Thursday, December 4, 2014

You are fearfully and wonderfully made


You are fearfully and wonderfully made.

 

Psalm 119:73 (WEB)

Your hands have made me and formed me.
Give me understanding, that I may learn your commandments.

I created you with My own hands.


The psalmist declares that God's own hands created him. What a glorious thought! It makes me think of the tender creation process when our God and Father formed Adam out of the dust of the earth. If God did indeed create each one of us the same way, then God must see each one of us as His work of art!


In Ephesians 2:10, the KJV Bible says... For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus unto good works, which God hath before ordained that we should walk in them. (KJV) The NLT says that we are God's masterpiece. What a blessed thought!



 

Psalm 139:14

I will give thanks to you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.
Your works are wonderful. My soul knows that very well.

This is one of my favorite scriptures.


God uniquely created each one of us with His own hands. This is a declaration from King David that he was the handywork of the living God and that he was fearfully and wonderfully made.

Can you say the same thing about your life? Can you look in the mirror and with a joy-filled heart declare to God ... "I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made!!!!!" When most people look in a mirror, they only see their imperfections. Even the most popular celebrities and professional models obsess over the smallest of flaws.

In the Great Commandment, Jesus tells us that we are to love God with all our heart, all our mind and all our strength... and to love our neighbors as we love ourselves. Loving ourselves from God's perspective is not narcissism but rather just agreeing with how God sees us... We are fearfully and wonderfully made!

In some Christian circles, self-hatred can be seen as a form of humility. I personally do not believe that this brings joy to our Father's heart. If He says that we are fearfully and wonderfully made, who are we to disagree with the living God

 
My prayer is that each and every one of us would know that we are all a one of a kind masterpiece that can never be replaced in the sight of our Father. May faith rise up in our hearts today. I will give thanks to you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made.

Wednesday, December 3, 2014

I WAS DISTRACTED


LAST CHRISTMAS I WAS DISTRACTED AS I OFTEN AM DURING the holidays. Every year I say I’m going to get better about scaling back so I can really keep my focus where it needs to be for the season. I have moments where I do this well. But I have other moments that are just plain pitiful.

 

Honestly, I can be an utter nincompoop.

 

I was rushing about, frustrated. I went to Target for wrapping paper and somehow left the store having spent ninety-seven dollars on who knows what. Then got all the way home before I realized I left the wrapping paper on that little shelf underneath the shopping cart. At checkout I didn’t remember to grab it and purchase it. So all my moments of trying to match this and that to keep up with expectations in this Pinterest-crazed world were all for nothing. Now I’d be using recycled bags

 

I was so caught up in the rush of superficial things in my world that I missed

hearing the cries for help in someone else’s world. God had been prompting me to listen, really listen, to stop and focus and give him just a few minutes. But I refused. I rushed past. And I acted like I was perfectly justified in doing so.

 

When all of life feels like an urgent rush from one demand to another, we become forgetful. We forget simple things like where we put our car keys or that one crucial ingredient for dinner when we run into the grocery store. But even more disturbing, we forget God. We say with our mouths that we are trusting and relying on God, but are we really?

 

A quick check to see if this is true is our ability to notice what God wants us

to notice and our willingness to participate when God invites us to

participate. The one who obeys God’s instruction for today will develop a keen awareness of His direction for tomorrow. I’m always asking God for direction, but I’ll miss it if I constantly ignore His instruction.

 

It’s in those little breaks in our companionship with God where confusion sets in about what we’re really supposed to do. we must not confuse the command to love with the disease to please? Not being able to hear God’s direction is the exact spot where this confusion gets so many of us in trouble.

 

Have you ever heard that amazing verse from Isaiah “that says, “Whether you turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you, saying, ‘This is the way; walk in it’ ” (30:21)? I love this verse! I want it to be true for me! I want my ears to hear God say,

 

“This is the way; walk in it.”

I want that with every fiber of my being. Don’t you? Can you imagine how much angst and pain we could save ourselves if we were really that in tune with God?

 

This is what the Sovereign LORD, the Holy One of Israel, says:

 

“In repentance and rest is your salvation,

in quietness and trust is your strength,

but you would have none of it.

You said, ‘No, we will flee on horses.’

Therefore you will flee!

You said, ‘We will ride off on swift horses.’

Therefore your pursuers will be swift!

A thousand will flee”

At the threat of one;

at the threat of five

you will all flee away,

till you are left

like a flagstaff on a mountaintop,

like a banner on a hill.”

Yet the LORD longs to be gracious to you;

therefore he will rise up to show you compassion.

For the LORD is a God of justice.

Blessed are all who wait for him! (30:15–18)

 

Right here the Amplified Bible adds blessed are those “who [earnestly] wait for Him, who expect and look and long for Him [for His victory, His favor, His love, His peace, His joy, and His matchless, unbroken companionship]!” (v. 18). Who doesn’t love that?

 

You turn to the right or to the left, your ears will hear a voice behind you,

saying, “This is the way; walk in it.” Then you will desecrate your idols

overlaid with silver and your images covered with gold; you will throw them away like a menstrual cloth and say to them, “Away with you!” (vv. 19–22)

 

This is how God is speaking to me through these scriptures.

 

• God asks us to return and rest.

• But we say no and speed on our own course.

(Remember the rush can often make us rebellious.)

• The Lord is gracious and shows us loving-kindness even while we run ourselves

ragged.

• He hears our cries. He answers with compassion.

• Yes, there are consequences for our refusal to listen, but there’s always a second chance to experience that unbroken companionship when we wait expectantly for Him—or, as the Amplified Bible says, when we look and long for Him.

• So He whispers, “Say hi to her; pick up that cup; have those girls over for

dinner. Look for Me. Long for Me “Experience unbroken companionship with Me.Then we will see and hear Him.

• And these other idols we’re so bent on chasing—anything we prioritize over God—we’ll be able to let them go.

 

Do I do this perfectly? Obviously not. If we want to hear from the Lord, we must confess that sometimes we walk right past the Lord’s instruction and set ourselves up to miss His direction. If we want His direction for our decisions, the great cravings of our souls must not only be the big moments of assignment. They must also be the seemingly small instructions in the most ordinary of moments when God points His Spirit finger saying, Go there. And in doing that, we are companions of God with eyes and ears more open, more able, more.

Tuesday, October 7, 2014

It is good to receive


 

Even so, I have noticed one thing, at least, that is good. It is good for people to eat, drink, and enjoy their work under the sun during the short life God has given them, and to accept their lot in life. And it is a good thing to receive wealth from God and the good health to enjoy it. To enjoy your work and accept your lot in life-this is indeed a gift from God. God keeps such people so busy enjoying life that they take no time to brood over the past" (Ecclesiastes 5:18-20 NLT).

So what does this mean to you today? I will once again focus on the phrase "It is a good thing to receive wealth from God and the good health to enjoy it."

1. You cannot manipulate God. While I am 100% convinced that sickness and poverty are not from God, I am equally convinced that we don't get to tell God what to do. If you got to tell God what to do, then you would be God's God, and let me assure you that you are not. So you cannot spot a Rolls Royce and then magically say, "God, I command you to give me a Rolls Royce." Or, "God, you said you would give me the desires of my heart. My desire is for a yacht. Therefore, I receive a yacht by faith, in Jesus' name." Once again, faith is not about you telling God what to do. Faith is not about you attempting to get God to put a yes on your plans. Faith is about submission and surrender. Faith is about God attempting to get you to put a yes on His plans. God will freely give you everything you need to accomplish His Kingdom plans and purposes in the earth. Millions or billions are nothing to God. Solomon was a billionaire. But just remember that God is not your servant and He is not obligated to give you everything you come up with to satisfy your selfish desires. Don't pursue things. Pursue "your thing" (your purpose) and things will pursue you.

2. You minister to others out of your overflow. Jesus got up every morning focused on the Father and open to do whatever the Father led Him to do that day. This led to a life of purpose and service. Jesus spent His days ministering to the needs of others. Here's my point: Jesus could not spend His time focused on others if He was personally struggling. I am not going to be focused on allowing God to use me to be a blessing to another marriage if my marriage is falling apart. It will be hard for me to hear from God in order to help someone else with their children, if I am 'pulling my hair out' because of my own kids. I probably won't be apt or open to helping someone out financially if I cannot pay my own bills. Jesus ministered out of His overflow; meaning that His needs were met and He was free to be a blessing to others. He could minister peace, because He had overwhelming peace. He could minister love, because He was love personified. He could minister healing, because He was not sick or bedridden Himself. Guess what? Jesus said we would do what He did and even greater works (John 14:12). That's why God is not opposed to giving us more than we need. When we have more than we need we are prime candidates to be used of God to be a blessing. If you say, "All I want is enough for me." What you are saying to God is that you are only focused on yourself. God wants to bless you TO BE a blessing, but if you are only focused on yourself, you are too selfish to see the greater opportunity for God to impact the world through you.

3. The real answer to poverty is the Word, not money. In Luke 7 John the Baptist, Jesus' cousin, found himself in jail and he was upset that Jesus was not coming to get him. He sent his disciples to go and ask His cousin this question: "Are you the Messiah we've been expecting, or should we keep looking for someone else?" This is obviously a question birthed out of frustration, because John knew who Jesus was. But let's look at Jesus' response. Jesus said, "Go back to John and tell him what you have seen and heard-the blind see, the lame walk, the lepers are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised to life, and the Good News is being preached to the poor." Did you see it? Look again. Jesus always ministered the answers to life's problems. What did Jesus minister to the blind? The ability to see. What did Jesus minister to the lame? The ability to walk. What did Jesus minister to lepers? Clean skin. What did Jesus minister to the deaf? The ability to hear. What did Jesus minister to the dead? Resurrection/life. And what did Jesus minister to the poor? Your first response is probably to think it was money. But Jesus never gave the poor money. He ministered to their needs, but He did not give them money. Jesus gave them the WORD! He said, "The Good News is being preached to the poor", not money. You see, you can give a poor person money or meet their immediate need, but if you don't change their heart and mind, they will need the same hand out the next day. Jesus' answer to poverty is the Word. If we can get the Word down inside a person, then they will find their divine purpose and their purpose will lead them out of poverty.

 

 

Tuesday, September 30, 2014

God has the ability to do all that He has promised.

God has the ability to do all that He has promised.

20 Yet, looking to the promise of God, he didn’t waver through unbelief,
but grew strong through faith, giving glory to God,
21 and being fully assured that what he had promised, he was also able to perform. Romans 4:20-21 



This is an amazing picture of one man's simple faith in the faithfulness of his God. Just prior to these verses in Romans 4, Paul is talking about Abraham and how he hoped against hope in the face of impossible circumstances.

God had promised Abraham a son to be born by his 90 year old wife, Sarah. Though Abraham himself was nearing 100 years old, and his aged body was hardly in the right condition to have children, he believed what God had promised.

The NIV Bible says verses 20-21 this way... 20Yet he did not waver through unbelief regarding the promise of God, but was strengthened in his faith and gave glory to God, 21being fully persuaded that God had power to do what he had promised. (NIV)

Abraham didn't waver in his faith but was fully persuaded that God had the power to do all that He promised. Always remember that when God makes a promise to us, He has the power to perform what He has promised, no matter how impossible the circumstances!

Who would have thought that this simple act of faith by an old man and an old woman so many thousand of years ago would have such ripple effects throughout history! Because of Abraham's faith that God was who He said He was, we are reaping the benefits today.

What has God promised you? You never know what ripple effects there might be because of your simple obedience to believe that God has power to do all that He has promised! Don't waver through unbelief today, but believe with all your heart in the faithfulness and power of the One who made the promise.

Thursday, August 7, 2014

Divine purpose

 King Solomon, a man who had access to both divine wealth and divine wisdom, said this about wealth, health and life:


"Even so, I have noticed one thing, at least, that is good.  It is good for people to eat, drink, and enjoy their work under the sun during the short life God has given them, and to accept their lot in life.  And it is a good thing to receive wealth from God and the good health to enjoy it.  To enjoy your work and accept your lot in life-this is indeed a gift from God.  God keeps such people so busy enjoying life that they take no time to brood over the past" (Ecclesiastes 5:18-20 NLT).  


I want to focus in on the phrase "accept your lot in life".  Solomon uses this phrase twice and I will share a few nuggets from this point.


1.  You were born for a reason, that reason is your divine purpose, and you will never find true success in life until you discover and accept your purpose.


2.  Purpose cannot be developed, it must be discovered, because God developed it before the world began.


3.  True success can only be realized when your FIND, FOLLOW and FINISH your divine assignment.  Said another way, if you want to be successful in life you must DISCOVER, DEVELOP and then DEPLOY into your purpose.


4.  Running from your calling will not change your assignment.  Your calling will still be waiting on you when you are tired of running.


5.  Jeremiah thought he was too young for his assignment (to be a prophet), but God promised to put His words in Jeremiah's mouth.  Jeremiah simply needed to provide the mouth and God would fill it with the words.  Like Jeremiah, God will manifest provision for His vision for your life.  But like Jeremiah you must accept God's assignment, your "lot in life," in order to become successful.


6.  Gideon saw himself as the weakest man from the weakest clan in all of Israel.  God called him a champion, but he saw himself as a coward.  Gideon had to accept his assignment, his "lot in life," in order to become successful.  Once he did, he was converted and he led a mighty revolution.


7.  While the Apostle Paul was known as Saul of Tarsus he was on the opposite side of God's best for his life.  He was sincere, but sincerely wrong.  God revealed Himself to Saul and talked to him about his divine purpose.  Saul had to accept his assignment, his "lot in life," in order to find true success.  God converted him from Saul of Tarsus to the Apostle Paul and he went on to make the greatest impact in the first century church.


8.  God approached a young girl (Mary) who was engaged to be married and revealed her divine assignment to her.  She had been selected, completely by God's unearned grace, to be the mother of Jesus.  Mary had to accept her assignment, her "lot in life," in order to find true success in the fulfillment of her purpose.


9.  God delivered the nation of Israel from Egypt and He offered them the Promised Land, Canaan.  This was a land flowing with milk and honey.  But the nation of Israel believed the 10 doubting spies instead of the two believing ones.  They wound up putting a "NO" where God had already put a "YES."  They failed to accept their assignment, their "lot in life," and millions died in the wilderness because of it.


10.  The Rich Young Ruler received a great offer from Jesus.  He is the only man documented in scripture that Jesus said, "Follow me" to, who turned down the offer.  Jesus was offering this man a position as one of His disciples, but the man refused and walked away sad.  There is no telling what would have happened had he accepted the offer.  Don't do as he did.  Accept God's assignment for your life and walk out your divine purpose.  You will be glad you did.  


11.  Once you make an alignment with God's assignment for your life, you position yourself to have free and unfiltered access to God's grace to do would you could never be able to do on your own.




Friday, July 11, 2014

Submitting

To submit to another is seen by many as a negative idea. Everyone wants to be the leader. Nobody wants to be told what to do. But the reality for Christians is, submitting to God is the best thing for us!
Jesus acted on this truth as He walked in God’s will before going to the cross. In the garden of Gethsemane, Jesus struggled and wept over what was about to happen. Three times He pleaded with His Father for this suffering to be taken from Him. But He trusted His Father and submitted:“Nevertheless not My will, but Yours, be done” (Luke 22:42).
When you and I choose to become followers of Jesus, we must also submit to His authority. We are no longer the masters of our own lives. And that should be a cause for celebration because the Creator of the universe is now looking after us! While submitting might be difficult at times, God wants us to come to a place where we say, “I delight to do Your will, O my God” (Psalm 40:8).
Are you having trouble letting God take control of an area of your life? Submit to Him completely and you’ll receive the greatest blessing of all: that His perfect plan for you can be carried out in your life!


The Father says

The Father says today tap into the composure afforded you in Christ. The real you is never stressed out or extended beyond your measure. The real you is at one with Me. The real you is seated with Christ in heavenly places. The real you cannot be discouraged, defeated, dismayed or frightened in any way. I am THE rock therefore you are a rock. I am immovable therefore you are immovable. I am with you says the Father, fear not neither be dismayed.


Put on the FULLNESS of CHRIST today. Say within your heart "I shall ascend in worship and descend in warfare." Open your heart, spread the wings of your spirit and wend you way to the throne. The entitlements of the cross await you. The signet ring of My authority is available. The robe of righteousness. The staff of My strength. All hell trembles at the thought of one believer possessing their possession and walking in all that heaven affords. Be THAT believer this day says the Father. Accept My favor and know it as that which the blood that was shed affords you in this life. 

Thursday, July 10, 2014

God wants you to rely on His grace




(Gen 3:19 NLT) By the sweat of your brow will you have food to eat until you return to the ground from which you were made. For you were made from dust, and to dust you will return."


God wants you to rely on His grace.  By God's grace you can work hard doing what He has called you to do, but you can do it without getting overwhelmed, overloaded or stressed out.


Have you ever heard the phrase "By the sweat of your brow"?  It comes from our verse for today, which is Gen 3:19.  In Genesis chapter three Adam and Eve sinned.  This caused God to curse the serpent, the man and the woman.  The curse God spoke over Adam was that he was going to have to work hard for his food.  Prior to sin event Adam received everything by God's unearned grace.  God had given Adam purpose, power, partnership and parameters.  Adam lived in abundance.  Adam and Eve's only physical need was food and they had an entire Garden (more like a forest) to eat from.  They had more than they would ever need and it was all given to them by God's unearned grace.  However, Adam violated the one rule he had and his sin caused him to lose it all.  Adam was cursed, kicked out of the Garden, and forced to WORK for everything he was going to get.  Another translation reads, "You will work hard for your food, until your face is covered with sweat.  You will work hard until the day you die, and then you will become dust again.  I used dust to make you, and when you die, you will become dust again."  


So what does this mean to you?  A few things.


1.  Prior to the fall Adam was experiencing The Blessing.  He had communion with God, companionship with his wife, abundance and authority.  Adam was living the good life and everything he had was given to him by God's unearned grace.


2.  When Adam sinned he lost access to The Blessing.  Adam was cursed, kicked out of the Garden, and forced to WORK hard for everything he was going to get.


3.  The curse God spoke over Adam was that he (and man in general) was going to have to work hard for his food and earn his provision by the sweat of his brow.  Hard work by human effort, without the grace of God, is part of the curse and NOT The Blessing.


4.  Jesus came to redeem us, to get us out of everything Adam got us into.  Jesus did not redeem us back to Abraham, He redeemed us all the way back to Adam, prior to the fall and prior to the curse.  We are not supposed to earn everything we achieve in life now by hard work alone, relying solely on human effort, earning things through the sweat of our brow.  No.  That is not a picture of God's best.  


5.  God still expects us to work, because Adam was working prior to the fall.  God gave Adam a job before he gave him a wife.  But the way in which Adam was working before the fall, under The Blessing, was completely different than afterwards.  
-- Before the fall of man Adam worked, but he enjoyed grace based success.  Adam walked with God in the cool of the day, he received revelation concerning what to say and how to say it, and God blessed everything he put his hands to do.  


-- After the fall Adam was left on his own, working hard by human effort alone, and he had to sweat to earn everything he received.  



-- Which picture do you think God expects you to identify with?  Adam in the Garden or Adam after he was kicked out of the Garden?  I submit to you that God wants you to identify with Adam in the Garden of Eden.  That is the life He wants you to live.  God wants you to experience success, but success His way, graced based, with His favor on your work, so that you don't rely on yourself and your own ability to accomplish what God has called you to do.

Are you misunderstood

At every turn, Jesus was misunderstood and rejected. As John 1:11says, He “came to His own, and His own did not receive Him.” So how did Jesus endure this unfair treatment, and how can you and I resist the urge to fight back when we are rejected too?
When Jesus started His ministry, everyone seemed to love having Him around – as long as He continued to heal the sick and feed the masses. But the moment He challenged them with the principles of God’s Kingdom, they forsook Him: “From that time many of His disciples went back and walked with Him no more” (John 6:66).
And even those disciples who continued with Jesus didn’t really understand His true mission. At least seven times Jesus told them about His death on the cross and the resurrection. Yet, they still didn’t get it. Peter even tried to rebuke Jesus for talking so much about His death!
While He was on the cross, Jesus still had patience and a love for those who didn’t understand Him. He said, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do” (Luke 23:34).
Do you sometimes feel misunderstood and maligned by those around you? Do they look down on you for your faith in Christ and your commitment to your Christian walk? Let Jesus be your example and ask Him to help you to always have patience and a forgiving heart toward others.

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Success

The Bible is full of examples of successful people -- people who found, followed and finished their divine assignment by the grace of God.  Some of them were rich, but there were many who were not.  Some of them lived long lives, while others died at an early age.  Some had it relatively easy, while others seemingly went through hell on the road to their purpose.  My point is that there is no 'cookie cutter' path to divine success.  There is no blanket statement I can give you about the path we take to divine success that will apply to people, at all times.  Some truths are universal and timeless, and we will deal with those truths in this series.  But I can't tell you that everyone is going to have the money Solomon had, the strength Sampson had, or the challenges Paul had.  What I can tell you is that God has given every believer the grace to complete his or her divine assignment, whatever that assignment is.

Each of us take a path that is as unique as we are.  But at the end of the day, divine success boils down to doing what you were born to do, before you die.  That's it, and it's that simple.  While that is the "what" of success, this morning I want to talk about the "how".  Today I will discuss hard work and tomorrow I will bring God's grace into the equation.

So what does this mean to you today?  Let's learn a few things about hard work.

1.  God is not a rewarder of laziness.  In Proverbs chapter 10 Solomon said, "He becomes poor who works with a lazy hand, but the hand of the diligent brings wealth" (v.4).  In chapter 12 he said, "Work hard, and you will be a leader; be lazy, and you will end up a slave" (v.24) and "If you are lazy, you will never get what you are after, but if you work hard, you will get a fortune" (v.27).  In chapter 13 he said, "People who refuse to work want things and get nothing.  But the longings of people who work hard are completely satisfied" (v.4).  In chapter 21 Solomon said, "The craving of a sluggard will be the death of him, because his hands refuse to work" (v.25).  In the New Testament Paul said, "If a man will not work, he shall not eat" (2 Thes 3:10).  Jesus said, "My Father is always working, and so am I" (John 5:17).  And believe me, there are many, many more scriptures like this in the Bible.  My point is that God requires you to work.  The Lord expects you to bind your feet to the path He has laid before you and to put your hands to work on the assignment He has given you.  

2.  The Lord can favor your work.  I grew up in a family where 'hard work' was part of our DNA.  The men were taught to work hard to support their families.  The women were taught to work hard to make a home that was peaceful and practical.  All these years later I can say with certainty that He continues to favor the work of my hands.  Here's my point: the Lord cannot favor or bless the work of your hands if you do not put your hands to work.  If you want God to bless what you are doing, then you have to DO something.  Stop talking about your dreams and pursue them.  

3.  God wants you to be good at what you do.  Remember, you represent God.  I strive to be the best at what I do in the military and by the grace of God I can say that I am one of the best, if not THE best at what I do in the entire U.S. Army.  By doing my best I am able to represent God and give Him the glory whenever the spotlight is on me.  King Solomon said, "Observe people who are good at their work - skilled workers are always in demand and admired; they don't take a back seat to anyone" (22:29).  That is my testimony and I pray it be yours as well.  If you will be faithful to work, God will be faithful to bless the work of your hands!


Closing:  Father, I thank You for making plans for me before the world began, for shielding and protecting me for my purpose even before I acknowledged You as Lord, and for now blessing the work of my hands.  I want to maximize my purpose and potential.  I want to arrive at Your desired destination for my life.  I want to die empty, getting out of me everything You placed in me.  I want to leave a mark in this world that will not be erased.  I want to leave a legacy of righteousness for my children and my children's children.  I want to be the person I am called to be, and in order to do it, I know I will need to put my hands to WORK.  You don't bless laziness.  I am Your child, I represent You every day, and I declare that I shall represent You well.  I enter each day with a determination to do my best, by Your grace, with a full expectation that You will bless the work of my hands.  I am like the Blessed Man described in Psalm 1.  I am like a tree planted by the rivers of water, I bring forth my fruit in my season, my leaves do not wither, and everything I DO prospers.  I am faithful to work and You are faithful to bless the work of my hands.  Like Your Word says, my work is always in demand and I do not take a back seat to anyone.  I declare this by faith.  In Jesus' name, Amen!

Tuesday, July 8, 2014

Grace Based Prosperity

Grace Based Prosperity

Dr. Creflo Dollar recently taught a series entitled "Grace Based Prosperity" and his messages blessed me greatly.  As I listened to Pastor Dollar the Lord was speaking to me about the difference between pursuing success the world's way (through blood, sweat and tears) and God's way (by His grace).  In this series I will cover lots of topics as I seek to teach by both precept and example; giving you divine principles and Biblical examples you can glean from.

The following is a list of 'just a few' of the things you will learn in this series:
-- How to define success in life
-- Right thinking and right believing concerning Godly success
-- Redemption from the curse of Adam (Gen 3:19)
-- Confidence in God's love towards you
-- Finding grace in a net-breaking boat-sinking load of fish
-- The grace to work hard
-- Entering into God's rest
-- Freedom from dead works
-- The favor of God
-- Everything you need to fulfill your divine assignment is already yours
-- God wants you to succeed in your life's assignment
-- God is not opposed to wealth or health
-- The power of the Presence of God
-- Joseph had the grace to succeed
-- Paul had the grace to succeed
-- Gideon had the grace to succeed
-- King Jehoshaphat had the grace to succeed

These are in no particular order, but for this morning I will share a few nuggets about the term "success in life."

So what does this mean to you today?  A few things.

1.  How do you measure success in life?  Success in life cannot be measured by what you drive, where you live or the size of your bank account.  In society today many equate success to fame or fortune.  Having money or being known is not necessarily a bad thing, but it is far from being "only" thing.  The dictionary defines success as "the accomplishment of an aim or purpose."  In the case of your life, the aim should be the accomplishment of God's divine purpose for you.  You were born for a reason and your job is to FIND, FOLLOW and FINISH your purpose.  If you do, if you accomplish what God brought you into the earth to accomplish, then you succeeded.  That's it.  It's that simple.

2.  Can you be successful at the wrong thing?  Wouldn't it be a shame to think you were 'winning' at life, enjoying what you thought was success, only to get to the end of your life and find out that your spent it doing the wrong thing?  God is not going to favor and bless the work of your hands when you are doing it on your own and you are determined to live a life you were not intended to live, but make no mistake, you can WORK your way to earthly success at something you are not supposed to be doing, and if you do, you will have to work hard and your labor, at least in God's eyes, will be in vain.

3.  Are you succeeding?  Since I gave you a simple definition for success (accomplishing your divine purpose), I can now ask this simple question.  Are you doing what you were born to do?  Are you living the life God intended for you to live?  Is the path that you are on taking you incrementally closer to God's overall desired destination for your life?  If it is, and if you are, then you are succeeding at life.  It doesn't matter how much money you have in the bank, what you drive or where you live.  If you are doing what God placed you in the earth to do, then you are succeeding, and you should enjoy every minute of it.  However, if you are not, then don't allow the trappings of this world (money, fame, position, prominence, etc.), to keep you on a path you know is wrong.  Repent, ask the Holy Spirit to lead you, and get back on the path to God's best for your life.  Don't worry about money.  If you do what God purposed you to do, the money will be there and you will always have more than enough to meet your needs and to be a blessing to others.  Money makes a great servant, but a poor master.  Don't chase money, chase God, and money will chase you.

Father, I thank You for dealing with me concerning my definition of success.  I know You made plans for me before the world began.  I know I was born for a reason and that reason is Your divine purpose for my life.  I know I am not a mistake.  I know I am here on purpose.  I also know that there was a time when I did not know Your purpose for my life, so I came up with my own and I was the Captain of my own ship.  However, after I came in contact with Your Son Jesus and made Him my Lord, You gave me Your precious Holy Spirit and He now reveals things to me about my purpose.  I have made changes based upon what I now know my purpose to be.  I have rearranged my priorities.  Now what is first and foremost in my life is the accomplishment of my divine purpose.  I don't chase money, I pursue my purpose.  I don't chase fame, I seek to accomplish what I was born to accomplish.  And as I do, You make all grace abound towards me, to the point where I always have everything I need to do what I am called to do, and You make my name great, putting the spotlight on me, so I can deflect the glory right back to You.  Thank You Father for helping me to understand success.  I am succeeding and I shall be successful in life, because my life is no longer about me.  My life is ALL ABOUT YOU.  You brought me into the world for a purpose and I will accomplish my divine assignment before I die, by Your grace, living by faith.  And that is success to me!  I declare this by faith.  In Jesus' name, Amen!


Be of Good Courage






The following night the Lord stood by him and said, "Be of good cheer, Paul; for as you have testified for Me in Jerusalem, so you must also bear witness at Rome."

Even the most committed believer has those times when fear and worry can kick in. Anxiety can overtake us. Maybe we are concerned about our future. Maybe we are discouraged or afraid. If that is the case, you might be surprised to know that even the great apostle Paul experienced emotions like this.

Paul had gone to Jerusalem, and the next thing he knew, he was locked up in a cold, damp, dark prison cell. All of this happened as a result of his bold proclamation of the gospel. Acts 23:11 tells us, "The following night the Lord stood by him and said, 'Be of good cheer, Paul.' "

That phrase be of good cheer could be better translated "be of good courage." Whenever we read in Scripture that an angel of the Lord appeared and said, "Fear not," it was usually because someone was afraid. So I conclude that when the Lord himself stood by Paul and said, "Be of good courage," the apostle needed that special word of encouragement at that particular moment.

Sometimes it seems as though God is the only one standing by us. But if everyone else had forsaken Paul, Jesus was company enough. If all the others despised him, the smile of Jesus was approval enough. Though his circumstances were less than ideal, I am sure he knew it was better to be in that jail with the Lord than to be anywhere else without Him.

Jesus is there in your prison as well, whatever and wherever that prison may be. And He knows what you are going through.

Friday, June 27, 2014

INTERCEDING

The Father says today join Me in the place of prayer. Each and every day you come to Me you will find Me praying. It is even as I said in My word I am EVER INTERCEDING. As you rise in the morning come alongside and join Me in the place of prayer. Join Me and before you open your mouth - pause to hear the words coming from My heart and pray those prayers. I am praying for you and I am praying for those around you. I am praying for kings and nations and I am praying for the destitute and forgotten. Pray specifically and pray determinately. Pray for your rulers and those you are accountable to and for day by day.

Come alongside Me in intercession says the Father. The bridal season has come and I will have a bride washed in prayer and cleansed in intercession because they hear My voice and join Me behind the lattice in the place of intimacy. So come near says the Father. Come near and seek My face before you seek the face of man. You have asked for change and this is where it starts. You must align yourself with My mind and my heart each and every day and that alignment with heaven will produce heaven's characteristics in your life.


Tuesday, May 20, 2014

My grace is sufficient for you

The Lord allowed the Apostle Paul to visit heaven and to return back to the earth to talk about it.  The experience was supernatural and amazing.  Satan assigned one of his messengers to constantly attack Paul.  Paul asked the Lord to take the messenger away, but instead of removing the source of pain, God said, "My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness."  Which led the Apostle to say, "Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ's power may rest on me.  That is why, for Christ's sake, I delight in weaknesses, in insults, in hardships, in persecutions, in difficulties.  For when I am weak, then I am strong." (2 Corinthians 12:9,10 NIV).

So what does this mean to you today?  A few things.

1.  Paul acknowledged that he was not worthy of making the trip to heaven.  Paul told about his trip to heaven, not so he could boast in his abilities, but so that he could boast in God's grace.  The fact that Paul took no credit for the trip is actually one of the reasons why the Lord allowed him to make the trip in the first place.  God wants to know that you can handle the blessing.  Some people can't.  Some people ask for God to bless them with this or that, but God can't, because He knows that the blessing (whatever "it" is) would cause them to cross over into pride and self-righteousness.  God wants to bless you richly, but you must get to the point where you are humble enough to receive it without pridefully thinking you did it on your own.  So let me ask the question this way: Can you stand to be blessed?  Can God bless you richly and you still rely on Him?  God will not bless you until He knows He can trust you with the blessing.  

2.  Paul acknowledged that he did not have the power to deal with the messenger from satan.  After Paul's trip to heaven a messenger of satan was assigned to trouble him.  In his own strength Paul had no power over this satanic messenger, but that was actually Paul's true strength.  He did not claim to be able to handle the satanic messenger on his own.  He called out to God and God gave him the grace to overcome the satanic attacks and to keep going.  God will release His power in your life when you acknowledge the fact that your power is not enough.

3.  Paul acknowledged that he was not worthy of his assignment.  Paul had a great assignment and he was able to complete it, because he never fooled himself into thinking he was worthy of it, or that he could accomplish it without God's grace.  Do you want to maximize your purpose and potential in life?  To do so you must maintain a proper perspective of yourself and your abilities.  If you think too highly of yourself, you will be humbled by God.  But you cannot think too lowly either.  Simply acknowledge your limitations and rely on God's grace to equip, enable, empower and employ you in the Kingdom of God.

4.  Paul's strength was found in his weakness and his reliance on the Father.  The Apostle said, "Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ's power may rest on me."  If you want God's power to rest on you, and to flow through you freely, you must die to self.  It is only when you acknowledge your limitations and you rely on God's strength, that His power will be made available and manifest in your life, because when you get to that point you will be relying on God's grace.   

Friday, May 16, 2014

Gods Amazing Grace



The Apostle Paul wrote, "I will reluctantly tell about visions and revelations from the Lord.  I was caught up to the third heaven fourteen years ago.  Whether I was in my body or out of my body, I don't know-only God knows.  Yes, only God knows whether I was in my body or outside my body.  But I do know that I was caught up to paradise and heard things so astounding that they cannot be expressed in words, things no human is allowed to tell.  That experience is worth boasting about, but I'm not going to do it.  I will boast only about my weaknesses.  If I wanted to boast, I would be no fool in doing so, because I would be telling the truth.  But I won't do it, because I don't want anyone to give me credit beyond what they can see in my life or hear in my message" (2 Cor 12: 1-6 NLT).

So what does this mean to you today?  A few things.

1.  God will allow you to experience things, by His grace, that will prepare you for your life's assignment.  Paul was used supernaturally, therefore he needed to have supernatural experiences with God.  God allowed Paul to experience heaven, even while he was still alive in the earth, in order to help shape his writings and ministry.  Paul is not the only human to have visited heaven and come back to talk about it.  You may not get that experience, but you can rest assured that God will allow you to experience, what you need to experience, in order to maximize your purpose and potential in the earth.  But when you do, just remember that God gave you the experiences by His grace, not because you earned them.

2.  Boast in the fact that you 'got to' experience it, not that you earned it.  Paul did not boast in the fact that he was selected to go to heaven, he boasted in the fact that he wasn't worthy of the trip.  Paul was just happy that he 'got to' experience it.  Learn from Paul.  Like Paul I don't credit for writing Today's Word every day, or for the fact that God allows me to preach His Word to the world.  I am just thankful that I 'get to' do it.  So no matter what you are called to do, just be thankful that you GET TO do it.  God could have selected anyone, but He CHOSE YOU!

3.  When you know you didn't earn it, you acknowledge and appreciate God's grace.  When Paul was talking about his trip to heaven and he said, "I will boast only about my weaknesses," he was acknowledging the fact that he had not earned the trip.  Similarly, I often think about my assignment in life, and the awesomeness of it.  Honestly, sometimes I can't do anything but weep, because I know I don't deserve it, and I know I surely haven't earned it.  But God, who is rich in mercy, calls us by His grace, not our merit.  

4.  The secret is acknowledging the fact that you don't deserve it.  Paul had the perspective he did because he knew all the bad things he had done in life before coming to Jesus, and all the mistakes he had made even after being Born-Again.  The message of grace changed Paul, it has changed me, and my prayer is that it also changes you.  Please embrace the amazing freedom from your failures, forgiveness for your past, and excitement about your future, that is found in God's grace.


Gods Amazing Grace

The Apostle Paul wrote, "I will reluctantly tell about visions and revelations from the Lord.  I was caught up to the third heaven fourteen years ago.  Whether I was in my body or out of my body, I don't know-only God knows.  Yes, only God knows whether I was in my body or outside my body.  But I do know that I was caught up to paradise and heard things so astounding that they cannot be expressed in words, things no human is allowed to tell.  That experience is worth boasting about, but I'm not going to do it.  I will boast only about my weaknesses.  If I wanted to boast, I would be no fool in doing so, because I would be telling the truth.  But I won't do it, because I don't want anyone to give me credit beyond what they can see in my life or hear in my message" (2 Cor 12: 1-6 NLT).

So what does this mean to you today?  A few things.

1.  God will allow you to experience things, by His grace, that will prepare you for your life's assignment.  Paul was used supernaturally, therefore he needed to have supernatural experiences with God.  God allowed Paul to experience heaven, even while he was still alive in the earth, in order to help shape his writings and ministry.  Paul is not the only human to have visited heaven and come back to talk about it.  You may not get that experience, but you can rest assured that God will allow you to experience, what you need to experience, in order to maximize your purpose and potential in the earth.  But when you do, just remember that God gave you the experiences by His grace, not because you earned them.

2.  Boast in the fact that you 'got to' experience it, not that you earned it.  Paul did not boast in the fact that he was selected to go to heaven, he boasted in the fact that he wasn't worthy of the trip.  Paul was just happy that he 'got to' experience it.  Learn from Paul.  Like Paul I don't credit for writing Today's Word every day, or for the fact that God allows me to preach His Word to the world.  I am just thankful that I 'get to' do it.  So no matter what you are called to do, just be thankful that you GET TO do it.  God could have selected anyone, but He CHOSE YOU!

3.  When you know you didn't earn it, you acknowledge and appreciate God's grace.  When Paul was talking about his trip to heaven and he said, "I will boast only about my weaknesses," he was acknowledging the fact that he had not earned the trip.  Similarly, I often think about my assignment in life, and the awesomeness of it.  Honestly, sometimes I can't do anything but weep, because I know I don't deserve it, and I know I surely haven't earned it.  But God, who is rich in mercy, calls us by His grace, not our merit.

4.  The secret is acknowledging the fact that you don't deserve it.  Paul had the perspective he did because he knew all the bad things he had done in life before coming to Jesus, and all the mistakes he had made even after being Born-Again.  The message of grace changed Paul, it has changed me, and my prayer is that it also changes you.  Please embrace the amazing freedom from your failures, forgiveness for your past, and excitement about your future, that is found in God's grace.