to fulfill your destiny! No one else will ever do the same things which you do! In His calling there is fulfillment and joy!

You have been blessed with a calling, God’s dream. He has chosen you for His purposes, having predestined you before time to be adopted into God’s family, and you have been accepted by Him! When we lose hope it is because we have lost sight of this calling of God! Our dream dies! It therefore becomes necessary that we return to the Lord time and time again and ask for our eyes to be opened again! We must carry a vision in us of the calling which God has given to us! That is where hope lies!

Friends Are Gifts of Our Loving God, Part Two

The Bible shows us pictures of friendship. In the story of David and Jonathan we get a good vision of a strong earthly friendship with God as a part of the trust between the two of them. We also see friendship exampled in the stories of Jesus and the disciples.  Friendship pervades the Bible, most obviously but not only in the gospels where Jesus called his disciples friends. But true friendship was not all one way: he was influenced and changed, challenged and comforted by his friends, by Peter and John, by Joanna and the many Marys we hear of, by Joseph and Lazarus, Judas and Nathaniel.

"Love one another,"says Jesus in the Book of John, and "No one has greater love than this, to lay down one's lifefor one's friends."ii These statements are part of Jesus' final commandments to his disciples on the night he was to be arrested and taken away to be crucified. So clearly we need to read into this passage Jesus' own sacrifice -- his own love for his disciples, and indeed for all of humanity, for which he was willing to lay down his own life. Yet, he also makes clear that these words are meant for his followers, and by extension for us here today: "I have said these things to you so that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be complete. This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you."

Who are your friends? Do you appreciate them? Have you told them so?

What is a friend? Friends are people with whom you dare to be yourself.
One example of friendship remains with me as vividly as the moment I first heard of it as a boy. In his first seasons with the Brooklyn Dodgers, Jackie Robinson, the first black man to play Major League baseball, faced venom nearly everywhere he traveled--fastballs at his head, spikings on the bases, brutal epithets from the opposing dugouts and from the crowds.

During one game in Boston, the taunts and racial slurs seemed to reach a peak. In the midst of this, another Dodger, a Southern white named Pee Wee Reese, called timeout. He walked from his position at shortstop toward Robinson at second base, put his arm around Robinson's shoulder, and stood there with him for what seemed like a long time. The gesture spoke more eloquently than the words: This man is my friend. Robinson said that Reese saved his career on that day. He was a true friend.

A small boy defined a friend as "Someone who knows all about you and likes you just the same."

Be slow in choosing a friend, slower in changing friends.. B. Franklin.

In a survey of more than 40,000 Americans said these qualities were most valued in a friend: 1. The ability to keep confidences 2. Loyalty 3. Warmth and affection.

I would add another key attribute – someone who prays for you!

Here is a question – what kind of friend are you? Are you loyal, do you keep confidences, are you warm and affectionate, do you pray earnestly for your friends?

Of course, when we think of friends we have the great model in Jesus, and He says He is our friend. “what a friend we have in Jesus." He is our best friend and if our relationship with him is what it ought to be, then our relationship with others is going to be growing strong each day. In fact, if your relationship with Jesus Christ is a deep, beautiful, personal, intimate relationship, you are going to want to bring your family and friends to the Lord Jesus Christ. He will provide a wonderful new dimension for their lives and He will be a friend who will never leave them nor forsake them.

Have you ever thought about what it means to be a friend in Jesus? You know, when we talk about something like friendship with Jesus it is absolutely thrilled to realize that the Son of God who is responsible for the creation and the upholding of the universe is literally a personal, intimate friend of those who are His own. It is an overwhelming thing when you really grasp that truth. This morning I want you to see what it really means to be a friend of Jesus.

We know what He did for us – He laid down His life for you. What have you done for Him? What are you doing for Him? What do you plan to do for Jesus? What kind of friend are you to Him?

Many times, we imagine the church as the family of God. And we are the family of God. But we are also a a community of friends. Into this community of friends, Jesus invites you, invites you to love the other friends of Jesus with a love that accepts, that cherishes, that challenges, that supports.

We are not all called to give our lives for one another as Jesus did for us. Yet we are all called to that difficult task of loving one another with that same passionate love that carried Jesus through the cross to the transformation of the resurrection.

Jesus opens his arms to you in friendship. Jesus opens his arms to you in sacrifice. Will you follow and do the same? Let me close with just a couple of questions.

1. Are you the friend of Jesus?  2. Are you a friend like Jesus?3. Are you willing to become His friend and a friend like Him?

Friends Are Gifts of Our Loving God -- Are You a Friend Others? Are You a Friend to Jesus? Part One

Friends are never earned they're a gift from the loving God
And they're precious beyond human evaluation
But you dare not take them for granted or they'll lift away like a smoke
And the warmth of their caring will vanish into the chill of the endless nights
Who is your friend he's someone who warms you with a nod
Or with an unspoken word in hard times when you're hurting beyond words
Who is your friend he's someone who holds you hand And sighs softly and prays with you when no other medicine could possibly stop the pain
A friend is someone who listens when you are hurting
Or answers the phone at three in the morning when you're lost
And with a few words of encouragement and concern
Makes you realize that you're not really lost at all
Friends come in both sexes in all shapes and sizes
The most imprtant thing they have in common is their ability
To share with you your most sky splitting joys
Or your deepest most awesome sorrows, for they are your friends.

Friendship – real friendship – is a gift from God. Be thankful for your friends. The Book of Proverbs tells us in Proverbs 17:17 that “A friend loves at all times, and a brother is born for adversity.” A good friend is with your through thick and thin.

Think on that fact from the Good Book -- :a friend loveth at all times and a brother is born for adversity.” One of the basic needs and longings of life is for a friend, a real friend, a true friend. I want to talk to you about friends, what they're like, how to have a friend, how to be a friend, and then I want to talk to you about the friend of all friends, what a friend we have in Jesus and, and you know, many people have given definitions of friends.

A friend is one who strengthens you with his prayers, blesses you with his love and encourages you with his hope or somebody else said a friend is one whom distance is no barrier to communication or to concern or to caring. A friend is someone who believes in you when you have ceased to believe in yourself. A friend is somebody who is on the scene when you need him and quietly leaves when you want to be left alone. Somebody else said a friend is someone who is there when you call and sometimes even before you call.

Now, all of these are nice and some of them are very good thoughts, some of them are frivolous, but what does the bible say, what does the bible say about a friend, a real friend, a true friend, what is the friendship factor that we find in the word of God? You will be pleased, perhaps amazed to see that the bible places a great emphasis upon friends. And so, first of all, I want you to think with me on what I'm going to call the value, the value of friendship. The bible says “A friend loveth at all times.”Now, friend, if you have a friend, a real friend, a true friend, you indeed have something of great, great value

But the Bible also tells to beware the company we keep – Because untrue “friends” can be a problem. Bad people can bring you down. Proverbs 20:19 urges us to avoid gossiping people. It plainly states that “A gossip betrays a confidence; so avoid a man who talks too much.” And Proverbs 22:24 says to avoid a person who is angry all the time, less you learn his or her ways!” And Proverbs also says not to hang around winebibbers – those who drink too much, or in our time, those who drug it up. And the Bible says to stay away from liars and the untrustworthy.

You want your friends to have wisdom, and if you want them to have the right kind of wisdom, you need to seek out Christian friends, like friends from your church family. Christian friends are the ones who will stick closer than a brother or a sister, because friends are friends forever, when the Lord is the Lord of them.

Thursday, March 04, 2010

God Has Plans for You to Succeed, to Have Abundant Life in Christ

God showed Joshua the way of success.  Joshua 1:7-9 states: “Only be strong and very courageous, that you may observe to do according to all the law which Moses My servant commanded you; do not turn from it to the right hand or to the left, that you may prosper wherever you go. (8) This Book of the Law shall not depart from your mouth, but you shall meditate in it day and night, that you may observe to do according to all that is written in it. For then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have good success. (9) Have I not commanded you? Be strong and of good courage; do not be afraid, nor be dismayed, for the LORD your God is with you wherever you go.”

First, Joshua was to know God’s Word. Although not spelled out in so many words, every thing depended on Joshua knowing and studying the word of God. If law to be his guide in everything he did, and it was, then Joshua would have to know what the law said. If you feel that God may be calling you into some sphere of service, the best thing that you can do is to prepare yourself by studying and seeking to know more about the word of God.

Secondly, Joshua was to talk about God’s Word. The text says in verse 8, “this Book of the Law shall not depart from your mouth, …” Clearly, Joshua is called upon to include the word of God in his daily conversation and to speak the truth according to the Word. he was to speak to his mountains in God's name (Mark 11:22-26).
Third, Joshua was to mediate on God’s Word. Not just read it, but soak it into himself.  He is told “…. but you shall meditate in it day and night.” Mediation is the next step beyond just knowing about and talking about the word of God. Mediation means to think about or contemplate how to apply the word in your life. Mediation has application as a goal. It is only when the word of God gets into our minds and affects our normal day to day decision making that we begin to act differently.

Finally, Joshua was to Obey God’s Word In Its Entirety. This is the last element and is the most important. Joshua is told that not only is he to know, speak about, and mediate on the word, he was to obey it.

Yes, God plans for us to succeed. We see this in the lives of many men and women in the Bible. For example, do you remember the story of Joseph in Genesis chapters 37-50? By the world’s standards, he was doomed from the start. The young Hebrew had been beaten and sold into slavery by his own brothers, and for years he lived a life of servitude and imprisonment. However, in everything Joseph did, God made him thrive. God had planned for the faithful servant’s good fortune, even during those years when all seemed hopeless.

We see similar accounts throughout biblical history. Moses, David, Nehemiah, and Joshua all demonstrate this same kind of greater divine plan for distinction. And, of course, let’s not forget the apostles—they thrived in the first century and spread the good news of salvation around the world. No doubt, their mission must be considered a success, or we would have no churches or record of Jesus Christ at all.

In each of these examples, people discovered what the Lord wanted them to do, committed their lives to it, followed godly principles, and achieved their goals. In the eyes of God, they were all successful.

Second, God provides for our success. I have shelves of books on this topic, and I’ve yet to find an overriding principle of achievement that is not also found in God’s Word. The Bible contains every fundamental concept on success that I’ve ever read in any other book. Different authors may pluck an idea out of the Scriptures and write a book about it, but they didn’t create the principle.

Remember, the source of our strength: almighty God, who cares for us. You see, God alone is the author of lasting success. Without Him, a person will ultimately know only failure—and in the meantime, perishable wealth at best.

Third, God equips us for success. Because He calls us to be shining lights in a dark world, He has provided what we need in order to be successful men and women. For example, every believer has been given certain abilities, or spiritual gifts. These are amazing endowments that enable us to do the things that God calls us to do.

The Lord has also equipped us by giving every believer the presence of His indwelling Spirit. The Holy Spirit brings us into intimate contact with the heavenly Father, empowers our daily lives, teaches us the things of God, and gives us His discernment.

In the power of the Holy Spirit, we have access to supernatural decision-making processes. You see, the Lord doesn’t set people up to fail. He would get no glory from that. Instead, He gives us what we need to be successful in what He has called us to do.

Fourth, God promises us success. You may argue, “Well, if God has promised me success, then somewhere along the way, He messed up.” No, He hasn’t. However, if we’re struggling to find any areas of accomplishment in our lives, it may be that we ourselves have gotten off course.

Remember again what the Lord told Joshua? He told him to be strong and courageous, to obey His Word, and to be careful to keep His commandments. And the result? “For then you will make your way prosperous, and then you will have success” (Josh. 1:7-8). Do you see? The formula for success is right there in black and white in the pages of Scripture.

We must rely fully upon the Holy Spirit as we practice godly principles of success. We cannot go about the Christian life as though we were acting in a one-man show. We can be successful in Christ when we submit completely to the leading, direction, and empowerment of God’s Spirit.

The Lord is intimately concerned with our success. He offers abundant life in Christ (John 10:10).

Reach your full potential in God by walking God's way, with the Word as your guide and strength!

Friday, February 26, 2010

God's School of Prayer, Second Semester, No.5: The Prayer of Surrender to God: Jonah in the Belly of the Big Fish

The story of Jonah and the big fish (we don't know that it was a whale from the actual words of the Old Testament) has always been tremendously popular reading, especially with children. That's easy to understand because it has all the elements of great drama. Rebellion, storms at sea, swallowed alive inside an enormous fish, survival, risky business in an alien land--it sure works like a modern day comic book adventure. Couple that with the fact that the whole story is packed into four brief chapters and you can see why it has always had universal appeal.

Because it is so action packed it would be easy to overlook the fact that within Jonah is one of the great prayers of the Bible. Tucked into Chapter 2 is a profound prayer that Jonah prayed from inside the fish's belly. This was a prayer of acknowledgement of God's sovereignty, a final surrender to God's plan and a prayer of faith for deliverance. Let's do a quick review on why Jonah was in this predicament in the first place.

Jonah was a prophet living in a time when Israel was severely harassed by the pagan Assyrians, Israel's long standing enemy. God told Jonah to go to the Assyrian's chief city, Nineveh, and preach against their wickedness and call them to repentance. The fact that God would offer the Ninevites an opportunity to repent made Jonah mad. He did not want any mercy doled out to this hated enemy. So he got on a ship going in the absolute opposite direction in order to get out of God's presence and hopefully away from being used in God's plan. But it didn't work.

Jonah in the deep

While at sea, God caused such a severe storm to arise that the ship's crew cast lots to see who was responsible for what they assumed correctly was a divine calamity. The lot fell to Jonah and he admitted that he was the culprit and he told them to throw him overboard so that the sea would become calm again. It probably seems strange that Jonah would suggest such a thing. One way you could look at it is that he didn't want to follow God's plan for him so badly that he would rather die than do it. Now that's rebellion. Or maybe he felt drowning was all he deserved after his direct disobedience. Jonah was a melancholy sort of guy. Whatever the reason; "they picked Jonah up and threw him into the sea, and the sea ceased from its raging." (Jonah 1:15)

The Bible says; "Now the Lord had prepared a great fish to swallow Jonah. And Jonah was in the belly of the fish three days and three nights." (1:17) It is in this predicament that Jonah prayed his great prayer. Notice that God is the one who prepared the fish and in this act he demonstrated his sovereignty - and also his mercy. He did not allow Jonah to be drowned because he still had a plan for his life and he still had a plan for Nineveh.

Here is what the prayer says: "I cried out to the Lord because of my affliction, and He answered me. Out of the belly of Sheol I cried, and You heard my voice. For You cast me into the deep, into the heart of the seas, And the floods surrounded me; all Your billows and Your waves passed over me. Then I said, 'I have been cast out of Your sight; Yet I will look again toward Your holy temple.' The waters surrounded me, even to my soul; the deep closed around me; Weeds were wrapped around my head. I went down to the moorings of the mountains; the earth with its bars closed behind me forever; Yet You have brought up my life from the pit, O Lord, my God. When my soul fainted within me, I remembered the Lord; and my prayer went up to You, Into Your holy temple." (Jonah 2:2-7)

Part description about what happened to him and part prayer to God, we sense an emotional tangle as dense as the sea bottom. I think when Jonah was thrown overboard he fully expected to die. He seemed resigned to it and at the same time a hope was rising from within him because he says; "Yet I will look again toward Your holy temple." Something from inside him still trusted even though he also felt that he had been cast outside of God's sight - outside of God's favor.

He must have come awfully close to death because he says that "the earth with its bars closed behind me forever" and then in the next moment he acknowledges that God brought his life back from the pit. His best moment is when he says that when his soul fainted within him, he remembered the Lord. It is the moment of the surrender of his will. He would no longer turn and run the other way; he would no longer fight the plan of God; he would no longer rebel.

Surrender, finally

Jonah is now ready to cooperate with God as he states in verse 9; "But I will sacrifice to You with the voice of thanksgiving; I will pay what I have vowed. Salvation is of the Lord." After some 72 hours in the belly of the fish he vowed that he would now do whatever God wanted him to do. That's what God was waiting for. The next verse tells us that "the Lord spoke to the fish, and it vomited Jonah onto dry land." When the Lord said a second time to go to Nineveh, Jonah went and preached God's message to the great city.

The book of Jonah is the story of the sovereignty of God. Sovereignty means that God is ultimately in control of, well-everything. History, kings and rulers, the seas and the land, weather, the destiny of great cities, the path of a man. It also is the story of God's compassion. Maybe Jonah didn't want Nineveh to repent but God did. He wanted to show them his mercy in spite of the fact that they were heathens who did not worship him or follow his ways.

Okay, you might say, but what makes Jonah's prayer so great? Jonah's prayer is great because he finally surrendered. The story starts with a hard hearted and rebellious man who ultimately bowed his will before a sovereign God and obeyed. Jesus tells a similar story in Matthew 21:28-32 of the New Testament. A father had two sons and he told each of them to go work in his vineyard. The first son said "I will not". But then he regretted his decision and went out into the field to work. The second son said he would go but then did not. Jesus asks which of the two did the will of his father. The answer, of course, is the first son who initially refused.

God did not reject Jonah because he disobeyed; in fact, he patiently kept pursuing him and protecting him until he had a change of heart. This is good news for you if you have been in rebellion or disobedience. God will give you another chance. Maybe you are in a mess right now because of your own choices; maybe you are reaping what you have sown. Because of that you may have felt that you couldn't expect much help from God or that there was no way back to God's plan for your life. It should comfort you to know that God is still sovereign and he is still in the forgiving and restoration business.

If this is you, surrender is your key. Finally, once and for all, surrender your whole self to God's will and be determined that you will obey from now on no matter what he tells you to do. Then see what happens. You may have your own "Big Fish" story to tell someday. We all need to surrender to God.  It is never too late to surrender.  If you have one foot in the church and one foot in the world, give in to God, give up the playing around and get both feet in God's house.  Now is the time to surrender! Pray the prayer of surrender to God.

Tuesday, February 23, 2010

God's School of Prayer, Number 5: The Prayer of Faith: To Receive You Must Believe

To receive from God we must have faith.  To receive healing you must beleive God heals.  You must have faith in God.  It is the foundation of all prayer.  Have faith in God.  He rewards those who seek Him!  "And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly, diligently seek Him." -- Hebrews ll:6

As Jesus promised us, when we ask we will receive, as long as we do our part and ask in faith, believing that God will answer. Look at verse 6 here,and note James is using a command again. “But when he asks, he MUST believe and not doubt.” It is a two part command. First, note the parallel of this verse to a statement of Jesus’ in Matthew 21:21-22: Jesus replied, "I tell you the truth, if you have faith and do not doubt, not only can you do what was done to the fig tree, but also you can say to this mountain, `Go, throw yourself into the sea,' and it will be done. 22 If you believe, you will receive whatever you ask for in prayer."

Sound familiar? The book of James tells us similar truths. James was an excellent student of his brother’s teachings wasn’t he? The first command we find is we must believe or have faith. It doesn’t read we should have faith. The word here is pisteou which means “belief and conviction and assurance in,” and it refers to something more than just believing God will give us what we ask for, but also includes a confident, unwavering, and complete trust in God and submission to His will. Notice the connection here with the unwavering nature of God in His desire to give, and the nwavering trust we should have in Him in order to receive.

The true Christian prays with this kind of faith, not just lip service. Merely invoking God’s name doesn’t cut it, there must be faith. God will answer the prayers of Christians who have faith in Him. . Do you want access to all the great gifts God can give, including joy in the midst of trials? Then believe and have complete faith in God. If you don’t want to do that, then don’t waste your breath. 

A big key to the prayer of faith is, “You must not doubt.” Not only do you have to be a believing Christian, but you must also not doubt. The word “doubt” or diakrino literally means “a divided calling or judgment.” Yes, you may be a Christian, but don’t expect to receive from God if you doubt.  James wants us to have that absolute confidence and absolute faith in God. We cannot be half-mast Christians.  Half way leads to nowhere.

James 5"16 states firmly that “The prayer of a righteous man is powerful and effective.” God listens to His people and answers their prayers, if they are offered with the kind of faith James has mentioned.  As an example, James gives us Elijah who, under the direction of God, prayed for no rain, and it didn’t rain. Then he prayed for rain, and the rains came. Prayers offered in faith by God’s children can do wonderful things! Without them we are like the dry land of the desert, parched and dry, thirsting for God.

Be diligent in your prayer life.  Keep on praying. In your trouble, pray. In your happiness offer praises and prayers of thanks. In your illness, have others pray with you. Whatever your circumstances, be in prayer for those around you, whether they be your brothers and sisters in Christ, or family and friends who need the Lord. Pray.

Paul’s exhortation from 1 Thessalonians 5:16-18 serves as a nice summary of James’ exhortations: "Be joyful always; 17 pray continually; 18 give thanks in all circumstances, for this is God’s will for you in things."

Are you a man or woman of prater and faith? Such a man was Edward McKendree Bounds was born in northeastern Missouri on August 15, 1835, served as a confederate chaplain in the civil war and experienced something of the mighty work of God in the ranks of that army. He became a minister and retired at 60 to spend the last nineteen years of his life praying and writing about prayer. He arose at 4 a.m. each day. He completed eight books but only two were published during his lifetime, his most famous, "Power through Prayer" was one of those, published in 1907. Bounds' great insistence is upon the place of man or woman in prayer.

 He famously wrote these words, "The trend of the day has a tendency to lose sight of man or sink the man in the plan or organisation. God's plan is to make much of the man, far more of him than of anything else. Men are God's method. The church is looking for better methods; God is looking for better men. 'There was a man sent from God whose name was John'...What the church needs today is not more machinery or better, not new organisations, or more and novel methods, but men whom the Holy Spirit can use - men of prayer, men mighty in prayer. The Holy Spirit does not flow through methods, but through men. He does not come on machinery, but on men. He does not anoint plans, but men - men of prayer"

Those words are as true today as the day E.M. Bounds wrote them over a century ago.  We need men and women of prayer, now, more than ever.

Tuesday, February 16, 2010

God's School of Prayer, No. 4, Part Two: Blessing the Lord: Prayers of Praise

Bless the Lord, O my soul!” cries the psalmist numerous times in his songs of praise. Psalm 34 and Psalm 103 are great examples of this action.  But what does it mean to “bless” the Lord? Scripture tells us that “it is beyond dispute that the inferior is blessed by the superior” (Hebrews 7:7). So we ask,  then can we, the infinitely inferior, bless the Lord, the Supremely Superior?  Well, it only happens because God, our superior, desires and ordains that we can bless Him with our praises and our actions of worship and praise.

There are two main things that we do when we bless the Lord. The first is synonymous with giving thanks and praise. Some translations actually say, “Give thanks to the Lord,” where others say, “Bless the Lord.” So, blessing the Lord is praising Him and giving thanks to Him—for blessing us! The other thing we do when we bless the Lord is to proclaim Him blessed, to attest to His holy nature.
When we call God blessed, we are saying something about who God is. He is blessed, which is a synonym for “holy.” Blessed is God, the Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! The Byzantine Divine Liturgy always opens with the glorious and magnificent “Blessed is the Kingdom of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, both now and forever and unto ages of ages!” When we speak of God as the recipient of our blessings (praises and thanksgivings), then He is blest. May the Lord be forever blest!

We are to bless the Lord, because too few people do it, and He deserves better that that from us! There is a great old hymn that says:“Blessed are You, O Christ our God... O Lover of Mankind, glory to You!” Blessing the Lord is a vocation, and not merely and occasional prayer formula for times when one is feeling happy.  Let’s face it, for most people, the two main forms of prayer are Asking and Complaining. We come to God with a list of petitions, and if we don’t get what we want, we complain and grumble, or else we merely manifest our ongoing discontent with The Way Things Are. But we are to foremost have a relationship with God in prayer, and part of that is to bless the Lord, to praise Him and make Him the center of our attention.

Blessing the Lord can be a real “lift” in my prayer life. The Byzantine  When we are glorifying God, he ianhabits the praises of His people (Psalm 22:3).  To bless the Lord is ascend to a higher and more noble level of awareness, to gratefully recognize God’s universal providence, to honor his wisdom and his plan for the spiritual growth and salvation of all. It is a resounding “Yes!” to all God is and does. This does not mean that we are oblivious to the evil in the world; we simply acknowledge that God's wisdom, compassion, and timing are better than ours,and He is stronger than any evil, and we bless God in trusting Him. To bless the Lord makes us “transparent” to God’s grace, an opening for his light to come in to the world, while we simply lose ourselves in Him. We are to become windows for his light to come into the world.

We may very well do more good for ourselves and for the world by blessing the Lord than by asking for what we need. “For your Father knows what you need before you ask him… Seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things shall be yours as well” (Matthew 6:8, 33). That doesn’t mean we shouldn’t ever ask, for Jesus also said, “Ask, and you shall receive,” but I think that our asking ought to be balanced by (at least) equal amounts of blessing.

So, bless the Lord, O my soul, and you, souls, all of you, bless the Lord! Proclaim his blessedness, his holiness and infinite goodness, and make sure that He is forever blest by your gratitude and praise. Gather all your prayers—petition, penitence, praise, worship, and thanksgiving (and even your complaints, if you must!)—and send them to Him in a package labeled: “Blessed are You, O God!” It’ll get there faster than any other.

God's School of Prayer, Second Semester, No. 4, Part One: The Power of Praise

I will praise Thee, O Lord my God, with all my heart: And I will glorify Thy name forevermore. Psalm 86:12

The four lines of the Doxology have been the most frequently sung words of any known song for more than three hundred years. Even today nearly every English-speaking Protestant congregation still unites at least once each Sunday in this noble ascription of praise. It has been said that the doxology has done more to teach the doctrine of the Trinity than all the theological books ever written. It has often been called "the Protestant Te Deum Laudamus."

Bishop Thomas Ken wrote a number of hymns, and it was always his desire that Christians be allowed to express their praise to God without being limited only to Psalmody and the Bible canticles. He was one of the first English writers to produce hymns that were not merely versifications of the Psalms.

In 1673 Thomas Ken wrote a book entitled A Manual of Prayers for the Use of the Scholars of Winchester College. In one of the editions of this manual, Ken included three of his hymns that he wanted the students to sing each day as part of their devotions. These hymns were called "Morning Hymn," "Evening Hymn," and "Midnight Hymn." Each of these hymns closed with the familiar four lines we now know as the Doxology. The text of his "Morning Hymn" became especially popular. Two of the verses from this hymn are as follows:

"Awake, my soul, and with the sun Thy daily course of duty run, Shake off dull sloth, and early rise, To pay thy morning sacrifice. Direct, control, suggest, this day, All I design, or do, or say; That all my powers, with all their might, In Thy sole glory may unite." It is said that after Bishop Ken had written this hymn, he sang it to his own accompaniment on the lute every morning as part of his private devotions.

The tune for Bishop Ken's text, "Old Hundredth," is said to be the most famous of all Christian hymn tunes. It was composed or adapted by Louis Bourgeois, born in Paris, France, c. 1510. In 1541 Bourgeois moved to Geneva, Switzerland, where he became an ardent follower of John Calvin and the Reformed Reformation Movement. Here he was given the responsibility to provide the tunes for the new metrical psalms which were being prepared at that time. Bourgeois was largely responsible for the Genevan Psalter, a monumental musical publication, completed and published in 1562. The tune was prepared originally for the French version of Psalm 134 and was included in the Anglo-Genevan Psalter of 1551. The first English words to which it was wedded were William Kethe's version of Psalm 100, "All People That on Earth Do Dwell;" accordingly, the tune became known as "The Hundredth."

Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Praise God From Whom All Blessings Flow!

Praise God, from Whom all blessings flow; Praise Him, all creatures here below;  Praise Him above, ye heavenly host; Praise Father, Son, and Holy Ghost.  The Doxology

God is so amazing!  He is our God and He has claimed us as His people!  Glory be to God!  God gives us favor and He orders our steps!  Praise be His holy name!

We need to praise the Lord.  Praise is a wonderful form of prayer!  In the Old Testament, we see that David discovered that God inhabits the praises of His people. In other words, the very presence of God dwells in the midst of His people as they praise Him (Ps. 22:3).In Acts 15:15-18, James explains that what the Lord was doing in the Church of Acts was rebuilding the Tabernacle of David. He says:

"And to this agree the words of the prophets; as it is written, After this I will return, and will build again the tabernacle of David, which is fallen down; and I will build again the ruins thereof, and I will set it up: That the residue of men might seek after the Lord, and all the Gentiles, upon whom my name is called, saith the Lord, who doeth all these things."

It follows then, that the Church should conform itself to the pattern found in the Tabernacle of David. David was a man conformed to the heart of God. Both his life and his prophetic message found in the Psalms show us that the Lord’s dwelling place or tabernacle is made up of every believer who has entered into a love relationship with Christ. This relationship is based on a life dedicated to Christ, and expressed through prayer and praise and doing good in the world in His name.

The Father is seeking worshipers who will worship Him in Spirit and in Truth (John 4:23). David spent time in God's presence and learned to offer acceptable sacrifices of worship. As New Testament priests, we are called to do the same (1 Pet. 2:5; Heb. 13:15).

The Importance of Praise to the Beleiver

Praise strengthens your faith.
Praise tunes you in to God’s enriching presence.
Praise activates God’s power in your life and in the life of your loved ones.
Praise helps you profit more from your trials.
Praise helps you experience Christ in your life.
Praise helps you demonstrate God’s reality
Praise helps you over come Satan and his strategies.
Praise brings glory and pleasure to God.

Sunday, February 07, 2010

God's School of Prayer No. 3: Pray for the Lost and Unchurched -- Share the Romans Road to Salvation With Them!

I hope you gain a burden to pray for the lost and for the unchurched.  Share with them the Romans Road to Salvation that follows.  Jesus Christ is the answer for the world today!

The Romans Road to Salvation

The ROMANS ROAD....is a pathway you can walk. It is a group of Bible verses from the book of Romans in the New Testament. If you walk down this road you will end up understanding how to be saved.

Romans 3:23 "For all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God."

We all have sin in our hearts. We all were born with sin. We were born under the power of sin's control.
- Admit that you are a sinner.

Romans 6:23a "...The wages of sin is death..."

Sin has an ending. It results in death. We all face physical death, which is a result of sin. But a worse death is spiritual death that alienates us from God, and will last for all eternity. The Bible teaches that there is a place called the Lake of Fire where lost people will be in torment forever. It is the place where people who are spiritually dead will remain. - Understand that you deserve death for your sin.

Romans 6:23b "...But the gift of God is eternal life through Jesus Christ our Lord."

Salvation is a free gift from God to you! You can't earn this gift, but you must reach out and receive it.
- Ask God to forgive you and save you.
Romans 5:8, "God demonstrates His own love for us, in that while we were yet sinners Christ died for us!"
When Jesus died on the cross He paid sin's penalty. He paid the price for all sin, and when He took all the sins of the world on Himself on the cross, He bought us out of slavery to sin and death! The only condition is that we believe in Him and what He has done for us, understanding that we are now joined with Him, and that He is our life. He did all this because He loved us and gave Himself for us!  - Give your life to God... His love poured out in Jesus on the cross is your only hope to have forgiveness and change. His love bought you out of being a slave to sin. His love is what saves you -- not religion, or church membership. God loves you!

Romans 10:13 "Whoever will call on the name of the Lord will be saved!"
- Call out to God in the name of Jesus!

Romans 10:9,10 "...If you confess with your mouth Jesus as Lord, and believe in your heart that God raised Jesus from the dead, you shall be saved; for with the heart man believes, resulting in righteousness, and with the mouth he confesses, resulting in salvation."

- If you know that God is knocking on your heart's door, ask Him to come into your heart.

Tuesday, February 02, 2010

God's School of Prayer, Second Semester, No. 2: "The Greatest Prayer Ever Prayed"

John 17 gives us the high priestly prayer of Jesus.  Some call it the greatest prayer ever prayed.  Jesus prayed this prayer for you and me, for his church. Matthew 6:5-14 may contain Jesus’ model prayer, but this is really surely alsoa prayer that can be called the Lord’s prayer, Jesus’ prayer from the heart for those of us who would believe on account of the testimony of those who had gone on before.

Jesus prays for us. Jesus prays that God will be with us in the world. Jesus has prayed for you -- that all will be well with you. And that God will be with you in the world.

Then Jesus asks that we will have joy! This may be rather hard for us to understand. Jesus uses a kind of reasoning that turns all human reasoning upside down. It is God’s reasoning. Jesus prays that you and I have joy in the midst of all that pulls us in this world in which we live.

Jesus requests that we be sanctified. Sanctification is a word that we use too seldom. In fact, many of us may not even know what it means. Let’s all say it together: sanctification. It means purified or made holy. It is a process of transformation that only happens when we walk with God on a daily basis. It only happens when we consciously turn toward God and accept God’s love. Perhaps we can best understand sanctification from a human perspective in terms of discipline. It is the in the spiritual disciplines that we open ourselves to God. In the process God transforms us.

From God’s perspective sanctification is a setting apart. Our life in God is a life apart from many of the things that tug at us as humans. It is a life set apart for being God’s son and daughter. It is a life set apart for living in God’s kingdom.

Then, in John 17:20-26 Jesus prays for the unity of His followers -- that includes you and me -- and he says his praye is not just for the disciples but those who will believe.  Praise God, that is us!
 
Jesus asks that the Church show the same oneness that exists between Jesus and the Father. This is a difficult one for us to understand. All churches -- congregations and denominations -- seem to be filled with divisions. It is Jesus’ continuing prayer for us that we will be one.

1. Our Unity Testifies To Christ’s Love (Verses 25-26)

John 13:35, “By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you have love for one another.”
When we get along as a church we show that there is an abundance of love in the body of Christ. If we want to testify to Christ’s love we must love each other. 1 John 4:20 makes it very clear that if we can’t love each other whom we have seen we have no hope of loving God whom we can’t see.

•Some of our hearts are cramped and small – our love is insufficient how do we over come this? Pray, 1 Thessalonians 3:12 Paul prays, “May the Lord make you increase and abound in love for one another and for all, just as we abound in love for you.”

•Our love is dependent on God filling us with his love. Our love is insufficient, often for the people we like. His love is all-sufficient, even for the people we don’t like.

2. Our Unity Celebrates Eternity (Verse 24)

•We will be united in heaven with all believers – we’d might as well learn how to get along now. Revelation 7:9-10, every nation, tribe tongue, denomination…

•When we recognize our unity and celebrate it we get a glimpse of heaven. Our communion celebration is a prophetic event looking forward to eating of it in the kingdom of God when Christ will join us forever! (Matthew 26:29) I believe we ought to eat together and celebrate together it is practice for heaven.

3. Our Unity Shines God's Glory (Verses 22-23)

•In Albuquerque N.M. there is the Sandia National Laboratory which operates a reflective solar power plant, using over 200,000 mirrors aligned around a tower they reflect the sun onto one area in order to generate electricity.

•The church is like that, when we are all aligned and looking towards God hen we reflect his glory and show the world his incredible power.

•I don’t look in my rear view mirror to admire the craftsmanship of the hinge and reflective glass that makes it up, I look into it to see something that lies outside of my car. We are mirrors pointed to God, people don’t want to see us they want to see Jesus and that is our glory when people look at us and they see Jesus.
•We should point that back to Jesus Christ, just like the Trinity. Corner any member of the Trinity for worship and they reflect you to another member. The Spirit points us towards Jesus, Jesus points us towards the Father and the Father asks, “Have you met my son?”

•When we unite as a church – not just here but globally we most brilliantly reflect the glory of Christ. We also more accurately reflect his glory. When we forget that we’re not the only Christians God appears very anemic, lop-sided. But when we unite with other believers we fully reflect the glory of God.

4. Our Unity Starts With A Prayer -- the Prayer of Jesus that is Still Being Answered (Vs. 20-21)

•Jesus started our unity with a prayer and it is still in the process of being answered today.

•Today I want us to pray for unity, just as Jesus did.  Let us follow his example. Let us agree with Jesus and his great prayer for unity.  The unity can start right here in our church, in our community.  It can start with us.  John Bunyan said it best, “You can do more than pray, after you have prayed, but you cannot do more than pray until you have prayed.”

Today, my brothers and sisters Jesus continues to pray for us. Can you hear him? His last earthly prayers are for you and for me. May we truly love one another.May you have true joy!  And may you be set apart -- sanctified -- service in God’s kingdom. May the Spirit unite us in His service.  Amen and Amen.

Monday, January 25, 2010

No. 1, Part Four: Declarations in Prayer: Bringing Scriptural Reality into Your Life

Declarations can be a part of your regular prayer time or stand-alone prayers anytime during the day.  Jsut begin with "Praise the Lord" or "Thank you God," or "In Jesus' Name" and add a statement that is based on Scripture.  When you say it aloud you bring the reality of God's Word  (which is the greater reality) into the world in your behalf.  Here are declarations with the Scriptures they are based on.  Meditate on these holy, power-filled Scriptures and then declare their truth into your life.

I am a member of the Body of Christ and Satan has no power over me. I overcome evil with good. (Luke 10:19, 1 Cor. 12:27, Romans 12:21)


God has promised as a part of my heritage that no weapon formed against me will prosper. (Isaiah 54:17)


I am delivered from the evils of this present world for it is the will of God. (Galatians 1:4)


I will live and not die to declare the works of the Lord. (Psalms 118:17)


Because I am a doer of God's Word, I am blessed in my deeds. (James 1:22, 25)


Because I am submitted to God and I resist the devil, he must flee from me. (James 4:7)


Great is the peace of my children for they are taught of the Lord. (Isaiah 54:13, Deut. 6:7)


Christ has redeemed me from the curse of the law. Christ has redeemed me from poverty. Christ has redeemed me from sickness and disease. Christ has redeemed me from spiritual death. (Galatians 3:13, Deut. 28)


Because I delight myself in the Lord, He gives me the desires of my heart. (Psalms 37:4)


The Lord has pleasure in the prosperity of His servant. The blessing of Abraham is mine through Jesus Christ. (Psalms 35:27, Galatians 3:14)


I have received the gift of righteousness and I reign as a king in life by Jesus Christ. (Romans 5:17)


I trust in the Lord with all my heart and I do not lean to my own understanding. (Proverbs 3:5)


In all of my ways I do acknowledge Him and He directs my paths. (Proverbs 3:6)


The Lord will perfect that which concerns me. (Psalms 138:8)


I let the Word of Christ dwell in me richly in all wisdom. (Colossians 3:16)


I do follow the Good Shepherd and I know His voice. I will not listen to the voice of a stranger. (John 10:4-5)


I am a new creation in Christ Jesus. My old nature is taken away, behold all things have become new! (2 Cor. 5:17)


I am not conformed to this world but am transformed by the renewing of my mind. My mind is renewed by the Word of God. (Romans 12:2)


I am fruitful in every good work and I am increasing in the knowledge of God. I am strengthened with all might according to His glorious power. (Colossians 1:10-11)


I am delivered from the power (authority) of darkness and I have been translated into the kingdom of God's Dear Son. Therefore, sin, Satan, demons, sickness, disease, bondages, strongholds, and poverty has no authority over me! (Colossians 1:13)


I am born of God and I have world overcoming faith residing on the inside of me. Greater is He that is in me, than he that is in the world. (1 John 5:4-5, 1 John 4:4)


I can do all things through Christ, which strengthens me. (Philippians 4:13)


Jesus gave me the authority to use His Name. That which I bind on earth is bound in Heaven. That which I loose on earth is loosed in Heaven. Therefore, in the Name of the Lord Jesus Christ I bind the principalities, the powers, the rulers of the darkness of this world. I bind and cast down spiritual wickedness in high places and render them harmless and ineffective against me and my family in the Name of Jesus! (Matthew 16:19, John 16:23-24, Ephesians 6:12)


I am of God and have overcome Satan by the blood of Jesus and the word of my testimony. Greater is He that is in me, than he that is in the world. (Rev. 12:11, 1 John 4:4)