Friday, December 5, 2008

Passion

Mark 12:30
[30] And thou shalt love the Lord thy God with all thy heart, and with all thy soul, and with all thy mind, and with all thy strength: this is the first commandment.


The creative force behind all great art, all great drama, all great music, all great architecture and all great writing is passion.

It was Georg Wilhelm Friedrich Hegel (1770-1831) who said “Nothing great in the world has been accomplished without passion”. I agree – in my 31 years on this planet anything great I have seen achieved has always been achieved by passionate people. Passion is the energy of life and makes the impossible possible. Passion is that thing that gives us a reason to get up in the morning and go, "I’m going to do something with my life today”.

The Olympics are always an exhibition of passion. It is passion that drives a good athlete to become an exceptional or great athlete where they go to levels that no human being has ever been. At the 2008 Olympics we saw the talent of Michael Phelps. It takes some sort of passion to reach those heights. I don’t think I will ever see a comparable athlete in my lifetime – if I do….i hope it’s an Australian!

Passion is a powerful thing! It is passion that mobilises an army into action. It is passion that caused the explorers to boldly go where no man had ever gone before. It is passion that causes scientists to stay up all ours of the night trying to find the cure for a disease.

God created us with the emotions to have passion in our life and I believe He wants us to live a passionate life. Mark 12:30 is definitely talking about passion. In fact it commands very clearly what our passion should be. The object of our passion must be God! This entails loving Him, loving His word, obeying His word (“if you love me keep my commandments”), sharing His passion – I could go on and on – but our passion must be God!

If you wonder why it is hard to live a Christian life – then I suggest you examine what you are passionate about. Nothing is hard if you are passionate about it! It was Jesus Christ’s passion for us that led Him to the cross.

The Apostle Paul was a great example of passion. The apostle Paul wrote: “Whatever things were gain to me, those things I have counted as loss for the sake of Christ. More than that, I count all things to be loss in view if the surpassing value of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whom I have suffered the loss of all things, and count them but rubbish so that I may gain Christ” (Philippians 3:7-8). Oswald Chambers says of Paul, “He was recklessly abandoned, separated by God for one purpose - to proclaim the Gospel of God.”

Here’s the amazing thing. Today it is ok to be passionate about anything except God. That is not politically correct -- to be passionate about God. I can be passionate about movies. I can be passionate about sports. I can be passionate about politics. I can be passionate about fashions and clothes. I can be passionate about restaurants (and some of us really are). But I cannot be passionate about God. That’s a no-no.

Colossians 3:23 says "Whatever you do, do it with all of your heart as unto the Lord and not unto men."Help us to have a passion for God!”

Romans 12:1
[1] I beseech you therefore, brethren, by the mercies of God, that ye present your bodies a living sacrifice, holy, acceptable unto God, which is your reasonable service.


Notice the Bible says “ye present your bodies”. It’s not automatic. Notice it is “a living sacrifice” - that is total abandonment – that’s passion!

Do you know what the worst sin is for Christians? It is not adultery. It is not murder. It is not some sort of sexual perversion. God tells us in Revelation 3. He says it’s lukewarmness. No passion. A lack of passion and love for God will cause you to do all those things!

Thursday, November 20, 2008

Don't Worry! God is in control!


We live in a world shot through with worry and anxiety. We worry about yesterday. We worry about today. We worry about tomorrow. We just worry! I heard two great quotes about worrying:

“Worry give small things big shadows”

“It pays to worry. Ninety percent of the things I worry about never come true”

Why do we worry? To be really simplistic, I think we have turned to material things and forgotten that God is in control! In essence, we worry because have run after other gods that are unable to save us from our miserable plight – money, fame, friendships, hobbies, holidays etc. We have turned our backs on God and forgotten the One and Only true and sovereign Lord of the universe! I think this is why we worry!

The Bible is full of scriptures showing that God knows how to care for his people and we need not lead anxious lives. Our responsibility is to trust and obey him, confident that his grace will carry us along. “Being confident of this very thing, that he which hath begun a good work in you will perform it until the day of Jesus Christ” (Phillipians 1:6).

There is absolutely nothing that happens in the universe that is outside of God’s influence and authority. As King of kings and Lord of lords, God has no limitations. Consider just a few of the claims the Bible makes about God:
  • God is above all things and before all things. He is the alpha and the omega, the beginning and the end. He is immortal, and He is present everywhere so that everyone can know Him (Revelation 21:6).

  • God created all things and holds all things together, both in heaven and on earth, both visible and invisible (Colossians 1:16).

  • God knows all things past, present, and future. There is no limit to His knowledge, for God knows everything completely before it even happens (Romans 11:33).

  • God can do all things and accomplish all things. Nothing is too difficult for Him, and He orchestrates and determines everything that is going to happen in your life, in my life, in America, and throughout the world. Whatever He wants to do in the universe, He does, for nothing is impossible with Him (Jeremiah 32:17).

  • God is in control of all things and rules over all things. He has power and authority over nature, earthly kings, history, angels, and demons. Even Satan himself has to ask God’s permission before he can act (Psalm 103:19).

Why is it important to know that God is in control? The Bible says that there is righteous, peace and joy in the Holy Ghost. We all know that if we don’t have peace we cannot have joy. The devil likes to make us worry and become anxious because that will destroy our peace. In destroy our peace there is no way that we can have joy – and the Bible says that the “joy of the Lord is our strength”.

Have peace – God is in control. The result of peace is joy, and the joy of the Lord is our strength!

Wednesday, November 12, 2008

Because of the Times - Alexandria Louisiana

I am going to Because of the Times (BOTT) in January 2009. BOTT is a conference for ministers and their families hosted by the Pentecostal of Alexandria in Louisiana USA. Thousands of ministers from numerous Apostolic organisations gather with a desire to pursue the deity and vision of Almighty God. It is a time for preachers to be fed and replenished and a time where programs, positions, and prominence are laid aside to let God unify the body and install His purpose in our hearts. BOTT follows a basic format is 13 anointed speakers with diverse delivery methods.

For those of you who know me well, you will know that this has been a dream of mine for many years. I like to refer to it as the “Apostolic Mecca” and I’ve even heard it called the “Apostolic Promiseland”. Everyone I have talked to insists that BOTT is a life changing experience. From watching the DVDs over the last few years, I argue that this is the best preacher’s conference in the world. I have seen every message preached at BOTT since 2001, and have watched the majority of them more than once. As my friends – my most treasured multimedia items are my BOTT DVDs.

BOTT exploded into my life during a Wednesday night service in 2003 when the church watched Pastor Anthony Mangun preach the opening message of BOTT 2001 entitled “This is a Lost World and We Have a Mandate to Reach it”. My mum had been receiving these videos from the USA for many years. I remember her watching them as she would do the ironing. This day, mum insisted that the church must watch this particular video.

While Pastor Mangun preached, I remember seeing the walls of the POA sanctuary covered with massive pictures of the faces of lost people and world globes spread across the platform. Pastor Mangun relayed his burden of how all of these faces should haunt us. He challenged all those present that while we have the message and the truth, we must not lose our passion for a world destined for eternal damnation.

It was during this message that my spirit was quickened to the urgency of the task at hand. What was I going to do with my life? Was I going to continue to pursue a successful career in financial systems that had already enabled me to travel all over Australia and the world, promising even more in the future. Was I going to continue to pursue my career of opportunity and financial gain? The video finished and it was time to go home. It is strange when you watch a DVD or video during a service – you feel removed from the event – you don’t know whether to clap, back the preacher up – although it feels like you should. I guess it is even stranger to respond in the altar call. Well, that night I made my way to the altar and committed my days, my purpose, my passion and my life into God’s hands. If you can use anything Lord, you can use me. From that day onward God has opened doors and equipped me to fulfil my ministry in the body of Christ.

Some of my favourite messages from BOTT include:

  1. This is a Lost World and We Have a Mandate to Reach it - Anthony Mangun
  2. 21st Century Apostolic – Anthony Mangun
  3. We are measured by God’s pattern – Anthony Mangun
  4. Man’s Greatest Need is God’s Greatest Desire (Knowing God) - Jeff Arnold
  5. When you stop measuring the miracle will happen – Jeff Arnold
  6. Life’s Three Greatest Words (I Am Persuaded) – Jeff Arnold
  7. Hath Israel No Sons – Wayne Huntley
  8. Condemnation Interferes with Intimacy – Gerald Jeffers
  9. There is no substitute for Sons – Wayne Huntley
  10. Addicted – Matthew Maddix

So in January 2009 I will visit Alexandria Louisiana for the first time. I will be making the trip with my two closest friends in the ministry and mentors of mine – Wayne Francis and Stanley Harvey. The trip is extremely costly for only 3 nights and 2 days, but God has provided the funds. There is so much more I could tell you about God’s provision for this trip – but let it be said “God provides”.

Friday, October 24, 2008

Trust God!

Genesis 42:35
[35] And it came to pass as they emptied their sacks, that, behold, every man's bundle of money was in his sack: and when both they and their father saw the bundles of money, they were afraid.
[36] And Jacob their father said unto them, Me have ye bereaved of my children: Joseph is not, and Simeon is not, and ye will take Benjamin away: all these things are against me.


There is an ancient proverb that says “Worry give small things big shadows”. I read another great quote about worry: “It pays to worry. Ninety percent of the things I worry about never come true”.

I suggest you read the about the story of Jospeh in order to understand the context of the scripture above. Start reading around Genesis 37.

Jacob is worrying! Joseph is dead, Simeon is gone and now they want to take Benjamin away. “All these things are against me”. Now that’s a pretty serious statement – that means past, present, and future – everything is against him. Jacob is saying “I’ve been singled out for all the problems of the universe to hit me”.

What do you do when “all these things are against you”? I didn’t say “if” but “when”. If you’ve been around long enough – you will know the feeling.

There are going to be times when it looks like everything is against you. I’ve come across a lot of born again Christians that think because they have been born again that they are somehow immune to problems in their life. The very fact that the Holy Ghost is a comforter ought to tell us that there are times when we are going to need comforting (John 14:26).

What Jacob didn’t know was Joseph was the Prime Minister and Simeon is in the care of a loving brother Joseph. Why was he worrying about Benjamin? Jacob was going by what his eyes could see – not what his faith could discern.

It may look like it is all falling down around you – but God is still in control. We tend to think that God doesn’t understand what we are going through, but He does. We have a high priest which is touched with the feeling of our infirmities (Hebrews 4:15) – He knows what it is like. Jesus knew what it feels to be “man forsaken” and “God forsaken”. “My God My God – why hast thou forsaken me”.

Jacob thought all these things were against him – but that was not true. They were actually for him. They seemed to be against him! If fact, they had never been better.

The devil would like us to get our minds on everything that is going wrong – “all these things are against me”. He seeks to destroy our peace because if you don’t have peace you cant have joy. If you don’t have joy we wont have strength – the Bible says “the joy of the Lord is our strength”.

There are times when it appear everything is against us – but that does not mean you are defeated.
1. Have faith in God!
2. Trust God!
3. God has everything under control!

That's my five minutes!

Thursday, September 25, 2008

Praise Builds a Bridge

Psalm 22:1-3
[1] To the chief Musician upon Aijeleth Shahar, A Psalm of David. My God, my God, why hast thou forsaken me? why art thou so far from helping me, and from the words of my roaring? [2] O my God, I cry in the daytime, but thou hearest not; and in the night season, and am not silent. [3] But thou art holy, O thou that inhabitest the praises of Israel.

Notice that the writer begins the verse in a terrible dilemma. He obviously feels God forsaken. The Psalmist feels like God is not there. The Psalmist feels like God is ignoring his prayers. He is definitely facing a dilemma!

But, what a turn around in attitude in verse 3. Note that after putting his petitions to God, the psalmist shift gears and shifts into praise.

I don’t know about you, but very often my first response is self-pity and I know that most of us tend to have that same response. So, the idea of shifting into praise in the midst of our dilemma is a significant paradigm shift for us.

So what is the scripture telling us? I believe the Psalmist is telling us that the best thing to do when you are facing a dilemma is to praise God. It is our praise that creates a door for Gods presence to come into our problem.

The Psalmist shows us that when you are in a dilemma, shift the focus off the dilemma and get to praising God.

We see this principle in the “Lord’s prayer”.

Matthew 6:9-13
[9] After this manner therefore pray ye: Our Father which art in heaven, Hallowed be thy name. [10] Thy kingdom come. Thy will be done in earth, as it is in heaven. [11] Give us this day our daily bread. [12] And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors. [13] And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil: For thine is the kingdom, and the power, and the glory, forever. Amen.


In the model prayer…”our father which art in heaven, hallowed be thy name”….this is the “praise phrase”. Then, it says “thy kingdom come, thy will be done on earth as it is in heaven”.

I believe we are seeing the creation of a bridge here! Notice the connect. Praise creates a bridge…in comes the kingdom of God. God comes into our dilemma!

Acts 16:25-26
[25] And at midnight Paul and Silas prayed, and sang praises unto God: and the prisoners heard them. [26] And suddenly there was a great earthquake, so that the foundations of the prison were shaken: and immediately all the doors were opened, and every one’s bands were loosed.


This Bible story begins the unjust arrest of Paul and Silas. The local Philippian authorities beat them and then threw them into a jail cell. Besides the trauma of the severe beating, they were fastened in stocks which clamped their arms and legs in an immobile position…can you imagine what it would have been like. Nothing like our jails today that meet human rights standards. The atmosphere there was depressing. According to the standards of that day, a prison was more like the resemblance of a dungeon. A dark, damp, stench-ridden place, with no facility for waste or comforts of any kind.

Yet, in spite of the throbbing pain in their bodies and the disheartening atmosphere, at midnight Paul and Silas were heard praying and singing praises to God! What a strange sound this must have been to the other prisoners, who were used to only hearing the groans or cursings of those who had been beaten. What a paradigm shift!
Then suddenly, there was an earthquake that shook the prison! The doors flung open, and amazingly, the bonds of Paul, Silas, and every other prisoner were released! What caused this mighty discharge of power? Praise!

PRAISE BUILDS A BRIDGE! God inhabits the praise of His people.

That’s my five minutes!

Thursday, September 11, 2008

A few random thoughts!

Oliver Wendell Holmes said, “A mind stretched by a new idea never returns to its original shape.”

  • I wonder what would happen to Spirit-filled Christians if they really understood and believed these scriptures?
  • John 4:4 - "Greater is he that in you, than he that is in the world"
  • John 14:12 says, “I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in me will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than these.”
Jesus redefined what is and what is not possible! He said, “All things are possible”. And because we sometimes need to hear the same thing in different ways, Jesus also said, “Nothing is impossible”.

Jesus had a pretty impressive resume of miracles! It’s easy to say, “but that’s Jesus. What does that have to do with me?” The answer is everything! As the scripture says above “I tell you the truth, anyone who has faith in me will do what I have been doing. He will do even greater things than these".

My son is learning alot of things, it is amazing how fast kids develop. But, if i told you that Lachlan can do algebra and calculus, you wouldn't believe me (after all he's only 15 months). You would say, "that's impossible". It is not impossible! It may be impossible at his present stage of development, but give him a few years and he should be able to do it.

Just as a young child grows up and in time they can do those things that were impossible when they were new borns or toddlers. The same is in the spiritual realm, faith is the only difference between what is impossible and what is possible. It is a developmental issue. Impossibilities disappear as we develop our faith.

Soren Kierkegaard “If I were to wish for anything I should not wish for wealth and power, but for the passionate sense of what can be, for the eye which, ever young and ardent, sees the possible. Pleasure disappoints, possibility never”.

Albert Einstein said, “Common sense is the collection of prejudices acquired by the age of eighteen.”

With the power of the Holy Spirit in our lives, we can do "greater works" than Jesus even did! That's what the Bible says!

That's my five minutes!

Thursday, August 21, 2008

Bethel

One balmy evening in the South Pacific, a navy ship spied smoke coming from one of three huts on an uncharted island. Upon arriving at the shore, the crew was met by a shipwreck survivor. He said, "I'm so glad you're here. I've been alone on this island for more than five years." The captain replied, "If you're all alone, why do I see three huts?" The survivor answered, "Well, I live in one and go to church in another." "What about the third hut?" asked the captain. "That's where I used to go to church."

This little story hits on the truth about our sin nature. Our sin nature tends to push us away from a close relationship with God and not towards Him. Just like the story above, even if we were the only ones on a uncharted island by ourselves, we would probably find it difficult to worship God without finding other distractions.

I don’t want to go into the whole life of Jacob, but we see the same tendency with Jacob in the Old Testament. In chapter 28 of Genesis, we have the old deceiver Jacob making a vow to God. After his vision of the ladder and the angels, saying that "this is my God and I will follow Him all the days of my life”. (Genesis 35:1-13)

God had promised Jacob land and had promised to make his seed like the dust of the earth. God promised to keep him. And Jacob called the name of the place where God spake with him, Bethel (v16).

Afterwards he went on his way; he became rich; he forgot God and the vows he made at Bethel. The years go by and now he is coming home. He has another experience with God; he wrestles with the angel and prevails. He meets Esau, and Esau forgives and forgets. But Jacob is not yet filled with peace, for his sin is still on his heart.

Then God calls him: "Go back to Bethel. Go back where you made your vow, go back to where you first felt My presence. Go back and renew you vows and start life over again." Jacob heard God's call and went back to Bethel and rededicated his life in that holy place.

The name Bethel comes from the Hebrew “beth”, meaning house, and “el”, meaning God. Bethel means House of God. Today many of us are far away from God.

For some Bethel “or that close relationship with God” is just a fond memory.

We remember when God touched us and saved us, but the years have come and gone, and our spiritual freshness has grown colder and further apart than it was at first.

We have lost the joy of our salvation.

“Let’s go back to Bethel”.

That's my five minutes!

Friday, August 15, 2008

Growing Spiritually versus Growing Physically

Jonathan Moore is a fantastic worship leader and singer and was the full-time music minister for Rex Johnson in Austin, Texas. I admire this guy because he is going out on his own to plant a church in San Antonio Texas. He has been blogging all the activities and feelings associated with such a venture!

Anyway, Jonathan Moore recently wrote something that i think was really cool - i had to share it! Also.....i just had to share a few pics of my little boy Lachlan (see below).


Maturing as a Christian is the polar opposite of maturing mentally & physically as a person. In normal life, as you grow up, you pass milestones that are directing you toward independence (i.e. learning to ride bike, learning to drive, graduating from Jr High, High School, College, getting married, etc). But, as you grow up as a Christian, instead of heading toward independence . . . we actually move toward more dependency on Christ! In fact, spiritual maturity is much more child-like in it’s nature than adult-like.

Remember, in Matt 18:3, Jesus told his followers, “Unless you change and become like little children, you’ll never enter the kingdom of Heaven.”

Thanks Jonathan......i hope you dont mind me using this!
That's someone elses five minutes!

Thursday, August 7, 2008

Don't be distracted!

Life is full of distractions. It doesn’t matter what you put your mind to do, there will be some sort of distraction. While common to life, distractions can end in pain, suffering, and even tragedy.

I recently heard of a tragic accident in a circus during the “big cat” show, where the lion tamers enter a cage with the dangerous big cats such as lion, tigers etc. In this case, the lion tamer was tragically injured when he was attacked by one of the lions. The day of the accident was the same as any other day - just another circus act, just another town, doing the same thing they have been doing for years. The lion tamer was well aware of dangers associated with these animals and was well experienced. But one day tragedy stuck when he became, in his own words “distracted”.

Later, while lying in a hospital bed paralysed, with little hope of ever walking again, the lion tamer told reports that he had simply become “distracted”. When questioned about what distracted him, he replied that he could not recall what it was – “I was just distracted”. It is sad enough that this man’s life was never going to be the same – but it was even more of a tragedy that this man was nothing more than the result of a distraction. The irony of the story is that something had captured his attention, only for a moment, but now he could not even recall what it was.

While distractions in the physical world can result in tragedy, the same applies to the spiritual world. Spiritual distractions are just as fatal. Distractions to our soul!

Most people that I have seen backslide into the world didn’t do it because they woke up one day and decided that they no longer loved God. In all cases, it was simply a distraction. Like the lion tamer, when you ask them what it was they usually cannot recall what it was. They can't tell you what distracted them and resulted in them walking so far from God. It was a distraction that allowed the enemy of their soul to maime them and lay them down a cripple in the presence of God.

There are so many things in this world that would try to distract us from our relationship with Jesus. We cannot let anything get between us and our relationship with Jesus! Jesus said “And if thy hand offend thee, cut it off: it is better for thee to enter into life maimed, than having two hands to go into hell, into the fire that never shall be quenched” (Mark 9:43).

This was God’s way of telling us – we may make mistakes that cause pain and suffering – but Jesus would rather us make it to heaven with a handicap than to go to hell with everything we have. We cannot afford to make a mistake with your soul. Physical distractions cause us pain and suffering for a time. But spiritual distractions have an eternal consequence.

Luk 9:62 And Jesus said unto him, No man, having put his hand to the plow, and looking back (distractions), is fit for the kingdom of God.

The most grievous errors and mistakes are the ones taking place in the heart of men and women – distractions to our souls. A distraction to men and women who love God and know God and want to live for God and somehow become distracted by the things of this world – only for a moment – but ending in disaster!
That's my five minutes!

Friday, July 18, 2008

Intercessory Prayer, We Miss You!

I recently received this stirring article about intercessory prayer - i had to share it. We can't have revival without prayer!

This is just a line to let you know how things are since you’ve gone. It’s not the same without you, nor will it ever be. Although our lives seem shallow and empty when you’re not here, we’ve learned to make up for you in other ways. We’ve learned to live without you.

We now run the aisles, leap for joy, jig to the music, sing catchy choruses, and tap our feet in time to the rhythm of the drums. We use sticks, banners, black lights, and our sign teams do a tremendous job acting out recorded music. We’ve learned to worship without you.

The prayer rooms are mostly silent now. Those that do go there, for the most part, come away dry-eyed. A lot of praying now is chanting and singsong style. That’s how we know we’re in the groove. We pray memorized phrases that come automatically. We love what we call Prayer Walks. Most of us don’t even close our eyes anymore during prayer. We just walk and pray while we look around. We pray because it is required. No one prays till they break through anymore. We just pray till our 10 minutes are up.

Too, Too Busy
Family altars are almost unheard of now. You can’t imagine how busy we are and how hectic our schedules have been. It’s unbelievable. We get up in the morning and never stop till we go to bed at night. We do try to make it to church most services and get some praying in there during the service, but prayer at home is kind of out of the question. That may be another reason you haven’t heard much from us.

Oh sure, we still believe in prayer, as such. But not very many of us are anxious for you to come back. (You were always the polite type, you know, never forcing yourself on anyone. You never came uninvited. You only left because you were ignored.)

The sad truth is you’re not really needed anymore. You see, most of us have hospitalization insurance now. (It sure takes away that old desperate feeling we used to have.) So now, there’s no need to pray more than the few minutes it takes to drive to the Emergency Room. Also, we don’t have to ask for our daily bread like we used to. We now have better jobs with good benefits and government programs to fall back on.

If we lose our jobs, there is always unemployment or welfare. If we retire or become disabled, Social Security now supplies our needs. So, you can see, we’re doing okay. Other things have filled the void in your absence. Sure we miss you. But we’re getting over it somehow. Actually, we’re too busy to entertain you right now, even if you tried to come back. I hope you understand.

Easy Revivals
We are having revivals now without you. It’s not hard. The pastor fasts and prays, along with a couple others. The evangelist preaches mostly just to sinners now. Most of us try to get to church in time for the first song or two. We justify the fact that the number of new converts is down. Yes, there seems to be diminished conviction, less lasting victory, fewer miracles, and many young people are backsliding. We agree, however, that it’s not us that are at fault here; it’s just the times we’re living in. It’s like this everywhere.

As your friend, I’m writing this to you, knowing how much it must hurt you to have folks say they miss you . . . and yet in their material and intellectual progress, they’ve weaned themselves away from the haunting memory of you.

What hurts, I know, is that we were children you personally raised. You were always there when we needed you. (But now we don’t.) You taught us about faith. You taught us about miracles. You taught us about a move of God. You taught us about revival. You taught us about how to touch God. Thank you for that, but you see, this is a new day and we are trying to go to the next level. Our services are structured differently now.

Can you believe that now when you are ever mentioned in church, everyone gets real quiet? (They all feel guilty I’m sure.) It’s like they experience a momentary twinge of guilt while they consider their part in your disappearance. Once in a while some even get misty eyed when we talk about the old times you shared with us. Yet all that feeling vanishes along with the pizza right after church.

Happy Memories
By the way, do you remember all the folks of yesteryear coming into the sanctuary with red-rimmed eyes? Remember the baggy looking knees in mens’ suits? Remember all night prayer meetings? Remember the depth that was in worship? Remember when sinners couldn’t sit in their pews any longer, and would run to the altar? Remember when you could feel unity and brotherly love? When folks helped bear one another’s burdens? When the saints didn’t watch the clock? When they could hardly wait to enjoy the after service atmosphere, praying around the altar until the wee hours of the morning? Boy, those were to good old days. We call that “Old School.”

Well, it’s pretty much all gone now. But you ought to see our new Hammond C-3, our new drum set with a cage and everything. Electric bass guitars are just awesome and the electric guitars, too. We use praise singers to help cover up the fact that our congregations don’t sing like they should or used to. We let them do most of our worship for us. Our choirs just do terrific on the new style songs. Old saints don’t like the new songs much, but the younger crowd seems to like them. Many music directors don’t even know some of your old favorite songs, so they don’t get played much anywhere.

You would be proud of our church buildings. Carpet on the floors, there are pews now instead of benches and they are padded besides. The arched beams are beautiful; we also have the loveliest of imported chandeliers. Our pastor has polish too. He doesn’t preach long. We are more concerned about sermon length now, than content. Our pastor spices up his sermons with cute sayings but I guess that’s progress for you. “Win some, lose some.”

Speaking of “lose some,” we’re losing a surprising percentage of our young people. An unbelievable number of marriages have gone on the rocks. Many lives have been in jeopardy. But that’s to be expected, I guess. Teenagers seem to be at war with their parents and want to dress more and more like the kids at the public school. Our youth meetings may not have much in the way of prayer, but we have great icebreakers, skits and games.

No Offense Intended
I hope you’re not offended. I don’t mean for you to be. You’ll always have a special place in my memory. You were kind and generous to me. You sure got me out of some hard times. I can’t thank you enough! Still, this is a generation now that doesn’t know you at all. Your coming would probably scare them.

Remember the night when my mother sat at the piano bench and you joined her there?

Remember how she wept and groaned in the Spirit and slumped to the floor during the revival service and how some tried to call the ambulance because they thought she was sick? They never knew you and her were talking.

That’s what I mean. A good many never got to know you well. And most never knew you at all. Those that knew you personally have waited so long to talk to you that they are now, to say the least, embarrassed.

So while we are trying to work out our feelings about you, and see where you might fit into our plans in the future, you might try your luck someplace else. Try Brazil, Ethiopia, or how about the Philippines? You might have better luck in Third World Countries, or behind the Iron Curtain. You might even luck out and find someone to talk to you in some little storefront on the other side of the tracks. Surely someone somewhere needs you.

We’re terribly sorry, Intercessory Prayer, we miss you, but we really don’t need you . . . right now!

© 2008, Martyn Ballestero Sr.

Friday, July 11, 2008

When the Power Breaks Forth

God wants Spirit-filled Christians to have an impact on the world around us and He has equipped us with everything we need – that is the power of the Holy Spirit. We must recognise that before God can use us in the way that He plans, there must be a breaking of the outward man so that the inward man can come forth. Our ineffectiveness as Spirit-fill Christians is not the fault of someone else, but it is our fault. Our Spirit seems to he wrapped in a covering so that it cannot easily break forth.

Nature has its way of breaking. Jesus said "Except the grain of wheat falling into the ground die, it abides alone; but if it die, it bears much fruit" (John 12). I remember watching seeds grow when I was at school. The outer shell of the seed had to be broken before the life could come forth. In John 12, Jesus is clearly saying that unless we are broken we are of no use.

“But we have this treasure in earthen vessels, that the excellency of the power may be of God, and not of us” (2 Corinthians 4:7). So the treasure is in the earthen vessel, but if the earthen vessel is not broken, who can see the treasure within?

What is the final objective of the Lord's working in our lives? It is to break this earthen vessel, to break our alabaster box, to crack open our shell so that the Power can break forth. It is the Spirit that quickeneth; the flesh profiteth nothing (John 6:63).

That’s my five minutes!

Tuesday, July 8, 2008

Releasing the Spirit


The greatest hindrance to the release of the Spirit in our lives is the flesh! That is, to reach out potential as Spirit-filled Christians we must die to the grasp of the flesh.

In studying the topic of “brokenness” I came across a very interesting story and an ancient temple in Asia. Anthropologists found an altar area that was literally buried under shards of smashed pottery. Further research revealed that the people in that region were pottery makers who regularly sacrificed the fruit of their craft to their god. Having created their masterpieces, that work which stood to gain them the most fame and profit, the craftsmen would take the vessels into the temple and smash them to pieces before their stone god. The broken fragments were mute testimony that, in sacrificial worship, the craftsmen had given up all hope of gain from the vessels.

What a perfect picture of what God calls us to be as Spirit-filled Christians. Hudson Taylor called it the “exchanged life” – the life that is indeed “no longer I, but Christ that livetth in me”. Only when we are broken on the altar of the Living God can we know the power of His life in and through us! Acts 1:8 says that we receive power when we are filled with the Holy Spirit. The scriptures go further to say that we have that power to be witnesses. That is, we are filled with the Holy Spirit to show forth – to witness. God expects there to be a release of the Spirit that testifies and witnesses to others!

What stops this release of the Spirit – it is the flesh! It is because of the flesh that many are not where God wants them to be, not reaching their God-ordained destiny or purpose and not serving God as they have been called – a recipe for frustration.

I am not saying that if you aren’t filled with the Holy Spirit and I am not saying that you aren’t saved. I am simply saying that you aren’t where God wants you to be, you aren’t what God wants you to be and you aren’t doing what God wants you to do.

There is just one basic thing that will enable man to be useful before God: brokenness. We’ll explore “brokenness” further, but for the meantime…..



That’s my five minutes!