Tuesday, June 15, 2010

Why we Should Suffer- Part 2

Now, we have lived, in our formers lives, submitting to the desires of the flesh, and from this we reaped “lust, drunkenness, orgies, carousing and detestable idolatry.” – Now read the above sentence again and let in sink in for a minute…. Do you see the rewards of following the flesh? Is this the life we should be living, a life of unending partying and clubbing, a life of orgies and sexual immorality, a life of greed, envy and strife? Is it? Of course no, no way! That WAS our former way for life, but now we have a new one- a Kingdom life, a life so different from what the world expects or regards as normal such that the world will be “surprised that you do not join them in their reckless, wild living, and they heap abuse on you.” Now, when the abuse is heaped on us, then then we will feel the suffering I am speaking of here. Hehehe… I think we are now beginning to see why the apostle Paul said we should rejoice when we participate in the suffering of Christ. For more than sharing in the glory of Christ, we now know that we should accept this suffering, and this should make it easier… ok, more bearable.
“But they will have to give account to him who is ready to judge the living and the dead.” Now there is a scary statement! Judgment is not a fable, it is real and it is coming. We will all have our day to answer for the type and kind of lives we have led, and each will be judged according to what he knows. So if you are reading this, you now know the truth, so there, your excuse of ignorance is out the window! The living God will ask us to account for all, each and everything, so if we do not have a good excuse, which I believe there is none, I suggest we quit pleasing this world and live the new life Jesus died to give us! About this, I will be blunt and say no more.

For this is the reason the gospel was preached even to those who are now dead, so that they might be judged according to human standards in regard to the body, but live according to God in regard to the spirit. There are many reasons, I believe the gospel is preached, and here we are told one of them. Now if you read my previous blog, I ended with a deep conviction on whether we decide to choose life or death because judgment is coming. Now in the same vein I will continue. While the judgment of God, the fear-worthy judgment of God is coming, we are already facing a much less but quite sorrowful judgment here on earth. This judgment is according to human standards and though I somehow feel inclined not to label it sorrowful, I will maintain that it is so in the sense that it is us human beings who judge each other and to me that is pathetic- maybe then I should label it a pathetic judgment- which is also guaranteed! People will judge you when we are not like them: they will call you pretender and a hypocrite if you decide to go to church on New Year’s Eve instead of going to the club like you used to; they will laugh at you and call you weak and a failure when you decide to quit smoking, drinking, fornication and clubbing; they will hate you because you do not gossip and use perverted language with them anymore; they will call you old and boring because your choice in movies, and music is no longer bordering on X-rated; I mean the world will judge you for just about anything that is not “normal” to them- by human standards. But remember, that we “live according to God in regard to the spirit.”- and this is why we live a different lifestyle. The lifestyle of the one, who lives for Christ, should be seen! Do not think salvation is a onetime process and once you receive it, it’s a done deal. No. Salvation, though free, needs to be worked at to be maintained. Paul in his letter to the Philippians urges them to “work out your salvation with fear and trembling”. So as we live, no, as we choose to live according to God, we are working out the salvation we received, because choosing this life, like we have previously seen, comes with a lot of suffering in this world. But is eternal life, joy and the glory of God so small a trifle in our esteem, as not to be worth a few fleshly sacrifices? Is eternal life so steep a purchase, as not to deserve the temporary renunciation of a few worldly pleasures? Surely it is.

The end of all things is near. Therefore be alert and of sober mind so that you may pray. Lastly, Peter exhorts us to pray after a warning about the end of things. Now let us take the statement “The end of all things” verbatim. Read it again. “All things”! not some things, not earthly things, not bad things, but “all things”. People, everything is coming to an end, things we see and do not see; things we have and long to have; things we love and those we hate; all things are going to perish. I believe this might be the reason Jesus said that we should not store things on earth, but in heaven. So when Peter tells us to have an alert and sober mind, it denotes that there is a possibility of losing focus and being confused by the things of this world, in this world, which will wash away anyway. You see, it is easy for us to become so wrapped up in our day to day activities and the material things in the world hoping that they will give us what we need in life. We get absorbed by our jobs, our families, our material possessions, our lax and worldly lifestyle that we are bound to forget that all these things will be gone one day and all we will have left will be the last account that we will give to God of what we did on this earth, to glorify Him- yes we were created for that reason. Friends, what will you tell God? How will you tell him that you chose the world and rejected him, yet all He had for you was love? Think on that, people. Think!

So as Peter lastly exhorts us, let us pray…

Let us pray that when we suffer in this world, we are always mindful of the sufferings of Jesus Christ and like him the spirit of the Lord will always grow in us the attitude to persevere the judgment of the world. Let us pray that we continue against all odds, to work out our salvation and live a life according to the will of God our father who created us to glorify his name among the people so that people may believe. Let us lastly pray, that we always consciously choose life, and the treasures of heaven and that we always keep a sober and watchful mind, a mind full of prayer, and a heart full of the word of God. In Jesus’ name.

Amen.

Monday, June 14, 2010

Why we should suffer- Part 1

“Therefore, since Christ suffered in his body, arm yourselves also with the same attitude, because those who have suffered in their bodies are done with sin. As a result, they do not live the rest of their earthly lives for evil human desires, but rather for the will of God. For you have spent enough time in the past doing what pagans choose to do—living in debauchery, lust, drunkenness, orgies, carousing and detestable idolatry. They are surprised that you do not join them in their reckless, wild living, and they heap abuse on you. 5But they will have to give account to him who is ready to judge the living and the dead. For this is the reason the gospel was preached even to those who are now dead, so that they might be judged according to human standards in regard to the body, but live according to God in regard to the spirit. The end of all things is near. Therefore be alert and of sober mind so that you may pray. 1 Peter 4: 1-7

I read this scripture last night and it got me thinking a lot about my life, the decisions I have made and why I am at this stage of my life. I read it the second time, and it hit me-most of the things that I have set my mind on in the past, have ended up eventually manifesting in my life, and this is the reason I am where I am today. All the good things I have thought about and cultivated in my life have produced good fruit and all the bad things have equally produced dead fruit. Then I read the scripture the third time, and I saw just how much truth and revelation was embedded therein; so I asked the Lord to give me words of wisdom and the grace so that I can share with you the truth that has just been revealed to me in the hopeful attempt that these words, in the least bit, just might be the turning point in someone’s life, just as they have been in mine. So I will expound on each verse with the wisdom that the Spirit has granted me so that I leave no truth assumed, but plainly understood.

But before I proceed, I am going to take it for granted that all who are reading this have, in the least bit, heard of the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, and that whatever the religion they follow to practice their faith, they believe that there is one true God;

I am also going to take for it granted further that you believe that the word of God, which is the Bible, was written by the inspiration of the Spirit and is the eternal truth;

And lastly, I further take it for granted that you believe that Jesus is the Son of God, the messiah and the savior of all mankind.

“Therefore, since Christ suffered in his body” We all know, or should I say, we assume we know how our Lord Jesus suffered. The Bible says that he was tempted by the devil, arrested by his own people, called a thief, carried a heavy cross, whipped, insulted, spat on, crowned with thorns, crucified, speared, and many other dreadful things. However, Jesus knew that he was meant to suffer. Consider though, that all of Jesus’ sufferings were to his body. It was his body, his human body, to which all the above things were done. The human body that our lord inhabited, brought him tremendous suffering why? Because the body’s characteristic desire is to make man want to do, say, hear, and think things that are of the world, things that are against the will of God, and when we do not follow these desires, these ways of the flesh (read the world) we suffer, or more accurately, our body suffers. So Jesus did not obey his human desires. He did not obey the devil who was telling him to turn stones to bread or throw himself down; he did not choose his family over the rest of the people; he did not prove or boast that he was Messiah even when he was slapped and spat on; he did not even turn away from death yet he feared that the burden was too heavy to carry.

So how do we, as followers of Christ, suffer today? When our body is too tired and lazy to go to church and we force it to- it suffers; when our bodies covet another woman’s husband, or desire to have sex outside marriage, and we ran from it- it suffers; when our bodies desire to imbibe that glass of whisky, that cold Bell, that extra piece of black-forest cake, and we say no- it suffers; when we hold back on indulging in gossip, insulting that irritating taxi conductor, taking that bribe, lying to our friends, hating people, back-biting and being spiteful of our boss, jealousy, selfishness- all things that come naturally to our human body- the body suffers. Now the suffering I am speaking of here is not the I-need-more-money, i-long-for-a-husband, i-am-losing-my-house etc type kind of suffering. Not that that is not suffering, it is, but the type I am referring to here is the suffering we face because we deny our bodies the things it craves when we choose to follow the will of God.

Now to some of us, suffering is many things and happens in various ways. Not to belittle anybody’s kind of suffering, but I think whenever we are having a tough time, fighting off the temptations and issues of this world, it would help us a long way to remember Jesus’ suffering which was way, way more painful than what we go through, but most of all, it would help us to remember how he came out victorious at the end of it all. The important thing though, is to learn how Jesus persevered through his suffering. This was by having a different attitude, which Peter exhorts us to carry below:

“arm yourselves also with the same attitude”,
Now the attitude being spoken of here is the attitude Jesus had when he was suffering. Throughout the times Jesus was suffering, he always, rested on the word of God, he always did what the will of God commanded that he should do, but I also think he wore humility above all else. When Jesus was tempted by the devil, he quoted the word of God, when Jesus was afraid of death, he prayed; when Jesus was insulted, mocked, speared and crucified, he forgave his condemners sins. Imagine that! Even as I write this, I am so totally humbled; and cringe at the thought of the complaining and grumbling I do mbu when I am suffering! We have not known suffering; none such as the one Jesus went through yet can you imagine how much we exhibit weakness, protest, misery and a complaining attitude because we want to have things our way? So, when the scripture says that we should have a similar attitude, this means that all the while we are suffering, (denying our fleshly desires) we should arm ourselves with the Word, wear humility and generally have a Christ-like attitude. Note that, suffering is not optional. The Bible says in many instances that we shall suffer, and should share in the sufferings of Christ so that we shall share in his glory as well. There is hope however, at the end of all this- “because those who have suffered in their bodies are done with sin. As a result, they do not live the rest of their earthly lives for evil human desires, but rather for the will of God.” Can you imagine what is like to be done with Sin? When sin, the devil and all his legions have no hold on you, and you are living a life, a life so high above the kind and type of this world, free from fleshly desires and all? Now that is living the Life! This is a promise, a promise written in black and white, that we can take to the Bank, as it were. The apostle Peter is telling us the rewards of suffering which is the great reward of freedom, and living the ultimate kingdom Life- a life that we as believers in Christ are born to live. Succumbing to the desires of the flesh is the worldly way of living, and since the evil one is the king of this world, do I really need to spell it out whom we will have chosen to serve if we choose to follow our bodily desires?

“For you have spent enough time in the past doing what pagans choose to do—living in debauchery, lust, drunkenness, orgies, carousing and detestable idolatry.” This is so straight forward and obvious that I think I should not comment on it at all lest I water it down. I mean, we all know the kind of lives we lived before we received salvation. But I think I should comment on the use of the word “choose”. This word clearly denotes the presence of option. This means that, we do consciously decide to do the things that we do. So when suffering comes, the action we take at that moment, will either give us the kingdom life, or lead us to the grave, yes the grave- because the reward for sin is death! I guess I should remind you or probably press on you here that when I say suffering I am not merely speaking of emotional distress and/ or physical pain - I am speaking of all sorts of suffering that we as followers of Christ undergo when we choose, there is that word again, not to follow the ways of this world; even though emotional and physical pain are most usually the consequences of choosing the worldly life. In other words, what I am saying here is that, when we follow Christ, we are guaranteed to suffer- yes I think this comes out more clearly. We will suffer; and there are no two ways about it.

I do want you to digest all the above so I will stop here in an attempt to let you take this all in. However, if I should have one more thing to say it will be this- as long as we are alive in this world, life will always, always throw us a curve ball, and this is not the worst thing that can happen. There will always be times when this body we inhabit will try to get its way to make us obey it. When we choose to continuously follow these desires of the world and permanently kill the spirit of God that lives in us- then the worst thing has happened, for then we will die! And no matter how God loves us, and He loves all of us, we will not, even with this intense love, survive his wrath and the end of days if we “choose” not to obey his commands. As Mr. Dollar once said, if you do not obey His word, God loves you enough to lead you to the path of hell and even open the gates for you, while loving you all the way, because love is His nature. However, only you, you, you, can make the decision right now, to choose life, or death!

May the Lord watch and keep you always.

Tuesday, June 1, 2010

Break me, O' Lord

I fear to admit that I believe that I am self- righteous….. There it’s out!

…and I know it, seems like I have always known it. What is harder though is that I know people like me, are on the road to perdition. So now I have decided to take on the fight and bout this out. In total submission , I refuse to nourish this attitude any further and am beginning the battle to change, and consciously choose humility.

This attitude can creep up on you. I know that I do not choose to be like this, but I have come to the realization that sometimes, pride takes over, even for a tiny space of time, in my daily relations with people. Sometimes we boast of having a great memory; material possessions like cars, houses; physical attributes like great abs, beautiful hands; giving the needy money so that others can see; praying longer and louder than the rest; even that we believe more in God than others do… it does creep on you, I said.

Matt 6:1: "Be careful not to do your 'acts of righteousness' before men, to be seen by them." When the Lord says, “Be careful,” he signals just how tempting it is to take earthly credit and boast about what one has done.

Admitting that we have these feelings, I have realized, is the key to gradually getting rid of them. Well you do not have to publicly do it, like I just have, but in the least bit, there has to be some sort of admission because by nature, as humans, we are inherently smug and self-righteous, “Every way of a man is right in his own eyes...” So in my own self- righteousness I sometimes boast of my knowledge, my talents, my experiences, my continence, my abilities and my accomplishments, All of these, if we come to think of it, are credited to me by God. So how dare I, how dare I!

The degree of self-righteousness will vary from person to person, but all in all, I have realized that this self- righteousness is more deeply ingrained in me, first as a human and then as me, than I thought was so.

I have figured, that for me, the key is recognizing when such an attitude presents itself and consciously remembering to willfully curse it out, to nip it in the bud, as it were, and choose not to continue in its tenor.

Let us remember that it is the praise from our Creator that counts, not the praise from other people and strive not to be like the Pharisee in Luke 18:9-14.

If there are any like me out there, I exhort you, please join me and let us battle the evil nature so that we can be victors of our accursed human nature.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Almost Doesn't Count

Life seems so much harder, when you decide to do the right thing.

I have believed for a while that I was an unfeigned believer and that God was the first priority for me; but it not until last night that I realized that this was not so, not as much anyway, as I thought myself to be.

We as human beings are inherently selfish, sinful and weak. There is an evil dark side of our nature that, for most, fuels our very existence. This dark side is what our first parents, Adam and Eve, let into our lives when they fell from grace and obeyed the devil over obeying God. This same human nature is against everything that we were created to be and is in constant conflict with our true nature. True in the sense that, God, in His image, created in us a nature like His, in which we were to identify with Him. It was the correct and actual semblance of what human beings were supposed to be like.

Because of His love for us, God sent His son, to redeem us from our fallen selves. Jesus took the cup of death in our place. He purchased a new life for us, through his precious blood. He saved our souls, our hearts and our very lives from damnation. The Lord, in his infinite love took our place; he died, was buried, went to hell and rose on the 3rd day- he won the battle for our souls!
How then, do not owe him our lives. What sort of justification is there, if any, for us not to give ourselves wholly unto him?

It is this understanding of what It means to surrender our lives to the Lord, and to give up our heart, soul, body and mind to him- that has led me to suffer in the realization that I have not yet wholly given up my life to the Lord.

Most of us live a double life. We waver between the things of this world and the things of God. We secretly hope that God will not be too strict so us to remember every little thing that we do wrong, so long as we go to church on Sunday, fast every month, are generally good to people; while yet we can indulge in a little sexual immorality, get drunk once in a while and be negatively good- we are “Lukewarm- neither hot nor cold”. We forget the consequences of such a life- God promises to spit such people out of his Kingdom.

The Lord requires our full hearts. We are to give ourselves wholly unto the Lord, holding nothing back. Jesus gave up everything for us, why would we think that it is sufficient to give him back just a portion of our lives? It is not right that we say a chain of prayer every Monday morning yet when we get to the office, we gossip about our boss; that we preach about being born again yet we are recovering from a hangover from the night before; that we place “I love Jesus” bumper stickers on our cars as we drive to commit acts of fornication; that we pray the morning prayer at our desks in the office yet we spend half the time on internet chat flirting with friends. God forbid!

Let us exhort ourselves through the pain of our lives to let go and let God, to really let go and let God. God demands our full commitment, not just part of it, lest we are struck dead like Ananias and his wife Sapphira for pretending to offer their hearts to God yet they kept the greatest part for themselves.

If God can help us, guide us, feed us, clothe us and keep us alive, even when we are sinful as we are and without much effort, how much more will he take care of us when we let Him lead the way? Why O why are we so in love with the flesh so as not to fully renounce our bodies, which for the most part of our lives has held us bound in chains of disease, pain and suffering? Why?

Most times, we are afraid of our fellow man. We suffer to imagine what people will say when we become born again and are liable for our actions. Many of us serve the world, the flesh during the day and then like Nicodemus we sneak into the night, secretly for fear of being judged, fall on our knees to God, with a mind to see God’s power in our lives, but inherently afraid of being ridiculed by our friends and peers. But what did the Lord say of such behavior: “the friendship of this world means enmity against God”.

But if there is anyone we are deceiving, it is ourselves, because “God cannot be mocked”. He sees our hearts and judges us thereof. True, when we choose to do the right thing, we will be judged and will be met with contempt. We may loose friends, jobs, and pride, but the price of eternal life is too grave a gift to forego. What we should let go of are the eccentricities of the world and walk the narrow path. Life seems so much easier when we follow the world, but it far less rewarding.
We should embrace the servile character of our Lord and humble ourselves before God. We should consciously seek to learn, to know and to see God and His power manifest in our lives today.

Let us think then, let us repent and change our lives. Let us receive a new and clean rebirth. We might think that we have already done much for Christ, but we cannot afford to loose even the little we have because we could not do more. Let us every day, every moment give ourselves to the full will of God, always praying, always watching and always yearning for Him to lead us to the truth- for those that are led by the spirit of God are the children of the God.

Wednesday, May 5, 2010

Lead us Not into Temptation

This inspired me... thought i would share- i have edited the original text for easier comprehension.

Matthew 6:13, "Lead us not into temptation."

The great and important duty which is mandatory on Christians is to guard against all appearance of evil; to watch against the first rebellions in the heart to evil; and to have a guard upon our actions, that they may not be sinful, or seem to be so.

It is true, the devil is tempting us continually, and our own evil hearts are ready to join with the tempter, to make us fall into sins, that he may obtain a victory over us, and that we may be his subjects, his servants, his slaves; and then by-and-by he will pay us our wages, which will be temporary death, and later eternal death.

Our Lord Jesus Christ saw how his people would be tempted. The devil would lay hold of every opportunity, so he could keep poor sinners from coming to the Lord Jesus Christ by:

- filling you with temptation, to drive you to some great sins and then if he cannot gain you over,

- Often transform himself into an angel of light, and by that means make the soul fall into sin, to the dishonor of God.

The Lord Jesus, seeing how liable his disciples, and all others, would be to temptation, therefore advises them, when they pray, to beg that they might not be led into temptation. It is so dangerous to engage Satan because he is so subtle and powerful. We shall be overcome as often as we engage in temptation, unless the Lord is on our side.

If you are left by yourselves, you will be overcome by every temptation with which you are exposed to.

These words are part of the prayer which Christ taught his disciples; and I shall, therefore, make no doubt, but that you all believe them to be true, since they are spoken by one who cannot lie. I shall,

1.Show you who it is that tempts you.

2.Shall show why he tempts you.

3.Mention some of the ways and means he makes use of, to draw you over to his temptations.

4.Let you see how earnest you ought to be to the Lord, that he may preserve you from being led into temptation.

5.I shall make some application for you to come unto Christ, that he may deliver you from being tempted.

I. FIRST, We are to consider who it is that tempts us.


And the tempter is Satan, the prince of the power of the air, he that now rules in the children of disobedience; he is an enemy to God and goodness, he is a hater of all truth. Why else did he slander God in paradise? Why did he tell Eve, "You shall not surely die?" He is full of malice, envy, and revenge; for what other reasons could he molest innocent man in paradise? The person that tempts you is remarkable for his tact. Because he does not have power him from above, he is forced to wait for opportunities to betray us, and to catch us by treachery; he, therefore, made use of the serpent to tempt our first parents; and to lie in wait to deceive, is another part of his character.

And though this character is given of the devil, if we were to examine our own hearts, we will find many of the tempter's characters in us.

Do we not all like to tell a lie? And if it is done in our line of work we sometimes believe it is excusable. But whether you believe it or not, it is sinful, it is exceedingly sinful. Though we value ourselves as fine rational creatures, and that we are noble beings (like when we first came out of God's hands). We are now fallen and there is nothing lovely, nothing desirable in man. His heart is a sink of pollution, full of sin and uncleanness. Yet, though a man's own heart is so desperately wicked, he is told by our modern polite that because God sees us as good creatures, gives us his grace. But this, though it is a modern, polite, and fashionable way of talking, is very unscriptural.

These preachers talk of than doing no one any harm, living honestly, loving your neighbor as yourselves, and do what you can and that Christ is to make up for the deficiency. This is making Christ to be half a savior, and man the other part.


But let these modern, polite gentlemen paint man in as lovely colors as they please, I will not do it; I dare not make him better than the word of God does. If I was to paint man in his proper colors, I must go to the kingdom of hell for a copy; for man is by nature full of pride, subtlety, malice, envy, lust, sensuality, pleasure, revenge, and all uncharitableness- and are not all these from the devil?

And this is the man, who is told, that he must be part his own savior, by doing good works, and what he cannot do Christ will do for him. Good God!

This is giving the devil great room to come in with his temptation. The devil may make a soul to follow moral duties like go to church, take the sacrament, read, pray, meditate. The devil is ok that you do all these. but if they are done in your own strength without the Spirit or if you go no farther than here and do no more than these, you are simply smoothening your path to hell.

Why he tempts you, is the second thing I am to show you.

He endeavors to keep you from getting close with Jesus. and if he can keep you from laying hold by faith on Christ, he knows he has you safe enough; and the more temptations you are under, and the more unsettled your thoughts and emotions are, the more you will think that if you were to go to Christ in this state full of emotions and unsettled, that Christ would not receive you. This is a policy of the devil- to make you have low and dishonorable thoughts of the blessed Jesus and by so doing the devil works upon your minds that you do not care about Christ. This, this, my brethren, is the design of the tempter.

Nothing will please the devil more, than to see you ruined and lost forever. He tempts you for this reason- that you may lose your interest in Jesus Christ, and that you may dwell with the devil and his spirits to all eternity. He knows that Jesus Christ died for sinners, yet he would fain keep these same sinners from seeking Jesus.


The devil endeavors to blind our eyes, that we shall not see what danger you are in, and how much evil there is in our hearts; and as long as he can keep us easy and unconcerned about having your hearts changed, he will tempt us to sin until we are hardened in sin. Do not give the devil a handle were he can lay hold on you. That is why he tempts you, when he finds you at the disco or a bar. if you are doing the devil's work, he will convince you to continue sinning. So how can we say "Lead us not into temptation," in the morning, when we are planning to run into temptation at night?

So when we have go to church and read the prayers, it is like offering the sacrifice of fools when we say “Amen” to them with our lips, when in our hearts we are either unconcerned at what we are doing, or else we think that simply saying of our prayers is sufficient and that we have balanced our debts with God.

But let us not deceive ourselves; God is not to be mocked. We are only ruining ourselves for time and eternity. We pray, "Lead us not into temptation," when we are tempting the devil to come and tempt us.

I shall now point out some of the ways and means; the devil makes use of to draw you to himself.

But this is a field so large, and I have but just begun to be a soldier of Jesus Christ, that

I cannot say everything to you. I shall therefore be very short on this.


a. He endeavors to make us think sin is not so great as it is; that there is no occasion for being so strict, and that we are over-righteous too much and will harm ourselves. The devil shows us the bait, but he hides the hook. He shows us the pleasure, profits, and advantages that come if we follow him but he does not show us hardships, losses and displeasures that we will have while we enjoy his world.

b. When he finds he cannot allure us by flattery, he will try by frowns, and the terrors of this world. He will make people to point at us, and say, "Here comes another of Christ’s followers;" He will make them up to jeer, scoff, backbite, and hate us. but if he still finds this will not do, then he throws in doubts and discouragement in our minds or he will suggest, “What! Do you expect to be saved by Christ?” Also, “He did not die for you; you have been too great a sinner; you have lived in sin so long, and committed many sins against Christ, which he will not forgive.” Thus he rushes poor sinners almost into despair. And very often, when the people of God meet to worship, he sends his agents to disturb them.

These, my brethren, are some of the ways Satan takes in his temptations, to bring us from Christ. Many more might be named; but these are sufficient, I hope, to keep us on our guard, against all that the enemy can do to hinder us from coming to Christ.


I come to show you, how deep we ought to be with Jesus Christ, either so that we are not led into temptations, or to persevere under them.


And here let me beg that we go to Jesus Christ when we are attacked by the evil one, who lies in wait for our souls. We should tell him we are not able to master the devil in our own strength. We should beg Christ’s assistance, and then we shall find him ready to help us, ready to assist us, and to be our Guide, our Comforter, our Savior, and our All. He will give us strength to resist the fiery darts of the devil. Jesus Christ knows what it is to be tempted, he was tempted by Satan in the wilderness, and he will give us the assistance of his Spirit, to resist the evil one, and then the devil will flee from us. In Christ Jesus we shall have the strength we stand in need of, the devil shall have no power. Therefore fear not, for in the name of the Lord we shall overcome all our spiritual Amalekites.

Let the devil and his agents rage, let them breathe out threatenings, yes, let them breathe out slaughters, yet we can rejoice in the truth that Jesus Christ has all these evil agents in his power. They may rage, they may rage horribly, but they can go no farther. Blessed be to God that we can commit ourselves to Christ’s protection. He has been our protector before, he will be even now. Then sincerely, we should ask of the Lord to support us under these temptations which the devil may attack us with. He is a powerful adversary; he is a cunning one too. He would be too hard for us, unless we have the strength of Christ to be with us. But let us be looking up unto Jesus, that he would send his Spirit into our hearts, and keep us from falling.

Monday, February 22, 2010

I have always missed you though my mind never did entertain the notion
You know me so deeply in the most intimate of ways
From whence I flirted with untaught skill, discerning, learning, knowing and then loving you
Tonight I return…
I beseech you to open your soul, for you and I are one, rooted deep within the core of life
Take me home.

Friday, February 12, 2010

Action- The Dream Catcher

I have desires, dreams and many things that I hope for. So I keep praying, believing and trusting that all my needs will manifest one day. However, I realized that there is one crucial thing that I often miss and/or ignore to guarantee assurance of this manifestation-faith, and not just faith, but the action behind the faith.
I need to learn to demonstrate my faith so that God can see. I need to, more often than not show God that I am serious about what I am believing for. Sure He is omnipresent and knows and sees all things, however, therefore needs to “see” my faith.

Learning from the great women of faith before me over 2000 years, ago a lady with a life-threatening disease though to herself “If I just touch his clothes, I will be healed.” She fought through a crowd of hundreds of people, pushed and squeezed herself through the congested lot till she touched Jesus’ cloak. Also the Greek Syrophoenician woman, considered an outsider because she was non-Jew risked being incarcerated and maintained that her daughter should be healed. When she was told she was not eligible to receive any blessings because she was not a Jew she said “even the dogs under the table eat the children’s crumbs.” Now if this is not action showing tremendous desire and belief, then I do not know what is.

I have realized that we need to release our minds, emotion and actions and demonstrate that which we are believing for, against all odds. Prayer, though vital, alone is not enough. I believe that Gods needs to see more of my belief. Demonstration of faith is also an inadvertent way of fighting evil, because though our actions we are choosing to believe the truth and not the facts (bad things) happening in our lives.

A few great men also showed faith- Moses almost sacrificed his son, Joseph used his wit and jail time to impress the pharaoh, Noah built the Ark, Abel offered a bigger sacrifice, Abraham left his rich and fertile land and went to live in a dry and arid desert… all these people DID something. They did not just pray and believe that their circumstances would change, they did not just write down what they believed for and sit and wait.

We all need to do something towards whatever we are believing for and show God that our faith is more than just words, confession and emotion- The He will move!