Beyond Measure

I answered the king, “If it pleases the king and if your servant has found favor in his sight, let him send me to the city in Judah where my ancestors are buried so that I can rebuild it.” (Nehemiah 2:5)
The book of Nehemiah takes place during a time of exile and captivity for the Jewish people. Nehemiah, the Jewish cupbearer to the Persian King Artaxerxes, successfully petitions to take a group back to Jerusalem to rebuild the city walls after hearing they are in disrepair. King Artaxerxes not only allowed Nehemiah to return to Jerusalem, he even agreed to a request for supplies (Nehemiah 2:8). From what we know of Artaxerxes heritage, this is hard to understand. What made him sympathetic to the plight of the Jewish homeland, even to the point of providing resources? 

The books of Nehemiah and Esther actually appear in reverse order in our Bible. God raised Esther, a young Jewish maiden, to the throne of Persia as queen. Esther’s son is believed to be the Artaxerxes of the opening chapters of Nehemiah. This brutal, heathen king gave the command for Nehemiah to return to Jerusalem to build up the walls of the city. Artaxerxes’ sympathy for the Jews probably had a lot to do with Esther’s witness, influence and integrity.

Apparently there was much “more” to Esther’s mission than the initial saving of the Jewish people from extinction recorded in the Book of Esther. Esther — as an instrument of God’s grace — was sent to the throne of Persia and so moved the heart of her son the king, that he allowed Nehemiah, his cupbearer, to return to Jerusalem. Then Nehemiah began the work of rebuilding the city of Jerusalem.

**In a sense, the rebuilding of Jerusalem is just as much Esther’s legacy as it is Nehemiah’s.**

This observation thrills me beyond measure. There is always so much more than we can imagine when we share in God’s plans for us! He is definitely the God of “more”!

Father, thank you that when I give my will to your plans they surpass all that I ever dreamed or hoped for. Please open my mind to see beyond my capacity. Reveal to me “the unsearchable things of God” (Jeremiah 33:3) and bring light to those “treasures hidden in the darkness”(Isaiah 45:3). May I run and finish my race beyond all human expectation. Father, free me to your expectations.
In Jesus’ name I pray, 
Amen

Masking In Pride

Have this mind among yourselves, which is yours in Christ Jesus, who, though he was in the form of God, did not count equality with God a thing to be grasped, but made himself nothing, taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And being found in human form, he humbled himself by becoming obedient to the point of death, even death on a cross (Phil. 2:5–8).

 

C.S. Lewis said, “According to Christian teachers, the essential vice, the utmost evil, is Pride. Unchastity, anger, greed, drunkenness, and all that, are mere flea bites in comparison: it was through Pride that the devil became the devil: Pride leads to every other vice: it is the complete anti-God state of mind…
… it is Pride which has been the chief cause of misery in every nation and every family since the world began.

 If this sounds like exaggeration, it will help us to know that Lewis is not simply giving us his private opinion but summarizing the thinking of great saints through the ages. The desire to lift up and exalt ourselves beyond our place as God’s creature lies at the heart of pride. Weakened by unbelief, enticed by pride, and ensnared by self-deception, Adam and Eve opted for autonomy and disobeyed God’s command. In just a few deft moves, the devil was able to use pride to bring about Adam and Eve’s downfall and plunge the human race into spiritual ruin. This ancient but all-too-familiar process confronts each of us daily: “Each person is tempted when he is lured and enticed by his own desire. Then desire when it has conceived gives birth to sin, and sin when it is fully grown brings forth death” (James 1:14–15).

As people lose or suppress the knowledge of God, spiritual darkness grows and in their thinking God becomes smaller and they become larger. The center of gravity in their mental lives shifts from God to themselves. They become the center of their world, and God is conveniently moved to the periphery, either through denial of his existence or distortion of his character. Self-importance and godless self-confidence grow stronger. The cycle that follows is familiar: people exalt themselves against God and over others. Pride increases, arrogant and/or abusive behavior ensues, and people suffer.

The well-known story of the Pharisee and the Tax Collector can help us recognize our own spiritual pride. It tells of a much-despised tax collector and a self-righteous Pharisee who went up to the temple to pray. The Pharisee proceeds to commend himself to God because of his careful observance of the law and to look down with scornful contempt on the sinful tax collector. “God, I thank you that I am not like other men, extortioners, unjust, adulterers, or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a week; I give tithes of all that I get.” Notice in his prayer that his focus is not really on God at all but on how good he is and how bad others are. Here is pride wrapped in the cloak of religion and giving it a bad name. The tax collector is so painfully aware of his sins and unworthiness before God that he cannot even lift his eyes as he stands in the back of the temple, far from the altar. Pounding his breast in sorrowful contrition over his sins, he can manage only the desperate plea, “God, be merciful to me, a sinner.” C.S. Lewis said, “Pride is spiritual cancer: it eats up the very possibility of love, or contentment, or even common sense”.

If your pride causes you to exalt yourself, you are painting a target on your back and inviting God to open fire. And he will. For He has declared his determination to bring it low wherever he finds it, whether among angels or humans, believers or unbelievers. However, chances are good that most of us do not see pride in our lives. While it is easy to see pride in others, it is very difficult to see it in ourselves. C. S. Lewis says, “If you want to find out how proud you are, the easiest way is to ask yourself, ‘How much do I dislike it when other people snub me, or refuse to take any notice of me, or shove their oar in, or patronise me, or show off?” Perhaps we are better off to earnestly seek God in prayer and ask him to reveal to us any sinful pride in our lives so we can repent and forsake it. Pride is a universal human problem. Everyone suffers from it to some degree. When we have exalted ourselves in pride, God does not want to punish us and bring us low but rather to forgive and restore us. He says again and again in Scripture, humble yourselves, and I will exalt you. This gives us hope and encouragement. God takes pleasure in our efforts to humble ourselves, and he loves to bless and exalt the humble. For just as pride is the root of all sin, so humility is the root, mother, nurse, foundation, and bond of all virtue.

Father, forgive me for exalting myself in pride. May I live my life as a servant like you did.

Take Courage, Testify

“The following night the Lord stood near Paul and said, ‘Take courage! As you have testified about me in Jerusalem, so you must also testify in Rome.’”           Acts 23:11

 

Paul had endured great suffering and was about to endure much more at the hands of his own people. The Pharisees and Sanhedrin were conspiring to kill him, and he would never fulfill his plan to testify in Rome. But the word of the Lord came to Paul, “Take Courage, you will testify in Rome!”

 

Here’s what the Lord didn’t say: He didn’t say, “I know you are weary, give it up and go home”. He didn’t say, “I know you are suffering, I know you miss your family, I know the Pharisees want to kill you, I know many of your friends and loved ones have died, I know it seems impossible, I know you’ll be crucified in Rome; therefore, stop testifying about me and go home.” He said, “ Take COURAGE, don’t quit, stay the mission, TESTIFY!”

 

Today, despite our circumstance, be it weariness, illness, loss of a loved one, or whatever it may be, “Take COURAGE and TESTIFY”. For the most part, as Christians, we spend over 95% of our time supporting other believers. Don’t get me wrong, supporting Christians is a good thing, but are we intentionally positioning ourselves to reach those who don’t know Christ? Are we boldly reaching out to people we don’t know, people of differing cultures, young and old alike? So many people have not yet heard the Gospel and are dying daily in their hopelessness, lost for eternity. The Lord is saying to each of us, “Take COURAGE, I’m not finished with you yet. My plans will prevail. TESTIFY about me. Testify about my great love. Be bold, affirm my gospel to everyone you meet. Take COURAGE and TESTIFY!”

The King’s Gate

“But Mordecai went only as far as the king’s gate, because no one clothed in sackcloth was allowed to enter it. “(Esther 4:2)

 
Mordecai was among the first to hear of the horrifying royal decree by the King… that all Mordecai’s people were to be brutally attacked and killed, that not one person was to be left alive. Imagine the horror, an entire people group wiped from the face of the earth. Mordecai’s grief was overwhelming. He tore his clothes and put on sackcloth and ashes, and went out into the midst of the city. He cried out with a loud and bitter cry. He wailed aloud in the city right up to the “King’s gate”. However, not allowed to enter the gate in his present state, dressed in his garb of woe, he remained outside. No one was allowed to give the king any occasion of grief or trouble. Nothing and no one was allowed to dampen the pleasure of the king.

Thankfully, we serve a king who doesn’t care what we’re wearing or how discomforting our wailing cries; we can always enter the gate to Him. Today I am praying and crying out for my Syrian friends and their families in Aleppo, who are literally being wiped out by war and destruction! May they enter His gate.

 
Jesus is the approachable king, ready and willing to heal our wounds and mend the broken-hearted. He is an ever-present and loving Father. Look to Jesus. Trusting in Kings or men will inevitably leave you standing at the gate.

Forgive And Live

“Yet having learned who Mordecai’s people were, he scorned the idea of killing only Mordecai. Instead Haman looked for a way to kill all Mordecai’s people, throughout the whole kingdom.”(Esther 3:6)

Anger is quick to become a stronghold in our life and, like Haman, if left unchecked, will grow well beyond it’s beginnings.Haman’s hatred grew beyond his desire to kill one man, to a brutal desire to destroy an entire race of people! Anger and unforgiveness had become a stronghold in Haman’s life. His unforgiveness, like a deadly poison, was consuming him.

There is so much talk of hate and unforgiveness in our world today. We hate this, we hate that, we hate readily and freely, not thinking much of the consequences or the power of such a remark. Yet, people need loving the most, when they deserve it the least. If Jesus had waited until His enemies repented He’d never have prayed on the cross: “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do” (Luke 23:34). Sure, it’s easier to forgive when others acknowledge their offense. But if that’s a prerequisite, you may never experience victory! Forgiveness, is God’s way OF life and God’s way TO life. So for your own sake, forgive, take back your life, and begin walking in the blessing of the Lord. If we close our hearts to forgiveness, then we close our hearts to God!

When Hope Seems Hopeless

It’s always a blessing to return home and embrace the love and comfort of friends and family. Yet today my heart is turned toward those we recently visited in Turkey and on the Syrian border; those who have lost their homes, their spouses, their sons, their daughters and all that they know. Shattered by the chaos of war and blinded by the pain and fear that encircles them, their hearts and minds are full of unanswered questions as they cry out in desperation to God.
 Sometimes in the midst of so much pain and suffering , it may seem difficult to know just where to begin or how to pray. And yet we soon recognize a deep ache in our hearts that cries out for God’s mercy, and a longing to see him heal His people and to gather the nations of the earth to himself. God is faithful no matter how we feel or how much confusion and chaos swirls around us in many of the nations today. 
May we stand together and pray for God to heal the nations, and strengthen His people. May we pray for all those in authority. May we pray for blind eyes to be opened, for many to see the power of our Lord as never before. IMG_0026

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For times when it is difficult to know what to pray, we can trust these words as a place to begin, “The Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know what to pray as we should, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words.” (Romans 8:26
) We are never left alone fending for ourselves, wrestling in worry, consumed with fear, or tempted towards hate. He continually reminds us that He is always with us. He reminds us that He will help us. He reminds us that He has not lost control, but has a plan, and that His purposes will prevail.
He hears our prayers and knows our needs. There’s great power in uniting together, turning our hearts towards our Lord, and praying on behalf of one another.IMG_0801

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Remembering today this powerful truth that God is where our real hope is found, not in our leaders, not in our economy, not in the condition of the nations today, or any other day. “…my hope comes from Him.” Psalm 62:5

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May that same hope fill the hearts of the people of Turkey and Syria.

May that same hope fill the hearts of all people, of all nations, of all the earth.

(Revelation 5:13) Then I heard every creature in heaven and on earth and under the earth and on the sea, and all that is in them, saying: “To him who sits on the throne and to the Lamb be praise and honor and glory and power, forever and ever!”IMG_0978

I Am Who He Is

Lots of fear, worry, anxiety and other issues in this life…When life seems to press in on all sides, frequently the black mold of our heart surfaces. What do I mean by black mold ?
Things like insecurity, fear, anxiety, worry, to name a few.
At times like these we can become moody, withdraw, complain and become critical. Or maybe we just keep our mouths shut and stuff it like the good little Christians we sometimes mask ourselves to be. When things get too much for us we cry out to God and blubber questions like, “Where are you God? Do you love me? Am I enough? Will You get me out of this mess? Do I have worth and value? Do I matter?” After we’ve laid it all out before Him, whenever we take time to listen, in His mercy, God’s still small voice begins speaking to us about our identity and who we are in Him. Identity is an incredibly complex mix of culture, generation, career, country, religion, and more. As Christians, our identity overrides this complexity because it is firmly and permanently rooted in Christ. We simply stand on His promises and believe what they tell us about ourselves.

• I am loved by God.
• I am chosen and adopted by God.
• I am perfectly and wonderfully made by God.
• I am a child of God.

As we begin to declare those promises, a wave of truth slams us, and quickly silences our moldy thoughts.

When God told Moses at the burning bush, “I Am who I Am” (Exodus 3:14).

Think about what that means. It means…

“God is the only One whose identity is not rooted in any other.”

Imagine that! He is His own root. And thankfully, our identity is rooted in Him! We are His image bearers. Our roots are in Him.

He is love. He is peace. He is truth. He is our rock – our firm, unshakable foundation in which we place our identity. Jesus, fully man and fully God, lived his 33 years on earth with perfect knowledge and understanding of his identity and an unwavering purpose of why he was here. He faced betrayal from his closest friends, hatred from the religious leaders, and shame from the public to rescue his people and to declare His glory to the world.
Therefore… we turn our gaze to the One from whom our identity stems.
We rest in the conviction that we are loved because the One who loves us “is” Love and He “Cannot” lie and He “Is” unchanging.
He is …

“I Am who I Am”

The Good News….

Rooted in Him so are WE!

                                                                    …praying for you all my friends

 (Was doing some reading today and decided to do a rewrite of my readings with a few excerpts)

Acts Of Ethiopia

Recently on our trip to Ethiopia I was invited to speak at a huge church (1000 members) and to share the vision of Indestructible Daughters that God has laid on my heart. It is a message of unity for men and women using their gifts together in the fullness of God for His ultimate glory. It is His message that is touching the hearts of women and men to not shrink back from hindrances dictated by systems,and to work in power together to complete the work God has given us to do…Isaiah 52:2 “Free the chains from your neck oh captive daughter.” Walk in the fullness of God!

I have been speaking this message only to women but lately God continues to position me with more opportunity to share His vision with men and women alike. Seeing their faces and watching men bless their wives with freedom to be all they can be through Christ is overwhelming.

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After sharing and teaching at a church planters training in a very sensitive area in another city of Ethiopia near the Somalian border, several men shared how convicted they were and how they plan to empower and encourage their wives, sisters, mothers, and daughters to use the gifting God has planted in them to the fullest. Bruce introduced me and shared about gifting through God and the differences in our gifts and how we minister together. Even more amazing is that this was a room of men sharing in a very sensitive area of Ethiopia. The fact that they would receive such a teaching and then declare it publicly could only be God! He is the author of vision. He is the author of unity. May we all work together as His children, in full authority for the glory of God!

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Please pray for these men and women. May their power together multiply to fulfill the work of the kingdom! Blessings on Ethiopia, blessings on the nations of God!

Please keep us in your prayers as we have you in our prayers also.

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Miraculous Movements

How do the people most resistant to the transformative power of the gospel come to be its most devoted followers? Miraculous Movement recounts an amazing change taking place within Muslim communities where the truth of Jesus Christ is turning around the lives of many thousands of Muslims from more than twenty people groups. Discover through the sometimes humorous, often sobering, but always enlightening and encouraging true stories how imams, sheikhs, and entire mosques are forsaking Islam and embracing Christ.

 

The Power Of One

In the 14th year of Hezekiah,  Sennacharib, the great and terrible King of Assyria came up against all the fortified cities of Judah and took them. Jerusalem was left isolated against hundreds of thousands of armed Assyrian soldiers. The scene in Jerusalem … a frightened people, a prophet named Isaiah, and a praying king.

First King Hezekiah, trembling with fear, sent word to Isaiah to intercede and pray for the people. Even so, eventually the threat continued. Then Hezekiah went straight to God himself, pleading, and crying out before him.

This is the response the Lord gave Hezekiah:

“Because you have prayed to me …I will defend this city to save it, for My own sake and for the sake of My servant David” (Isaiah 37).

Now the tremendously important point of this story is seen in the words of Isaiah 37:21-22Because you have prayed to Me concerning Sennacharib, King of Assyria.…”

Because you have prayed!

Because you have prayed, 185,000 enemy soldiers lie dead on the plains of Judah.

Just think of it!

Hezekiah, because you have prayed, the strongest king in the known world is gone—off the scene of history. Hezekiah, because you have prayed, the witness of My covenant love and My zeal for My name has spread throughout the nations.

All because one man prayed!

 

My friends just think of the power we have through God’s Spirit…

Because one man prays!

Because one woman prays!

Because one child prays!

Such power!