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Fear Not 365 – for God Still Works Miracles

May 10, 2017 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment

Last week, I asked a prayer warrior how prayer worked. She said, “I talk to God like he’s my best friend.”

“No, no.” I said. “I mean, how do your prayers get answered.”

She said, “I tell God what I want, and He gives me what I need. I have never been rich, but even when I was destitute, when my husband got sick and died, and I had nothing to eat, and the power was shut off, and didn’t have food for groceries, I lacked for nothing.”

“So, prayer simply changed your attitude about things, but you still lost everything?”

“No,” she said, “I have witnessed many miracles.”

“Tell me about a one,” I urged.

“When my husband was in the hospital, the power company turned off the power at our home. It was cold. The house would have frozen up. I don’t think they can do that anymore, but back then, they would just shut you off. I got a call at the hospital from Jack, who lived next door that and he said that they had come out and shut off the power at our house. So, I prayed about it. Well, that same day, they came back out and turned it back on. A few days after my husband died, I found out that the manager of the power company had paid my bill himself. I don’t know how he found out about it, but he did. The church brought over groceries for weeks after Eric died. That was God.”

“So,” I said, “Prayer works because the people praying for you care enough about you to act, to help you out.”

“I suppose that is part of it,” she said, but I could read the frustration in her voice. I just didn’t get it, she thought. “God laid it on the hearts of those folks to help us, the man at the power company, my church family.”

“But, have you ever seen anything that you were sure, was a divine miracle?”

“Yes,” she said. And this is where my jaw hit the floor. This ninety-something year old woman, whose name I will never tell, said this: “God changed my life. You see, my father ran out on my mother and me when I was a eight. I had two little brothers and a sister. Then, a few years later, my mother died. I was fourteen. She was ran over by a street car. I was forced to sell myself to men so that we could all live. A couple years later, after I was married, and my husband had a good job, I stopped. When he went off to war, though, I began selling myself again. When he came home, I didn’t stop. I sold myself to whoever would have me for… well, for a long time.

“Then, one day a preacher came to a church down the street from our house in Kansas City. People were lined up for blocks to see that man. Hundreds stood outside just to hear him through the open windows. I don’t know why, but I was drawn to him. Drawn to the Holy Spirit in him. It took me most of an hour to make my way inside, but I listened to him the whole time, and the very second he gave an altar call, I fell on my face and wept. I was changed. Everything about me was changed. I was saved and sanctified that night. The next night, I drug my husband to see him and he was saved. I was changed. I never looked back, and I never did that that terrible thing again.”

“God changed you overnight,” I said.

“In the twinkling of an eye,” she said.

“Do you believe God still works miracles, then?”

“Let me tell you about how He healed me of cancer last year,” she said. That’s another story.

Fear Not, for God Still Works Miracles. He still changes lives.

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Fear Not 365 – for He will live in you and be with you – by Pastor Jim Cariker

May 7, 2017 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment

The weather has been extreme. I personally do not recall the heavy rains and flooding being as wide-spread as it has been this past week.  Many mobile homes were totally washed away leaving some families completely devastated.  One man featured on the news Wednesday told how his cabin was washed away with him in it and he was convinced that he would drown. It took 10 hours before he was found and rescued. Another told how lightning killed over 30 of his cows—an estimated $70,000 loss. Bridges have been closed and some swept away from all the flood waters, leaving communities isolated with no way out.  And the stories of destruction and tragedy along with stories of miraculous rescues abound. I especially liked the testimony of the woman who prayed for the 2 little children who were taken from the vehicle that was caught in the flood waters. As the rescuers performed CPR, the woman prayed and suddenly the children coughed and began to breathe. To God be the Glory!

The Old Testament Book of Joel tells of another time when disaster came upon the Nation of Judah—the invasion of Locusts. A description of a similar event that occurred in 1915 in Jerusalem gives us a glimpse of the disaster:

A loud noise was heard before the locust were seen, produced by the flapping of myriads of locust wings and resembling the distant rumbling of waves.  The sun was suddenly darkened. Showers of their excrements fell thick and fast, resembling those of mice.  Their elevation above the earth was at times hundreds of feet; at other time they flew quite low, detached numbers alighting.  “In Jerusalem, at least,” Mr. Whiting said, “they inevitably came from the northeast going toward the southwest, establishing the accuracy of Joel’s account in chapter 2:20.”  Tons were captured and buried alive; many were thrown into cisterns or into the Mediterranean Sea, and when washed ashore, were collected and dried and used for fuel in Turkish bathes… Mr. Aaronsohn, another witness of the plague in 1915, testifies that in less than two months after their first appearance, not only was every green leaf devoured, but the very bark was peeled from the trees, which stood out white and lifeless, like skeletons.  The fields, he says, were stripped to the ground.  Even Arab babies left by their mothers in the shade of some tree, had their faces devoured before their screams were heard.  The natives accepted the plague as just judgment because of their wickedness.”   (from Beacon Bible Commentary, volume 5, page  90).

An interesting fact about the Prophet Joel is that scholars cannot pin down the exact time when he lived and prophesied.  Most of the other prophets make reference to an historic event or a reign of a king that helps us determine the approximate time they lived, but Joel does not make any such reference.  It was sometime after the kingdom divided, but that is as definitive as we can get. While there are arguments that he was one of the earlier prophets, there are also arguments that he was much later in Judah’s history.  This timelessness factor reinforces to me the relevance of his message to our day and our time.

This little prophetic Book seeks to put the disaster from the Locust invasion into a spiritual context and in so doing helps us to come to grips with the disasters that invade our lives.

  1. THE MEANING BEHIND THE CALAMITY.
    1. Those who think Joel was one of the earlier prophets also think that he is the one who coined the Phrase “The Day of the Lord” that is repeated so many times as the prophets point to the climatic time when this present Age ends and God ushers in a new Age. The devastation caused by the locusts must have brought the phrase to Joel’s mind: “The Day of the Lord.” Joel pointed out that Judah and Israel had not kept the terms of the Covenant they had made with God. God had promised to bless and prosper the nation if it would stay true to Him. But that promise was conditional and the nation had not stayed true to the terms. The Covenant agreement had very clearly warned the nation that if they broke the terms of the covenant there would be severe consequences.
    2. The question we ask is, “Did the locust come because of God’s Judgment?” “Or did the locust infiltration simply awaken the nation to their own sins?”              Someone this past week made this statement about all the flooding, “God must really be angry with us!”   How should we respond to that?                                              Here are some of my thoughts:  Yes, God does punish people who are disobedient to Him. When He does, though, it is a way that He uses to help people make the decision to get right with Him.      But just because we are experiencing disasters it does not necessarily mean that God is punishing us. It may mean that God is allowing us to be tested. That is what happened to Job in the Old Testament. His friends tried to blame Job with being sinful, but the Bible is very clear that Job was a righteous person that Satan was attacking.                                                            But there is another possibility for the fact of disaster: We live in a fallen world and bad things just happen.  When that occurs, instead of seeking to place blame, we need to just seek God’s mercy and grace.                                             I’m sure there are other possible explanations. And sometimes there just not a good answer to the problems we face. Volumes have been written on the subject of “Why Bad Things Happen to Good People.”   It was happening to Judah during Joel’s lifetime. Natural Disasters happen to someone somewhere almost every day. That is the world in which we live!
  2. THE SOLUTION TO THE TRAGEDY
    1. Joel called for the people to go through a time of mourning and repentance. Joel 1:13-14 says, “Put on sackcloth, you priests, and mourn; wail, you who minister before the altar. Come, spend the night in sackcloth, you who minister before my God; for the grain offerings and drink offerings are withheld from the house of your God. Declare a holy fast; call a sacred assembly. Summon the elders and all who live in the land to the house of the LORD your God, and cry out to the Lord.”
    2. Regardless of the reason for the disaster—whether it because of personal or national sin, whether it is a time of oppression and testing by Satan, or whether it is just  a random act that is the result of living in a fallen world, THE BEST SOLUTION  ALWAYS  IN EVERY SITUATION IS TO SEEK GOD!.                   If there is sin involved—even if it is not the cause for the disaster—the correct solution is to Confess and Repent and seek God’s forgiveness!                                                           If the problem is caused by spiritual oppression from satanic forces, call upon the Lord. He is our strength. 1 John 4:4 reminds us that “The One who is in us is greater than the one who is in the world.”     Paul in Philippians 4:6 wrote, “Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your request to God.”                    Peter in 1 Peter 5:7 wrote, “Cast all your anxiety on Him because He cares for you.”
    3. Chuck Swindoll, in his book, Hand Me Another Brick, (Thomas Nelson, 1978, pp. 82-3, andBits & Pieces, November, 1989, p. 12.) wrote this about Thomas Edison: Thomas Edison invented the microphone, the phonograph, the incandescent light, the storage battery, talking movies, and more than 1000 other things. December 1914 he had worked for 10 years on a storage battery. This had greatly strained his finances. This particular evening spontaneous combustion had broken out in the film room. Within minutes all the packing compounds, celluloid for records and film, and other flammable goods were in flames. Fire companies from eight surrounding towns arrived, but the heat was so intense and the water pressure so low that the attempt to douse the flames was futile. Everything was destroyed. Edison was 67. With all his assets going up in a whoosh (although the damage exceeded two million dollars, the buildings were only insured for $238,000 because they were made of concrete and thought to be fireproof), would his spirit be broken?                                                The inventor’s 24-year old son, Charles, searched frantically for his father. He finally found him, calmly watching the fire, his face glowing in the reflection, his white hair blowing in the wind. “My heart ached for him,” said Charles. “He was 67–no longer a young man–and everything was going up in flames. When he saw me, he shouted, ‘Charles, where’s your mother?’ When I told him I didn’t know, he said, ‘Find her. Bring her here. She will never see anything like this as long as she lives.'” The next morning, Edison looked at the ruins and said, “There is great value in disaster. All our mistakes are burned up. Thank God we can start anew.” Three weeks after the fire, Edison managed to deliver the first phonograph.” 
    4. Rather than allowing disasters and tragedies to cause us to blame God, we should be running to Him for help. He has His arms wide open as he welcomes you into His care. Here the words of Jesus in Matthew 11:28-30—“Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn of me, for I am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For my yoke is easy and my burden is light.”

 

  • THE PROMISE FOR THE FUTURE
    1. It is in this context of national disaster and a call to seek God that Joel, inspired by God, delivers a promise for the future. It is the scripture we read earlier. Let me read it again from Joel 2: 28-32:

“And afterward,
    I will pour out my Spirit on all people.
Your sons and daughters will prophesy,
    your old men will dream dreams,
    your young men will see visions.
29 Even on my servants, both men and women,
    I will pour out my Spirit in those days.
30 I will show wonders in the heavens
    and on the earth,
    blood and fire and billows of smoke.
31 The sun will be turned to darkness
    and the moon to blood
    before the coming of the great and dreadful day of the Lord.
32 And everyone who calls
    on the name of the Lord will be saved;
for on Mount Zion and in Jerusalem
    there will be deliverance,
    as the Lord has said,
even among the survivors
    whom the Lord calls.

  1. Bible Commentaries connect this powerful promise with the words of Moses after God had directed him to call for 70 elders to come before the Tent of Meeting so he could take some of the Spirit that was upon Moses and place it on the 70 so they could help carry the responsibilities that Moses had tried to carry by himself. When 2 of the elders stayed in their tent we are told that the Holy Spirit came upon them as well as those who had gathered together. Joshua complained and asked Moses to stop these 2 who had been disobedient. Moses responded in Numbers 11:29 saying “Are you jealous for my sake? I wish that all the LORD’s people were prophets and that the LORD would put his Spirit on them!”                                         Now Joel is saying that God is promising to do just that: Put His Spirit on all His people!
  2. This passage from Joel may sound familiar to you. It is the very passage the Peter quoted on the Day of Pentecost in Acts 2. God’s plan  that is revealed in the Old Testament Book of Joel as well as in other places is to Put His Spirit on all of us—Or, as Jesus said in John 14:17, “…for he lives with you and will be in you.”
  3. The Holy Spirit of God, the same Spirit that hovered over the waters in Creation and that came upon individuals in the Old Testament when God wanted that person to do extra-ordinary things for His glory, that is the same Spirit that has been released in this New Age—the Church Age—in which we are living. He wants to live in each of our hearts, empowering, teaching, guiding, blessing, energizing as we allow Him to be in control!

 

 

Conclusion:

            Yes, we live in a fallen world. Yes, tragedies and disasters occur. Yes, the trials of this life can be very severe at times.  But take heart! God has delivered on the promise that he gave through Joel. The Holy Spirit came upon the disciples at Pentecost and He is still moving upon us today.

Paul asked some believers in Ephesus an important question –one that we should answer as well:  “Have you received the Holy Spirit since you believed?”  (Acts 19:2).

            Surrender you life completely to Jesus and Ask the Holy Spirit to fill you! Would you like to do that right now?

 

Fear Not, for He will live with you and will be with you..

Filed Under: Uncategorized

Fear Not 365 – For We Must Speak…

May 1, 2017 by ChristianHolinessDaily Leave a Comment


Acts 4: 1-22 

Text: Acts 4: 20 “As for us, we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard.”

The change that the Disciples of Christ experienced after the Resurrection and Pentecost was amazing. Contrast this passage with the passage telling about how Peter, when questioned by a servant girl in the courtyard of the High Priest, denied that he even knew Jesus. It is like he is two different people! What was the reason for such a drastic change? What motivated the Apostles to face hostile crowds who persecuted them and eventually even put them to death? Where did they gain their courage? 
Let’s review the information we have about Peter and John in particular and see what the Holy Spirit can teach us. 
I. PETER AND JOHN BEFORE THEY MET CHRIST. 
a. From the information we have in the Gospels we know that Peter and John and John’s brother James were fishermen. Speculation from historians suggests that they were more than likely involved in a highly successful commercial fishing business on the Sea of Galilee. They probably marketed their catch to the wealthy in Judea as well as to those in Galilee. We are told at the time of Jesus’ arrest that John was known by the house of the High Priest (See John 18: 15), lending speculation that his family was well-off financially and that they probably had business contacts among the wealthy Judeans and especially with the Jewish Religious Leaders. And we know that Peter and John definitely had different personalities. Peter was the obvious leader—and probably in his younger days, the instigator. He tended to speak before he thought. And you always knew where you stood with Peter—he would tell you. And, while we sometimes tend to think that John was a little more passive in temperament, it was he and his brother James who wanted to call fire down from heaven to destroy the Samaritan village that rejected Jesus. I would suspect that both Peter & John were muscular from having labored with the fishing nets. And they probably could tell some pretty good fish stories. These were men’s men, strong, boisterous, with a good sense of business in their heads. They were destined to continue their families’ commercial fishing business. And we know also that Peter and John were religious Jews. They had no doubt been schooled in the local synagogue in their hometown of Capernaum by the local Rabbi—that was the custom of that day. And, because of their religious training they were aware of the Promise of a Messiah King who would someday restore Israel to its former glory days. Simon Peter’s brother Andrew had become a disciple of John the Baptist, so it is very likely that Peter and the other fishermen were aware of this unusual prophet who was spreading the news that the Messiah would soon arrive. So, we assume from the knowledge and the probabilities in accordance with the culture of that time and place, Peter and John were good men, good Jews, and inclined to lean towards the Religion of their people. 
b. As I think about these men prior to them becoming disciples of Jesus, I realize they were much like our children. Raised in a Religious setting, exposed to the secular world, developing their own opinions of politics and refining values of their own—Good people who stood at the cross roads of their life purpose. I think of my own experience. When I was a young boy, church was not the priority of my family’s life. My dad had been raised a Methodist and my mother had attended a Pentecostal church out in the country where she was raised. We went to church occasionally, but I really don’t remember us being regular attendees up until I was about 10 years old. My folks were honest, hard workers, and well respected. People often came to Dad to get his opinions about situations they were facing. While Dad wasn’t the oldest son in his family, he really filled the role of an older brother. By outward appearances we were solid folks—Religion was accepted as a part of the culture, but was not to the extent that anyone would have thought us as being religious. And in our present world there are a lot of people who live very similar lives. I have heard so many times people say they moved to Branson because they felt God was directing them here. And many of those people are good people, but they really are not connected with any particular church. It is more a cultural relationship with Christianity than anything else.

II. BUT THEN THEY MET CHRIST. 
a. Jesus was raised in Nazareth, a little village not far from the Sea of Galilee and not far from Capernaum which was the hometown of Peter and John. There is even some speculation (by me mostly) that Jesus may have been a cousin of James & John, but that is not really provable. We really don’t know when Jesus first met these men, but it does seem likely that he was acquainted with them prior to their leaving their fishing nets to follow him. From John’s Gospel we are told that Andrew was one of John the Baptist’s disciples who had witnessed the baptism of Jesus and had followed him afterwards and had decided that Jesus was indeed the Messiah. He had then gone and found his brother Simon Peter and brought him to Jesus, telling him, “We have found the Messiah.” (See John 1:35-42). It was sometime after that that Jesus had invited Peter to leave his fishing boat and follow him “to become a fisher of men.” (See Matthew 4: 18-23). Immediately after that, Jesus had invited James & John to become his disciples and they too left their fishing boats and followed Him. Their schooling under Jesus went on for the next three years as Jesus mentored them and taught them about the Kingdom of God. He had trained them to minister to others. They had witnessed miracle after miracle performed by Jesus—miracles of healing, miracles over winds and waves, miraculous catches of fish, miraculous supplies of food for vast multitudes. They had seen the love of Christ as He ministered to those who were “like sheep with a shepherd.” They had even seen Jesus bring the dead back to life. And as they followed Jesus he gradually released them to minister to others as they had been sent out 2 by 2 to go to various towns and villages to prepare them for Jesus’ arrival. 
b. “Were they truly saved? “ I have heard people ask. And I have to say, “Yes, they were.” They were new followers. They had much to learn. They were being mentored to become leaders, but they were works in progress. They were “walking in all the light they had” at that time in their lives. 
c. And I have to say similar things of all who first come to Jesus. We experience His love, His forgiveness, His peace, His Joy. But we are mere infants with so much to learn. We may not yet be mature, but we should be moving towards maturity. Our progress may involve unlearning some of our pre-conceived notions about what it means to be a Christian. We will make some mistakes and have to seek God’s forgiveness. As we mature, those mistakes should become less and less frequent, but reality is that we will always be “In progress” even when we are much more mature as Christians. Remember how Peter thought he was being so mature when he asked how often he should forgive a person, suggesting maybe up to 7 times? And Jesus set him on his heels when He told Peter, “70 times 7,” indicating that we should reach a place where we freely forgive and have compassion and mercy towards others. We should always be learning. 
d. The disciples were definitely different after becoming followers of Christ. They indeed were learning how to become fishers of men! Have you allowed Jesus to teach you how to become a “fisher of men?” 
III. AND THEN THERE WAS THE CROSS AND ALL THAT FOLLOWED. 
a. We are told that all his disciples forsook Jesus and fled that night when Jesus was arrested. Only Peter followed, but when push came to shove, he lost his nerve and denied that he even knew Jesus. But the Crucifixion, Burial, and Resurrection certainly had a profound effect on Peter and John and all the other followers of Jesus. They had seen his torture and death. They had witnessed the Roman soldier ramming the spear into his side and penetrating His heart so that blood and water poured out. They had seen His dead body placed in the tomb. And then, they had met Jesus face to face, the Risen Lord. He had taught them for 40 days until one day when Jesus suddenly was taken up into heaven. They had tarried in Jerusalem until the Day of Pentecost when the Holy Spirit had suddenly come upon them and empowered them to be His Holy Witnesses. And now, in the streets of Jerusalem and in the Courtyard of the Temple, they had told everyone what they had seen and heard. This is the same Peter who had cowered before a servant girl. And he and John and the others had hidden behind locked doors fearful that someone would be coming to arrest them after Jesus was crucified. But now, faced with the threats of the very same people who had arrested Jesus, their response: “As for us, we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard” (Acts 4: 20). The threats of beatings and imprisonment and even death, did not deter them—they HAD to tell what they had seen and heard. 
b. And that brings me to us: What will it take for us to be so compelled that we are willing to risk rejection and even ridicule and still be willing to tell others what we have seen and heard in Jesus! 
c. Leighton Ford, an evangelist similar to Billy Graham, in his book “Good News is for Sharing, copyright 1977, published by David C. Cook Publishing), wrote this: In preparing for this book, I have talked to a lot of people, and the fear issue comes up front again and again. What makes people hesitate to share their faith? Here are some of the fears that have been mentioned to me: 

– “I am afraid I might do more harm than good.”
– “I don’t know what to say.”
– “I may not be able to give snappy answers to tricky questions.”
– “I may seem bigoted.”
– “I may invade someone’s privacy.”
– “I am afraid I might fail.”
– “I am afraid I might be a hypocrite.”

Perhaps the most common fear, however, is that of being rejected. A survey was given to those attending training sessions for the Billy Graham crusade in Detroit. One question asked, “What is your greatest hindrance to witnessing?” Nine percent said they were too busy to remember to do it. Twenty-eight percent felt the lack of real information to share. None said they didn’t really care. Twelve percent said their own lives were not speaking as they should. But by far the largest group was the 51 percent whose biggest problem was the fear of how the other person would react! None of us likes to be rejected, ridiculed, or regarded as an oddball.  
I think the biggest reason we have so many bench warmers in the church is that too many have not really focused on the Cross. If we really get our eyes focused on the love displayed on Calvary, if we really encounter the living Lord, if we really are filled with His Holy Spirit, if we are really fully yielded to His Control—How can we help but tell others the Good News about Christ! 
We should never have to beg for Sunday School Teachers and Vacation Bible School Workers, and other workers around the Church. We should never be hung up on what style of music the church is singing—we should be so excited about the Living Lord that our number one desire should be to tell others about Jesus and do all we can to see others coming to know our Savor and Lord! 
Fear Not “for we cannot help speaking about what we have seen and heard.”

Filed Under: Uncategorized Tagged With: John, Peter

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