Practicing Intolerance

Lovely revelation this morning. I was getting back into my study of what Jesus taught about the Holy Spirit, so I was reading John 14. Right in the midst of that, I noticed this quote from Jesus as if it were lit up in neon lights:

“Peace I leave with you; My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Do not let your heart be troubled, neither let it be afraid [Stop allowing yourself to be agitated and disturbed; and do not permit yourself to be fearful and intimidated and cowardly and unsettled].” (verse 27, modified AMP)

So many things could be taken from this verse, but what hit me today was this: This scripture outlines the answer to why so many Christians are lacking the blessings that the scriptures say so clearly that God has already given us!

Why We Lack the Blessings

Let’s look at this scripture step by step. First, Jesus gives us His peace. Then we are to actively guard our hearts, not allowing our hearts to be troubled or afraid. Do you see it?

If the peace that Jesus offered was automatic, if we didn’t need to do anything to receive it and have it operating fully in us, then He wouldn’t have said the second part! But this example clearly shows us how God gives and how we are to receive.

Jesus said He doesn’t give as the world gives. How does He give? Cooperatively! He does His part to give the gift and we do ours to receive it.

I believe this scripture reveals to us a pattern. There is valuable insight here regarding why so many scriptures promise wonderful things, and yet we don’t see them operating in our lives. Healing, overcoming of sin, peace, prosperity, wisdom, the fruits of the Spirit, divine protection, all the good gifts God has given us in Jesus Christ. Freely given to us. God isn’t holding out on some and blessing others. We’re all blessed.

The Solution – Don’t Tolerate the Bad Stuff

So if we look in our lives and see a lack of some promised blessing, ask ourselves, “Where have I allowed the curse (the opposite of the blessing) to remain in my life?”

Where God has promised peace, we must police our thoughts and emotions (take every thought captive to the obedience of Christ!) and stop any fear or anxiety or worry. Resist it in the name of Jesus, and it will flee! Meditate on the peace of God and His promises to care for us.

Where God has promised healing, we must tell that sickness to go, in Jesus’ name. Just as Jesus rebuked the fever in Peter’s mother-in-law. Just as Peter told the lame man, “In the name of Jesus, stand up and walk”, we should tell our bodies to be healed in Jesus’ name. Don’t tolerate the sickness, thinking it’s a natural state of being. For a Christian, it’s not! Resist it! Jesus took those stripes so we could be healed.

Praising God

I praise God today that He has given me the authority of the name of Jesus. I’m so thankful that because Jesus is my Lord and I obey His commands, the Father who did the works in Jesus’ life and ministry also dwells in me!

I’m so glad God called me to be a believer, because Jesus said that believers would cast out demons in His name and they’d lay hands on the sick and the sick would recover (among other wonderful things!). As a daughter of God, and co-heir with Jesus, I have a “Yes” answer to every promise God ever gave people in His Word.

And now, I praise God that He continues to give me insight to understand how to see those blessings fully manifest in my life. Thank You, Lord! I receive this wisdom from You, and I will do my part to receive Your blessings, so that my life will be a witness to Your goodness.

Scriptures referenced above:
John 14:27; 2 Cor. 10:5; Jas. 4:7; Luke 4:38-39; Acts 3:6; Isa. 53:5 ; 1 Pet. 2:24; John 14:10,12,20-21,23; Mark 16:17-18; 2 Cor. 1:20; Rom. 8:17; Gal. 3:29

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What I’ve been missing

I’ve been asking myself a question lately. “Why wait until you’re out of gas and sitting stranded on the highway to go to the gas station and get some fuel?”

Yes, the answer is obvious. Don’t wait that long! It’s ridiculous! Nobody does that if they can help it!

But in Christianity, we do it all the time. Why has it taken me this long as a Christian to understand that I’ve been running on low to zero fuel?

I suppose it’s because my fuel gauge has been off. I’ve measured the levels of God’s power in my life by the wrong reference points. It’s not about how many ministry activities fill my schedule or how many people say they loved the worship service at church. It’s not about whether I feel content in my walk with Jesus, or whether circumstances in my life seem to be going smoothly.

There’s a new reference point on my mind now, and it’s as old as the gospel. Does my life look like the lives of the apostles and church members in the book of Acts? Does my life evidence any of the signs that Jesus prophesied would follow those who believe in Him?

“In My name they will cast out demons; they will speak with new tongues; they will take up serpents; and if they drink anything deadly, it will by no means hurt them; they will lay hands on the sick, and they will recover. ”

God “Doesn’t Do” Miracles Anymore?

“Yeah, I know Jesus said that, but Teddi, you can’t seriously expect to see that stuff in your life, can you?” And I would ask you, “Why not?”

The old objections have gained a hollow ring in this age of the Internet and widespread communications. The old excuse, “But nobody in today’s world is operating in the kind of power the apostles had!” simply isn’t true.

Look around. Turn on the television and flip to the Trinity Broadcasting Network. Open your web browser and do a search for testimonies of miracles. There are documented modern-day testimonies of people cured of “incurable” diseases, of people raised from the dead, of just about every kind of miracle recorded in the Scriptures.

Truly, our God is the same yesterday, today and forever! He hasn’t stopped empowering His disciples to do miracles. For quite a few centuries, most of His disciples were in ignorance of His willingness and desire to do those miracles through them, but that is changing. More and more of us are awakening to fresh faith as the Holy Spirit enlightens the Scriptures to our wondering eyes. And the evidence of this faith revival is all around us, if we’re willing to look and believe.

You Can’t Count On Miracles?

A subtler (but insidiously worse, IMO) deception in the Church today is the nod of acceptance given to the existence of miracles while staunchly declaring that you never know when God will decide to do them. “Sometimes He does, sometimes He doesn’t. He gives life to some people and takes away life from others, and you just never know which it will be for you.”

Come on, people! That is not the kind of attitude Abraham had. God told Abraham (then Abram) a lot of fantastic stuff. There was no earthly reason for Abram to believe God — nobody in the society around him was getting these incredible blessings. Why should Abram think he’s so special? But Abram didn’t concern himself with any of that. God said it, and that settled it for him, despite all evidence to the contrary.

The people listed in the Hebrews 11 hall of faith all chose to believeGod’s Word rather than the evidence of the circumstances around them. They are the shining examples for us to follow. But too often, our objections sound much closer to those of the generation of Israelites saved out of Egypt. Despite God’s words — and the mighty evidence of miracles all around them! — they chose to succumb to fear and doubt. By word and action, they showed God that they didn’t believe His promises. And without faith, God’s promises had no way to come true in their lives. They died in the wilderness.

If we look around and see the vast majority of Christians lacking the sort of power and spiritual success the early Church had, our conclusion cannot be that the Promiser has withheld from us what He gave to them. It must be that we are lacking in faith the receive those same promises. God doesn’t change. And He doesn’t pick and choose some believers to bless and others to put through fiery trials. But the book of James makes it quite clear that even receiving the simplest of requests — a request for wisdom, which God gives generously without regard for our sin — will be utterly sabotaged by even the smallest hint of doubt in the asker.

Filling The Tank

What prompted this entry was watching some testimonies on the Believer’s Voice of Victory TV broadcast. The stories all had a similar pattern:

  1. A Christian faced a serious test of their faith (medical diagnosis of a killer disease or life-threatening situation for a child).
  2. The Christian got serious about feeding the promises of God into their hearts by every channel available (reading it, hearing it, declaring it) as close to 24×7 as possible.
  3. The promises of God came through after a variable period of time standing in faith.

In these particular testimonies, each Christian had come across “Word of faith” (WOF) teaching prior to facing the trial. Although some Christian groups warn against the WOF movement as if it’s heresy, the best of WOF teaching simply encourages the believer to have faith in — to believe — the Word of God for what it says and to stop doubting!

Slight side note: I recommend every Christian pray and seek the guidance of the Holy Spirit before believing anything they hear preached by any man (we should always guard against deception, and even the best preachers may get it wrong on occasion). But I also recommend you don’t reject any preacher sight unseen just because someone you think is a good, sound Christian says they’re bad. Only the Holy Spirit has the right and perfect wisdom to tell you what you should and shouldn’t listen to. There are Christians I respect very much who don’t approve of the theology of some of my most valued spiritual mentors.

As I pondered step number two above, getting serious about learning what the Word of God has to say about my circumstances, I realized something life-changing.

Why wait until I’m faced with a serious crisis to arm myself against the attacks of the devil and the effects of this messed-up world?

I could start now! I could find out what the promises of God are regarding my health and lifespan before any life-threatening illness is diagnosed. I could dig out the promises of God regarding the safety and salvation of my children before they suffer an accident or reach their “rebellious teenage years.” And when trouble comes, as Jesus declared it would while we’re in this world, I will be of good cheer — knowing that my Lord has overcome the world and as a born-again, faith-filled child of God, SO HAVE I.

Imagine that!

No, seriously — imagine it. Ponder it. And may the Holy Spirit tell you if it might be something you should try for yourself!

Scriptures referenced above:
Mark 16:17-18; Heb. 13:8; Heb. 11:8-12,17-19; Heb. 4:2; Rom. 10:12; Jas. 1:5-8; John 16:33; 1 John 5:4

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The need to make a choice

This morning I find myself with an abundance of energy and optimism, a grace from God that truly blesses my life! The past few weeks have been…

(…And here I have a choice: repeat the words and feelings that my human nature provides, out of its long-time alliance with the devil and the world… OR capture those thoughts, bring them captive to the obedience of Christ, and viewing my experience through the lense of the Spirit and the Word…)

(…Of course, once I pause to recognize the alternatives, the correct choice is clear, and all that is left is exercising the diligence to apply it.)

The past few weeks have been a prime opportunity to exercise the faith principles I’ve learned over the past year and a half. As my body adjusts to the new life growing within it (yes, I’m pregnant), I experience physical symptoms such as muscle soreness, mild nausea and fatigue.

I have not yet found scriptures that indicate I should expect total freedom specifically from pregnancy symptoms. However, I am convinced that if I consider it an affliction, and I cry out to God, He hears me and He delivers me. I do believe that I am ready for anything and equal to anything through Jesus, who infuses inner strength into me. It certainly isn’t God’s will for me to be conquered by weariness or ill-feelings.

And truly, He has sustained me, and even now I sense the manifestation of His deliverance getting more and more full in my life. I am beginning to reap the harvest of my earlier confessions of faith. The fight isn’t over, I sense, but I appreciate the taste of victory already manifest in my body!

I look back and praise God for His grace that covered me. In faith, I took naps, praying aloud saying they were seed towards strength in my body. Although I didn’t feel up to writing much, I used the time to read and meditate.

And I declared by faith that my creativity for writing doesn’t come out of myself or my physical condition — in fact, I received a very blessed revelation. Simple, but profound to me. It is this: I have the mind of Christ. And therefore, the ability of the wisest storyteller in all of creation (and outside of it!) resides on the inside of me — and is available to me as I abide in Him!

Never again may I doubt “my” ability to fulfill the storytelling destiny He has revealed to me: for it is not my own ability at all, but His!

(Some may find it odd that I have to state the obvious to myself this way,as it is widely taught that ministry comes out of His ability, not our own. But for those of us whose ministry coincides with a natural talent, we need to constantly remind ourselves that it’s not our own talent that we are to rely upon. The most telling and profound example of this precept is that Jesus Himself said, “I can of Myself do nothing — it’s all from the Father.” Any time I’m tempted to believe that my efforts are sufficient, I think of that and am humbled.)

Of course I have my own individual contribution to this partnership. I’m still the one who puts physical hands to physical keyboard and who prays and receives the revelation by faith and records it — but I can rely on Him for the source and success of it. Praise God! In my weakness, He is strong. May all the glory for all I do go to His name alone!

What a blessing these weeks of transition are to me. What strength of faith He is developing in me, what patience in distress I am learning. How precious are these lessons, these opportunities to work muscles of faith and love for God — muscles that cannot be strengthened any other way! I jump at and reach for every little chance to grow, to use these seemingly small circumstances to create strength in the Spirit.

I could have let it go. I could have chosen to resign myself to a couple months of morning sickness. Settle down on the couch and moan and groan about the nausea.

We always have a choice.

I’m made mine, and I’m making it again daily. May you have the grace and strength to make your choice on the Lord’s side. God bless you, dear reader!

Scriptures referenced above:
2 Chron. 10:9; Ps. 22:24; Ps. 119:153; Phil. 4:13; Isa. 40:31; 1 Cor. 2:16; John 5:30, 8:28

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