Wednesday, 23 May 2012

Let us draw near to God with a sincere heart in full assurance of faith... Hebrews 10:22

Is there any famous person that you would really like to meet and talk to? Personally I would like to talk to The Queen as I think it would be so interesting to hear about some of the places she has been to and people she has met. She is quite an expert on world affairs.
The chances of my doing this are just about zero and I expect the chances of your meeting your famous person are just as slim. You would need a special appointment and arrangements to be made. Have you ever thought though how easy it is for us to get instant access to the King of Kings and Lord of Lords? No appointments or special arrangements are necessary.  We can come into his presence at any time and he is delighted to see us. Why is it then that we make such little use of this? 

From our loving Father and Jesus we can get all the wisdom, insight, understanding, provision, mercy, grace as well as all the reassurance and peace we could ever need. The amazing thing too is that Jesus is even keener to spend time with us than we are to spend time with him!  He longs to draw aside with us but our busy minds and cluttered lives make it hard for him to make contact with us. 
Today just stop and think what it might be like to have a half hour exclusive interview with the Creator of all the earth. What would you like to talk to him about? Your problems or would you talk to him about what he has made and his love for his creation and especially for man? Would you ask him about some tricky situation that has been bothering you or marvel that you are sitting there talking to him? 

Whatever your topic of conversation, remember too that he wants to talk to you, shower you with his love and bathe you in his affection and acceptance. All it takes is half an hour of our time. 

Tuesday, 22 May 2012

No comparisons

I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made.  Psalm 139: 14

We all know we are unique; that there is and never has been anyone just like us. Everything about everybody is different even with identical twins. Even their fingerprints and DNA vary. There may be similarities between people but no two people are identical in any way. In itself that is truly amazing that of the approximately 7 billion people on the planet no two people are alike. We are unique yet unfortunately people rarely celebrate the differences between people but spend far more time comparing themselves to others. 
This leads us to wanting to be other than how God made us. We are fearfully and wonderfully made so wishing we looked like others or had other’s attributes is a bit of a rejection of God’s design. God made us and God loves us even though we are works in progress and far from perfect.

Comparisons are odious because they either puff up our pride if we feel the comparison is favourable to us or feed our rejection and unhappiness if others are perceived as better than us in some way. We are who we are. God loves and accepts us as we are so we must do the same.
If only we celebrated our differences we might come to an understanding that together using our different talents and abilities we can achieve so much more than we can alone. The body of Christ as Paul talks about it in I Corinthians 12 is all about recognising and using our differences.

When you are tempted to compare yourself to another whether favourably or not, stop, recognise and thank God for the differences between you. Infinite variety is God’s way and it should become our way too.
Be free to be yourself and accept yourself with all your good and not so good points. God does, so why not join him instead of making comparisons that he never wanted us to make.

Monday, 21 May 2012

Healing the sick

Jesus went throughout Galilee, teaching in their synagogues, proclaiming the good news of the kingdom, and healing every disease and sickness among the people. Matthew 4: 23

Recently I have become very aware of the number of people who need prayer for healing and what is more the increase in the testimony of people being healed. Whenever Jesus taught he also healed the sick including those suffering pain, paralysed or having seizures. He drove out demons, gave sight to the blind, hearing to the deaf and healed the lame so they could walk. This is the Kingdom coming to earth. Jesus brought the Kingdom of heaven here and in this the kingdom there is no sickness, pain, disease or demons and their horrible ways.
It is this same Kingdom that Jesus wants us to proclaim. He wants us to bring his Kingdom to people regardless of whether they are believers or not. Jesus made no distinction and neither must we. In fact it is a powerful witness to non believers when people are healed in their midst.  People get saved when the miraculous happens near them.

Despite my perceptions, I am certain that there are not more people who are sick than before but our awareness of them and our desire to pray for them with faith expecting people to be healed is I am sure increasing. The church is getting hold of the need to really pray for the sick and the testimonies are increasing. For instance, today someone one told me of a young man suffering from cancer who is doing so much better than he should and doctors are amazed. A lady I know is having a small operation today and I said I would pray for her. She was surprised but very pleased.
John Wimber said. ‘I do not know why some people are healed and others not. All I know is that if I pray for the sick, some will be healed. If I don’t pray for the sick, nobody is healed.’ Let’s keep on praying for those who are sick whether we know them or not. We may be asked to pray for a stranger but our prayers are just as important as family and friends.

I believe God wants to increase the level of faith for healing in the church and he is training us through many different circumstances to persevere in prayer until more and more people are healed. Let us not give up but instead pray till we see the kingdom coming in increasing measure in our midst. 

Sunday, 20 May 2012

The KIngdom of heaven is near

As you go, preach this message,: The Kingdom of heaven is here. Heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse those who have leprosy, drive out demons. Freely you have received, freely give.  Matthew 10:7- 8

Jesus only mentions the church twice in all his teachings and we find these in Matthew 16: 18 and 18: 17.  Yet he talks about the Kingdom all the time. As Christians we tend to talk about church all the time and hardly ever about the Kingdom.
Jesus said, ‘I will build my church...’ (Matthew 16: 18) yet too often we spend all our time building the church not the Kingdom.  I believe that what God wants instead is that we do what he told the first disciples to do: preach the Kingdom and then do it; heal the sick, raise the dead, cleanse the skin diseases and drive out demons.

The Kingdom of God is God’s rule and reign and God asks us to bring this to people. We need to talk to them first about the King, not the church. He wants us to talk to people about his amazing love for everyone and his desire that all be saved from their sin. He wants us to heal the sick and minister to people’s needs in Jesus’ Name.
Let’s become more Kingdom minded. Let’s talk about the Kingdom and the King and then let’s do the things that Jesus did and more.

Saturday, 19 May 2012

Prophetic actions

“Then he said, ‘Take the arrows’; so he took them. And he said to the king of Israel, ‘Strike the ground’; so he struck three times, and stopped. And the man of God was angry with him, and said, ‘You should have struck five or six times; then you would have struck Syria till you had destroyed it’” (2 Kings 13:18-19)

Elisha asked King Jehoash to strike the ground with his arrows but his tepid and not very enthusiastic response meant that King Jehoash would not get the victory over the Araemans that he could have had. If he had struck the ground five or six times he would have had complete victory.
The Bible is full of prophetic actions that can seem a bit strange today but prophetic actions are just as prevalent and just as significant now as they were then. In Hosea’s days God told him to marry an adulterous woman who was symbolic of Israel’s unfaithfulness to God by worshipping Canaanite idols (Hosea 1).  Through Hosea's marriage, children and further actions God showed his people that despite their idolatry he still loved them and wanted them back. Ezekiel and Jeremiah also performed prophetic acts.

Today we may not be called to do things like this but there are many other ways that God may ask us to act prophetically.  Have you heard of someone saying they must sow their seed  by which they mean give financially into a church, ministry or so on expecting there to be a return or fruit from their seed which they may or may not see?
I have seen people jump on chairs, open doors, stretch themselves out on beds to prophetically act out what they believe God is saying and doing. The one thing they all had was a conviction that what they were doing was going to make a difference. King Jehoash’s problem was that he did not believe striking the ground with the arrows was going to make any difference. He had a ‘it won’t work’ mind set.

If God asks us to do something like this, please don’t reason it away. Do it before reason persuades you it is silly and not worth doing.  We need to get to a place of faith where we believe that the prayers we say, our prophetic actions, our declarations and our Godly choices do make a huge difference even if we do not see the effect in the short term. Prophetic actions can be very graphic and powerful ways of making a spiritual statement. They do work!

Friday, 18 May 2012

It doesn't work

Peter went with them, and when he arrived he was taken upstairs to the room. All the widows stood around him, crying and showing him the robes and other clothing that Dorcas had made while she was still with them.

Peter sent them all out of the room; then he got down on his knees and prayed. Turning toward the dead woman, he said, “Tabitha, get up.” She opened her eyes, and seeing Peter she sat up.  Acts 9: 39 – 40
Doubt and unbelief are our greatest opponents in our Christian walk because they directly oppose our faith. When Peter was asked to go to Tabitha’s house because she had died, the first thing he encountered was all the widows standing around mourning her death and showing him all the wonderful clothing that Tabitha had made. She was known for ‘always doing good and helping the poor’. The widows were mourning the loss of this wonderful woman.

The first thing Peter did was send the widows out of the room because they had no expectation of resurrection. This got the unbelief out and then he prayed and let faith arise. Then he was able to raise Tabitha from the dead. The mourning widows with no faith would have been no help.
Reinhard Bonnke likes to have the first few rows of people at his crusades and meetings full of faith filled people. People with doubt and unbelief in their hearts can hinder the move of salvation and the miraculous. 

One of our biggest problems can be the ‘It doesn’t work’ thinking. The devil would love us to believe that our prayers and actions are ineffectual and that nothing has happened. Nothing could be further from the truth. Steve Backlund says, ‘As people of faith, we believe that our past prayers, declarations, godly choices and prophetic acts are working powerfully and effectively in the unseen realm’.
There are times when I think my prayers are not working and then suddenly God graciously shows me how effective my prayers have been. My personal journey now is to pray for the sick. Sometimes they are healed and sometimes nothing seems to happen but I am determined to persevere and pray for them on every opportunity that God gives me. I want to see more people helald in Jesus' name.

Don’t let doubt and unbelief steal from you the joy of moving in faith to see loved ones saved,  people healed, lives transformed, provision flow into needy areas and so on. Root out ‘it hasn’t worked’ from your life and let faith arise afresh today in your heart.


Thursday, 17 May 2012

Godly choices

Therefore let us stop passing judgement on one another. Instead make up your mind not to put any stumbling block or obstacle in your brother’s way.  Romans 14: 13

One of the highest callings we each have is to be spiritual parents. For some this will be to our natural children but everyone has this call. Others no matter how old or young we are, whether we like it or not, will look up to us and be encouraged by our choices.
We know as parents that life style is the greatest teacher for our children. They will much more readily do what we do than do what we say especially if our words are not backed up by actions. As an example, parents who swear or drink excessively will often have children who do the same even if they tell them not to. We limit our choices for the sake of our children.

In the same way in the Kingdom we limit our choices for the sake of others. We do not exercise our freedom if it will cause others to stumble. Paul talks of this in Romans 14 where he was addressing the matter of sacred days and what people ate and drank. Today we could extend this to do with our vocabulary, modesty in dress, alcohol, the kinds of food we eat, our attitudes, the types of places we go to, how we conduct ourselves with the opposite sex, the types of jokes we tell, media choices, how we deal with conflict, and how we spend our money.  There are quite a few pastors who do not drink so they will not be a stumbling block to others who may be weaker.
 
Paul encourages us not to judge others’ choices but also not to be a stumbling block to others by our choices. ‘Don’t look at me while I sin,’ is not an option!  Whether we like it or not, people will look at our lives and use them either as a Godly example or as an opportunity to do things that are perhaps not wise.

Let’s encourage one another to good choices and let us strengthen those weaker or new in the faith by our good choices; not by a holier than though attitude, but by the helping hand on our journey which we all need.

Tuesday, 8 May 2012

The great cloud of witnesses

Therefore, since we are surrounded by such a great cloud of witnesses, let us throw off everything that hinders and the sin that so easily entangles and let us run with perseverance the race marked for us. Hebrews 12:1

One of my favourite old hymns is For all the Saints and one of my all time favourite songs is Yes I believe by Point of Grace. Both emphasis the saints that have gone before who are now cheering us on to great acts of faith for the King. The writer of Hebrews likens this to our running a race with the witnesses who have gone before being the crowd urging us on. Hebrews 11 gives a great long list of the greats of faith who have gone before and it is these along with many others who are encouraging us to run our race with faith and perseverance. Many of them would love to live in our day and with their great faith do mighty exploits for God.  I suspect they are quite bemused by the apathetic, wealthy but so often faithless Western church. 
I listened to a radio programme recently about the early days of aviation and the planes and airfields they used which are a far cry from our modern airplanes and airports. How the early aviators would love to see the progress of aviation since those early days. I am sure they would want to get into the cockpit of one of today’s airplanes and have everything explained and marvel at today’s technology.

In the same way, imagine John and Charles Wesley, John G Lake, Andrew Murray, or Spurgeon and Moody visiting our churches today. Technologically and culturally much may have changed but they would still be urging us to build on what went before and press on into everything that God has for us. We have a race to run to win our generation for the Lord. Though superficially society looks much better than in their day, underneath are the same lost souls, dying in their sin, just as much in need of a Saviour. God is anointing his church afresh to go into all the world and preach the Gospel with signs and wonders following.  Let us be inspired by the great men and women of the faith to run our race with perseverance and let God use us to reach our world.

Monday, 7 May 2012

The blessing of unity

The eye cannot say to the hand, ‘I don’t need you’ and the head cannot say to the feet, ‘I don’t need you. I Corinthians 12: 21

Some years ago a friend said to me, ‘You know, someone else does not have to fail in order for you to succeed.’  This was a bit of a revelation for me because unknowingly that was exactly what I thought and it was obvious enough for my friend to say so to me.
My wrong thinking that success for me was at the expense of someone else’s failure was a lie that needed exposing.  We are called to be a body working together not a set of spare parts competing for top spot.  Our greatest and most fruitful moments come when we work together. If I am a finger I do not compete against the thumb but work with it to achieve something neither of us could do separately.

There are two problems in most churches and certainly between churches and one is the confident people working independently and the other is those lacking in confidence feeling they have nothing to contribute. Both are wrong. The over confident need to start working better with others and the timid need to realise and start to operate in the gifting and function that God has placed in them.
The body needs all the parts operating well together to fulfil what God has called it to do.  This is true unity.  Others do not have to fail in order for us to succeed but if we are to succeed we need to work together in unity blessing what is going on and honouring one another. At the end of the day it is not about personal success or failure or even our church’s success or failure but all about God. Do we honour him with our words, our service and our attitudes? Do we bring him glory in what we do?

We are the body of Christ. Let each one of us play our part and bring glory to him in all we do.

Sunday, 6 May 2012

Isaac the sacrifice

Then God said, ‘Take your son, your only son, Isaac, whom you love and go to the region of Moriah. Sacrifice him there as a burnt offering on one of the mountains I will tell you about. Genesis 12:2

I wonder what Isaac thought about the expedition to sacrifice him. We know that on the third day of their travels as they were climbing the mountain to offer the sacrifice, Isaac asked his father about the lamb for the burnt offering (Genesis 22:7). Abraham’s wonderful words of faith that God would provide must have been like a knife in his heart. He knew who the offering was going to be even of Isaac didn’t.
However it is almost certain that Isaac was not a small boy but an adolescent at this time and in verse 9 it says that Abraham bound Isaac and laid him on the wood of the fire. Was it at this point that Isaac realised he was the burnt offering? Abraham was over 100 years old and though no doubt fairly fit from his life of farming, I am sure Isaac would have been able to resist his father’s attempt to make him the sacrifice. He must have agreed or at least not resisted being bound and laid on the altar. Why?

My only conclusion is that he had great faith and trust in both God and his Father. He must have realised that if he was the lamb to be slain, there was a good reason. Isaac had to trust that either God would provide a lamb or he would be it. I find this level of trust very inspiring but also daunting.
I doubt if any of us will be required to make that level of sacrifice but we may well have to give to God our most cherished dreams, plans, hopes and if God does not provide a ‘ram’ they may have to die. There have been times in my life when I have had to hand over to others something that I have poured my heart and life into. I have also had to watch a once fruitful ministry die because God’s hand was no longer on it. To this day I do not know why but I do know I did the right thing painful though that was.   

I pray today you may have grace to do this if necessary and to trust God with all your most cherished dreams and hopes. So whether you continue with them for years or feel the time is come to hand them on you will have the confidence to know what God’s will is.  He is faithful and can be totally depended on.


Friday, 4 May 2012

Trust in the Lord

Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him and he will make your paths straight. Proverbs 3: 5 - 6

Fifteen years ago my dad wanted to celebrate his 80th birthday by taking the whole family to South Africa. We were all so excited to be going to stay in a very nice hotel near Cape Town in the middle of the South African summer and to have Christmas in the sun.
About two weeks before we left, God said to me, ‘Give me the holiday’ which I was holding onto very tightly. He wanted me to place it in his open hands. I immediately said a loud and emphatic, ‘No!’ God asked me, ‘Why not?’ I replied immediately, ‘because I don’t trust you. You will take it away from me.’

I was so shocked but I know God was not. I thought I was a woman of faith but obviously I was not. God knew what I felt but it needed to be revealed to my stubborn, unbelieving heart. For the next two days a battle ensued with God just waiting quietly and lovingly and me trying hard to place this wonderful holiday in his hands. Could I trust God to do what was best because underlying all this was the thought that if you gave something good to God he would take it away?
Today I still find it shocking that I thought such an awful thing about my God who only wants and gives good things to his children.  However he knows best and we have to trust him. Abraham had a far harder test of faith. God asked him to sacrifice his one and only child on which so many promises hung. He trusted God that even if he had to kill his son, God would raise him from the dead (Hebrews 11: 19) so that the promise would be fulfilled. Of course as Abraham raised the knife to kill Isaac, a ram was provided but he was prepared to do as God had asked. Amazing faith!

So what happened to the holiday? Two days later, after a lot of giving and taking on my part, I finally managed to give our wonderful holiday into God’s hands and say, ‘I trust you.’ Of course we had the most fabulous holiday but I didn’t know that. I had to trust God. That was the start of many tests of faith but God has been so wonderful. Even when doors have closed that I so wanted to open, it has always been for the best. God’s love never fails.

Thursday, 3 May 2012

Eagerly desire spiritual gifts

Follow the way of love and eagerly desire spiritual gifts especially the gift of prophecy. I Corinthians 14:1

To eagerly desire something sounds a bit wrong, almost as if one is being greedy and self seeking. We are taught to wait our turn, share, put others first but here Paul is encouraging the church and us as believers to eagerly desire spiritual gifts; in fact he says it three times in this letter.
It seems even odder in the context of the letter written to the Corinthian church who had got into excess in a number of areas of church life including spiritual gifts. Paul devotes three chapters (by modern reckoning) to the topic of spiritual gifts and how to use them in the church setting and the meat in the sandwich is the well known chapter 13 on love. Spiritual gifts are to operate out of love and be given in love.

Nevertheless Paul urges us to eagerly desire spiritual gifts and especially prophecy. This is because he doesn’t want the church to stop  prophesying but to do so in an proper and orderly way.  Both the church and the world desperately need to hear the voice of God on a wide range of issues. The gift of prophecy is to edify the church (14: 4) and to strengthen, encourage and comfort others (14:3).
I love it when the gift of prophecy along with words of knowledge and wisdom operate. Suddenly people are aware of God in a way that had been closed before. Believers and unbelievers’ eyes are open not just to the existence of God but that God knows them personally. I was at a ladies conference in South Africa and God gave me a word for each lady. Many asked me how I knew about what I had written. My answer was always ‘I don’t but God does’. I didn’t know any of the circumstances that God gave me words for but he knows and loves each one of us.

The world so needs to hear from God and we are the ones he wants to use to tell them. The world needs the wisdom of God in the workplace, schools, colleges, government, health services and so on and individuals are desperate to know God loves them.  The church needs to hear God’s heart of love for his beloved church and gain strengthening, direction and encouragement.
God wants to use each one of us with spiritual gifts but he also wants us to eagerly desire both him and his gifts. Do not hold back in modesty; ask God to use you. Each one of us has a part to play and God wants to use us to bless others. Be available today. You will be amazed at how blessed you are as you bless others with words of love and encouragement from the Lord.




Tuesday, 1 May 2012

All authority in heaven and earth

Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.  Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you.

We are all familiar with these wonderful words that Jesus spoke to his disciples after his resurrection. Just dwell for a moment on this truth that all authority in heaven and earth is in Jesus’ hands. As God’s children, bought by his blood, we too can operate under that authority and that means we have authority over our lives, homes and families. And that is just the start.
I have found that Christians tend either to lie down and let the devil walk all over them and their families with sickness, financial problems, marriage breakdown, children in difficulties or they start trying to take on major demonic powers in the heavenly realm ‘in the name of Jesus’.  Both extremes are wrong.

Firstly we need to realise Jesus has given us authority over our lives, homes and families and we must learn to walk in this. The Holy Spirit will teach us how to pray and take authority over everything afflicting our lives. We do not have to live in sickness, doubt, unbelief, poverty, criticism, abusive relationships, addictions and so on. We may have brought these things into our Christian lives but we do not need to continue to live in them. It may take time but the Holy Spirit is a wonderful guide and will show you how to pray and will lead you to people, books, teachings that will help you.
In South Africa there are many homes in our area that have trouble with baboons. The baboons have learned that humans equal food – nice food and they will do all they can to invade people’s property and homes. Defensive measures need to be taken but even then they can invade homes but when they do, people do not need to make the baboons at home; they need to drive them out forcefully. The baboons have no right in their homes.

In the same way the devil has no right to be in your life, home or family and you must drive him out forcefully. You may need to deal with old behaviour patterns, ungodly beliefs, areas of unforgiveness and also with the lies that say the devil has a right in your life. He doesn’t. You are a child of God and under his authority and covering you have all authority in heaven and earth over all principalities and powers in your life and circumstances.
Don’t let the devil steal from you. Exercise your God given authority and declare it over your life. Let the truth of who God is and who you are as his child infiltrate every area of your life, home and family in Jesus Name. He has all the authority and you belong to him.