Tag Archives: christian living

Preparing for God’s Promise Lands

The people of Israel reached their most critical hour. They failed once, wasting 40 years of wilderness wandering. Now, God had graciously granted them a second chance.

When the Israelites crossed the Jordan River, they would begin to fulfill God’s promises first given to Abraham. Everything would change. They would no longer be nomads and former slaves but a nation, God’s nation.

Israel’s preparation to cross the Jordan River into Canaan (their Promised Land) models what we must also do to successfully enter God’s “Promised Lands” for our lives, families, churches and societies.

At this critical time, the Israelites had lost the only leader they ever knew—Moses—to be replaced by Joshua. Was he up to the task of leading them into their Promised Land against the wicked and formidable Canaanites? Was he truly God’s chosen leader, the man of the hour? The Israelites needed assurance of this to move forward with boldness, knowing that God Himself appointed him.

They were headed to Jericho where they needed to know that victory was inevitable over the formidable strength of the foe.

God gave them needed assurance by sending the priests with the Ark of the Covenant (and His presence) ahead of them. His very presence would open the Jordan River, backing it up for miles, allowing the Israelites to cross on dry land even as they crossed the Red Sea.

God’s promises to them would become a “done deal” depending how they cooperated with God to make it happen. This demanded that they set aside every hindrance to faith and obedience. They had to ready themselves to see God work in miraculous ways never even imagined before. It was an unprecedented hour demanding utmost confidence in God. They had to stop thinking of themselves as nomads and slaves and think of themselves as a nation.

This was the moment for which God called them. It was a holy moment demanding full commitment and a dramatic shift in self-perception. This is why Joshua told them, “Consecrate yourselves.” By doing so, they would participate in the miracles God was about to work. God didn’t tell them just what He would soon do, but He gave them the assurance they needed to advance in confidence.

In short, God did not require blind faith from the Israelites, but action based on evidence that things not yet seen would become reality. This is the essence of the faith that pleases God which we find in Hebrews 11:1: “Faith is the assurance [or evidence] of things not seen.”

This should encourage us as we enter new chapters in our own lives. God never requires our blind faith. When we face life’s challenges and tests of God’s promises to us, He welcomes our requests for assurance that we are on the right path to victory. He requires us to rid ourselves of strongholds. We may not know just how He will fulfill His promises, but He wants us to know we are on course.

We live in a time of unusual shaking with challenges to life, ministry and nation. But His promises still stand. Let us consecrate ourselves, put aside past habits of limited or faulty thinking and seek Him for assurances we need to trust Him as we join Him in His miracles of redemption and justice.

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God’s Unexpected Choices

God can work through anybody! That is a vital lesson we can all learn from Acts 16.

In Acts 16, Paul takes the gospel for the first time to Europe. His venture plants a gospel beachhead in a pagan Roman colony, Philippi—through a woman. In Paul’s day, women were supposed to stay home, not start new and earthshaking movements. The woman, Lydia wasn’t even a native of the city, but came from Asia Minor.

She followed the God of the Jews, but there were not even enough Jews in Philippi to start a synagogue. So, she just met with a small band of other like-minded Gentile women at the riverbank. With this seemingly woeful and unnoticed group, Paul began his ministry—and ultimately changed a continent. As we read on, Lydia became a more dynamic believer and leader than anyone expected. Another example…

In those early days of ministry in Philippi, Paul and his companion-in-ministry, Silas, delivered a girl possessed of demons. That miracle unjustly landed them in jail because Paul ended the livelihood of those who exploited the poor girl’s misery for profit.

Instead of complaining, Paul and Silas praised God for His many blessings which outweighed their present trials. God responded with an earthquake that caused chaos in the prison. The jailer almost committed suicide, thinking all his prisoners had escaped, and he would now suffer death from his superiors for losing them.

This jailer was likely a cynical man hardened by the dregs of humanity. There was nothing religious or idealistic about him, and yet something about the lives of Paul and Silas touched him. In his sudden weakness, the shaken man approached them and asked, “What must I do to be saved?” That night, we are told, the jailer and his entire household—wife, children, relatives, servants—put their trust in Jesus Christ.

This unlikely woman, Lydia, and unnamed Roman jailer, along with his household, became part of the new fellowship of believers in Philippi. Every believer who comes from a European heritage or has received guidance through European believers ultimately owes a spiritual debt to these two unlikely people for an important reason…

The Philippian church did not become a self-centered, religious social club. In his letter to the Philippians, Paul praises the Philippians for their faith and vision for the lost. They were not content to keep the faith to themselves but joined Paul’s mission to deliver the faith to Thessalonica and the center of Rome itself.

Let us not forget that Paul himself was an unlikely messenger—a “Jew of the Jews,” a former terrorist and fanatic who became God’s messenger to the Gentiles he once despised.

The lesson is clear: never underestimate what God can do through you no matter what you or others may think of your abilities. God is always able to work in unexpected ways in unexpected people to accomplish His greater work.

I see this all the time as I meet with Indian evangelists and pastors. Again and again, IGO training centers graduate men and women from the most unlikely backgrounds whom God has called to do great things for the Kingdom.

What unlikely and unthinkable thing is God willing to do through you to affect lives and destinies of people for generations to come?

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The Source of Light

Lloyd Ogilvie, pastor and one-time Chaplain of the U.S. Senate, originally came from Scotland. One evening, he was walking outside without a flashlight. It grew dark. He tripped on a rock and fell down. He put his hand forward to push himself up and felt—nothing.

Sensing danger, he stayed where he was until the dawn revealed himself at the edge of a ravine. One more step, and he would have fallen to his death. Light can make the difference between life and death.

“Thy Word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path,” wrote the Psalmist. Maybe he had an experience like Lloyd Ogilvie’s, and it taught him deeper truths. Jesus Christ is the Word, we read in John 1. In John 8, Jesus also says, “I am the Light of the World.”

In what ways is Jesus the Light? He tells us in chapter 8:
• He comes from the Father (God).
• He speaks with the authority of the Father (God).
• He is going to the Father (God).
• He does nothing on His own, but everything comes from the Father (God).

Everything Jesus is and does He owes to God the Father, the One who knows us before creation, who knows each hair on our heads, who makes a way where there is no way, who keeps all His promises, who overcomes evil in our lives with good.

To me, this sounds like light in a dark world. What other person can rightfully dare to make such claims? What other person can claim a healing ministry like that of Jesus? What other person has overcome death like Jesus? What other person has transformed lives like Jesus? What other person answers prayers like Jesus?

Who else has promised to destroy the works of the devil? So many people in India can claim deliverance from the satanic possession and oppression, from addictions and strongholds when they put their trust in Jesus Christ. He intends to deliver the whole world from this darkness.

As the Light of the World, Jesus is not just a local deity. He is not a western god, or an eastern god, but God of the world. He is King of kings and Lord of lords. He is for every time and place.

But Jesus does not just want us to know Him as the Light of the World, but to experience Him as the Light in our own lives. That means we must follow Him, not as an idea or teaching, but as a Person. He wants us to relate to Him as His original disciples related to Him—as friends.

Jesus revealed to His disciples things about themselves they did not especially want to hear. He did this, not to tear them down but to help them fulfill their human natures. He enabled them to become more human, not less. He enabled them to do great and mighty things that resonate in our own day. He wants to do the same in and through you and me.

Jesus came not as a light but as the Light—the Light comes from the very one who made us and for whom we were made.

As we remember His sacrificial death and resurrection this month, let us bear His Light into a darkened world waiting for the Light.

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