Monday, May 2, 2011

The Friend of God

“And the scripture was fulfilled which saith, Abraham believed God, and it was imputed unto him for righteousness: and he was called the Friend of God.” (James 2:23)

Abraham was called the friend of God. This indeed is an amazing thing that the Creator of the heavens and the earth would consider a man as His friend; but Abraham was not the only friend that God had in the Old Testament.

Apparently God had a specific time of the day in which He would visit with Adam (Genesis 3:8, Psalms 8:4, Hebrews 2:6), no doubt sharing and discussing the secrets of the universe and teaching him about His Creation (Genesis 3:8). “What do you think, Adam?” “What should we call these creatures that I have created?” “I have created you in my image and in my likeness!” “Tell me, what shall we call these animals? (Genesis 2:19-20)

Adam was a friend of God, and that’s why the devil targeted him so aggressively; he knew that the man and woman whom God had created were precious to the heart of God, but he also knew that God had given them ruling authority. This fact infuriated the devil, filling him with envious rage; he would stop at nothing until he took what belonged to them and became the “god of this world” (II Corinthians 4:4). Well, most of us know the rest of the story; Satan deceived the woman, and Adam, who was standing there next to her, hearkened to the voice of his wife instead of obeying God (Genesis 3:6, I Timothy 2:14).

We have been taught that God was angry, but it was not so; the voice of God cried out in the cool of the day for the man that He had created; “Where art thou Adam, my friend?” “My heart longs for our fellowship!” “What did you do?” (Genesis 3:9) Of course God knew what they had done and where they were hiding; He wasn’t asking because He couldn’t find them, He was crying out to them because the man that had been His friend was now (spiritually) dead (Genesis 2:17). God’s heart cry continued to echo down through the ages, through all of His holy prophets, speaking of a time of restoration when true fellowship would once again be restored (Acts 3:21). We are privileged to be now living in that time.

God takes His relationship with His friends very seriously. In fact, He valued His relationship with Abraham to such a degree that He consulted with him on one of His major decisions (Genesis 18:17-19, 23-33). Why did God share such intimate things with Abraham? Because He was a prophet? (Genesis 20:7) No, God didn’t share these things with him because he was a prophet, but rather because Abraham was His friend. Friends share intimate things with one another, but prophets are not always friends. There were prophets in the Old Testament that were anything but friends of God (I Samuel 10:11, II Peter 2:15), and so it is today (Matthew 7:22-23).

The Apostle Paul also understood that with friendship comes responsibility and accountability, and he admonished the Corinthian church because they were unwilling to pass judgments pertaining to the affairs of this life (I Corinthians 6:1-4). Paul knew that, as sons and daughters of God, they had been given authority to execute righteous judgment and make decrees (John 20:21-23, Job 22:28, Mark 11:23, Romans 4:17), and that God would back these decrees that were in line with His will.

Paul walked in such intimate fellowship with the Lord that there were times when God gave no commandment concerning his instruction to the church. But rather gave Paul liberty to pass judgment himself, as one that had been found faithful to act as His ambassador (I Corinthians 7:6, 25). Paul was so yielded to the Spirit of God that his decisions were, in essence God’s decisions, and God’s decisions were his decisions; these judgments and decrees of Paul were not by commandment, but rather permission (I Corinthians 2:16), and yet they became scripture.

“Whoa, Brother Tom, are you saying that we can write scripture?” No, but we can make judgments pertaining to the affairs of this life in our specific realm of authority. What is your God-given realm of authority? Are you a pastor? A father and husband? A business owner or employee? An apostle or prophet?

Jesus knew His purpose and the boundaries of His authority because He was not only God the Son and the Son of Man, but He was also a friend of God; He obeyed the Father because He loved Him and spent many hours communing with Him, and knew His heart in matters.

Jesus died and rose again so that we could have the same opportunity that He had while he was on the earth; the same opportunity to walk in oneness with the Father, and to bear much fruit in His name. In fact, Jesus Himself told us that the mighty works that He did, we would do even greater because He was going to the Father, and we were to remain, in His stead; in His authority (John 14:12). We have indeed been privileged to be called the sons and daughters of God (John 1:12).

Monday, January 24, 2011

Leaven of the Pharisees

“…Beware ye of the leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy.” (Luke 12:1)

I read a statement this week by another believer concerning a minister that had fallen into sin, but has since repented, and God is restoring him. This believer said, “The attitude we have toward this man (the minister) reveals something about our own walk with the Lord.”

How true this is, for if we truly know God, we will also understand His ways (Exodus 33:13, 34:6-7). His ways are mercy, truth, compassion, forgiveness and restoration. “Well, Brother Tom, God might forgive, but that doesn’t mean a minister that sins should continue to minister!” My friend, when God restores, He restores! It’s people that don’t restore, forgive and forget.

The most dangerous and repulsive thing in the eyes of God is the religious spirit; the spirit of the Pharisees, Scribes and Sadducees. Jesus Himself warned us of this monstrosity, exhorting us to beware of hypocrisy. But what is a hypocrite? Hypocrisy is a condition of the heart; it is someone that professes to be something, when in reality, they are something else. But let me explain what it is not; it is not a person that has struggled, or is struggling in an area of their life, but yet loves God and is endeavoring to overcome the weakness.

There are many people that love God that stay away from our churches in mass quantity because of the religious people that are in them! Drunks hang out in bars and religious people hang out in churches! So you can go to either place and get beat up! This ought not to be so my brothers and sisters.

Religious spirits hate those that are spiritual because they cannot control them. A religious spirit is all about control; they want control and they want preeminence (III John 1:9). A spiritual person (One who is led by the Spirit of God) that will step outside of man-ordained boundaries to pursue after the will of God will become their targets.

If we understand the ways of God, we will be able to discern correctly and judge righteously. Yes, we are to judge (discern) the fruit of others, and we’re to judge prophecies and those that labor in our midst (For how else are we to drive out wolves that come to destroy the flock?) (I Corinthians 14:29, I Thessalonians 5:12) But this instruction and command is for those that are spiritual, not religious (I Corinthians 2:15, Galatians 6:1) When Jesus told us to “Judge not,” (Luke 6:37) He was not telling us that we shouldn’t discern; He was telling us not to condemn; there is a difference! Religious people condemn others while excusing their own ungodly behavior; they are always looking at everyone else’s faults, but they refuse to look inward. They are gossipers and backbiters, and it’s no wonder that sinners off the streets are apprehensive to walk through our doors; the prostitute feels safer on the streets of Los Angeles, than in the ladies Sunday morning “Bible study!” I don’t blame them, I would too!

My wife told me that, when she was young, a woman evangelist came to their church and preached a message of truth on a Sunday morning. That evening only one fourth of the people returned! She cleaned out the church! The church leaders were living in adultery and fornication, drunkenness, and all manner of sin, pride, disobedience and rebellion against God’s Word, yet they ran her mother out of the church because she got filled with the Holy Spirit and prayed in tongues!

We are warned that many that call Jesus, “Lord,” will be denied entrance into the Kingdom of God. Scripture tells us that these people will not expect this, and in fact, will be taken by surprise; they will be expecting Jesus to applaud their “good works,” but instead will hear something else (Matthew 7:21-23, 22:11-13). They will be shocked when they hear their condemnation at the lips of Jesus because they had no relationship with God, but were in fact religious, hypocrites. The sinner on the street knows that he or she is a sinner, and most wouldn’t step foot in a church for shame, but those that are religious believe that they are alright with God, when in fact, they are not (Matthew 18:9-14).

How do we avoid the leaven of the Pharisees and Sadducees? We allow the grace of God to work in our hearts (Hebrews 13:9); it is in knowing God through intimate relationship that we can do and be all that he desires for us to become. The Pharisees used the scriptures to condemn others, and it is no different today (John 8:5-6). They pound their Bibles and scream “homosexuality is sin!” But never mention the delivering power of God, and how God so loved them that He sent His Son that they can be free! (John 3:16) You hear them praying that God would send doctors and lawyers to their churches (For the offerings, no doubt), but how often the drunkards, the ex-convicts, prostitutes, homosexuals, pedophiles and murderers? Our prayer should be, “God, send us your worst!”

“Oh, Brother Tom, we don’t want pedophiles in our churches!” I didn’t say that you had to put them in charge of Sunday school! But do you believe in the power of God? This is what Jesus told us to do! (Luke 14:23) We ignore this part of the Bible, and then point our fingers at the denominational church across the street because they “call their ministers ‘Father,’ and scripture condemns this!” (Catholic priests) (Matthew 23:9) Well, what about the other things that “scripture condemns?” Like condemning the guiltless? (Matthew 12:7) This is hypocrisy, my friend. “Well, do we just excuse people’s sin?” “How do we know the difference?” There are no formulas; it is through relationship; God will take us to His Word, and give us that which is appropriate for each unique situation (Those things that are our business, that is) (John 21:21-22).

Wednesday, December 8, 2010

Spirit of Excellence

“That ye may approve things that are excellent; that ye may be sincere and without offence till the day of Christ…” (Philippians 1:10)

I once heard someone say, “Excellence of ministry they have, but excellence of spirit, they have not!” This has stuck with me over the years, but it also brings us to ask, what does God consider excellence?

The Pharisees were a people of “excellence;” they paid their tithes and gave offerings; they wore fine clothes and did all the right things. They were meticulous and upstanding members of their communities; they were the ones in leadership positions, and kept the commandments of the law blameless. Many of them were wealthy businessmen, and of excellent reputation among those of power and influence. But yet, with all of these things, they were deficient in the eyes of God (Matthew 5:20), and Jesus called them hypocrites, children of the devil, a generation of vipers. (Matthew 23:33, John 8:44)

He rebuked them vehemently, but when John the Baptist came out of the wilderness wearing camel skin and eating bugs, Jesus said of him that there was no greater prophet in all of the Old Testament (Mark 1:6, Luke 7:24-28).

What made the Pharisees so debased in the eyes of God? They would be considered righteous by most of us today, and John the Baptist would have been considered unkempt and extreme. Most of us would not have given him the time of day; we would say of him, “Who sent you?” “What famous minister do you know?” “What church do you belong to?” “By whose authority do you speak?” (Matthew 21:23)

My friend, where do we set the standard?

In order to understand what excellence is, we may first understand what it is not. Many of the things that are important to us as men, are repulsive to God, or are simply not high on His priority list. For one, excellence is not “busy-ness.” I saw a bumper sticker once that said, “Jesus is coming, look busy!” You may laugh, but this is what many of us are doing. In being “busy,” we can miss the still, small voice of the Holy Spirit speaking to our hearts, and we can miss His will.

Another counterfeit of excellence is perfection; we can spend so much time worrying about the details that we can miss God in the middle of it. God isn’t looking for perfection; He is looking for our hearts, and obedience (I Samuel 15:22).

The Pharisees missed the time of their visitation because they discerned not the excellence that was in their midst. They were expecting the King of the ages to come in royal apparel, and to fit their definition of royalty, and they were offended by a group of men that would not even wash their hands before they ate (Matthew 15:2).

The Pharisees were high-minded and critical; they were wrapped up in position and appearance, but neglected the weightier matters of the law, which were judgment, mercy and faith (Matthew 23:23). They had no power or relationship with God, and in fact, were offended by those that God had sent.

Esther had an excellent spirit, and when she was in the king’s court, she was content with what she had, and demanded nothing of the king. She was not there to impress him with a vast array of Jewelry and perfume, but rather a quiet and gentle spirit; the King recognized this quality in her, and it drew his heart (Esther 2:15, 17, I Peter 3:4). It was in sharp contrast to the incessant demands of the previous queen, and no doubt the majority of his concubines.

David killed Goliath with a sling and a stone because he had an excellent spirit within him. He brought God his best (I Samuel 17:39-40), and God used it to do what no other man in Israel could do.

What does God require of us? (Micah 6:6-8)

God spoke to me last year and said, “I only want your best, not the best!” That is what He is looking for; God will make up the difference with grace (Romans 4:16). He will transform and empower our best to move mountains and to slay giants.

When the widow brought her two mites and dropped them in the offering plate, Jesus said, “She has given more than they all.” Why? Because she gave her best, while the Pharisees were too busy competing with one another (Mark 12:41-44).

If God has told us to do something, He is only requiring us to bring our best in obedience to Him. If God wanted man’s “expertise,” He would call on those that are mighty and noble to do the job; but this is not what he has done, for He has called you and me (I Corinthians 1:26-29).

Saturday, October 23, 2010

Forgetting

“…but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind, and reaching forth unto those things which are before.” (Philippians 3:13)

Most of us, if we have walked with the Lord for any length of time have had our share of battles, and some of them might not seem to have turned out so well in our favor. The wounds and feelings of perplexity can at times run deep, leaving us feeling defeated, confused and without much hope for the future.

This is the very thing that the Apostle Paul, by the Holy Spirit, was referring to when he declared “…but this one thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind…” (Philippians 3:13) Why would he do this? Because he understood what it was like to be battle-weary; he also knew that it would be impossible to move forward while holding onto the baggage of yesterday. The failures and even the successes of yesterday can be like anchors around our ankles that must be removed in order to run the race that God has set before us.

As a young man, Moses had destiny burning in His heart (Acts 7:25). He had seen by the Spirit, through the eyes of faith, the children of Israel departing out of Egypt; he saw the same thing that Joseph had seen four hundred years before (Hebrews 11:22). Moses believed in the calling upon his life; he was young and determined, and full of zeal, and he understood that God had a plan to deliver His people (Acts 7:25). He hid these things in his heart until he felt the time was right, and then went into action. But he failed miserably (Acts 7:23-29), and then fled into the wilderness, no doubt defeated in his heart.

For forty years Moses kept sheep in the land of Midian (Exodus 3:1), and every day, had the opportunity to think; “Where did I go wrong? “Where did I miss it?” “What happened to the great calling upon my life?” “I know that God put something in my heart, but my people are still in bondage, and now I’m an old man!” In perplexity, Moses resigned himself to retire in the land of Midian, and to probably die there with his family and with his sheep.

But God had a plan all along, and in the proper season, He came to Moses; “I know that you are broken, Moses, but what do you have left?” (Exodus 4:2) That’s what God is asking; what do you have left? “Things may have not have turned out the way that you had planned, but what do you have left in your hand?” What Moses had left was sufficient for God to part the sea and free His people; what Moses had left was sufficient to destroy a nation and to fulfill God’s eternal plan. God never forgot, but Moses had to forget something; he had to forget the ways of Egypt, he had to forget his own abilities, and now God was demanding that he forget his past failures and go back to Egypt.

My friend, do not ask yourself what you have lost, but rather what remains, for it is what remains that God can use to change a situation, to change a nation.

In the beginning of the New Testament (Luke 1:5-20), before the birth of John the Baptist, Zacharias was high priest; he and his wife Elizabeth had prayed for a son in their younger years, as she was barren. But year after year went by and still no son was born to them; Elizabeth was now passed the age of Childbearing and Zacharias was an old man.

In their younger years, they were excited about the things of God; they knew how God had visited Sarah; they knew how He visited Hannah (Genesis 21:1-2, I Samuel 1:19). So they got into agreement and prayed. But over the years things changed; they had forgotten about the prayer of their youth, and when an angel of God appeared to Zacharias at the appointed time, Zacharias was cynical, his heart hardened in unbelief. It didn’t matter to him that his prayers were in the process of being answered, for during the years of waiting, when his faith should have been growing stronger, he had hardened his heart. He argued with God; “No, you don’t understand, I am an old man!” “It’s over for me!” Can you imagine? Explaining to God that He doesn’t understand! “Whereby shall I know this?” (Luke 1:18) God had to close his mouth in order to keep him from hindering His plan with words of unbelief (Luke 1:20, James 3:6).

All of us have had failures, and these things can get down on the inside of us, and if we’re not careful, they can sabotage our faith. Hebrews says not to harden our hearts as in the “day of provocation” in the wilderness (Hebrews 3:7-8). The things of God, most of the time, do not come out of heaven without a fight, and sometimes these battles can be brutal (Isaiah 9:5). Satan will fight vigorously for every inch of territory that we purpose to take; we can be assured of that, but we will win if we will not quit! Isaiah declared that he would “set his face as flint,” and would never be ashamed (Isaiah 50:7).

If God has spoken something, it is as good as done, regardless of what circumstances look like, and He will visit you in the proper season. He will perform the thing which He has promised, if we keep our hearts tender and receptive to the Holy Spirit, and continue in faith, love and obedience.

Sunday, September 12, 2010

That Good Part

“But one thing is needful: and Mary hath chosen that good part, which shall not be taken away from her.” (Luke 10:42)

Have you ever wondered why everything seems to work out for some believers? It seems that with some Christians, favor, blessing and peace seem to follow them wherever they go (Psalm 23:6), and though there are challenges, there always seems to be an inner strength and joy in the midst of every trial.

Obviously, every believer has challenges; in fact, the closer a person walks with God, the greater the intensity of the attacks that will come against him (Hebrews 4:9-10). Mary sought hard after the Lord, and was determined to let nothing stand in her way, and yet she came under attack for spending time with Jesus.

Sometimes people will get angry when a man or a woman has chosen the better part; Cain killed Abel because Abel sought hard after the Lord, and the blessing of God was evident in his life because of it. Cain was envious, and it drove him to commit murder and bring an even greater curse upon himself (Genesis 4:11-12).

King David was a man after the heart of God, and when they brought the Ark of the Covenant to Jerusalem, David worshipped and danced before the Lord with all of his might (II Samuel 6:14). However, Michal, David’s wife, despised him in her heart; she accused him of wrongdoing and attacked his motives; but David refused to bow to her intimidation. God is jealous over these things, and He intervened on David’s behalf (II Samuel 6:16, 20-23).

To Martha, Mary seemed irresponsible and lazy, and as Martha worked feverishly do get all the serving done, Mary was just sitting around “doing nothing” at the feet of Jesus. Martha was sure that Jesus would certainly understand and take her side; but He didn’t. In fact, instead of thanking Martha for a job well done, and sending Mary on her way to go help her, He turned and rebuked her (Luke 10:41).

When Jesus and His disciples were crossing the sea by boat, a great storm arose, and Jesus’ disciples were cumbered about; they woke Him up screaming “Master, careth thou not that we perish?” (Mark 4:38) They accused Him of being negligent, irresponsible and uncaring because he was sleeping, and felt no sense of urgency to wake up because of the storm. When Jesus did wake up, He rebuked them for their unbelief (Mark 4:40).

Martha didn’t understand that there was a better way when she ran up to the Lord; “Lord, careth thou not that my sister has left me alone…?” (Luke 10:40)

There are times that we become cumbered about with the cares of life, but one thing is needful. Jesus told the Pharisees, in regard to His “praise and worship team;” “If these (disciples) shall hold their peace, the stones themselves would immediately cry out!” (Luke 19:40) You see, Jesus was present in the house, and if Martha only understood that if God could raise up stones, He could most certainly raise up others to wait on the tables.

A believer that has chosen that good part is not concerned about the opinions of men, but only the opinion of God. You see, Mary could have succumbed to the pressure of Martha, and gotten up from the feet of Jesus to go “help,” but instead, she ignored her. The devil will use people to apply pressure to get us out of that secret place with God (Psalm 91:1), but we must learn to ignore them and send them on their way!

Jesus was preaching to multitudes and performing miracles, and then suddenly He sent the people away and went up into a mountain to pray (Mark 6:45-46). He was jealous of His time with the Father, and knew better than to allow the pressures and demands of others to keep Him from it.

Am I advocating laziness? By no means! Serving God will never be accomplished through laziness, but there is a yoke that is easy, and a burden that is light. Jesus commanded us to take this yoke upon us, and to put off the heavy yoke that comes as we labor and toil in our own strength (Matthew 11:30).

Peter learned this lesson on a fishing trip! He and his men were fishing all night long; they labored and toiled, but to no avail, for they caught nothing. They were tired and were cleaning their equipment when Jesus came to them and told them to get out there and put their nets back in the water (Luke 5:4). Peter could have said “No! We’ve worked all night and we’re tired! You’re not even a fisherman, what do you know?” But instead, Peter obeyed the word of Jesus and the boat was filled with fish (Luke 5:5-7). When we cooperate with God, the burden is removed.

It is impossible for God to lie (Hebrews 6:18), and He has promised that when we choose the better part, that it shall never be taken away (Luke 10:42). Heaven and earth are designed to accommodate us as we pursue the things of the Kingdom of God, and no man or circumstance can take it away; only we can give it up!

Monday, August 9, 2010

Obedience

“And Samuel said, Hath the Lord as great delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices, as in obeying the voice of the Lord? Behold, to obey is better than sacrifice, and to hearken than the fat of rams.” (I Samuel 15:22)

All men want to be free, but true freedom comes with a price; the price of obedience! Desiring freedom from bondage is always universal, for even the gentiles (unbelievers) want to be out of debt, have their bills paid, and have a good faithful wife, a good marriage, successful children, healthy bodies, and even eternal life! (Matthew 6:32)

For many years I wanted to be free from alcohol and drugs, a spirit of anger and rage, and a corrupt and deceitful mind. I tried many of man’s “fixes” and programs, but none of them worked. Sure, I stayed “dry” for periods of time, but I was not free. Listen, brothers and sisters; if you have to go to AA meetings in order to stay free from alcohol, then your life still revolves around alcohol! Can you see that? God wants His people to be free!

Freedom came for me in 1991, when I said, “Not my will but thine!” I replaced my old passions with a new passion; seeking God and winning souls! If we are born again, we will have a passion for souls, for that is the very heartbeat of God! (John 3:16)

When it comes to obeying God, many times we confuse our intentions with obedience. “Well, I want to do that, or I will someday!” But Jesus said that we would be rewarded according to our works, not our intentions (Revelation 2:23). In speaking to the Church of Sardis, Jesus rebuked them because they thought that they were alive, but they were in fact, dead. Jesus warned them and gave them space to repent; He told them, “I have not found thy works perfect before God.” (Revelation 3:2) To the church of Ephesus, he declared to them that they had left their first love.

Did He say to the Ephesians, “Love me again in your hearts?” No! He commanded them to repent and do the first works, or He would remove them (Revelation 2:4-5). What does this mean? It means that He would remove his presence and his blessing, and they would become a dead religious icon that would no longer contain the light of the gospel, but rather would be turned unto Satan and the works of darkness.

Many have once walked powerfully with God, but over the years have fallen into a “routine,” and stopped seeking Him diligently. But God is not into routines; He calls routines, and those that are involved in them, dead and backslidden. You say, “Well, Brother Tom, God looks on the heart!” My friend, faith without works is dead! (James 2:20)

In the book of Revelation, Jesus declares that those who will inherit the Kingdom of God are those that overcome, and keep the first works unto the end (Revelation 2:26). What are your first works? What did Jesus put in your heart?

Jesus said, “Go ye…” (Mark 16:15) Is this command on the forefront of our thinking, or have we backslidden to the mindset of the gentiles, having our own problems and issues on our minds all the time? (Matthew 6:32, Colossians 3:2)

God has imparted into us gifts and talents; what is your gift? What is your talent? Are you using it to further the Kingdom, or have you buried it in the “busyness” of life? (Matthew 25:18) Have you been afraid of man? Have you allowed the opinions of others to cause you to become unfruitful? Are you struggling? Do you desire to be free? Freedom comes when we obey; it comes from obeying God possibly in an area that seems completely unrelated to the problem.

In running from God’s call, Jonah jumped on a ship and brought God’s judgment in the form of a storm (Jonah 1:4). This storm did not affect only Jonah, but everyone on the ship! The men of the ship rowed hard; they labored and toiled and did everything they knew as professional sailors in order to save the ship, but to no avail (Jonah 1:13). The storm did not cease until Jonah, the man of God, called upon the Lord, and the men (and Jonah) obeyed what God said to do! (Jonah 1:15)

Men always look to natural solutions, but in the case of God’s servants, the solution is not always what it may seem. How are we to know? We know because we spend time with God! We talk to Him, and He talks to us! And when He talks to us, we must remember what He said, and do it!

That’s why we get into trouble when we judge other believers! Jonah’s sailors were not bad sailors, they were good sailors; they couldn’t save the ship because there was another issue. If we have gotten into a routine, we will continue to serve God the way that we are used to. However, what once worked for us may not work any longer, because God has moved on!

Has God said “Go to Nineveh, but yet we want to go to Tarsus?” What once was a good thing may now have become a dead, religious work because God is finished with it! When God finishes with something, we had better be finished with it too.

When the children of Israel sojourned in the wilderness, God led them with fire by night and a cloud by day (Exodus 40:36-37). When the cloud stayed, they stayed, and when it moved, they would close up camp and move with God. But can you picture them saying (I can), “We like it here!” “We’re not moving!” Well, God would have moved on without them, and they would have been destroyed by the enemy (I Peter 5:8). Disobedience always causes defeat, pain and destruction, but obedience brings freedom and deliverance, joy, and pleasures forevermore! (Psalm 16:11)

Thursday, June 24, 2010

Overcoming Faith

“That ye be not slothful, but followers of them who through faith and patience inherit the promises.” (Hebrews 6:12)

Most of us have heard the saying, “Well, he thinks the world revolves around him!” But did you know that the world does revolve around every man or woman of faith?” That’s right! Because God’s Word is the center of the universe; it upholds all things, and by it all things consist (Hebrews 1:3, Colossians 1:17). It is not the other way around, and when God gives a dream or a vision, natural things are subservient (Psalm 119:90-91, Judges 5:20).

It takes faith to bring God’s promise to pass in our lives, and it takes faith to confront the powers of darkness. Many times we think it will “just happen” because God has spoken something to us, but we must agree with Him and say it also, and then go after it with intent (Matthew 11:12, James 2:20). If this were not the case, then the children of Israel would never have wandered in the wilderness for forty years. God’s Word is a seed, and it produces a harvest according to the law of seedtime and harvest (Genesis 8:22); this can be a long process, but if we exercise patience, we will see it come to pass (Hebrews 6:12).

God has never stopped releasing His faith; from Genesis to Revelation He has been declaring the fulfillment of His promise through all of His prophets since the foundation of the world (Luke 1:70). Even in the face of utter impossibility because of the unbelief and rebellion of His people, God did not waiver (Numbers 14:21).

Before Noah’s day, men lived for a very long time, and had a lot of time to become bored and cause trouble! What did God do about this? He declared that man’s days would henceforth be one hundred and twenty years (Genesis 6:3). However, this would not prove to be instantaneous, but instead would gradually decline over a period of generations until the time of Moses (Deuteronomy 34:7). But God didn’t scratch His head when Noah lived another three hundred and fifty years after the flood, for a total of nine hundred and fifty years (Genesis 9:28-29). Can you imagine the Father talking to the Son? “Jesus, is it really going to work?” “I thought it was going to work right away!” “What do we do now?”

Many of us don’t see the fulfillment of certain things in our lives because we have no patience to endure; we stop declaring and believing before the seed even breaks ground, much less produces fruit. The waves and the sea roar, and we, like Peter, begin to sink, and Jesus reaches out His hand to us when we cry out to him, and puts us back in the boat again. But we don’t have to stay in the boat!

Joshua was fighting a battle one day, and he needed just a little more time to finish the job. He
didn’t think within himself, “We must stop fighting because the sun is going down!” But Joshua knew that God had given him an important assignment, and that it must be completed; he spoke to the sun and commanded it to stand still, and it did! (Joshua 10:12-13) You see, normally the earth and Joshua would revolve around the sun, but not so this day, for on this day the sun would revolve around Joshua! For Joshua had God’s plan in his heart, and His Word in his mouth (Joshua 1:8).

It is the same for us today! That is why the antichrist cannot be revealed and come to power until the church is removed from the earth, because our faith holds it all back (II Thessalonians 2:7), and will continue to do so until we are removed. Praise God! When wicked rulers come to power in a nation, it is because the faith of the church has gotten weak, and God’s people are distracted with other things (Mark 4:14-20). Don’t ever think that any president or king has the power to stop the hand of God concerning His plan; it is us that become the hindrance by our apathy and unbelief. God will turn the heart of the king (Proverbs 21:1), or remove them from office if necessary in order to bring His will to pass, if we abide in faith (Psalm 105:14).

Do you think that modern technology is wonderful? But understand that for one purpose only has knowledge been increased in the last days; it is for the purpose of God (Daniel 12:4), so that scripture may be fulfilled and the gospel preached throughout all nations. Even the very continued existence of the nations is hinged upon God’s eternal plan, for as soon as our job is done, it’s all over, my friend; Jesus returns for His church! (Matthew 24:14)

I have heard many in the church resigning themselves to the “will of God” in that “America is going down, what can we do?” “God is judging her!” No! If God is judging anyone, it will be us, His church (I Peter 4:17), not the heathen; they have already been judged and condemned! (John 3:18, 3:36, 16:11). We have been entrusted with the ministry of reconciliation (II Corinthians 5:18), and the state of our nation is our responsibility (II Chronicles 7:14). I challenge you today; what are you doing with what God has given you? What are you doing with your talents, your vision, and your faith?

In the days of Eli, the lamp of God went out because Eli was lazy and indifferent. His sons were wicked, and they became priests, rulers of the people (I Samuel 2:12-17, 22). Eli was content with that, for he had no backbone to take hold of God’s Word and confront the status quo of the day. Many of our preachers are like that today!

We have a work to do until Jesus returns, and it is not to sit around while the wicked triumph, praise God! That is not the commission of an overcoming church; but God has commanded us to be strong in faith, bringing glory to Him!