Thursday, February 10, 2005
Great & Mighty Things
Over the last month or so, I've been spending a lot of time focused on two different verses that are intertwined in unique way: Jeremiah 33:3 and Proverbs 6:30-31.Since my last post had to deal with the 'love of money', I felt that now would be an excellent opportunity to show that God is not against us having money and that's not what I was attempting to say. Hopefully that came through in the post, but I believe that these two verses can illustrate this point even better than I may be able to.
In Jer. 33:3, we find that we are commanded to request that He show us great and mighty things that we do not already know. In other words, God is commanding us to search for mysteries because He wants to share them with us. God doesn't want us to be operating blind, He wants us to be active participants with Him in understanding how the spiritual world works and the only way to do that is by seeking Him and asking Him to reveal these hidden things to us.
Well, it was pointed out to me that Prov. 6:30-31 contained a hidden mystery that most of us tend to gloss right over, at least I know I did.
"Men do not despise a thief, if he steal to satisfy his soul when he is hungry;
"But if he be found, he shall restore sevenfold; he shall give all the substance of his house."
KJV
Who is the thief? Is this just a different version of Aesop's fables that was first told by Solomon? Or is this something that can apply to us in this modern age of technology? If it is, how would we apply it?
Well, the first answer is that it is not just another fable that doesn't apply to us, nothing in the Bible has just one meaning. There are always new insights that we can glean, if we allow the Lord to reveal the hidden things to us.
In this case, because I am a child of God's the thief is the enemy (you know, Satan, the devil, etc.) and the reason we know this to be the case is a matter of deductive reasoning. We know that Satan goes around as roaring lion seeking whom he may destroy (I Peter 5:8) and that Satan seeks to steal, kill and destroy (John 10:10).
In the second passage, John 10:10, we also notice that Satan is referred to as the thief, just as he is in Prov. 6:30-31.
Now that we have established that Satan is the thief in question, we can rightly deduct that he can not kill or destroy us, because he doesn't have God's permission to do so. (Job 1:6-12 is a situation where we learn that Satan still has access to God, so that he can accuse us and be the prosecuting attorney in the case against us being allowed into heaven.) However, if we have allowed Satan an access point through our spiritual armour, then he will have the ability to steal from us.
At least that's what was exposed in my life. However, because I have been made aware of the fact that 'the thief' has been stealing from me, I am able to go back through my life and pinpoint exact situations and circumstances where he has been able to steal the future, both financial and otherwise, right from underneath my feet.
Now for the victory! Because of the promise in Proverbs 6:31, I now have the ability, through the power God gives each of His children, to demand that Satan, the thief, return sevenfold what he stole from me PLUS the substance of his household!
For me personally, this covers a period of about 15+ years of my life, a string of jobs that I was unable to work for more than 12 months, a number of businesses that I started and was never successful at, a number of business and athletic opportunities that never panned out (seemingly for one reason or another, now I know that they were all the same reason), and a handful of personal relationships that fell apart for reasons that I never seemed to understand.
I'm currently compiling a worksheet of damages and over the next few weeks, I will be bringing it before the Lord, seeking His face and asking that He show me what to demand as sevenfold retribution, as well as what to demand as the substance of the enemy's household!
While I believe bygones are bygones with regards to the personal relationships, I do believe that this final step of healing is necessary before I am able to move forward into the next relationships in each of these areas. Those who know me, know that I have been able to forgive the individuals involved in each of these relationships that were stolen from me, but it is my belief, now that I know what was occuring spiritually, that I must finally gain the right measure of retribution from the enemy, before I can truly move forward.
This is especially true, because I have not been able to enter into a new relationship with anyone in these areas of my life. While I don't feel that that is a complaint, I know that wounds must be healed before growth can occur and that's all I'm seeking in this case.
Right now however, I'm heading for bed. I have a long weekend coming up, starting tomorrow, and on Sunday I'll be fasting for the team that's traveling through Europe. I chose to fast on Sunday, because that's my number, #13, and because of the location the team will be in on that day. It's the home of one of the sports clubs I used to follow as a kid. Although I was privileged to travel to that country when I was in high school, I didn't get the opportunity to go to the city in question.
Now, 8 years later, I get to fast and pray instead. Hallelujah!
Tuesday, February 08, 2005
The Love of Money Explained
My reading this morning was in Hebrews. I'll write another post later regarding a couple of other scriptures in Hebrews that caught my eye, but right now I want to focus on Hebrews 13:5-6.We all grew up thinking that we knew the passage about "the love of money is the root of all evil", but let me share with you what the writer says here in Hebrews.
"Keep your lives free from the love of money and be content with what you have, because God has said, ?Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you.?[a] 6So we say with confidence, ?The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid. What can man do to me??[b]"
NIV
"Let your conversation be without covetousness; and be content with such things as ye have: for he hath said, I will never leave thee, nor forsake thee.
6So that we may boldly say, The Lord is my helper, and I will not fear what man shall do unto me."
King James Version
Finally, let me share what I read in my Bible this morning that struck me as so amazing:
"Keep your lives free from the love of money, and be satisfied with what you have.
For God has said, "I will never leave you; I will never abandon you.?
6Let us be bold, then, and say: "The Lord is my helper; I will not be afraid. What can anyone do to me?"
Good News Bible
Did you catch that? While God commands us to live lives free from the love of money, we always leave off the second half of the verse: "I will never leave you; I will never abandon you."
No wonder so many, including me, have trouble allowing God to move in our lives. Instead we try to legislate how much money we believe God owes us. It doesn't work that way.
Focus on God, be satisfied with what we have, both in the present and what God has laid before us to accomplish in the future, and God will always be with us. He will always make sure that we have what is necessary to live.
Most-times, that will include enough to give an offering, above and beyond our tithes, but that's a discussion for another day.
Today, we need to focus on God, instead of trying not to love money.
Sunday, February 06, 2005
Distractions Abound
Feb. 6th, 200514:19
Distractions abound
All around
Frustration rises up
As I cry for help
It seems as though
I may not know
The whys and
Wherefors, even
Though my mind
Stumbles blind
Into the hows
It still won't show
What the Lord
Seeks on my accord
Excuses instead, so
I must learn to go
Before Him in
Total desperation
Seeking His heart
Will be my part
Then I can
Begin to understand
His plan to restore
What the devourer
Sought to steal
Now He will heal
And return sevenfold,
Substance of his household
Since I have found
The enemy is bound
And I am restored,
Thanks be the Lord.
Based on Proverbs 6:30-31
Tuesday, January 25, 2005
My Church
If you're curious as to the church I attend, it's The Father's Church, which is located in Dallas, TX.After having grown up in a much larger church, I was invited to attend TFC before it became what it is now. At the time, I was in college in Dallas, and lacked transportation to my parent's church, but that was God's plan.
After I left school, I returned to my parent's church one last time and came to the realization that the Lord wanted me to make TFC my church. Although we've gone through a lot of upheaval, I thank the Lord that He placed me in TFC as I know that I would not otherwise be as receptive to what the Lord has done, is doing and will continue to do in TFC and in me.
Having grown up visiting large numbers of churchs all over the world and hearing many different men (and women) of God speak, I believe that Pastor Crawford is as close to a direct conduit from the Lord for this present time, as I could ever be under the authority of. For that reason, among many others, I feel in awe of the Lord that He would require me to be a part of TFC.
Praise the Lord!