Friday, August 28, 2009

Neither Fear Them...

""And you, son of man, neither fear them nor fear their words, though thistles and thorns are with you and you sit on scorpions; neither fear their words nor be dismayed at their presence, for they are a rebellious house." (Ezekiel 2:6 NAS95S)

Observation:  The prophet is told not to fear the listener.  This is a message repeatedly given to God's servants.  It was given to Moses at the burning bush when God said:

""Certainly I will be with you, and this shall be the sign to you that it is I who have sent you: when you have brought the people out of Egypt, you shall worship God at this mountain."" (Exodus 3:12 NAS95S)

God also gave this message to His servant Joshua.  Seven times, in the books of Deuteronomy and Joshua, the Lord says to the young warrior leader... "Be Strong and Courageous!"  And with this exhortation comes a promise:

""The LORD is the one who goes ahead of you; He will be with you. He will not fail you or forsake you. Do not fear or be dismayed."" (Deuteronomy 31:8 NAS95S)

Yes every time God give the injunction to "Be Strong and Courageous," He accompanies it with the promise of His presence.  And it is His presence that gives courage; His presence that makes the meek bold, and the weak strong.  It is His presence which brings life to the dead and sight to the blind; His presence that makes us truly strong and courageous.

The list of those emboldened by God goes on...  The boy king, Josiah.  The teen king, David.  The boy prophet Jeremiah.  And the girl queen Esther.  All received great courage and strength from the Almighty.  All did great things, not because of their wisdom or strength, but because of the wisdom and strength of their Savior and Lord and King.

Application:  Yesterday I was speaking to my friend Freddie Russell.  I was bemoaning my ministry to him.  Bemoaning my weakness and my fear.  And He spoke courage into my heart and life.  He reminded me that it is not about me, but about the God I serve.  The Lord who says to me: "Neither fear them, nor their words..."  The Lord who says: "Certainly I will be with you..."  The Lord who says: "I will go ahead of you.  I will never fail you or forsake you."

Prayer:  Father, I thank You for the injunction to be strong and courageous.  And I lean on Your promise that says: "I can do all things through Christ who gives me strength."  

I can lead.  I can administrate.  I can delegate.  I can exhort.  I can rebuke and correct.  I can pray with power.  I can repent.  I can confess.  I can forgive.  I can forget.  I can let go.  I can rejoice.  I can weep tears.  I can sing songs.  I can rejoice.  I can be loved.  I can be His.  I can surrender.  I can let go.  I can die.  I can....  

i am.  i am His.  i am nothing.  

"i am crucified with Christ, therefore i no longer live.  Jesus Christ now lives in me!"

O Yes my Father.  i claim no greatness in myself.  i claim the greatness of Christ.  i claim the boldness of my Savior and the courage of my Redeemer.  As Job declared:

"For I know that my Redeemer lives, And He shall stand at last on the earth; And after my skin is destroyed, this I know, That in my flesh I shall see God," (Job 19:25-26 NKJV)

Glory to Your name Lord God.  Jesus lives.  He rules.  He reigns.  He is Lord of my life, and King of my heart.  There is none like Him.  I could search for all eternity long, and find... there is none like Him.  I pray this promise may be fulfilled in my lifetime:

"'Once more (it is a little while) I will shake heaven and earth, the sea and dry land; and I will shake all nations, and they shall come to the Desire of All Nations, and I will fill this temple with glory,' says the LORD of hosts."  (Haggai 2:6-7 NKJV)

Yes Lord, let the Desire of All Nations come.  The Desire of Ages.  Christ Jesus is His name.  Let Him come in His glory.  Let Him come in His might.  Let Him come to the hearts of men today.  And let Him come in the clouds of glory tomorrow.  Let Him come with power.  Let Him come with passion.  Let Him come with healing in his wings.  Let Him come as the sun that breaks the darkness.  And as the water o'er the sea.  O Let Jesus come to His temple; to the people who He has loved and chosen as His own.  

O Father, Let Your Kingdom Come.  Let Your King take the throne.  

Even so, Come Lord Jesus!

Monday, August 24, 2009

Trampling Destiny

by Karen Fettig
 
I was at the county fair the other evening watching the grandsons take in the rides at the carnival.  Every time we would walk by the game booths the peddlers would call out to us:  Come play! You can win! You win every time! I thought yes: "spend 5 bucks and win a 25 cent stuff animal!" Sometimes I would graciously say: "no thanks!" or I would focus my attention in another direction and walk on.
 
I was waiting in the shade at one ride and happened to look behind me to see the young woman that was with me looking down on the ground. She was moving around almost like as in a dance, but it turned out that she was writing something in the sand with her foot.  I love to go to places so I can watch people, so my curiosity was aroused at once. What was she writing?
 
I looked down to see that she was completing "Jesus Loves You!"  The crowd though was totally oblivious to the message. As they came through in droves intrigued by the sites, the rides, the sounds; they trampled on the message. The message written in sand was wiped out by the feet of those it was given to be a Blessing. A Blessing in an odd place; but never the less a Blessing if someone would have seen it.
 
Lately and again last night I have been dreaming about the cities and the masses of people oblivious to the message.  My dreams are usually very vivid. The one last night was not only vivid in the sense of realness, but of the anger and violence in the big city culture.
 
In my dream last night I was sharing a room with some other women. It was a dormitory style complex with men and women renting rooms. We came home from somewhere and there was a head of a man hanging from his door; his body was in the closet. I went to find police and found crowds of more violent people. I woke up then.
 
Many are losing jobs right now.  And I look in the paper and there are few ones to be had. We talk stimulus, but that my friends is borrowed money. Our government is sinking us and we are sucking it up.
 
As the economy sinks lower and lower, violence will escalate as debts are called in and food is in scarce supply. Sin calls out to us to come play and we pay the peddler for his cheap goods. Many times we play just enough hoping not to get caught in sin.
 
There will be a call for a moral law in this country and it will come to pass. A law that says: ""We must worship because God is angry at our nation!" This law will take away our liberty to worship as we choose; when and where.
 
Laws cannot dictate morality! God gives us the freedom of choice! It is by our sins and the knowledge of them, that we are lead to the need for a Savior and the need for His forgiveness!  Our destiny is choice, though sometimes quickly erased and because of choice we do not always get a second chance. 

 

The man in my dreams that was beheaded doubtfully had a chance to repent and ask for forgiveness of his sins before he died.  Satan wants us to die in sin. He will send the black horse of death to us quickly when he thinks it will serve his purpose and we will be forever lost.
 
It is time to look at the message in the sand: "Jesus Love You!" It is so simple! He is saying: "Come and be saved!"  "If the black horse of death comes to you at any time, you will have a place in heaven forever.  Satan is defeated by my sacrifice for you; by my grace!"
 
  We must lead a victorious life at all times!  But how do we do that?  God knows the heart and He is the judge. The only way we fail to have that victorious life; is to fail to come back, after we sin, to the one who saved our lives! It is all choice! That is hope!
 
What is your choice of Destiny today? He says: "Indeed the Lord has proclaimed to the end of the world: Say to my sons and daughters, surely your salvation is coming: Behold His reward (for you) is with Him! (Isaiah 62:11)
 
My Jesus loves you!

Wednesday, August 19, 2009

The Divine Wounding

"Now the sun rose upon him just as he crossed over Penuel, and he was limping on his thigh. Therefore, to this day the sons of Israel do not eat the sinew of the hip which is on the socket of the thigh, because he touched the socket of Jacob's thigh in the sinew of the hip." (Genesis 32:31-32 NAS95S)

Observation: Why did the Lord touch Jacob's thigh? Why not his hand or his shoulder? What is it about the thigh? The chapter entitled "The Divine Wounding" from Watchman Nee's book Changed Into His Likeness offers some powerful insights:

THE DIVINE WOUNDING

Issac's life was peaceful, with no strivings. Jacob's way was Issac's long struggle throughout. For Isaac everything went easily; Jacob found even the simplest things presenting difficulties. God is the God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, all three; so we cannot have Isaac without Jacob, nor, praise God, Jacob without Isaac.

We ourselves are in the position of both. From the Lord's side we are rich, complete in Christ. Yet because of our own natural strength, God's hand has a chastening and formative work to do upon us. We cannot escape the discipline, but equally surely we shall never be without the absolute fullness of divine bestowal. If there is a difference in the discipline it is because some of us have more of Jacob to be dealt with than do others. That is all!

Proverbs 13. 15 tells us that, `the way of transgressors is hard', that is, tough or rugged. Jacob's way was like that because he was like that. The hard, rugged self in Jacob required a lot of time for God to deal with it, and many of us will be little use unless God has taken that time to handle us. Jacob was a usurper and a cheat. God will not let such a man escape.

Some ask why God spent so much time on Jacob, as though it were an easy thing to deal with any man! To receive, as Isaac received, is something done in a minute. We enter into the inheritance immediately our hearts respond with a Thank - you to what God reveals. But Jacob's difficulty is a lifelong thing. As long as we live, our natural strength pursues us. It is always being dealt with by God, though there is a time when this is specially true.

Those who do not know themselves do not know Jacob. We need to be aware how the flesh always takes care of itself, cheating others to do soand being cheated-if we are going to understand this man. For with all God's dealings with him in Laban's home, still Jacob was largely unchanged. Cheating, scheming, planning, were still in his character.

But as we have seen, after twenty years and with the birth of Joseph, Jacob bethought himself of home (30. 25). Then it was that for the first time in Haran God spoke to him. `Return unto the land of thy fathers, and to thy kindred; and I will be with thee.' `I am the God of Bethel, where thou anointedst a pillar, where thou vowedst a vow unto me: now arise, get thee out from this land, and return unto the land of thy nativity' (31. 3, 13). So Jacob prepared himself to go.

But Laban was not likely to let him go easily. In spite of everything, God had blessed Laban for Jacob's sake. So Jacob left secretly, and Laban followed him. But it was God who had sent Jacob back, and God protected him. At God's time He sets us free. When the testing has accomplished its purpose, God lets us go, and no man, not even Laban, can keep us.

When Laban eventually caught up with Jacob they made a covenant together. Laban was respectful and he swore by the God of Abraham and of Nahor. Jacob swore, however, by the God of his father Isaac (31. 51-53). He bore witness to the fact that God's promise was according to God's choice.

Then Jacob offered a sacrifice (31. 54). Laban had none. Something surely had happened to Jacob. When he went out first it was his mother who sent him. Now God sends him home, and he goes. He has learned to recognize God's voice. Discipline had not changed him much, but he had at least advanced into wanting God. In his early years he had wanted only God's purpose, because it fitted in with his desires. He wanted God's will, but not God Himself. Now at last he had some desire for Him. He had heard His voice, and now he sacrificed.

`And Laban departed, and returned unto his place. And Jacob went on his way, and the angels of God met him. And Jacob said when he saw them, This is God's host: and he called the name of that place Mahanaim' (31. 55 - 32. 2). Jacob had left Laban, having been protected from him by God. Now angels met him. God had opened Jacob's eyes to see that just as He had delivered Him from Laban, so He would deliver him from everyone else. The name Mahanaim means `two companies'. Not you alone, Jacob, one company-but always God's company with you. It was not that the angels had just arrived, but that Jacob's eyes were at last opened to see them. `Fear not: for they that be with us are more than they that be with them. And Elisha prayed and said, Lord, I pray thee, open his eyes, that he may see. And the Lord opened the eyes of the young man; and he saw: and behold, the mountain was full of horses and chariots of fire round about Elisha' (2 Kings 6. 16, 17).

At this point we may well ask, Could all the conditions possibly be more favourable for Jacob? He had God's command, God's promise, God's protection, and now a vision of the angels with him. Surely this was enough to make anyone trust God! But Jacob was still Jacob. God's grace does not alter the flesh. So in the following verses he sends a very lowly, flattering message to his brother Esau. `My lord . . . thy servant . . .' he says (32. 3, 4). He had already forgotten God's call and His grace and His protection. He thought his own specious words could somehow change Esau. That was Jacob still, just the same as he ever was!

But Esau started out to meet him with four hundred men. What did that mean? Good or bad? It struck dismay in Jacob's heart. Clever people have many worries; schemers pile up troubles for themselves. Those who think and contrive, and do not trust and believe, find themselves like Jacob, `greatly afraid' and `distressed' (32. 7).

Jacob's one problem, as always, was what to do! But, trust him, he still had plans! God had sent him now to Canaan, so he could not flee back to Mesopotamia. Yet he dare not let God look after the results of his obedience. How many of us obey God by the front door, and make preparations to retreat by the back! Jacob tried both to obey God and at the same time to escape his brother.

In his fear and distress, we are told that Jacob `divided the people that was with him, and the flocks, and the herds, and the camels, into two companies' (32. 7). Here we find the same word mahanaim that occurred in verse 2. Jacob has substituted his Mahanaim for God's. There had been one earthly company and one heavenly one, but he divided his earthly company into two ! So, perhaps, he would impress his brother, who would scarcely have eyes for the unseen!

Now in verses 9-12 we have Jacob's first real prayer. He has made some progress, though it has not yet reached a high level. In his early years it was all scheming and bargaining, and no prayer. Now it is both scheming and prayer. Yet if we pray we need not scheme. If we scheme there is often no meaning in our prayer. But Jacob still did both; on the one hand he trusted God, on the other hand he did the work himself! To trust God completely would be too reckless, for suppose God's words fell empty to the ground! How like us he was! Of course I am a Christian, so I must trust God; but to trust Him fully and completely is taking too great a risk.

So Jacob elaborated his plans (32. 13-18). Remember, this man had just prayed! This stratagem, however, was to be his masterpiece. Of course he knew his brother, that he was a hunter, so he truly faced the most dangerous crisis of his life. Never before had he expended so much thought and effort as he put into this. After all, more than his possessions, his very life itself depended on the outcome.

But Jacob was equal to the situation. He who had been through all these years of God's discipline could still summon the wits to produce an answer. In a series of mollifying gestures he would let everything go if necessary to Esau, and so at least save his skin. It was a great scheme, the best he had ever made. Moreover, he believed in his own plans and trusted to them-and yet he had prayed! He looked to God and made the most elaborate preparations.

It was on that night that God met him. There had never been a night when he was more afraid. On previous occasions it did not so much matter whether he succeeded or not. This time it was a matter of life and death to him. He had used all his wits, all his strength, to meet a most difficult situation, and everything hung on the outcome.

All the others had passed on across the ford. Remaining behind on this side, `Jacob was left alone' (32. 24). Here at Peniel God met him face to face. `There wrestled a man with him until the breaking of the day.' Now it was that Jacob put forth his utmost strength.

It was not Jacob who wrestled, but God who came and wrestled with him, to bring about his utter surrender. The object of wrestling is to force a man down until he is unable to move, so that he yields to the victor. Yet of God it is said that even here, `He prevailed not' (v. 25). Jacob possessed tremendous natural strength. Many of us know all too well what this means. We can still do so well ourselves; we employ all sorts of natural skills for our self-protection. It is as if God were defeated.

Defeat is defeat. When you or I are defeated it means `I cannot', `I yield'. Yet being as we are, we have another try. God may overthrow our plans again and again, but we don't admit defeat, we do not give up. We just think we have not planned well enough, and the next time we must do better. `Is any thing too hard for the Lord? the angel had exclaimed to Abraham (18-14). But it is almost as if we say to the Lord, `Is anything too hard for me?'!

One day we must acknowledge defeat, confessing that we know nothing at all and can do nothing at all. Jacob had not come there, and still thought he knew Esau! For this last step therefore, something more than discipline was necessary. Discipline brought him as far as Peniel, and it brings us to the place where God can touch us fundamentally. But beware of boasting of God's disciplinary dealings, for until the question of our natural strength is finally settled, this kind of talk can only increase our pride.

Wrestling illustrates God's method of dealing with us. It is finally to weaken us so that we cannot rise. God has His way of doing this with each of us. Jacob was stronger than most, but God conquered. Had He used other means it might have meant a further twenty years. But when Jacob would not yield, God `touched him'. With a touch He did what great strength would not do.

The thigh is the strongest part of the body, a fitting type of our point of greatest natural strength. There must come a day when God dislocates that thigh, totally undermining and undoing our strength of nature. Your strong point and mine may be quite different from Jacob's. Ambition, boasting, emotion, self-love-each of us has his own, but for each of us this dislocating work is a definite crisis of experience.

With some of us, as we said, the trouble is a readiness to expose spiritual things. In all our work and life and conduct, the fruits are brought out on the surface and displayed. Exposure is in such a case the nerve-centre of our natural strength, and God must touch that. Self is dominant there. People's mistakes vary, and many of us have never seen where our nerve-centre is. But generally all our mistakes spring from one inner principle, and when all symptoms point to one disease, that is our `thigh'. May God open our eyes to see the nerve-centre of our natural strength, for when that is touched, then there will be fruitfulness.

One touch-and Jacob was lamed. He could no longer wrestle; he was powerless. Dawn came, and he said to God, `I will not let thee go.' But when any member, even a finger, is dislocated, the whole body is put out of action. Speaking physically, if God had wanted to go, He could perfectly well have gone off and left Jacob there. Jacob could not possibly have held Him.

But now that Jacob was truly weak the Wrestler could not leave him. For Jacob depended on Him. It is when our thigh has been touched that we can hold God the closest. We are strongest when we are weakest (2 Corinthians 12. 10). From man's standpoint this looks impossible, but it is divine fact. It is small faith that accomplishes great things. `I cannot hold thee, but I can plead with thee! I can scarcely even pray, yet I can plead. I have no faith, yet I believe!'

With an abundance of natural strength we are useless to God. With no strength at all, we can hold on to Him. God's response to Jacob was amazing. 'Thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel: for thou hast striven with God and with men, and hast prevailed' (32. 28). Ten years experience looked like defeat for Jacob, but God said he had prevailed. This is what happens when we surrender, beaten, at God's feet.

`And Jacob asked him, and said, Tell me, I pray thee, thy name. And he said, Wherefore is it that thou dost ask after my name? And he blessed him there.' Jacob wanted to know who had done this, but he was not told. Jacob did not know who the Wrestler was when He came, and he knew no more when: He went. He just knew that his own name had been changed-and that he limped! This is the only time in Scripture when God declined to reveal His name to a servant of His.

Those touched by God do not know what has happened. When it really takes place, we don't know what it is. That is why it is so difficult to define, for God does not want us to wait for an experience. If we do we shall not get it. God wants our eye fixed on Him, not on experiences. Jacob only knew that somehow God had met him, and that now he was crippled. The limp is the evidence, not merely the witness of the lips. We are to look to God to do the work in His own way and time. The result will be evident in us, and there will be no need to talk about it.

Tuesday, August 18, 2009

The Land of My Sojourn

"'You shall not build a house, and you shall not sow seed and you shall not plant a vineyard or own one; but in tents you shall dwell all your days, that you may live many days in the land where you sojourn.'" (Jeremiah 35:7 NAS95S)

Observation:  These are the words of the Rechabites to the prophet Jeremiah when he invited them to "drink wine."  Contained here is a powerful message.  We will not drink and we will not settle.  To put it another way, we will not party and we will not park.  In the positive:  We will be a sober people and a mobile people.  A people of sound mind and a people of steady movement.  

Isn't that what we want to be as God's people, sober minded and obedient to the movements of His Spirit?  Truly, we cannot follow the lead of His Spirit if we are imbibed with the ways of this world.  We can not move with him if we are settled into self.  

I am reminded of the song by Rich Mullins... Land of My Sojourn:  

Land of My Sojourn
Rich Mullins and Beaker

And the coal trucks come a-runnin' 
With their bellies full of coal 
And their big wheels a-hummin' 
Down this road that lies open like the soul of a woman 
Who hid the spies who were lookin' 
For the land of the milk and the honey 
And this road she is a woman 
She was made from a rib 
Cut from the sides of these mountains 
Oh these great sleeping Adams 
Who are lonely even here in paradise 
Lonely for somebody to kiss them 
and I'll sing my song, and I'll sing my song 
In the land of my sojourn 

And the lady in the harbor 
She still holds her torch out 
To those huddled masses who are 
Yearning for a freedom that still eludes them 
The immigrant's children see their brightest dreams shattered 
Here on the New Jersey shoreline in the 
Greed and the glitter of those high-tech casinos 
But some mendicants wander off into a cathedral 
And they stoop in the silence 
And there their prayers are still whispered 
And I'll sing their song, and I'll sing their song 
In the land of my sojourn 

Nobody tells you when you get born here 
How much you'll come to love it 
And how you'll never belong here 
So I call you my country 
And I'll be lonely for my home 
And I wish that I could take you there with me 

And down the brown brick spine of some dirty blind alley 
All those drain pipes are drippin' out the last Sons Of Thunder 
While off in the distance the smoke stacks 
Were belching back this city's best answer 

And the countryside was pocked 
With all of those mail pouch posters 
Thrown up on the rotting sideboards of 
These rundown stables like the one that Christ was born in 
When the old world started dying 
And the new world started coming on 
And I'll sing His song, and I'll sing His song 
In the land of my sojourn 

In the land of my sojourn 
And I will sing His song 
In the land of my sojourn 

I love this song because it captures the reality of the now and the not yet; the paradox of living in a broken world; the paradox of the Christ who came to conquer that brokenness by entering into it.  I love the line that says:  "So I'll call you my country, and be lonely for my home..."  

Truly, the Rechabites wandered in the regions of Israel...  they might have even called it their country... but was it really their home?  Maybe all that wandering in tents was to remind them that their home was a completely different land altogether.  

I think of the words of the Hebrew writer who penned:  

"By faith he lived as an alien in the land of promise, as in a foreign land, dwelling in tents with Isaac and Jacob, fellow heirs of the same promise; for he was looking for the city which has foundations, whose architect and builder is God. By faith even Sarah herself received ability to conceive, even beyond the proper time of life, since she considered Him faithful who had promised. Therefore there was born even of one man, and him as good as dead at that, as many descendants AS THE STARS OF HEAVEN IN NUMBER, AND INNUMERABLE AS THE SAND WHICH IS BY THE SEASHORE. 

All these died in faith, without receiving the promises, but having seen them and having welcomed them from a distance, and having confessed that they were strangers and exiles on the earth. For those who say such things make it clear that they are seeking a country of their own. And indeed if they had been thinking of that country from which they went out, they would have had opportunity to return. But as it is, they desire a better country, that is, a heavenly one. Therefore God is not ashamed to be called their God; for He has prepared a city for them."  (Hebrews 11:9-16 NAS95S)

Do we desire a better country?  Are we looking to settle here, or journey their?  Are we looking to be drunk with wine or filled with the Spirit?  O let us accept the apostle challenge today:

"And do not get drunk with wine, for that is dissipation, but be filled with the Spirit, speaking to one another in psalms and hymns and spiritual songs, singing and making melody with your heart to the Lord;"  (Ephesians 5:18-19 NAS95S)

Yes, let us sing "His song, in the land of our sojourn!"  

The song of Moses, the song of the Lamb, and the song of Home!

Friday, August 7, 2009

Hide Us

""Therefore wait for Me," declares the LORD, "For the day when I rise up as a witness. Indeed, My decision is to gather nations, To assemble kingdoms, To pour out on them My indignation, All My burning anger; For all the earth will be devoured By the fire of My zeal. "For then I will give to the peoples purified lips, That all of them may call on the name of the LORD, To serve Him shoulder to shoulder. "From beyond the rivers of Ethiopia My worshipers, My dispersed ones, Will bring My offerings. "In that day you will feel no shame Because of all your deeds By which you have rebelled against Me; For then I will remove from your midst Your proud, exulting ones, And you will never again be haughty On My holy mountain. "But I will leave among you A humble and lowly people, And they will take refuge in the name of the LORD. "The remnant of Israel will do no wrong And tell no lies, Nor will a deceitful tongue Be found in their mouths; For they will feed and lie down With no one to make them tremble.""  (Zephaniah 3:8-13 NAS95S)

Observation:  The Lord says... "Wait for me!"  He doesn't say "worry."  He doesn't say, "grow weary."  He says wait.  

Do we not see?  Can we not perceive?  This waiting time is a blessing.  It is to build anticipation.  It is to be a time of gathering; calling all nations to make themselves ready for the great and terrible day of the Lord.  This time of tarrying is to be a time of telling the good news of the gospel.  This time of waiting is to be a time of witnessing to the One who says:  "Behold I come quickly."

O let us not wait in vain; but let us be victorious in our waiting:  

"Those who wait for the LORD Will gain new strength; They will mount up with wings like eagles, They will run and not get tired, They will walk and not become weary."  (Isaiah 40:28-31 NAS95S)

My wife once pointed out to me that waiting can also mean, "to earnestly hope for..."

Do we earnestly hope for the coming of the Lord?  Do we lean into his promise as the rock climber leans into the side of the great mountain, or the sailor leans into his vessel as they traverse the rocky waves.  O we must lean my brother, my sister.  We must hold fast to the promise....  Waiting in anticipation.  Waiting with great hope.  For our God shall prove faithful.  His Promised One shall come.  The Anointed One shall appear with power and great Glory.  

Prayer:  O ready our hearts Holy Spirit.  Grant us redemption full and free.  Fill us with a Holy Waiting...  A waiting that bears witness to a wandering world.  A waiting that bears witness to the scoffers and the skeptics.  O let the nations be gathered Lord Jesus.   Be true to Your promise through the prophet Zephaniah:

"Gather yourselves together, yes, gather, O nation without shame, Before the decree takes effect— The day passes like the chaff— Before the burning anger of the LORD comes upon you, Before the day of the LORD'S anger comes upon you. Seek the LORD, All you humble of the earth Who have carried out His ordinances; Seek righteousness, seek humility. Perhaps you will be hidden In the day of the LORD'S anger." (Zephaniah 2:1-3 NAS95S)

O yes Lord Jesus, hide us on the day of Your anger.  Hide is in the shadow of the cross.  Hide in the hope that is Holy.  Hide is in Your robe that is righteousness.  Hide is in You, our Rock and our Redeemer.

Wednesday, August 5, 2009

Guard this Home


Guard this Home Lord Jesus
Guard this Home.
Let it's little hands take hold of Yours
And it's little feet in Your footsteps follow
O, may the words spoken here
be of heaven and be of home,
Of the joys of sweet communion
With Father, Spirit, Son.

Guard this Home Lord Jesus
Guard this Home
May all that's done among us
Bring glory to your name
May Your will always be
In work, pleasure, or play

Guard this Home Lord Jesus
Guard this home.


NAU Jeremiah 35:18 Then Jeremiah said to the house of the Rechabites, "Thus says the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel, 'Because you have obeyed the command of Jonadab your father, kept all his commands and done according to all that he commanded you; 19 therefore thus says the LORD of hosts, the God of Israel, "Jonadab the son of Rechab shall not lack a man to stand before Me always."'"

Prayer: Lord Jesus I ask that my eldest son would stand before You. I ask that I would always have a descendant to stand before you. My heart longs for the salvation of my children Jesus. You word says:

Matthew 16:26 26 "For what profit is it to a man if he gains the whole world, and loses his own soul?

Jesus what would it profit me if a million souls were one to Christ through my ministry but I lost my own children? I confess that this is not my ministry Lord Jesus. I confess that I have a control issue. I'm hungry for power and I need to let it go. Help me to surrender.

O Savior, please save my children. Annoint my son with Your Holy Spirit. Fill him with all the fulness of God. Give him a hunger and thirst for righteousness. Father I pray he will learn to walk in your ways early in life. Jesus, I want to take the time to teach him about You. I want to tell him the stories of what You have done in my life; how You are drawing me away from the world and into the loving of embrace of Your friendship.

Jesus I also want to pray that my little girl will be a daughter of heaven. Jesus annoint her with purity and strong boundaries. Jesus I will teach her to say no and stop. I will teach her that it is right to have a personal space. Lord, may she grow up to be your queen. O Lord my heart aches for the salvation of my children. I want the abosolute best for them dear Jesus. Help me to give them my best.

Even when I'm tired, I ask that You will help me to give them my best. They are so precious Lord, I just commit them into Your hands. Right now I want to spend some time claiming promises for them and Ingrid.

NKJ 1 Corinthians 10:13 No temptation has overtaken you except such as is common to man; but God is faithful, who will not allow you to be tempted beyond what you are able, but with the temptation will also make the way of escape, that you may be able to bear it.

Jesus always give my kids a way of escape. Help them to follow you when they feel like they are standing before the Red Sea and there is no way out. Jesus lead them to call out to you even in their heartache and distress. Teach them that You are there for them. Lord help me to teach them this.

Psalm 34:7 7 The angel of the LORD encamps all around those who fear Him, And delivers them.

Holy Spirit, give my children the fear of the Lord. Dwell in their heart and protect them from the influences of wickedness in the world. Help them think on those things which are good, lovely, pure, and of noble thought. Capture their imagination with the things of heaven, with the truths of scripture, and with stories of herioc men and women of faith. Let their heros be people like Ellen White, Daniel, David, Jonathon, Jesus, Peter, and the apostle Paul.

Psalm 19:13-14 13 Keep back Your servant also from presumptuous sins; Let them not have dominion over me. Then I shall be blameless, And I shall be innocent of great transgression. 14 Let the words of my mouth and the meditation of my heart Be acceptable in Your sight, O LORD, my strength and my Redeemer.

Help my daughter and sons never to presume Lord; never to think they can do as they please. Help them to never impose upon your forgiveness but to treasure it and guard it as a sacred trust. Give them hearts for righteousness and truth. Lord, I paint the blood of Your sacrifice over the doorposts of their little hearts. Pass over them tonight and every night for the rest of their lives. Lord, I call upon all the agencies of heaven to minister and work in their behalf. Guard them Lord Jesus. Protect them.

You have promised that the prayer of a righteous man availeth much. Father I come in the righteousness of Christ this evening. I come in His name and under the banner of His blood. I'm seeking Your power and grace for my children. Father, help us to protect them from those who would lead them astray. And at the same time help us to give them the proper amount of freedom they need when the right time comes. Father I place these wonderful kids in your care. I love you Jesus. And I love them.

Afterglow: Some Thoughts from Testimonies, Volume 7.

By sincere, earnest prayer parents should make a hedge about their children. They should pray with full faith that God will abide with them and that holy angels will guard them and their children from Satan's cruel power. {7T 42.4}

In every family there should be a fixed time for morning and evening worship. How appropriate it is for parents to gather their children about them before the fast is broken, to thank the heavenly Father for His protection during the night, and to ask Him for His help and guidance and watchcare during the day! How fitting, also, when evening comes, for parents and children to gather once more before Him and thank Him for the blessings of the day that is past! {7T 43.1}

The father, or, in his absence, the mother, should conduct the worship, selecting a portion of Scripture that is interesting and easily understood. The service should be short. When a long chapter is read and a long prayer offered, the service is made wearisome, and at its close a sense of relief is felt. God is dishonored when the hour of worship is made dry and irksome, when it is so tedious, so lacking in interest, that the children dread it. {7T 43.2}

Fathers and mothers, make the hour of worship intensely interesting. There is no reason why this hour should not be the most pleasant and enjoyable of the day. A little thought given to preparation for it will enable you to make it full of interest and profit. From time to time let the service be varied. Questions may be asked on the portion of Scripture read, and a few earnest, timely remarks may be made. A song of praise may be sung. The prayer offered should be short and pointed. In simple, earnest words let the one who leads in prayer praise God for His goodness and ask Him for help. As circumstances permit, let the children join in the reading and the prayer.

Eternity alone will reveal the good with which such seasons of worship are fraught. {7T 44.1}

The life of Abraham, the friend of God, was a life of prayer. Wherever he pitched his tent, close beside it was built an altar, upon which were offered the morning and the evening sacrifice. When his tent was removed, the altar remained. And the roving Canaanite, as he came to that altar, knew who had been there. When he had pitched his tent he repaired the altar and worshiped the living God. {7T 44.2}

So the homes of Christians should be lights in the world. From them, morning and evening, prayer should ascend to God as sweet incense. And as the morning dew, His mercies and blessings will descend upon the suppliants. {7T 44.3}