The Voice of the Lord

The Voice of the Lord

The Voice of the Lord

Those who belong to God hear what God says.”

John 8:47

God has always desired an intimate relationship with us. When Adam and Eve were in Eden after the fall, they “heard the sound of the LORD God as He was walking in the garden…” (Genesis 3:8). God was wanting to be with His children, but their sin and shame were keeping them apart. 

In eternity, God’s desire will be culminated when “the dwelling of God is with men, and He will live with them. They will be His people and God Himself will be with them and be their God” (Revelation 21:3).

Jesus came to be among us and to restore us to the Father. In the closing days of His time among us, He told His friends, “I will not leave you as orphans. I will come to you.” (John 14:18). “I will ask the Father and He will give you another advocate to help you and be with you forever – the Spirit of truth” (v. 16).

Prayer is intended to be a two-way conversation with the Father – talking to Him and listening for Him. The next time you are in prayer, pause and listen. And when you hear something that is so Godly, in no way ungodly, maybe even very creatively beyond you, something that would not have been your own thinking, you will know that you are hearing from Him. When that happens, just ask Him for the energy to follow whatever He desires.

His will for you is always good.

Have a good week.

God with Us

God with Us

“The Word was God”

John 1:1

By the time the apostle John wrote his account of Jesus’ life, he not only had experienced the years of walking beside Jesus, but the horror of watching him tortured and killed. Though Jesus had often told His disciples that He would be killed and resurrected, no one seemed to understand that He was speaking of a literal return. John would always remember the resurrection morning when the women returned from the tomb and told the troubled disciples that the body was no longer in the grave. John and Peter immediately ran to the grave. John himself reports that when he saw the empty grave clothes, he believed (John 20:8-9).

He believed. Believed. Not only did he believe in the resurrection, but also in the fullness of Him who had walked among us.

John would have later thought back through the times when Jesus was seen after his resurrection, his ascension and the angels’ assurance that he would return “in the same way you have seen him go into heaven.” As John thought back on all that had happened, he must have often thought back to the words of Isaiah, who had seen it all prophetically, but how impossible it was to believe until everything happened:

“To us a child is born, to us a son is given…. He will be called… Mighty God, Everlasting Father.” The son born would be God, would be the Everlasting Father!  (9:6-7)

“The virgin will be with child and will give birth to a son and will call him Immanuel” (7:14). Immanuel: God with us (Matthew 1:23). God had walked among us.

”He was despised and rejected by men, a man of sorrows, and familiar with suffering. Like one from whom men hide their faces he was despised, and we esteemed him not…. he was led like a lamb to the slaughter, and as a sheep before her shearers is silent, so he did not open his mouth… he was cut off from the land of the living…He was assigned a grave with the wicked, and with the rich in his death…After the suffering of his soul, he will see the light of life and be satisfied….he bore the sin of many.” (Isaiah 53)

That He would be rejected, that He would be silent before His accusers, that He would die, that His death would be with the wicked, but somehow also with the rich, that He would come back to life, and that He would carry our sins – it was all predicted through Isaiah, but never comprehended until it happened.

So John, pen in hand, began to write his own account of this God/man:

In the beginning was the Word,

and the Word was with God,

and the Word was God.”

As we celebrate Christmas this year, may Jesus, God with us/God in human form/God born to a virgin from Nazareth, God who now lives within His followers through the Holy Spirit – may this Jesus surround us and be the ever-present Guest among us.

The best is still ahead. Have a blessed year in Jesus.

Reinhard Bonnke

Reinhard Bonnke

Then I heard a voice from heaven say, “Write: Blessed are the dead who die in the Lord from now on.” “Yes,” says the Spirit, “they will rest from their labor, for their deeds will follow them.” -Revelation 14:13 


Most of you will have heard of the death of Reinhard Bonnke, the German evangelist who spoke before millions during his life-time call to the continent of Africa. I am choosing to call his death a “good report,” since all of us who are followers of Jesus believe that life is grander after death – that death, for the believer, is a promotion, not a defeat. “To die is gain,” Paul told the community in Philippi, “I desire to depart to be with Christ, which is better by far” (Philippians 1:21-23). 
Some of us will remember with joy when Reinhard and Anni came to Belmont in the 90s. I especially remember two things about his visit.

  1. His recall of the time when God was calling him to Africa. He responded by asking God why he would choose him for this weighty assignment. The Lord’s response to Reinhard was that he was actually not God’s first choice. He was choice number three, but the other two had declined, then asked Reinhard, “Will you do it?” Thankfully he responded positively and became a surrendered instrument in the Lord’s hand.
  2. The other memory was when a few of us were having breakfast the next morning with Reinhard and Anni. Anni assured us that we were seeing the real Reinhard Bonnke. “This is who he is day and night. This is his vocation, his avocation, his hobby, his joy – talking about Jesus and preaching the gospel to the unsaved.” 

And that he did. On one occasion he spoke to over 1 ½ million people all gathered together in one place in Nigeria. 

Two other brothers and I traveled in 1991 to Kano, Nigeria, to join in one of Reinhard’s campaigns, but unfortunately we were not able to complete our assignment because of the radical Muslim uprising at the parade ground where the campaign was to have been held. We were, in fact, under heavy police protection during the few hours in Kano, before we were taken to the airport, and the airport closed, until all of us who were a part of his entourage were out of the country. We never felt unsafe, even though, from the reports, about 200 people who were setting up the arrangements at the parade grounds were killed in the uprising. The people back home were in serious prayer for us because they heard of the opposition that came against us. 

So – I am rejoicing with Anni and the family that this esteemed husband, father, grandfather and friend-man of God is at home with Jesus. 

May we all look forward to the time when we, too, will be gathered together with the Lord and with the believers who have gone before us.

Danger

Danger

Hassan (not his real name) lives in Cairo, Egypt. He is an ardent disciple of Jesus, and has studied Islam completely so that he will be more capable in talking about Jesus to his Muslim friends. He knows that this can be dangerous, and that he has to be careful how he approaches people, but his passion is great to see more people come into an understanding of who Jesus really is.

Though Hassan knew that he had a dangerous lifestyle, he still was not prepared for the encounter he had early one morning long before daylight when a masked man stood over him, the point of a revolver at his head, and demanding that he get up and come with him. As the masked man escorted Hassan through the streets of Cairo, Hassan assumed he was soon to be executed for his faith. “Lord Jesus, unto your hands I commit my spirit,” he prayed out loud as his captor continued to their destination. Together they entered into an abandoned building where a group of ten men were waiting. As the men saw Hassan enter their room, they all looked at him and began smiling. “We are all imams,” they said, “and we began having dreams about Jesus. We are now followers of Christ, and knew that this was the only way to get you here without endangering your life. We want you to teach us the Bible.”

After several minutes of laughing uproariously, Hassan gladly began to oblige his captor and his fellow imams who had already come to faith in Jesus.

This story and many others like it are contained in a book by Tom Doyle called Dreams and Visions. Get it, read it, and be encouraged.

The Lord is bringing millions of Muslims and other people groups to faith in Jesus.

Join me in prayer – not only for a continuation of these dreams and visions, but also for all of us that we are ready at any time to tell people about this Jewish Redeemer/Messiah who is also the Savior of the world.

Have a blessed in the presence of Jesus week!

Is it lust? Be alert!

Is it lust? Be alert!

1 Peter 5:8

According to 1 John 2:15, there are three basic temptations in life: the lust of the flesh, the lust of the eyes and the pride of life.

These were the temptations to which Adam and Eve fell in the Garden. The fruit was “pleasant to the eye” (lust of eyes), would taste good (lust of the flesh), and was supposed to make them “like God” (pride of life).


Jesus Himself conquered all these when He was tempted by the devil after those 40 days of fasting and prayer in the Judean wilderness. “Turn these stones into bread in order to still your hunger” (lust of the flesh), “Jump from the Temple to you’re your power since Scripture says that the angels will catch you” (pride of life). “I will give you all the kingdoms of the world if you will fall down and worship me. You won’t have to go to the cross (lust of the eyes). 

I have found both through personal experience and through observing others, that we are most susceptible to these temptations when 1) we are very tired, 2) when we are “very high,” 3) very stressed and self-medicate, and 4) when we are in a strange environment.

When we are very tired, we may let down our guard and defenses, and begin to think, even subconsciously, that we deserve a break. That “break” can lead us to indulge ourselves in things we would not do if we were alert.

When we are “very high,” not necessarily on some substance, but just high on life, things are going well for us, maybe we’ve received a promotion, or received some honor, or maybe we’re even “high” in the Lord, feeling so close to Him that we feel almost invincible and are not expecting temptation to be lurking.

When we are very stressed, we do not go to the source of our comfort (2 Corinthians 1:3) but self-medicate to avoid the Lord’s presence. Even as we are stressed, are we standing on God’s Word?

When we are in a strange environment, we do not have around us the people who often help to keep us focused. 

In those moments, we can be the most susceptible to areas of failure, expressing itself in some form of lust, self-focus, self-elevation, maybe an outburst of anger, perhaps an offense because we are not appreciative, or some other unexpected enticement.

In such cases, Peter’s word is the word for the moment: “Be alert!”

Yes, Lord, may we accept this God-given-Peter-phrased advice, always relying on Your help so that, even in those times, we walk forward in strength.