Monday, December 22, 2008

It's Mine!

There are a few points that I just want to hit on. Hopefully this won't become a production but rather a true expression of what's up.


Tonight I finally arrived back in Panama for the first time in six months. It's a very weird feeling to be back in a place where you once lived -- at least for me -- because it's not strange at all. I sort of knew exactly what to expect and next to nothing surprised me. It usually ends up feeling like nothing has changed in all the time I'd been gone.

But I got home tonight and something hit me that just got me thinking a little about sonship. I went into the kitchen to fill my glass of water during a commercial break for Monday Night Football and I just had an impulse to go look at the fridge. I opened it up and thought, "wow, all this is mine. I don't have to do anything, I have full permission to take whatever is in here and just eat it. It's mine because it's dad's. He bought it for the express purpose of his wife and children having what they need." It took six months of six weekly Chick fil-a visits, ramen noodles, and canned chicken quesadillas to make that sink in.

It's mine. Not mine because I went out and worked and got money and then went to the store and bought it. Mine because all that my dad has is mine. It's the essence of sonship. What the father has, the son has. I don't have to ask dad if I can drink a glass of milk! He'd be weirded out if I did.

You can probably see where I am going with this. It's no hidden gem of insight. But really, something has just broken loose in my mind in these past few months and I'm beginning to realize that God, our Father, is a lot better than we think.

Gal 3:
26You are all sons of God through faith in Christ Jesus, 27for all of you who were baptized into Christ have clothed yourselves with Christ. 28There is neither Jew nor Greek, slave nor free, male nor female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus. 29If you belong to Christ, then you are Abraham's seed, and heirs according to the promise.

Rom 8:
15For you did not receive a spirit that makes you a slave again to fear, but you received the Spirit of sonship. And by him we cry, "Abba, Father." 16The Spirit himself testifies with our spirit that we are God's children. 17Now if we are children, then we are heirs—heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ, if indeed we share in his sufferings in order that we may also share in his glory.
18
I consider that our present sufferings are not worth comparing with the glory that will be revealed in us. 19The creation waits in eager expectation for the sons of God to be revealed. 20For the creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of the one who subjected it, in hope 21that the creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God.

Gal 3:
8Although I am less than the least of all God's people, this grace was given me: to preach to the Gentiles the unsearchable riches of Christ, 9and to make plain to everyone the administration of this mystery, which for ages past was kept hidden in God, who created all things. 10His intent was that now, through the church, the manifold wisdom of God should be made known to the rulers and authorities in the heavenly realms, 11according to his eternal purpose which he accomplished in Christ Jesus our Lord. 12In him and through faith in him we may approach God with freedom and confidence.

That last one didn't have too much to do w/ sonship, but I don't care because it's so good.

So what does it mean to be God's? If sonship means that all the father has, the son has, then what does that mean I have? Look at all the crazy things Jesus says.

22So with you: Now is your time of grief, but I will see you again and you will rejoice, and no one will take away your joy. 23In that day you will no longer ask me anything. I tell you the truth, my Father will give you whatever you ask in my name. 24Until now you have not asked for anything in my name. Ask and you will receive, and your joy will be complete.

Anything. Salvation is a joy that no one can take away! There's no such thing as bad news. Anything bad left in this life is a defeated evil. One of the greatest things that I've learned in the past year is that any suffering we go through for the sake of Christ is a suffering of the loss of carnality. Every single thing that we perceive as bad is just fleshly discomfort. There's nothing but good news in Christ. No wonder the message of what it is to be "in His name" is called the 'Gospel' - the Good News. It's always good, every time, in every situation. So what is the gospel for you today? Now? What difficulty are you experiencing? What does the completed work of the cross and all the fullness of God inside of you have to offer your situation today?

If you're poor, Jesus became poor so you could be rich. If you're sick, he took the price for all the sickness that ever did or ever would enter the world on His precious back. If you're in defeat, He suffered the loss of His entirely victorious life over sin and every fiery dart of satan to hand that torch of 100% absolute victory to you every time. If you're in depression or confusion, He took a crown of thorns on His head that penetrated into His clear and perfectly joyous mind so that you could have nothing to think about but how good such freedom is! If your mom died, He is the resurrection and the life. Can He not do it? Has he not already?

This is what your refrigerator is stocked with. I dare you to try to think of a situation in life that the cross is not powerful enough to overcome. Go take a glass of milk. Grab a handful of grapes. Eat some ice cream. You deserve it. Why? Because you're a son/daughter. Because Jesus gave up His spotless and perfect life that deserved every bit of God's highest favor and love and took on all your sins and failures and imperfections, nailing them to the cross. His blood has run over the record of your wrongs from your beginning until the end of time so you could have the relationship with God that He has -- SONSHIP! What do you need from your Abba today?

It's yours! And that's the grace of God. He gave you anything you'd ask for. Did Jesus mean something else? Do we have to meet a certain level of spirituality before we can really see that happen? Do we have to 'get more faith'? He'll give you whatever you want! If you're truly in His name, then you'll automatically want what He wants, because to be saved is to have your heart -- the most base, essential part of you, your totally honest motives -- turned toward Him. That happens when His love touches you. That touch comes from the gospel -- from hearing that He reached across the divide of sin and saved you. That's love that rattles to the core. That's love that can change a person. And whatever we ask in His name -- that is, under the law of Christ, it is ours. Because He's made us sons of God. Because He's become the firstborn of many brothers. Joint heirs.


All that means is that all the Father has, we have. At no point will we earn a healing by getting holy enough to have God trust us with His power. Religion is that incessant argument that says "yeah, 'it is finished', BUT..." But you need to attain some level somehow to where you can receive. Religion's evidence: you don't have it now. You don't see healings now, you don't see riches now, you don't see freedom now. Biblical truth: you have it now. "It is finished." You have exceedingly abundantly above all you could ever hope or think.

Religion uses a visible circumstance to discredit an invisible promise. In other words, it uses a natural argument against a supernatural truth. Because there is still pain in my neck after I pray, there must be some point on which I am messing up such that it can't happen now. So now I'm gonna go off in some quest to find whatever it is I need to see the promise of God come into reality in my life. Because we think we have time on our side, we allow the prospect of a later receipt of God's gift to placate our dissatisfaction with the lack of manifestation of God's promise.

Faith sees the promise of God as truth above anything seen. So rather than falling into the pit of accepting a lie of the enemy -- that God withholds good things from His sons because of x or y -- faith refuses to accept at any point the failure of God. Faith is an eternal commitment to a truth. It is something never given up on. That's why Abraham had to wait. It's a picture of faith being something of endurance. That's why people don't get healed when you get up to go "pray for the sick". Jesus said "heal the sick". That's what I want to do. If you walk up to someone with the intent of seeing them healed by praying a prayer, seeing if it works and walking away whether you see the healing or not, that's NOT faith, because faith endures. It works by love, which also has the quality of enduring all things. So it's not about how long you stay but your attitude in approaching a sick person. Are you praying for them or are you healing? That's just one example of something stocked in the fridge.

Approach God in all the confidence of Christ! Wait no longer, accept no lie of procrastination of the enemy. He said, "no good thing will I withhold from you." There's so much to ask for, and it's fun to ask, because we receive! How do we know? 1 John: Because we know we what we've asked, we've asked of Him! And His love is unfailing, and He is 100% faithful to His word.

GOOD NEWS!



Monday, December 8, 2008

The Heart of the Gospel

I want to get real. There's been something about writing in my life that's made me able to deal with whatever's been bothering me if I will just sit down and write about it.

What has been bothering me of late are the dots. The lack of identifying what they are, and the failure to connect them. The dots connects my present life to the vision I have for this life.

My question: do I really need a process? Look at Joseph, King David, whoever. Procesess. Look at Peter, Paul, Barnabus. Ability to minister was not dependent in Acts Christianity upon how long a person had been in process but rather, I believe, to what extent the person of Jesus Christ had overtaken his identity. I do not need to spend ten years in bible college, serving here or there, becoming a youth pastor, then finally one glorious day be promoted to senior pastor somewhere. I need to know Him.

This adds to my suspicions about the state of Christianity today. I've been coming to think that any lack of faith, devotion, power, unction, or any fruit of righteousness comes from some level of perversion of the true gospel. We can tell the right words and give valid statements in our preaching and yet still be so off. Because the words you say don't matter if what you mean when you say them isn't what they mean when they are said in the bible.

I believe we don't see healings, we don't see "revival", we don't see powerful, "greater things" caliber ministry anywhere because the original gospel isn't really being preached anywhere. Everyone's got their "revelation" that they love to talk about and all these programs and processes and divided up sections for ministry. A whole person will never be changed one issue at a time. That's like trying to create a supplementary meal replacement pill by looking at each nutrient a person needs and all scientifically trying to plaster together some nutritious but artificial food that will contribute to a person's growth. Why not just have them eat a full on meal -- an 8oz sirlion with loaded mashed potatoes and steamed broccolli! That person will grow and enjoy it as they do. We need the natural word, not man's predigested, refabricated attempts and expressing it.

That doesn't mean there's no place for preaching, but come on. Church in America is created to keep believers dependent upon the church to survive. Biblically, that should be so, but not because the believers need to hear another sermon to make it through the week. They need the encouragement of others in the Lord and unity of spirit and things like that, but that's only to keep reaching out. Preaching is for reaching. For spreading the gospel. Biblically, a congregation was just a group of bleievers congregating, where one gives a word, one prophesies, another gives a message in tongues, etc. We don't leave any room for that in our services. We just want to get our word preached and then we go out for the week and live like everyone else (sinfully or not) and come back the next and that's our life.

I don't think that's quite right! As an example, something talked about a ton is thought life. Gettin' your thinking right. Elminating stinkin' thinkin. But we see that as an end and we see process as a means. We see our devotional time, our partnership w/ the spirit of God is so we can think in line w/ the word. Sounds good, but is that really the end? Let's look at what the bible says about thinking: "be not conformed to this world but be transformed by the renewing of your mind." 1 important word "by" tells us that renewing of your mind is a means to the greater work of transformation which sets us apart from the world. Set apart means holy. He said "be holy as I am holy". So in place of geting my thoughts right to not be down and have a good week at work till next sunday, I'm now conforming my thoughts to be in line with what God says so that I can live on this earth differently -- not like the world. That difference is the essence of holiness. Holiness isn't some weird uber-purity. It literally means being different, being picked out of the norm to serve a greater purpose. And when a person believes what God says and has His thoughts, they live on this earth manifesting the fruit of right thinking. A wise saying you hear in church all the time is that thoughts become words which become your beliefs which become reality. If my thinking is in line with the word, and the word says I'll do greater things than Jesus did, then any situation I find myself in I'm gonna do greater things than Jesus did, because I thought, spoke, believed, and did in accordance with God. And that's how God gets His glory on this earth from my thoughts. "This is to my Father's glory, that you bear much fruit"!

So why do we end up with happy, worldly-patterened Christians instead of holy, earth-shaking Christians? We've perverted the gospel. We quote the right scriptures but we don't take them in light of the full revelation of the scriptures. That's not to say you need to be a bible scholar to take any step in God, but the power of the gospel isn't found in words. It's found in Christ and Him crucified. It's found in the communication of the full truth about what God has done for us. Read Gal. 1, you'll see how Paul was adamant about protecting the original, pure gospel. That's the only place where the power is at.

So anyway, to see what I want to see, the way is the pure gospel. Bonnke says "if you want the original results, preach the original gospel". The pure gospel isn't "Jesus died for your sins" if all I mean when I say those true words is that you just pray a prayer and start coming to church so you'll make it without gross sin in your life and then you can get to heaven. Even if I just hug a leper in the name of the Lord to express His selfless love, that's more the gospel than those five words above. We need the true message of the gospel to be what hits people when they hear our words and see our actions. To get there, we need the true heart of the gospel. It beats for the souls of those for whom our King paid with His life. It does not fail to use every tool given us by God to complete the task of communicating it "to all nations."

May we never settle for less!