God’s Miracle of Now: “Exactly the Right Moment” Thoughts on the Glory of God, and our 2022 Celebration of JuneTeenth

Tomorrow is Father’s Day, a celebration of God’s great gift of fatherhood.

Tomorrow is a day well worth celebrating because – It is God our Father’s Day.

Tomorrow is also a day of celebrating God our Father’s DAY – “Juneteenth”

Juneteenth is a celebration of bravery, fortitude, and the awakening of our “better angels” – a wish for unity as stated in President Abraham Lincoln’s First Inaugural address in 1861.  

What is Juneteenth?

Juneteenth is a contraction of June and nineteen, also known as Freedom Day, Jubilation Day, Liberation Day, and Emancipation Day.

It is a celebration of the emancipation of those who had been enslaved in the United States.

Originating in Galveston, Texas, it is now officially celebrated annually on the 19th of June in 47 states.

Commemorated on the anniversary of the June 19, 1865, announcement by Union Army General Gordon Granger, proclaiming freedom from slavery in Texas.

In many ways, Juneteenth is more important than the reading of Lincoln’s Emancipation Proclamation.

It took the intention of the Emancipation Proclamation and made it universal – almost two and a half years after the signing- to include the border states and the frontier of Texas – the last outposts of slavery. 

While the Emancipation Proclamation declared that as of January 1, 1863, all enslaved people in the states currently engaged in rebellion against the Union “shall be then, thenceforward, and forever free” the Proclamation itself didn’t actually free any of the approximately 4 million men, women and children held in slavery in the United States when it was signed the following January.

The document applied only to enslaved people in the Confederacy, and not to those in the border states that remained loyal to the Union.

But its symbolic power was enormous, as it announced freedom for enslaved people as one of the North’s war aims, alongside preserving the Union itself.

As the tide of the war turned in favor of preserving the Union and against the Confederacy, black Americans were welcomed into the Union Army and were integral in helping to defeat the Confederate cause thus paving the way for the more permanent and universal remedy

– the 13th amendment to the Constitution.

In a moment such as this, when I take the time to reflect on such a momentous moment as Juneteenth, its deeper meaning and deeply historical implications, its continuously significant role in “life in 2022 America and beyond,”

I am first drawn to the Miracle of the Glory of God in every single ‘now’ moment in our existence.

All of the Miraculous “Now” Moments throughout our history, both good and bad, as the Glory of God is revealed to those living the “exactly now” moment.

So, today, I reflect on the Miracle of the Moment God’s Glory is being revealed.

John 11:38-40Amplified Bible

38 So Jesus, again deeply moved within [to the point of anger], approached the tomb. It was a cave, and a boulder was lying against it [to cover the entrance]. 39 Jesus said, “Take away the stone.” Martha, the sister of the dead man, said to Him, “Lord, by this time there will be an offensive odor, for he has been dead four days! [It is hopeless!]” 40 Jesus said to her, “Did I not say to you that if you believe [in Me], you will see the glory of God [the expression of His excellence]?”

The Word of God for the Children of God. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Amen.

Today’s Question is this ….

“Did I not tell you that if you believed, you would see the glory of God?” 

What does the glory of God mean to you?

*Is it food in your belly when you’re hungry and someone unexpectedly feeds you or buys you something to eat?

*Is it forgiveness you’re seeking from someone?

*Is it a miracle of healing that you need in your life.

*Is it financially motivated?

When God’s Glory shows up, do you always notice right away? Or do you witness the hand of God and only realize later what has happened?

The same God,

*who parted the Red Sea,

*fed multiple thousands with a child’s lunch

*caused the walls of Jericho to fall, with a trumpet blast and a shout,

*Healed the sick, by the thousands.

*raised the dead on many occasions,

*who also has performed so many miracles the number is unrecordable…

*and still performs miracles today, on a regular basis.

However, even with all of those accolades, some Christians mightily doubt whether or not God wants to work a miracle for them today.

The circumstances they face are extraordinarily real!

The pain and the suffering are undoubtedly great!

But I want you to never forget, God is still bigger than any circumstance!

God is greater than any suffering and pain they feel and still on the throne meeting needs for those who can believe, AND…AND receive their miracle!

Did you know, Receiving is every bit as important as believing is, for a miracle?

Anyone can say they have faith and believe God can do a miracle!

Having the genuine faith to receive the miracle personally you are believing for is the realization THAT God 100% loves you enough, to do what you are asking!

Far too many believe there are still miracles performed today, but they are not for them.

That line of thinking is totally anti scriptural as pertaining to the reference, “God is not a respecter of persons!”

How could anyone, think their circumstance could defy the miraculous power and the miraculous unmatchable might of the One True Living God?

Why would God meet the needs of others, but not meet their needs?

They may feel they are not worthy; okay I guess that’s a reason.

But I would vigorously argue against its validity!

Because if you’re a Christian, Jesus has made you worthy, because Jesus is your worthiness!

Whatever reason anyone can come up with, as to why Healing is not for them, is in no way a match for the cross, the finished work of Our Lord and Savior Jesus!

Whatever they think it is that unqualifies them, Jesus has already prequalified them in advance!

Jesus is their qualification!

In fact, Jesus has over-qualified them!

It was December 1772, in Olney England. At the age of 47, John Newton, began the writing of a hymn that would grow increasingly more popular over the next 349 years.

In his song, “Amazing Grace,” Newton writes about a grace that is immense; he writes about amazing grace, one that saved him out of his wretchedness.

By looking within the hymn “Amazing Grace,” one is able to understand a little bit about Newton’s personal conversion.

Although every person’s conversion story is singularly, miraculously unique, there is something about this hymn which remains relatable to all Christians everywhere. Newton’s poem discusses where he was when he found God, or rather, when God found him. He was a wretch. He was lost. He was blind in sin.

Newton grew up with both his mother and father, however, his mother died while his father was away at sea.

Newton’s father remarried and the couple had another child. Following in his father’s footsteps, Newton began his life’s career by searching throughout the African coast for slaves to capture and eventually to sell for profit.

On one journey, Newton and his crew encountered a storm that swept some of his men overboard and left others with the likelihood of drowning.

With both hands fastened onto the wheel of the boat, Newton cried out to God, “Lord, have mercy on us.”

After eleven hours of steering, the remainder of the crew found safety with the calming of the storm.

From then on, John Newton dated March 21 as a momentous day set aside for a time of humiliation, prayer, and praise to the gloriously revealed Glory of God.

Upon arriving safely home, Newton did not venture out to seek more slaves, instead he began to learn Hebrew and Greek.

He occasionally accepted requests to speak about his conversion in front of various congregations.

Newton was eventually ordained and began to lead his own church.

The miraculous moment of the revealed glory of God changed him from a man who was an unyielding, staunch advocate for the slave trade to a man actively advocating and working towards completely abolishing it.

John Newton’s literary work against the slave trade encouraged abolitionist William Wilberforce to continue his legal fight against slavery in England.

In later years, Newton began to lose his memory.

Although his thoughts were limited, Newton said he could remember two things, “That I am a great sinner, and that Christ is his great Savior.”

With this conviction of newly found life that he found only in Christ, Newton passed from his earthly life in 1807, the age of 82. John Newton did live long enough to see the signing of The Act for the Abolition of the Slave Trade.

“Amazing Grace,” although originating in England, appeared in the colonies later accompanied with a different tune, commonly known as “New British.”

This song grew in popularity, but not because it was catchy tune, but because the words that Newton wrote related to every human being who encountered the revealed glory of our God, and the miraculous saving grace of Jesus Christ.

This song touched many people at various stages of their spiritual walks.

Since the day Newton penned the lyrics to “Amazing Grace,” it has grown in popularity and been present at numerous key moments in our nation’s history.

Newton experienced the darkness and hopelessness of his sin, the grievous consequence of following his own corrupt ways. He focused on fulfilling what he wanted to do in his life instead of looking to the direction of God’s glory.

“Amazing Grace” speaks of the sweetness found in Christ’s grace for his children.

Today’s Question of the day is this ….

“Did I not tell you that if you believed, you would see the glory of God?” 

As humans we are lost, blind in sin, and need saving. Jesus’s saving grace is amazing!

Listen, we may not feel overqualified, what we feel will never have nothing to do with our qualification! 

If we are ever going to see our needs met, we better start grabbing ahold of and standing on our Rock of Salvation on the fact we have been qualified enough to receive whether we feel like it or not, because of what Jesus has done for us!!

We don’t need any other reason, other than the fact we have Jesus and what Jesus has accomplished for us and that will always be more than enough!!

When the accuser reminds us of the so-called bad hand we have been dealt.

We need to remind him that we have and hold the ‘ultimate victory’ card!

We have Jesus!

There’s no hand and there’s nothing new under the sun the accuser can ever come up with, that will ever be greater than what our Savior Jesus has already accomplished for us and provided for our defense!

We no longer have to worry ourselves about our defense or defending ourselves against the attack of the accuser, because Jesus is, will always be defending us!

It’s time Christian’s everywhere miraculously take up God’s offensive and the powerful, POWERFUL STRATEGIC STANCE of resting in Jesus’ capabilities!!

All we have to do is rest in what Jesus already did and realize everything Jesus did, Jesus did for us!

The scourging Jesus endured is enough!

The cross Jesus sacrificed His Life on is enough!

The pit of hell Jesus conquered, shaking the gates of and confiscating the keys of, is enough!

Jesus deliverance of God’s Grace WILL ALWAYS BE MORE THAN ENOUGH!

Oh there are a lot of Christians that talk a good game,

They come to church regularly, know their bible pretty good, hear the word and say all the right things Christians are suppose to say.

There are also a lot of Christians who are running around accepting a host of things, the accuser and the world is telling them is wrong with them!

Its like they go to a great feast, have the finest table spread and a seven course meal of miracles is set before them!

They see them right there in front of them, they can even almost smell the aroma from the exquisitely prepared meal, but they never partake of the meal,

They go away limping and complaining, empty handed every time!

Oh they talk about how everything will be perfect one day in the sweet by and by. When we all get to Heaven, what a day of rejoicing that will be, and it will be!

But the time for talking is over, TALK IS CHEAP and the Devil knows it!

Now is the time for miraculous action!

Now is the time for Miraculous Faith!

Faith is defined as complete trust in someone or something!

Believing Jesus wants to do and will do miracles for everyone else and not you….is not Faith!

It’s contrary to Scripture and It’s a lie from the pit of hell! No matter how it may ever be sugarcoated by its description, it will always be a lie from the pit of hell!

We don’t have to wait until we get to Heaven to experience the Grace, the goodness and the unmerited favor of God.

Miraculously, this miraculous grace is alive and well and standing before us!

God’s Glory is about to be revealed – Right in the Miracle of this Moment ….

This scene from John’s narrative takes place at the burial spot of Lazarus.

Lazarus, the brother of Mary and Martha and a good friend of Jesus, is dead.

Mary, Martha, and the entire community grieve Lazarus’ death.

When Jesus arrives, Mary says to Jesus, grieving, “If you had been here our brother would not have died.” 
 
The text of the narrative tells us that Jesus is deeply moved by the pain and sorrow of Lazarus’ family and friends.

It also gives us a, perhaps a seldom noticed, seldom preached, underappreciated window into the exact moment of compassion and spirit of Jesus’ humanity and reveals to us Rabbi Jesus’ ability to identify with the pain and sorrow of others.

We see a man; we observe a Savior who now ‘weeps’ with His people. However, despite His sorrow, Jesus now speaks directly and decisively into the hurts of others and reminds them of God’s glorious plan of hope and restoration for all.
 
Jesus reminds Mary that He is “the resurrection and the life.”

He says, “Those who believe in me, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die.” Then asks: “Do You Believe this?”

This is a dramatic, miraculous promise and question that gives us a glimpse into Jesus’ identity as the Son of God and the authority God has given Jesus.  
 
Jesus then directs them to move the stone.

Martha warns Jesus that by now, there is a bad odor, the smell of decaying flesh which reminds Jesus that four painful days have passed since Lazarus died.

Jesus responds, “Martha, did I not tell you that if you believe, you will see the glory of God?” 

Jesus is not so much as asking Martha a question; He is stating a fact, a rather direct, pointed and emphatic statement of God’s truth about to be revealed.

What Jesus does next is most astonishing.

He calls Lazarus, the dead man bound in his burial clothes from the tomb, and the glory of God is manifested in their very presence.

To reveal the glory of God is to uncover what is hidden. 

Jesus’ mission on earth was to uncover the hidden nature of God.

Through the ministry of Jesus, God’s grace and mercy were revealed so that all might believe and be saved. 

That which was once hidden by an “immovable gravestone” is now to be unveiled!
 
Messiah Jesus chooses to use the exact moment of this impossible situation to remind some and to give witness to others of the glory, power of Almighty God.

Jesus, like His earthly mother, Mary, also believed that nothing was too difficult for God.

In this exact moment of unrepeatable history, standing in their midst, in the face of death, in the person of Jesus is the revealed miracle of God in the flesh!

God in the person of Jesus is the gift of eternal life. Jesus would demonstrate that death has no power over that which God has claimed and over God’s own.

Jesus gives them a prelude to what God was about to do in and through Christ.
 
They have witnessed Jesus restore life to a dead body that will again see death.

However, this experience pales in contrast to what will take place at Calvary.

Not death, not a grave, not burial clothes, nor a huge stone rolled in front of a “permanently” tomb can keep Jesus, the living God, bound in that tomb.

The God who walked among us human creatures defeated death, the sin of this world that separated us from God.

Through the miraculous power of His resurrection, we have been born anew, and in this miraculous new life nothing can destroy or separate us from God.
 
The life, death, and resurrection of Jesus define the meaning of everlasting life.

Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead spoke to the power of God that now resided in this Beloved Son of God, the miraculous power that rescues and saves all.

Standing in their midst and also in the midst of us is the “Great I am,” who is present with us in the fullness of God’s glory.

As the book of Hebrews states,

“He is the [EXACT] reflection of God’s glory and the exact imprint of God’s very being, and he sustains all things by his powerful word. When he had made purification for sins, he sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high.” 

Thus, you and I can declare that Jesus is the resurrection and the life. 

“Those who believe in Christ, even though they die, will live, and everyone who lives and believes in me will never die.”

ON THIS COMING JUNETEENTH DAY OF CELEBRATION, DO WE BELIEVE THIS?
 
Therefore, the question raised in this text is not really a question but a statement.

However, it also very much demands a year of our Lord 2022 answer from us.

This Celebration of Juneteenth, let us ponder our relationship with Jesus.

Do we accept the free gift of everlasting life that God has given to us through the Beloved Son, Jesus?

Make your discipleship count by placing complete faith and trust in Jesus and see the glory of God work miracles and wonders in your life.  

“Did I not tell you that if you believed, you would see the glory of God?” 

1. Amazing grace! How sweet the sound
that saved a wretch like me!
I once was lost, but now am found;
was blind, but now I see.

2. ‘Twas grace that taught my heart to fear,
and grace my fears relieved;
how precious did that grace appear
the hour I first believed.

3. Through many dangers, toils, and snares,
I have already come;
’tis grace hath brought me safe thus far,
and grace will lead me home.

4. The Lord has promised good to me,
his word my hope secures;
he will my shield and portion be,
as long as life endures.

5. Yea, when this flesh and heart shall fail,
and mortal life shall cease,
I shall possess, within the veil,
a life of joy and peace.

6. When we’ve been there ten thousand years,
bright shining as the sun,
we’ve no less days to sing God’s praise
than when we first begun.

Miraculously, do you long to see the glory of God?

Miraculously, do you long for God to do something miraculous in your life?

Is there a prayer that you have been praying for some time and God seems quiet?

Imagine how Martha and Mary felt as their brother Lazarus was sick, and they watched as he grew worse.

They sent for Jesus, but he didn’t arrive in time, and Lazarus died.

They knew Jesus loved their family very much.

Can you imagine their confusion as Lazarus gets close to death and Jesus hasn’t arrived yet?

Can you imagine their heartache as their brother takes his last breath and Jesus didn’t come?

Yet, they had enough faith to believe that, even at this point, Jesus could make a difference.

As we look towards this coming celebration of God, our Father’s Day, our birth Father’s Day, and Juneteenth 2022, as we look at the momentous, miraculous convergence of these days of celebration and remembrance of our history,

As we look at the narrative story of Mary, Martha, and Lazarus and Jesus when Jesus arrives after Lazarus’ death, there are things we can learn that will help us in the moments that we long to see the glory of God show up in our own lives.

I believe the Glory of God will be revealed in a miraculous way tomorrow. I will leave it up to you the reader to personally reflect upon what those lessons are.

Share those reflections with God, our Father, Son and Holy Spirit through study and prayer and praise, a humble reflection with your families and your friends.

To God be the Glory! Forever and Ever!

Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia! Amen.

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

My Lord and Savior, I pause to praise and honor you today. I have been thinking of this prayer request for a long time now. I seek for a miracle to happen. I know you can do the impossible. Only You can accomplish the unthinkable. Nothing is too difficult for you. Please God answer this miracle prayer! Show us your great glory. Make this miracle happen, and I will declare your greatness to everyone I know. Please, Lord, show yourself strong and marvelous in my life today. Amen.

https://translate.google.com/Miraculousl

The Miracle of delayed Miracles. After what literally seems like a lifetime, the Lame WILL finally LEAP up. Acts 3:1-10

It is said that in our technology, internet driven age, we have become the most time-conscious people in the history of the world.

Nowadays, we are always people in a major league hurry for everything to happen immediately, instantaneously, most definitely, preferably sooner.

When we get our oil changed it is “quick lube”.

Our packages are delivered by “Federal Express”.

Our food is “fast”.

Our rice only takes 1 minute.

Our coffee faster “instant”.

We drive on “expressways”.

When we need a loan, we go to the internet, fill out some basic information. Then we click a button or two and quicker than we blink, “instant approval”.

When we deposit our checks into our bank accounts using our smartphones, it tells us that it is immediately available for our use – no more waiting 24 hours.

How much of our world – stock markets, financial institutions, multi-billion-dollar business decisions, diplomacy and world government actions depend on moment to moment, instantaneous and immediate means of communications?

Our computers and phones are equipped with “instant messenger”. Someone said, “Americans are people who shout at their microwave ovens to hurry up”.

That is probably true as my wife will frequently tell me: “stop shouting at the microwave to cook faster because it won’t, and you know it.”

We don’t like delays.

Delays are at best inconvenient, most of the time they are irritating and often they are downright infuriating.

Think of morning rush hour traffic, the expressway and road construction for a moment. Because of the work the speed limit has been reduced to 35 mph, you are going to take the fastest shortcut to the nearest Walmart it takes 10 minutes instead of the usual 5 minutes … that is irritatingly inconvenient.

Imagine those same conditions. You are headed to work; the traffic is down to one lane, and you are 10 minutes late for work… that is irritating.

You are on your way to work. You are taking the kids to school first, traffic is stopped, five men are standing around watching one man work, you look at your smartphone and angrily realize you are 20 minutes behind schedule…

that can be worse than infuriating.

Many times, we allow delays to ruin our day.

But if we knew what we may have encountered if we had been on time we would be eternally grateful.

When have you called on the Lord to move in your life and He did not respond instantly, immediately, when or how you wanted Him to?

Perhaps from moment 1 of minute 1 of hour 1 of day 1 this caused you to be more than a wee bit angry, frustrated, saddened, numbed out, even 100% doubtful.

Perhaps the absence of that “immediate” “instantaneous” response has ended up defining your whole existence – and you come to literally expect “nothing!”

No answers! No Miracles! No Nothing!

What does it do to your self-esteem to expect nothing from no one all the time?

Acts 3:1-10Amplified Bible

Healing the Lame Beggar

Now Peter and John were going up to the temple at the hour of prayer, the ninth hour (3:00 p.m.), and a man who had been unable to walk from birth was being carried along, whom they used to set down every day at that gate of the temple which is called [a]Beautiful, so that he could beg alms from those entering the temple. So when he saw Peter and John about to go into the temple, he began asking [them] for coins. But Peter, along with John, stared at him intently and said, “Look at us!” And the man began to pay attention to them, eagerly expecting to receive something from them. But Peter said, “Silver and gold I do not have; but what I do have I give to you: In the name (authority, power) of Jesus Christ the Nazarene— [begin now to] walk and go on walking!” Then he seized the man’s right hand with a firm grip and raised him up. And at once his feet and ankles became strong and steady, and with a leap he stood up and began to walk; and he went into the temple with them, walking and leaping and praising God. All the people saw him walking and praising God; 10 and they recognized him as the very man who usually sat begging for coins at the Beautiful Gate of the temple, and they were filled with wonder and amazement and were mystified at what had happened to him.

The Word of God for the Children of God. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Amen.

Pentecost having taken place, and the infant Church having been shown to be established, Luke now goes on to deal with the way in which the infant Church rapidly expanded.

In Luke’s summary of the life of the early Church, he has told us:

And everyone kept feeling a sense of awe; and many wonders and signs were taking place through the apostles. (Acts 2:43 NASB)

Today, I pray we are going to see one of the “many wonders and signs” which the apostles did-the story of the lame man who was healed at the Beautiful Gate of the temple.

Evidently Luke has selected this miracle first in order that it might teach us something very significant.

Let us try to follow a timeline to these events.

Nobody knows for sure how much time passed between the events of chapter 2 and the beginning of chapter 3.

It was probably a relatively short period of time.

Now Peter and John were going up to the temple at the ninth hour, the hour of prayer. (Acts 3:1 NASB)

Peter and John being together seems to suggest that the apostles continued to go around in pairs as they had done while preaching during the ministry of Jesus (Mark 6:7; Luke 10:1), and as Paul would do with Barnabas in the future.

I definitely believe there was a significant reason for this; They were sent out in pairs for Koinonia, keeping company, encouragement and mutual support.

Even today we see the greater effectiveness of believers working together and ministering to each other, encouraging each other, supporting each other.

Here we see the new followers going to the Jewish temple to worship as is their usual daily practice.

At the end of the Gospel of Luke it says:

And they returned to Jerusalem with great joy, 53 and were continually in the temple, praising God. (Luke 24:52-53 NASB)

And then in Chapter 2 of Acts it says:

And day by day continuing with one mind in the temple, and breaking bread from house to house, they were taking their meals together with gladness and sincerity of heart, (Acts 2:46 NASB)

So, their place of worship hasn’t changed, but they now understand that Jesus is the Christ, and they are worshiping Him.

Later they will separate from the temple.

“The ninth hour, the hour of prayer”-It appears that there were three hours of the day devoted to and destined by the Jewish people to public prayer; perhaps they are referred to by David:

Evening and morning and at noon, I will complain and murmur, And He will hear my voice. (Psalms 55:17 NASB)

There are three distinct times marked in the book of the Acts.

The THIRD hour, Acts 2:15, answering to our nine o’clock in the morning; the SIXTH hour, Acts 10:9, answering to about twelve with us; and the NINTH hour, mentioned in this verse, and answering to our three in the afternoon.

This afternoon prayer time immediately preceded the evening sacrifices, so by an overwhelming margin this would have been the most highly attended of the prayer times.

We’re talking about literally thousands and thousands of people flooding through the gates through this magnificent structure called the temple.

And a certain man who had been lame from his mother’s womb was being carried along, whom they used to set down every day at the gate of the temple which is called Beautiful, in order to beg alms of those who were entering the temple. (Acts 3:2 NASB)

The Scripture tells us that this man was crippled.

But more than that, this man was crippled from birth.

Think about the tragedy of that.

He had never been able to stand and walk, to run and play like the other boys.

His parents had to carry him everywhere.

I’m sure many opportunities had been denied him because of his affliction.

Now, he’s a grown man and every day friends must carry him to the temple so he may beg for a living.

A tragic situation indeed.

We can only speculate concerning what effect this must have had on his heart.

He could easily have been bitter.

There had never been a day in his entire life when he had not been a burden to somebody.

He could not walk; he could not work.

This was not a day when there were concrete wheelchair ramps for those who were this extensively, severely physically disabled.

In fact, there were no wheelchairs or handicapped parking places! All he could do was beg, sit there, and hope that people would have pity on him.

Evidently, he had been brought to the temple habitually for a long, long time, and Jesus must certainly have seen him as He passed into the temple.

We are not told what this man had heard about Jesus or whether he had ever tried to reach Him to be healed.

It would seem that the man might have or even would have given considerable thought to Jesus during those times when He visited Jerusalem and especially that final week of His public ministry, before His death.

This was a week characterized not only by daily appearances in the temple for teaching but also to heal:

And the blind and the lame came to Him in the temple, and He healed them. (Matthew 21:14 NASB)

Many had been healed, but here he sat, still lame, and now since Jesus had been crucified, maybe even hopeless.

Beggars regularly sat at the gates of temples and shrines hoping to benefit from donors when they would be feeling at their most pious.

The Beautiful Gate.

The Beautiful Gate was in the courtyard of the women.

This beggar didn’t go through it to the temple itself, the holy place.

Josephus observes (Bell. Jud. lib. v. cap. 5, sect. 3) that the temple had nine gates, which were on every side covered with gold and silver.

Josephus also tells us that during the siege (66-70) this gate opened of itself. The Jews saw this as a sign that God was leaving the temple.

And when he saw Peter and John about to go into the temple, he began asking to receive alms 4 And Peter, along with John, fixed his gaze upon him and said, “Look at us!” (Acts 3:3-4 NASB)

“Look at us,” we don’t usually look at beggars, we look away. Peter looks right at the man, and tells the man to look at him to get his full attention.

And he began to give them his attention, expecting to receive something from them. (Acts 3:5 NASB)

Notice that he was “expecting to receive.”

He expected to receive because giving of alms was a required duty of Israel:

“For the poor will never cease to be in the land; therefore I command you, saying, ‘You shall freely open your hand to your brother, to your needy and poor in your land.’ (Deuteronomy 15:11 NASB)

So, it was a constant custom for all who entered the temple to carry money with them to give to the treasury, or to the poor, or to both.

It was on this ground that the friends of the lame man laid him at the gate of the temple, as this was the most likely place to receive alms:

But Peter said, “I do not possess silver and gold, but what I do have I give to you: In the name of Jesus Christ the Nazarene-walk!” (Acts 3:6 NASB)

This man had never walked-he had no clue how to walk.

Yet this is what Peter tells him to do.

This is a cruel thing to say to a lame man.

Unless you have the power to make him walk, and Peter did.

By “name” he implied “the full revelation of the person mentioned.”

The title that the angel gave to Joseph for the baby, “Jesus,” meant “Jehovah saves.”

It was our Lord’s given name and “refers to his birth, ministry, suffering, death, resurrection, and ascension.”

It was a title that encompassed His saving work.

The title, “Christ,” means “Anointed One” or “Messiah,” and emphasizes that Jesus is the “exalted Son of God.”

Or as Peter adds in his sermon a bit later, Jesus is “the Holy and righteous One…the Prince of life.”

What Peter carried with him was the authority of the name of Jesus the Messiah of Nazareth.

He was here with all the authority of the Messiah.

And by that authority he now commanded him to rise from the dust and walk.

He thus turned the man’s attention wholly on Jesus as Messiah.

The mention of the Beautiful Gate combined with the mention of silver and gold had to immediately draw his reader’s attention to the connection between the two comparing, the old temple with its splendor, but ineffective, with the new temple of His people founded on the power of the Lord Jesus Christ:

knowing that you were not redeemed with perishable things like silver or gold from your futile way of life inherited from your forefathers, 19 but with precious blood, as of a lamb unblemished and spotless, the blood of Christ. (1 Peter 1:18-19 NASB)

That old system with it’s silver and gold couldn’t redeem, but Jesus the Lamb could.

And seizing him by the right hand, he raised him up; and immediately his feet and his ankles were strengthened. (Acts 3:7 NASB)

Peter commands the man to walk (literally, continuous action-“be walking”) and grabs him by the right hand to raise him up.

If Peter had not grabbed this man, he may never have attempted to get up.

Let’s remember here that our author is Luke, who is a medical doctor.

Several of the terms used in this text are very precise medical terms.

For example, when Luke is talking about feet and ankles, he uses two words that are very unique, very specialized.

This is the only time these two words show up in the Scriptures.

They’re medical terms to describe the deformity, the problem with the feet and the ankles.

When Dr. Luke talks about the man leaping up, it’s a medical term that basically means for the long-deformed sockets to fall back into place where they belong.

And with a leap, he stood upright and began to walk; and he entered the temple with them, walking and leaping and praising God. (Acts 3:8 NASB)

He didn’t have to go slow until he built up his weak leg muscles.

He didn’t have to go for months of physical therapy to learn how to walk (remember, he had never walked before!).

He not only could walk, but he could also leap, and leap he did, over and over again! He was instantly healed.

The healed man knew where his healing had come from.

He didn’t shout praises to Peter and John.

He didn’t praise his own mental attitude, saying, “I knew that if I just kept a positive mental attitude, someday I’d be healed!”

He didn’t boast in his great faith as the cause of his healing. No, he simply praised God. God and God alone, by His great mercy, was the cause of his cure.

The very behavior of this former cripple was a sign to those who had eyes to see.

The word “leaping” is the same Greek word used in Isaiah 35:6 in the LXX:

Then the lame will leap like a deer, And the tongue of the dumb will shout for joy. For waters will break forth in the wilderness And streams in the Arabah. (Isaiah 35:6 NASB)

When does this happen?

In the new age of Messiah. Speaking to true Israel God says:

Say to those with anxious heart, “Take courage, fear not. Behold, your God will come with vengeance; The recompense of God will come, But He will save you.” 5 Then the eyes of the blind will be opened, And the ears of the deaf will be unstopped. 6 Then the lame will leap like a deer, And the tongue of the dumb will shout for joy. For waters will break forth in the wilderness And streams in the Arabah. (Isaiah 35:4-6 NASB)

The word used in Isaiah 35:6 is of the leaping of the lame when they are healed in the new age.

https://www.blueletterbible.org/kjv/isa/35/6/t_conc_714006

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Thus, this lame man’s leaping indicated that the new age was here.

How could Peter heal this man like this?

Well remember what Jesus had told him:

“Truly, truly, I say to you, he who believes in Me, the works that I do shall he do also; and greater works than these shall he do; because I go to the Father. (John 14:12 NASB)

When Rabbi Jesus spoke these words to His disciples, they must have sounded incredibly mystifying to them considering the miracles they already witnessed.

Yet what he had promised was happening.

It was as if Jesus were still with them working through them in great power.

Peter could do this because he had the gift of healing.

Peter at will healed this man.

There is no indication that the man had faith in Jesus to be healed.

In 3:16, Peter explains to the crowd that it was on the basis of faith in the name of Jesus that this man was healed, but Peter seems to be referring to his own faith, not to the man’s faith.

We’ll talk about this more in a few moments.

This lame man at the Beautiful Gate had not been healed by the Savior Jesus in the days of His flesh, though He so frequently taught in the temple; but he was healed by the power of His Name, now that He was glorified in heaven.

And all the people saw him walking and praising God; 10 and they were taking note of him as being the one who used to sit at the Beautiful Gate of the temple to beg alms, and they were filled with wonder and amazement at what had happened to him. (Acts 3:9-10 NASB)

They all recognized him as the lame man who had for so long begged for alms at one of the gates of the temple.

He was a well-known, local man and crippled from birth.

There could be no question about the authenticity of his condition.

And now here he was walking and praising God within the temple.

And while he was clinging to Peter and John, all the people ran together to them at the so-called portico of Solomon, full of amazement. (Acts 3:11 NASB)

That word “clinging” is an interesting word.

Most of the time in the New Testament it is translated “arrested.”

The apostles took a position in one of the open colonnades which faced the inner side of the temple wall, called Solomon’s Portico and this man who was healed hung on to them tightly.

It also tells us that the people came running in amazement.

We’re talking about thousands of people.

We’ll see in chapter 4 that there were thousands and thousands of people gathered here that came running from all over the courtyard.

These people were astonished by this, so much so that they ran.

Now there is another crowd and another opportunity to preach, and Peter takes it. What did Peter say? Come back next week and you’ll find out.

What is the significance of this story?

Well, I suppose that Luke’s purpose for incorporating this story is many.

First, it illustrates the wonders and signs spoken of earlier (2:43).

Secondly, in order to illustrate that those who will come to Christ are those who have recognized their spiritual lameness and need and have looked to Him as the only One Who can heal them.

Both the Hebrew Testament and the teaching of Jesus stress that those who will be saved of old Israel are like the lame.

In Isaiah we read, in the context of the coming of the Lord as Judge, Lawgiver, and King:

Your tackle hangs slack; It cannot hold the base of its mast firmly, Nor spread out the sail. Then the prey of an abundant spoil will be divided; The lame will take the plunder. (Isaiah 33:23 NASB)

The thought here is that it is God’s weak and helpless but restored people, who will finally, in God’s Day, triumph and enjoy the spoils of victory.

In Jeremiah we read:

“Behold, I am bringing them from the north country, And I will gather them from the remote parts of the earth, Among them the blind and the lame, The woman with child and she who is in labor with child, together; A great company, they shall return here. (Jeremiah 31:8 NASB)

The blind, and the lame will be among the very first people of God who return triumphantly from far off to enjoy God’s coming Rule.

In Luke the maimed and the lame were the ones who were to be called when someone gave a supper”

“But when you give a reception, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, (Luke 14:13 NASB)

This was immediately followed by the parable of the man who made a great supper representing feasting in the Kingdom of God.

Here the Holy Spirit through the apostles makes clear that in the Name of Jesus salvation is offered to ‘the lame’, and that something better than the temple is among them.

This lame man represents those of Israel who recognize their need and are open to God’s call.

The later mention of his having been lame for “over forty years” may well have been a reminder of the “lameness” of Israel in the forty years in the wilderness.

I think there is a comparison here of the old and new temple. The old temple-was no help to him. The new temple-body of Christ brought life.

And thirdly, in order to evidence the fact that the new age had come by the fulfillment of Isaiah 35:6, “then shall the lame man leap like a deer,” Luke is telling us prophecy was being fulfilled. The kingdom had arrived!

We see in this text in Acts 3 a remarkable miracle.

And because it occurs here in the book of Acts, there are many people who say,

“This is what ought to be occurring in the Church all the time. People ought to be healed like this every day.”

Acts 2:43-47 the new Church devoted to the Apostles doctrine and fellowship, which consisted of breaking of bread and prayers.

This should be a pattern for the Church for all time.

If that is true, shouldn’t the Church also expect miracles of healing today just as they saw then?

Are there people today like Peter who can heal people?

As you know, the Church is divided on this and a myriad of other issues.

So, let’s try to justify our position from the Scripture alone. Peter could heal people like this lame man, because he had the gift of healing:

to another faith by the same Spirit, and to another gifts of healing by the one Spirit, (1 Corinthians 12:9 NASB)

This is the spiritual gift of being able to restore to health.

A spiritual gift is a God-given capacity through which the Holy Spirit supernaturally ministers to the Church.

According to Ephesians 4:11-16 the gifts were to be used to bring the Church from a state of infancy to adulthood.

The purpose of spiritual gifts is to build up the body; once the body is mature, we no longer need spiritual gifts.

There is a lot of confusion today about spiritual gifts; do you know why that is?

It’s because they were for the last days, and when the last days ended, so did the gifts.

This is why so many believers have no clue as to what their gifts are, they don’t have one.

Just as the manna ceased when Israel got in the land, so did the spiritual gifts end when New Israel entered their inheritance in A.D.70.

At the end of the forty years the miracles ended.

There is a difference in Scripture between God’s healing of individuals and the gift of healing mentioned in 1 Corinthians 12.

If this were not so, we would find no healing before Pentecost.

But we see God healing many people in the Hebrew Testament.

He calls Himself:

And He said, “If you will give earnest heed to the voice of the LORD your God, and do what is right in His sight, and give ear to His commandments, and keep all His statutes, I will put none of the diseases on you which I have put on the Egyptians; for I, the LORD, am your healer.” (Exodus 15:26 NASB)

God says, “I am your healer”.

God has always healed independently of any gifts of healing bestowed upon an intermediary.

God healed Abimelech in Genesis 20:7; Miriam in Numbers 12:14; King Hezekiah in Isaiah 38:4-5.

They were all healed in answer to prayer.

All through the Hebrew Testament God graciously intervened in the sicknesses of men and healed them.

With the gift of healing God was now doing a new thing.

He was endowing individuals with the ability to heal as the Lord heals.

Peter had this gift.

We see it used here in our text in Acts 3, we see it in again in Acts 5.

The gift of healing was an endowment of specific individuals who could exercise the miraculous gift at will, independent of faith or expectancy in the individual being healed.

As I have already said, there was absolutely no expectation of healing on part of the lame man at the gate Beautiful.

Neither is there any question of whether he had faith to be healed, he wanted money, not a healing. Faith is not mentioned. According to verse six, Peter exercises this gift and heals this man independent of anything in the man.

What was the purpose of the gift of delayed healing? 

Did God want everybody to be immediately, instantaneously healthy so they could immediately and instantaneously enjoy life more?

Does God want everyone to be healthy and wealthy?

Absolutely not!

But there are those today who say it is actually wrong for a Christian to be sick.

They tell us that Jesus died not only for our sins, but for our sicknesses as well.

Quoting Isaiah 53, “by his stripes we are healed”.

They say that this means that in the atonement there is physical healing for everybody.

That is a gross misinterpretation of Isaiah 53. It has nothing to do with physical healing.

The gift of healing was a sign!

And everyone kept feeling a sense of awe; and many wonders and signs were taking place through the apostles. (Acts 2:43 NASB)

https://www.blueletterbible.org/kjv/act/2/43/t_conc_1020043

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The Greek word used for sign is semeion, which means: “a mark, an indication or a token.”

It is used of miraculous acts as tokens of divine authority and power.

The gift of healing was given as God’s signature as it were on the Christian Gospel to demonstrate that it was of Him.

The key to understanding Peter’s healing of this lame man starts in verse 12?

Peter got the crowds attention and then began to preach Christ.

I. You May Request a Miracle Today – Everyone here has needs, wants and desires. But there are also some who seek instead a mighty move of God.

We encounter those situations that are so severe that it is clear that God is our only hope! For those who are in that situation today….

A. There Is A Desire –

v1 ¶Now Peter and John went up together into the temple at the hour of prayer, being the ninth hour. 2 And a certain man lame from his mother’s womb was carried, whom they laid daily at the gate of the temple, which is called Beautiful, to ask alms of them that entered into the temple; 3 Who seeing Peter and John about to go into the temple asked an alms.

As Peter and John approach the temple, they encounter a man with a certain request.

He asked them for “an alms”.

This is defined as money or food given to poor people.

This was a simple request, and it was how he spent each day of his life.

But it is safe to assume that this man possessed a much greater desire.

He had condition that prevented him from walking.

He was unable to live as others lived and to do what other did.

Being lame was an issue that greatly impacted his life.

You and I may be facing complex issues and circumstances which are having a tremendous impact on our lives.

In vast this vast assembly today called “the Body of Christ” the church, there are many diverse people with many diverse and different problems.

Perhaps you and I are facing a situation at this very moment, and it seems that there is no hope for you and there is no hope for me.

Our greatest desire is for the Lord to immediately and instantaneously come on the scene and work a mightily impactful instantaneous miracle in our life!

Let the story of this man encourage you.

All he wanted was some pocket change, but he received an entire life change!

As Peter and John met with him that day, he received more than he could have ever asked or hoped for.

And Jesus is still working miracles today!!

But Jesus doesn’t always work when or how we would choose.

Not only is there a desire, but we also must one day observe that:

B. There May Be a Delay –

v2a a certain man lame from his mother’s womb was carried, whom they laid daily at the gate of the temple which is called Beautiful.

This man had endured this struggle his entire life.

We are told that he was “lame from birth”.

Your issue… your need for a miracle may be something that you have dealt with for many years.

Because of your waiting you may be frustrated, discouraged and even angry at God.

Notice:

1) Delayed Miracles May Cause Disappointment

– Consider the location of this miracle. When Peter & John found this man, he was at the gate of the temple.

There were some compassionate people who would take this man each day and place him beside the beautiful gate.

At this point in history Jesus has already ascended to Heaven.

But is the very recent past Jesus had been in this very area.

It is possible (I believe even probable) that this man was present on many occasions when Jesus was in the region.

He may have heard the news of this Man from Galilee and all of the miracles that He had performed.

Maybe he heard that Jesus had spit on the ground and made clay, placed it on the eyes of a blind man and he received his sight.

Maybe he heard that Jesus put His finger into the ear of a deaf man, and he began to hear.

Maybe he heard that Jesus encountered 10 lepers and at the sound of His voice they were cleansed.

Maybe he heard that there was a Centurion who approached Jesus on behalf of his servant and without even being at the same location the servant was healed.

Maybe he heard about a woman who has an issue of blood for 12 years and when she touched the hem of His garment she was instantly healed.

Maybe he heard about a man named Jairus whose daughter was sick and then died, who was healed by this Jesus.

Maybe he heard about a man named Lazarus who had been dead for 4 days and was raised to live again when Jesus called his name.

Perhaps he heard these things and was resentful.

With all of these miracles in the very region where he lived WHY was he left out!

Perhaps he lived for years thinking that “today could be the day that I receive my miracle”. And for years it didn’t happen.

You and I may be in a similar situation.

For a very long time you have longed for God to move in your life.

Perhaps you have prayed day after day for God to intervene to no avail.

You look around and see God working in the lives of others.

You trust Him and you call on Him… you plead with Him, and it seems you are wasting your prayers and your time.

Your delayed miracle may have caused you great disappointment.

After a while that disappointment may turn into doubt.

Notice also:

2) Delayed Miracles May Cause Doubts –

You pray and pray, and it feels that your efforts are futile.

You may ask is it worth it?

You may wonder if God is there?

You may feel that He just doesn’t care.

You are tired of waiting.

You are weak and weary.

Some of you may have gone beyond doubts and now you are angry at God.

You blame Him for your situation.

You ask why He let this happen to you?

Because of your doubts you have given up on God!

I hope that you will see through the story of this lame man that just because God doesn’t act when you want Him to…

Just because He doesn’t respond exactly how you want Him to…This doesn’t mean that He has forsaken you!

God always has a plan and a reason for the struggles in the lives of His children. You May Request a Miracle Today, and you may not receive it.

But there may come a day when you least expect it that God shows up and does something amazing. And that day could be today.

– Notice:

II. You May Receive A Miracle Today

– As this man was placed at the beautiful gate that morning, he had no idea that this was the day his life would change forever. All he wanted was some money or some food. But he didn’t get want he wanted, he got something much better!!

You may have been calling on God to do something specific in your life.

As of now it has not happened, in fact it may never happen!

But today may be the day that you receive a miracle.

And you may find that God has an even greater plan than you could have ever imagined.

Look with me to Acts 3 verses 4-6 as we consider:

A. The Method Of God’s Miracles

– v4 And Peter, fastening his eyes upon him with John, said, Look on us. 5 And he gave heed unto them, expecting to receive something of them. 6 Then Peter said, Silver and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk.

God is absolutely Sovereign, and He absolutely knows best.

He knows the reason for your struggle.

And when He works a miracle, there is a reason for that as well.

If this lame man had his way, he would have never been born with his condition.

And I am sure that he would have loved to be healed many years earlier.

But God was not ready!

God had a plan that would literally amaze those who were present. As a result, this man was used by God in a mighty way. (More on this in a moment.)

You may not have chosen your current circumstance.

You may feel that you know what God should do.

But God may have another plan concerning your miracle.

At times, all we can do is trust Him to do what is best!

The great lesson for us in this rather long devotional is not so much about the miracle, but the reason behind it.

– I want to look to verses 7-11 and consider:

B. The Motivation For God’s Miracles –

v7 And he took him by the right hand, and lifted him up: and immediately his feet and ankle bones received strength. 8 And he leaping up stood, and walked, and entered with them into the temple, walking, and leaping, and praising God.9 And all the people saw him walking and praising God: 10 And they knew that it was he which sat for alms at the Beautiful gate of the temple: and they were filled with wonder and amazement at that which had happened unto him. 11 And as the lame man which was healed held Peter and John, all the people ran together unto them in the porch that is called Solomon’s, greatly wondering.

Peter lifted this man up.

His legs received strength.

He was filled with Joy.

He walked,

He leaped and

He praised God.

Something that had long seemed impossible had FINALLY happened.

This was truly a “DELAYED” miracle that would change his life forever.

Maybe you are in a similar situation.

For whatever reason you NEED a miracle.

We believe that God is still working miracles today…right???

1. Amazing grace! How sweet the sound
that saved a wretch like me!
I once was lost, but now am found;
was blind, but now I see.

2. Twas grace that taught my heart to fear,
and grace my fears relieved;
how precious did that grace appear
the hour I first believed.

… RIGHT?

… RIGHT?

… RIGHT?

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Lord, my Rock and Redeemer, thank you that you are my ever-present help in times of trouble.

When all I can see around me is trouble, help me to trust in what is unseen. Remind me of the truth of your power, that you surround me and no one can pluck me from your hand.

Remove my crippling fear, replace it with wholehearted faith in you, my God. You are the King of ages, immortal, invisible, the only God. To you be honor and glory forever and ever. Through Jesus Christ, our Lord and Savior, Amen.

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Expecting a Miracle. Matthew 9:18-30.

As we intentionally lift our eyes above the chaos and confusion that surround us, Jesus fills our hearts with hope and restores our faith in His good plan.

And, though it seems like a difficult thing to do, now is a better time than ever to expect a miracle!

In a society driven by social media platforms, one smartphone application after the other to make our lives “easier,” virtual reality and geopolitical reality and global intrigue and political reasoning above all, even as Christians, elevating our expectations and embracing the supernatural reality of God seems a stretch.

Nevertheless, we serve a God who loves to break the rules!

I devote much of my writings on this often because I believe that miracles have the potential not only to impact our lives as individuals, but to display the glory of the Lord in a way that will draw many people to a saving knowledge of Him.

Far from being unique to a particular season in history, demonstrations of divine power have been happening since the dawn of Creation, and many were recorded in the Old Testament, long before our Savior Jesus came to earth.

Fascinatingly, though they remained common when Jesus appeared, they weren’t all happening at His hand.

In fact, there were other rabbis besides Him who were able to invoke a manifestation of the miraculous power of Yahweh.

This is because faith is the fuel of miracles, and it is not reserved for any one person or season in time.

Even today, cultivating a deep and vital confidence in the omnipotence of Almighty God is the beginning of experiencing His wonder.

The earnest expectation He will intervene in our daily lives opens the door to seeing Him do exceedingly, abundantly more than we can ever ask for or think!

Faith releases God’s power and our source of faith is the Word of God.

Faith is a work of God and not our own work and therefore releases to God all the impossibilities we strive far too hard to hang on to and (gasp) magnify.

Matthew 9:18-30 Amplified Bible

Miracles of Healing

18 While He was saying these things to them, a ruler (synagogue official) entered [the house] and kneeled down and worshiped Him, saying, “My daughter has just now died; but come and lay Your hand on her, and she will live.” 19 Jesus got up and began to accompany the ruler, with His disciples.

20 Then a woman who had suffered from a hemorrhage for twelve years came up behind Him and touched the [tassel] fringe of His outer robe; 21 for she had been saying to herself, “If I only touch His outer robe, I will be healed.” 22 But Jesus turning and seeing her said, “Take courage, daughter; your [personal trust and confident] faith [in Me] has made you well.” And at once the woman was [completely] healed.

23 When Jesus came to the ruler’s house, and saw the flute players [who were professional, hired mourners] and the [grieving] crowd making an uproar, 24 He said, “Go away; for the girl is not dead, but is sleeping.” And they laughed and jeered at Him. 25 But when the crowd had been sent outside, Jesus went in and took her by the hand, and the girl got up. 26 And the news about this spread throughout all that district.

27 As Jesus went on from there, two blind men followed Him, screaming loudly, “Have mercy and compassion on us, [a]Son of David (Messiah)!” 28 When He went into the house, the blind men came up to Him, and Jesus said to them, “Do you believe [with a deep, abiding trust] that I am able to do this?” They said to Him, “Yes, Lord.” 29 Then He touched their eyes, saying, “According to your faith [your trust and confidence in My power and My ability to heal] it will be done to you.” 30 And their eyes were opened. And Jesus [b]sternly warned them: “See that no one knows this!”

The Word of God for the Children of God. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Amen.

What I would not give to have a day with Jesus as he walked this earth.

They were amazing times! Amazing teachings!

The great thing is that we can take ourselves to those days by simply picking up a Bible reading it and imagining that day as if it were today.

I want to take you back to one of those days as it is being depicted in the Gospel of Matthew 9:18-30.

Here we are given a glimpse of a day in the life of Jesus.

And during this day we hear about three amazing and miraculous healings – a girl, a woman, and two men.

Each is healed from a different illness, and each is healed in a different way.

But with all three, Jesus is directly involved.

The first is a ruler of the synagogue from Capernaum – a leader in the community. He is grief stricken that his twelve-year-old daughter has died.

According to Luke his name was Jairus and he of course has heard Jesus teach – possibly knows him since Jesus had taught many times in Capernaum and certainly in the synagogue.

Jairus had also witnessed many miracles or at least heard of many miracles of Jesus. Most recently a boy from the village of Nain was raised from the dead.

So, he seeks Jesus out – he’s desperate.

He says something revealing his incredible faith: “My daughter has just died, but come and lay your hand on her, and she will live.”

Later Jesus arrives at the home where all the neighbors and relatives are grieving.

They laugh when Jesus says that she is just sleeping.

They know she is dead and that’s the end.

There is no faith in their hearts.

So, Jesus sends them out, takes her by the hand and calls her to arise.

The second healing involves a very different person – a woman who had suffered from a flow of blood for twelve long years.

That was not just irritating but it separated her from society.

She was unclean meaning that she was not allowed near the temple or the synagogue. She must touch no one and no one can touch her.

While Jairus was experiencing the joy of his daughter and life in his home for twelve years, we have all those years that this woman was grieving alone.

No husband, no children, no connection with the fellowship of believers.

It was a very lonely life.

In a moment she sees Jesus passing through the crowd.

She has heard him teach and preach.

This is her chance. And in faith she reaches out from the ground and grabs the tassel from the corner of his robe.

Jesus feels the power released from him to heal her but doesn’t know who it is.

Jesus asks who touched him. She confesses her faith that if she touches only his garment, she will be well. And Jesus affirms: Your faith HAS made you well!

The third healing is that of two blind men.

They too are desperate.

They will follow Jesus wherever he will go.

They see him along the way and follow him from the home of Jairus all the time crying out “Have mercy Son of David!”

This was the special title they give to Jesus of Messiah.

He’s not just a teacher but the Savior of the nation.

They follow and follow all the way to the home where Jesus is staying and finally when inside the house, Jesus confronts their faith:

“Do you believe that I am able to do this?”

They said to him, “Yes, Lord.” Hearing their faith, they are healed by his touch.

These are three amazing and wonderful and different stories of healing but what binds them together?

Faith.

Each is an example of the power of faith and teaches us the great treasure that is right in front of us every day.

Do we realize how much faith changes our lives and the world around us?

What do we learn about this great treasure of faith?

1. The first lesson about faith is this: faith is the key that releases the power of God. The opposite is true as well: a lack of faith limits the power of God.

Notice first of all what Jesus tells this woman who has been healed of her flow of blood in verse 22: “Jesus turned, and seeing her he said, “Take heart, daughter; your faith has made you well.””

Also notice what he says to the blind men in verse 29-30: “Then he touched their eyes, saying, “According to your faith be it done to you.” And their eyes were opened.”

It was clearly their FAITH which healed them both.

It was also FAITH which the synagogue official had.

All of them had absolute confidence that Jesus not only could but would heal.

From their statements there was no doubt.

And that is the key for the work of God throughout the Gospels.

Somehow God’s power is linked with faith.

In fact, if there is not faith – his hands are bound.

When Jesus was in Nazareth, his hometown, he spoke in the Synagogue, but people rejected him as the Savior.

He was just the hometown boy. And so, his ministry there was also very limited: 

Mark 6:5-6 “And He could do no miracle there except that He laid His hands on a few sick people and healed them. And He wondered at their unbelief.”

Why are there so few miracles today?

Why don’t we see what happened in the Gospels and in the book of Acts?

Why do we refer to the days of miracles as “Bible times”?

Jesus said John 14:12 

“Truly, truly, I say to you, whoever believes in me will also do the works that I do; and greater works than these will he do, because I am going to the Father.”

Why don’t we see that?

Because we live in a time in which there is little faith.

We believe only in that which we can touch, see, and measure.

For the most part, we do not really believe in the power of God as they did.

2. But there is another lesson about faith which is good news for us: we have a source of faith which is the Word of God.

I have read these miraculous stories of healing many many times and I am continually amazed at their faith.

We wonder if those people were just born that way?

Did they have a greater religious inclination?

Were they just more spiritual?

No! They were not one inch any different in their doubts than we are.

But what made them different than others were the fact that they received the teaching of the Word of God.

You see we’re not born with faith.

It’s not a talent or ability that some have, and some don’t although it does seem easier for children to believe than adults.

Faith comes from outside of us. Just as Jesus told the story of the farmer who planted the seeds in the soil and the plants grew up – so God plants in our heart the Word of God which results in steadfast faith that grows and produces fruit.

If you have your Bible turn back with me to Matthew five.

Now if you have a red-letter Bible, you can see that chapter five is all red, so also are chapters six and seven.

This is the sermon on the mount.

Miraculously, Hundreds of people sat and Miraculously listened to Jesus teach.

And miraculously, what happened?

It was planted in their souls! Faith was produced.

Miraculously – They trusted in Christ.

Miraculously – They believed he was Messiah, Lord, miracle worker.

Miraculously – Their hearts were transformed.

And look at the additional MIRACULOUS results…

• A leper kneels before him having faith that Jesus can heal him…and he does (8:2ff)

• A Centurian’s servant healed – from a distance. Greatest faith of all time! (8:5-13)

• Many others (8:16)

So also, with each of these three stories of healings we just read.

Their Miraculous faith didn’t come from nowhere.

It was planted by the Word of God.

They had heard Jesus teach.

They were open to God’s Word, and it produced faith.

Romans 10:17 says: “So faith comes from hearing, and hearing through the word of Christ.”

It’s no wonder so few are saved and so few are seeing the miraculous working of God today. Because if the Word of God is rejected, faith will NOT be planted!

Today the Word is attacked left and right as just a book, just stories and fables, unreliable, one of many ancient and “too far out of date” irrelevant classics.

And if we throw out the Word, do not receive it, how will God touch our souls?

Beware!

Miraculously return to the Miraculous Word of our Miraculous God, which is able to Miraculously heal your souls, Miraculously plant faith and release the Miraculous power of our Miraculous God today! Expect the Miraculous today!

3. A third lesson about faith is concerning the power of faith – Faith is a work not of man but of God.

Just as we’ve seen that faith comes from the Word of God, so also the power of faith is not in ourselves but in the power of Jesus Christ and it is to him that glory is given.

Look at the two blind men that follow Jesus to his home.

They call him Son of David – in other words, Messiah.

They say the right things and yet what they say needs to match what they believe in their heart.

There are many that say one thing but believe something completely different.

So Jesus tests their faith – “do you believe that I am able to do this?” In other words, “You believe that I am the Messiah, the king. But do you believe I am God? That I have power? And their answer? “YES, we do!” There is no doubt.

But what I desperately want you the reader to see here is that this is the power of JESUS. It’s not just some magical ability or a “virtual reality” of these men.

The miracles that come from faith are God’s power alone. 

Ephesians 2:8-9 “For by grace you have been saved through faith. And this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God, not a result of works, so that no one may boast.”

Salvation or any other miracle that happens through faith is a work of God’s power alone.

It gives no credit to us, or to any other person but gives glory to the Lord of the universe – God Almighty.

4. Fourthly, we can learn the lesson faith releases to God all the impossibilities.

The greatest impossibility is the salvation of a lost soul.

We are born self-centered, self-seeking.

We are born living for the flesh and in the world.

And yet God does a miracle through the Word and touches our hearts.

He creates faith and brings us to confession of sins and faith.

We trust in Christ alone and are totally righteous through Him.

God takes the soul that is long lost and far from God and transforms that life!

Jesus spoke of the impossibility of a rich man being saved is like a camel going through a needle.

And then he said this: “But Jesus looked at them and said, “With man this is impossible, but with God all things are possible.”” (Matthew 19:26)

“For truly, I say to you, if you have faith like a grain of mustard seed, you will say to this mountain, ‘Move from here to there,’ and it will move, and nothing will be impossible for you.” (Matthew 17:20)

When Mary was told that as a virgin, she would bear a son the angel told her: “For nothing will be impossible with God.” (Luke 1:37)

To the father of the boy possessed by demons Jesus told: “All things are possible for one who believes.” (Mark 9:23)

By some Miracle revelation, do you and I see the common theme here?

A Miraculous Faith is simply releasing all of our burdens, all of our fears, all of our impossibilities into the hands of God because we cannot deal with them.

We cannot do ANYTHING.

We are totally helpless.

But our Miraculous God can do the impossible.

A Miraculous Faith Miraculously lets everything go out of our hands and into his hands because, Miraculously, God can handle it better than we can.

Miraculously, we can trust him.

But the main question concerning any miracle is this: is Jesus being glorified?

Are we lifting ourselves up to our own altars?

Is Father, Son and Goly Spirit the One to be lifted up and praised above all?

Miracles are not self-serving.

They are not just to give us what we want but to give the Lord praise.

My readers, now more than ever, the Lord wants to do a miracle in your life!

If you believe that and own it as truth, your faith will grow larger and deeper, and your awe at the magnificence of His power will propel you to hold onto hope, put down deep roots, cultivate unshakable confidence in His character.

While the world around you has limitations, God’s power is limitless, and He invites you to cling tightly to the truth that nothing is impossible with Him.

When time has run out in the natural and you’ve reached the eleventh hour, His supernatural abundance has only just begun.

No matter how great the task or how large the dream, He is ready, willing, and able to rise to the occasion.

Stretch your tent, expand your capacity to receive, expect to see His glory, and know that He will meet you Miraculously at the point of your earnest desire.

Do we NEED the Lord or are we self-sufficient?

People in these stories couldn’t live without him.

They were desperate.

Are you and I desperate enough to take and receive everything he says to you?

Are we living and ministering with the expectation a miracle is less than one second away from being realized and visualized and genuinely actualized?

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Perform miracles in my life Lord to display your awesome power and glory. Despite of the sinner I am, please, increase my faith to trust in you. May my whole spirit and soul and body be kept blameless to the end. Through Jesus Christ, our Lord and our Savior, Gloria! Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia! Amen.

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Searching for a Miracle. Considering the Power of Salvation. “If I could but touch the hem of His Garment.” Mark 5:25-34

People today are searching for many different things.

o Some are looking for love

o Some are looking for money

o Some are looking for opportunity

o Some are looking for answers

o Some are looking for fulfillment

o Some are looking for physical and spiritual healing

o Some are looking for a touch of humanity

0 Some are looking for acceptance and belonging

To state the obvious, some are just looking for a miracle – ANY miracle!!

Whatever the reason, they are facing certain situations seemingly beyond their control, beyond their human resources to cope, their only answer is a miracle.

Webster’s defines a “miracle” as: an event that appears to be contrary to the laws of nature and is regarded as an act of God

You may find yourself at a place where you cannot solve your problem on your own, you have tried everything, you have looked everywhere with no success.

Through your struggle you have failed to look to the One who can do what no other can do.

We serve a miracle working God and nothing is beyond His power.

Just think for a moment about some of the miracles that Jesus has performed in the Gospel …

He:

o Turned water into wine

o Healed the Nobleman’s son

o Cast out demons

o Healed Peter’s mother-in-law

o Healed many of the sick in the city

o Cleansed a leper

o Healed the Centurion’s servant

o Healed a paralyzed man

o Healed the man with the withered hand

o Raised the widow’s son

o Spoke unto nature itself and calmed the raging storm.

As we come to our selected text we find one miracle being interrupted by another miracle.

First look to Mark 5:24 “And Jesus went with him; and much people followed him, and thronged him”

We arrive in the midst of the story of Jairus and his sick daughter.

She was 12 years old and at the point of death, in fact she did die.

Jairus went to Jesus for a miracle and that is exactly what happened, Jesus raised the little girl from the dead.

As they are headed to Jairus’ daughter, Jesus is interrupted by the lady that we read about in verses 24-34.

She is described as a “woman with an issue of blood”

She is a lady who is searching for answers …she is searching for a miracle.

Today, I want to devote our time and attention to the subject “Searching for a Miracle”

In this coming encounter between Jesus and this lady we see certain elements of our lives today which may come in the life of one who is searching for a miracle.

Mark 5:25-34Amplified Bible

25 A woman [in the crowd] had [suffered from] a hemorrhage for twelve years, 26 and had endured much [suffering] at the hands of many physicians. She had spent all that she had and was not helped at all, but instead had become worse. 27 She had heard [reports] about Jesus, and she came up behind Him in the crowd and touched His outer robe. 28 For she thought, “If I just touch His clothing, I will get well.” 29 Immediately her flow of blood was dried up; and she felt in her body [and knew without any doubt] that she was healed of her suffering. 30 Immediately Jesus, recognizing in Himself that power had gone out from Him, turned around in the crowd and asked, “Who touched My clothes?” 31 His disciples said to Him, “You see the crowd pressing in around You [from all sides], and You ask, ‘Who touched Me?’” 32 Still He kept looking around to see the woman who had done it. 33 And the woman, though she was afraid and trembling, aware of what had happened to her, came and fell down before Him and told Him the whole truth. 34 Then He said to her, “Daughter, your faith [your personal trust and confidence in Me] has restored you to health; go in peace and be [permanently] healed from your suffering.”

The Word of God for the Children of God. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Amen.

Mark 5:24-34 tells a story of a woman who had suffered a tremendous amount.

It had been twelve long years of suffering.

This disease was only getting worse, every dime she had had been spent in an effort to find a cure, there was none.

No physician or amount of medicine of the day was helping or would help.

All hope of any help was beginning to fade, and the future looked bleak.

The Bible does not tell us her name or her back story.

However, from the little information that we are given, we know that she had come to a point in her life where she was beyond desperate and out of options.

This is a story of not only suffering, but faith and courage.

This woman seeks out her last possible miracle of hope from the one whom she has not only heard has healed many but believes them all to be genuine, true.  

Her beyond desperate pursuit of the power of Jesus Christ gives us a picture of what it means to be driven forth by our faith, to hang on to God’s faithfulness.

There are three main lessons I wish to highlight from this miraculous story.

  1. To be desperate for God’s help
  2. Our faith is to be rooted in Christ’s power to work out any trial we face
  3. God lovingly welcomes us when we come to Him.

Come to God in Desperate need of Him

Scripture tells us that she had gone through all the options that one had to find a cure to her disease. The account in Mark 5:25-26 says she had

“suffered much under many physicians, and had spent all that she had, and was no better but rather grew worse.”

Miracles… we get really skeptical in a really big hurry when we hear that word.

Even Christians roll their eyes when you speak about God working a miracle.

We fail to realize miracles still happen today just as they did in the time of Jesus.

It is one thing for an unbeliever to be skeptical about a miracle, but if you are saved you’ve already experienced the greatest miracle of all time SALVATION!!!

Some people have to reach a devastating situation first before they are willing to open their eyes and see the power of God is their only hope and to see that the power of God unto Salvation can, will work a miracle in their life, even today.

Look at this woman’s situation for a moment:

A. The Sickness – v25a And a certain woman, which had an issue of blood

“An issue of blood” – speaks of hemorrhaging, or bleeding, from some part of the body.

This woman endured a continual flow of blood.

Due to her constant blood loss, she would have been incredibly weak, anemic.

She would have been pale in appearance and would have had no energy at all.

Do you know what it is like to have no energy at all?

It is frustrating and discouraging.

We can assume as a result of her physical ailments, she may have experienced much more than physical weakness but too, depression and discouragement.

B. The Span – v25b “twelve years”

– Not only did she face serious health problems, but she also found no relief.

She had endured this disease for 12 years …over a decade of sickness.

This woman would have been considered severely unclean, even untouchable according to the Law.

This would have resulted in social isolation:

Leviticus 15:25 And if a woman have an issue of her blood many days out of the time of her separation, or if it run beyond the time of her separation; all the days of the issue of her uncleanness shall be as the days of her separation: she shall be unclean. 26 Every bed whereon she lieth all the days of her issue shall be unto her as the bed of her separation: and whatsoever she sitteth upon shall be unclean, as the uncleanness of her separation. 27 And whosoever toucheth those things shall be unclean, and shall wash his clothes, and bathe himself in water, and be unclean until the even.

Could you imagine 12 years of continuous unyielding isolation and separation?

What a sad existence.

C. The Suffering – v26a And had suffered many things of many physicians,

She not only suffered the effects of her disease, but she suffered as a result of those whom she has hoped could heal her.

For a long time, this woman had been looking for answer but to no avail.

The Doctors were no help at all; you can read into this verse that they did more harm than good for this woman.

D. The Spending – v26b and had spent all that she had, – The doctors and their useless remedies had not helped her.

But they apparently took her money anyways.

After all of her searching and trying and suffering now she had spent everything she had. Here she is, sick, separated and desperately broke – but still spending!

Yes! I would absolutely say she is in a place of severe desperation!

Oh, but it still gets worse!

Notice:

E. The Ceaseless Spiral – v26c and was nothing bettered, but rather grew worse,

– After 12 years and many doctors, after hoping and repeatedly praying that the next remedy would finally, ultimately be the one to cure, to heal her, things just get worse (as if she needed worse) …literally her life was draining out of her.

During this time period, it was common practice for those who were diagnosed with difficult medical cases, to consult with numerous different doctors.

They would undergo many forms of treatments and the supposed cures were often very abusive and would lead to the patient feeling worse than before.

This woman was so desperate that she not only went to so many different doctors but spent all of her money to find a cure.

The account in Luke 8:43 suggested that the woman could not be helped because her condition was incurable.

She was left feeling hopeless, untouchable and desperate to find an answer.

There was literally nothing that could humanly be done to help her and from a human standpoint, she was out of options.

It was only until she had heard about Jesus coming that she became aware that this would be her last try at a miracle, and final attempt at being made well.  

She had heard the reports about Jesus and came up behind him in the crowd and touched his garment.”

The passage tells us that there was a large crowd of people.

This woman, on the point of physical and spiritual death, who was most likely physically and emotionally exhausted, pushing her unyielding hopelessness and weaknesses aside,

“came” through the crowd of people to “draw near to Him.”

https://www.blueletterbible.org/lexicon/g4334/kjv/tr/0-1/

There was a “quiet” “unnoticeable” sense of desperation to get to Jesus because of her quiet faith that only He could bring her the hope that she was looking for.

Her eager attempt to “quietly” push her way through the crowd was a true picture of someone who is in desperate need of Christ.

The true lesson is not in our own ability to bring a solution to the trials we face, it is in our coming to the power of God with a heart which longs and yearns for the power of Salvation in Christ ALONE to come and to enter in and fill the void, of our untouchable measures, seasons of sadness, hardships we all go through.

It is crying out as the Psalmist did in chapter 63:1.

“O God, you are my God; earnestly I seek you; my soul thirsts for you; my flesh faints for you, as in a dry and weary land where there is no water.”

This is a cry of desperation and longing for the miraculous power of God.

Furthermore, a desperate heart, beyond desperate for the miraculous power of God, hangs on with every imaginable amount of energy to the truth found in

Psalm 62:8 “Trust in him at all times, O people; pour out your heart before him; God is a refuge for us.” We know that when we come to God, desperate and open, we can also trust Him fully with our lives and find rest in the one who is our true refuge. 

As I mentioned, sometimes folks come to a place of “severe desperation” before they are willing enough to look to the power of Jesus for a miracle.

You may be here reading this devotion and spiritually you are in much the same situation as this woman.

You are suffering desperately with a desperately unclean disease …SIN!

You are looking for help, hope and happiness

You have searched everywhere with no success

You have looked to other people, and they couldn’t help you

You have spent entirely much money trying to buy things that will provide you with happiness …it didn’t work

You have dedicated yourself to your career goals and now you are desperately miserable; without the needed resources, you have a void that cannot be filled.

You thought a new “brand” of relationship might solve your problem

You thought that maybe more material goods, money would make life better

You may be turned to drugs and alcohol, crime, to numb the pain you face.

You have tried it all AND NOTHING IS WORKING!!

YOU ARE MISERABLE AND YOU NEED HELP NOW!

You my friend are at a place of “Severe Desperation” and that may be the best place for you to find the answer that you need!

This woman was at that point in her life too and she sought, found the answer… but how?

That is the next thing I would like for us to see.

Consider:

Our Faith is to be desperately rooted in Christ’s power to work out any trial we face

Verse 28 tells us that her faith was so deeply rooted in Christ’s power to save her from her trial,

“For she said, “If I touch even his garments, I will be made well”

II. The Specific Information Involved

– v27 When she had heard of Jesus, came in the press behind, and touched his garment. 28 For she said, If I may touch but his clothes, I shall be whole.

Notice the phrase -“When she had heard of Jesus”

How did she hear of Jesus?

o She didn’t have a Facebook account

o She did not have a Twitter or Tik Tok account

o She didn’t have any Internet or Wi-Fi services

o She did not have ZOOM or Tele-Medicine

o She did not have any Cable television to watch the Health News.

o There was certainly no Center for Disease Control and Prevention.

o There were definitely no Libraries at any National Institutes of Health.

She heard of Jesus because there were some excited people in the area talking about the man who had done so many miracles.

We have already reviewed the miracles of Jesus thus far in the Gospels.

It is possible that she has had a first-hand encounter with one of the people who were healed.

Maybe she had heard from or spoke with someone who witnessed one of the previous miracles.

Maybe she heard from someone who heard from someone who witnessed the miracles by actually and genuinely receiving the miracle.

I can’t prove this, but I would think that instead of any 3rd or 4th hand info, she may have heard an actual 1st hand account …a personal testimony, of someone who was radically changed by the powerful touch of Jesus Christ.

Here is why I believe this – Notice her statement “If I may touch but his clothes, I shall be whole.” That statement alone shows extreme faith…

Somebody, face to face, soul to soul, shared powerful testimony with this lady!

“It is no secret what God can do”

“What He’s done for others, He’ll do for you”

“With arms wide open, He’ll pardon you”

“It is no secret, what God can do!”

Regardless, we know somebody told her of the healing power of Jesus Christ!

The one and only true source of where our faith can truly be placed, is in Christ.

As a human, the common thing to do when you’re sick, is turn to medicine and make a doctor’s appointment.

We go there expecting a clear answer to why we are feeling sick and a cure to our ailment. There is almost a sense of hope that is placed in the doctor.

I am not the least against modern day medicine at all, I come from a family that is filled with Professional Nurses – Myself, my late Mother, a RN for 40 years.

I have repeatedly witnessed the miracle of modern medicine through the skilled hands of many surgeons as both of my wife’s have been replaced giving her the ability to walk pain free and her arthritic back has been surgically reenforced.

I have the utmost respect for the men and women of our health care services.

The point here is that ultimately despite her diagnosis, this woman’s faith was set on the ONLY one who knows her biological make up better than any doctor.

God is the creator of our human bodies and knows exactly what we need.

This woman recognized despite her best efforts to get help from many doctors, Jesus Christ was the true source that could help her through this difficult trial.

Whenever we are faced with that beyond desperate situation that seems almost impossible to face, we are sometimes driven by our desperation to look to other “material” “worldly” things to bring us a solution, a peace to our circumstance.

This woman’s faith was so strong that notice how in verse 28, she mentions touching his garments, not even Christ himself.

She believed that in Christ’s unlimited power that her words held no doubt that if she “touched” the hem of Christ’s garments, she WOULD be made well.

If she was able to even slightly “… to fasten one’s self to, adhere to, cling to …” the hem of his garments, she WOULD IMMEDIATELY be MADE WELL.

https://www.blueletterbible.org/lexicon/g3916/kjv/tr/0-1/

MADE WELL … Open this link to see the deeper meaning of this phrase!

https://www.blueletterbible.org/lexicon/g2476/kjv/tr/0-1/

The main lesson here does not lie in the outcome of her faith.

This woman could not foresee the future.

The Bible does not tell us that her faith predicted the future.

What scripture does tell us is that her faith was so strong that she knew her answers lied with the power of Salvation through Jesus Christ ALONE.

The end goal was to turn to Jesus Christ and look to Him for strength regardless of the outcome.

Unfortunately, too many people today are keeping secret what they should be shouting from the housetops!

People need to hear the specific information concerning what Jesus can do in their lives!

When people experience “Severe Desperation”, and they are given the “Specific Information” then there may be a “Supernatural Transformation”

III. The Supernatural Transformation Involved

– v28 … For she said, If I may touch but his clothes, I shall be whole. 29 And straightway the fountain of her blood was dried up; and she felt in her body that she was healed of that plague.

What do we see in verse 29? …A MIRACLE!!!

This woman exhibited great faith in her determination to get to Jesus.

In past miracles the people were healed by the words of Jesus Some were healed when Jesus reached out and touched them.

This woman says, “All I need is to touch a piece of His clothes and I know I will be healed”

Her determination is also seen in the fact that she fought her way through the crowd to get to Jesus.

v30 And Jesus, immediately knowing in himself that virtue had gone out of him, turned him about in the press, and said, Who touched my clothes? 31 And his disciples said unto him, Thou seest the multitude thronging thee, and sayest thou, Who touched me? 32 And he looked round about to see her that had done this thing.

There was a great crowd gathered around Jesus.

This weak, frail, sickly and desperate woman fought through the crowd with what little strength she had.

She finally gets to where Jesus is, and risking quite literally everything she had left within her, she reached out and quietly touches “the hem of His garment”

We are told that “immediately the fountain of her blood dried up.”

The miracle that she had been looking for and longing for had happened.

The thing that she had spent so much time, money and effort on was wiped away in an instant.

This woman who was deemed unclean by the law is now clean because of Jesus!

WE CAN RELATE TO THAT!!!!

Listen to what Paul said in

– Romans 8:1 There is therefore now no condemnation to them which are in Christ Jesus, who walk not after the flesh, but after the Spirit. 2 For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus hath made me free from the law of sin and death. 3 For what the law could not do, in that it was weak through the flesh, God sending his own Son in the likeness of sinful flesh, and for sin, condemned sin in the flesh:

When it came to the Law, we were helpless and hopeless.

We were deemed unclean!

Just like this woman we did not possess even the minimal ability to solve our problem, but praise God through the touch of Jesus Christ we’ve been healed!!

This woman with her physical disease sought Jesus, when it came to my own spiritual disease Jesus sought me

Who He was and what He did

How He loved and Who He is

Jesus is the miracle to me

What could be more miraculous?

That God Himself would come to us

Jesus is the miracle to me!

God lovingly welcomes His Children

When confronted by, with the fact Jesus had asked who had touched Him, He wasn’t asking because He didn’t know, He was beckoning her to come to Him.

Jesus is all knowing and sovereign, yet He still wants us to come to Him with an open heart and a burdened soul. He wants to hear us pour out our hearts, it is a clear indication that we’ll trust Him when we come with our burdens and joys.

Her approach to Him is described as being fearful and notice how the text says that she fell down before him and told him the whole truth” (vs 33).

Her admission to touching His garments is so much deeper than the physical.

It also shows us a picture of what a true, repentant sinner looks like when being convicted of their sin.

She makes no excuses, she does not try to run, she comes and surrenders it all to Him.

Surrendering our sin, anxieties and worries about life is not a natural human reaction.

We tend to come kicking and screaming before God, as a last resort because our own attempts have failed.

Regardless of our attitude, when we finally plead for God’s help, His response is always filled with Grace towards His children.

Here he looks at this woman and lovingly says,

“Daughter, your faith has made you well; go in peace, and be healed for your disease”

She is not only cleansed physically but, in that moment, has experienced the miraculous healing power of salvation through Christ ALONE in her life.

You and I too have that same opportunity to come before God and surrender it all to Him.

Like this woman, you and I will desperately try and live life in our own ways, rejecting that there is a God who has been there along.

The God who loves you and paid the penalty for our sin by dying a painful death so that we would not have to.

If we miraculously choose to place our faith and trust in Jesus Christ, the one who has the miraculous answer to life’s struggles and our reason to experience joy. He also miraculously looks at us and in the same way miraculously says;

“Daughter or Son, your faith has made you well”.

What HE did for this woman He can and will do for you!

A woman one day Tried many physicians

But daily grew worse in the bible were told

But when she had heard of this man called Jesus

She found what she needed for her body and soul

She said: If I can just touch the hem of his garment

If I could just touch one part of his robe

I know I’d be healed my sins all forgiven

If I could just touch him I know I’d be whole

One day I sat by the wayside begging

But nobody could help me down life’s weary way

Then my Jesus passed by, and He heard my sad crying

And He Reached down His hands and he saved me that day!

Do you need a special touch from the Lord today?

Are you “searching for a miracle”?

You have a choice; you can “bump into Jesus” like so many in the crowd that day or you can reach out and literally risk everything, touch Him with purpose.

AND MIRACULOUSLY BE MADE WELL AND LIVE!

You can find a miracle today!

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Perform miracles in my life Lord to display your power and glory. Increase my faith to trust in you. May my whole spirit and soul and body be kept blameless to the end. Through the miracle of salvation in Jesus Christ, our Lord, Amen.

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YAHWEH Sabaoth, “The Lord of Hosts.” Our Battles belong to the Lord Alone!

David’s triumph over Goliath is one of the best-known stories of the Bible.

An inexperienced, yet agile lad with a few smooth stones, steps out in his own weaknesses, defeats a giant, armored warrior decked out with heavy weapons.

It’s an inspiring and empowering story of contrasts and ironies: tall versus short, strength versus weakness, arrogance versus humility, glorious victory versus humiliating defeat.

From deep within, our hearts, souls and spirits are mightily stirred up.

From within our weaknesses, we raise up, savor the triumph of the underdog.

But this very impressive story is not mainly about David and Goliath. The core conflict is really between the false gods of the Philistines and the God of Israel, Yahweh Sabaoth, “the LORD of Hosts” or “the LORD Almighty.”

Yahweh Sabaoth is one of the most widely used names for God in the Old Testament, occurring 270 times.

The name Sabaoth comes from the Hebrew word for “that which goes forth” and for “armies” or “hosts.”

The name Yahweh Sabaoth declares God’s reign over heaven and earth and over all armies, earthly and spiritual.

The shepherd boy David, understanding the real conflict, declares that “the battle is the LORD’s.”

And through him, Yahweh Sabaoth, “the LORD of Hosts,” defeats the mighty Philistine and his gods.

A hymn of the church sings, “Lord Sabaoth his name, from age to age the same”—and today we can utterly rely on his strength in our daily battles.

1 Samuel 17:45-50Authorized (King James) Version

45 Then said David to the Philistine, Thou comest to me with a sword, and with a spear, and with a shield: but I come to thee in the name of the Lord of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom thou hast defied. 46 This day will the Lord deliver thee into mine hand; and I will smite thee, and take thine head from thee; and I will give the carcasses of the host of the Philistines this day unto the fowls of the air, and to the wild beasts of the earth; that all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel. 47 And all this assembly shall know that the Lord saveth not with sword and spear: for the battle is the Lord’s, and he will give you into our hands.

48 And it came to pass, when the Philistine arose, and came and drew nigh to meet David, that David hasted, and ran toward the army to meet the Philistine. 49 And David put his hand in his bag, and took thence a stone, and slang it, and smote the Philistine in his forehead, that the stone sunk into his forehead; and he fell upon his face to the earth. 50 So David prevailed over the Philistine with a sling and with a stone, and smote the Philistine, and slew him; but there was no sword in the hand of David.

The Word of God for the Children of God. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Amen.

“The LORD of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our stronghold.” – Psalm 46:7

As Christians, most of us likely know and understand that God is always with us. It is even possible that for many this truth has become so familiar that we have lost the awe and wonder it deserves.

In Psalm 46:7 the psalmist describes the God that is always with him as, “The LORD of hosts.” By referring to God by this name, Jehovah Sabaoth (LORD of hosts in Hebrew), the psalmist is ascribing glory, power and majesty to God.

The prophet Amos wrote,

“For behold, He who forms mountains and creates the wind and declares to man what are His thoughts, He who makes dawn into darkness and treads on the high places of the earth, the LORD of hosts is His name (Amos 4:13).”

Isaiah also used this name saying,

“Thus says Jehovah, the King of Israel and His Redeemer, the LORD of hosts: ‘I am the first and I am the last and there is no God besides Me’” (Isaiah 44:6).

The name LORD of Hosts appears more than 270 times in the Old Testament, making it the most frequently used compound name for God.

Most of these uses occur in the books of the prophets.

It is clear that God wants to communicate His supernatural and ever-present power to His people, especially during desperate circumstances.

The time of the prophets in the Old Testament was when Israel was crumbling.

The Nation was divided and then conquered by Babylon and Assyria.

The children of Israel were captured and exiled.

And it was during these years of chaos, suffering and heartache that God repeatedly reminded His children of His name.

When all hope was lost and defeat seemed inevitable Israel’s Warrior God, the LORD of hosts, reminded them that the battle was His…and it still is.

AW Tozer said,

“To regain her lost power the Church must see heaven opened and have a transforming vision of God.”

This name for God will change how we relate to Him.

God is so much more than “the man upstairs.”

I. What Does Jehovah-Sabaoth Rule Over?

“In general, ‘Host’ can describe (1) a multitude of men (army), (2) angels (good and bad) or (3) physical stars.

The important truth is that Jehovah is LORD over ALL HOSTS, whether they are the armies on the earth, the stars or the angels (good or bad).”

We must seek to know God in His majesty. He is God Almighty, the Maker of heaven and earth, and the only wise God. If He is for us, who can be against us?

When we are at the end of our ropes, we can call on the LORD of hosts.

He commands an army of angels and rules over all the heavenly hosts.

When we are powerless, He will fight for us.

When there is no other help, there is always God.

As the psalmist wrote,

“The LORD of hosts is with us; the God of Jacob is our stronghold.”

 Jehovah-Sabaoth rules over the battles we face.

Zechariah 4:1-7 Authorized King James Version

And the angel that talked with me came again, and waked me, as a man that is wakened out of his sleep, and said unto me, What seest thou? And I said, I have looked, and behold a candlestick all of gold, with a bowl upon the top of it, and his seven lamps thereon, and seven pipes to the seven lamps, which are upon the top thereof: and two olive trees by it, one upon the right side of the bowl, and the other upon the left side thereof. So I answered and spake to the angel that talked with me, saying, What are these, my lord? Then the angel that talked with me answered and said unto me, Knowest thou not what these be? And I said, No, my lord. 

Then he answered and spake unto me, saying, This is the word of the Lord unto Zerubbabel, saying, Not by might, nor by power, but by my spirit, saith the Lord of hosts. Who art thou, O great mountain? before Zerubbabel thou shalt become a plain: and he shall bring forth the headstone thereof with shoutings, crying, Grace, grace unto it.

Our focus should never be on “conquering our mountains” with our own might, or our own power, by how big our problem is, it should be on how huge God is.

Ephesians 3:20-21 Authorized King James Version

20 Now unto him that is able to do exceedingly abundantly above all that we ask or think, according to the power that worketh in us, 21 unto him be glory in the church by Christ Jesus throughout all ages, world without end. Amen.

YAHWEH, Sabaoth, The Lord of Hosts, always and forever protects His own

When the odds continually, continuously seem against us, when “Christian” life appears overwhelming, that is when we need to look at Jehovah-Sabaoth.

This is what David did when he faced Goliath. 

1 Samuel 17:45-47 Authorized King James Version

45 Then said David to the Philistine, Thou comest to me with a sword, and with a spear, and with a shield: but I come to thee in the name of the Lord of hosts, the God of the armies of Israel, whom thou hast defied. 46 This day will the Lord deliver thee into mine hand; and I will smite thee, and take thine head from thee; and I will give the carcasses of the host of the Philistines this day unto the fowls of the air, and to the wild beasts of the earth; that all the earth may know that there is a God in Israel. 47 And all this assembly shall know that the Lord  saveth not with sword and spear: for the battle is the Lord’s, and he will give you into our hands.

The Apostle Paul writes in Romans 8:37-39 Names of God Version

37 The one who loves us gives us an overwhelming victory in all these difficulties. 38 I am convinced that nothing can ever separate us from God’s love which Christ Yeshua our Lord shows us. [a] We can’t be separated by death or life, by angels or rulers, by anything in the present or anything in the future, by forces 39 or powers in the world above or in the world below, or by anything else in creation.

1 Corinthians 15:51-57J.B. Phillips New Testament

The dead and the living will be fitted for immortality

51-53 Listen, and I will tell you a secret. We shall not all die, but suddenly, in the twinkling of an eye, every one of us will be changed as the trumpet sounds! The trumpet will sound, and the dead shall be raised beyond the reach of corruption, and we who are still alive shall suddenly be utterly changed. For this perishable nature of ours must be wrapped in imperishability, these bodies which are mortal must be wrapped in immortality.

54 So when the perishable is lost in the imperishable, the mortal lost in the immortal, this saying will come true: ‘Death is swallowed up in victory’ ‘O death, where is your sting? O Hades, where is your victory?’

55-57 It is sin which gives death its power, and it is the Law which gives sin its strength. All thanks to God, then, who gives us the victory over these things through our Lord Jesus Christ!

Sometimes during trials, we focus so intently on our own personal experiences that we will forget to focus on our “God with us and within us” experiences too.

When we are exactly in the middle of uncertain trials, everyone will have their own opinions or suggestions, remedies about how to “get through them alive.”

And if they are from people, you innately, implicitly trust, you should consider them, you should seriously ponder them for a time and a season and move on.

However, after all is said and done, and you have exhausted your resources, your trusted confidants’ resources, there is only one place and person to go.

YAHWEH! Sabaoth – The Lord of Hosts – The Battle Belongs to Him ALONE!

In the name of YAHWEH, the Father, YAHWEH the Son, YAHWEH the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Lord of Hosts, help us to rely on your strength to wage the battles we face each day against our own trials and temptation’s. We ask this in Jesus’ precious name. Amen.

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Happy, Blessed, Highly Favored are those whose Strength is in the Lord: The Secret of Usefulness. Psalm 84

At the end of the celebration of Passover, in Jewish homes scattered throughout the world, the parting toast is, ‘Next year in Jerusalem!’

The sentiment echoes a common consciousness, a deep restlessness if you will, which is forever drawing God’s people back from “the near uselessness of their place of exile” towards “the usefulness of their roots in the land of their forefathers.

The Psalmist was one of those who had been familiar with the days of worship in the tabernacle in the holy land.

Immediately prior to the building of the Temple by Solomon, the tabernacle had been situated in the City of David, just below the Temple Mount in Jerusalem.

It has been suggested that Psalm 84 was written by King David when he left Jerusalem during the rebellion led by his son Absalom.

David belonged seated on the Throne of Israel. That is where God placed him. This is [place where King David was the most useful to God and His Kingdom.

But David’s fatherly judgement became severely impaired. Absalom took great advantage of that and by force of Arms, compelled David to leave his throne.

A King not seated on his throne – in “exile,” in “hiding’ was of no use to God.

David could not wield his Kingly power – becoming essentially useless to his people, to his nation and too his God – there needed to be a significant change.

The progression:

Useful to Self – Useless to God – then in Christ, 100% usefulness to God.

Psalm 84Complete Jewish Bible

84 (0) For the leader. On the gittit. A psalm of the sons of Korach:

(1) How deeply loved are your dwelling-places,
Adonai-Tzva’ot!
(2) My soul yearns, yes, faints with longing
for the courtyards of Adonai;
my heart and body cry for joy
to the living God.

(3) As the sparrow finds herself a home
and the swallow her nest, where she lays her young,
[so my resting-place is] by your altars,
Adonai-Tzva’ot, my king and my God.

(4) How happy are those who live in your house;
they never cease to praise you! (Selah)
(5) How happy the man whose strength is in you,
in whose heart are [pilgrim] highways.

(6) Passing through the [dry] Baka Valley,
they make it a place of springs,
and the early rain clothes it with blessings.
(7) They go from strength to strength
and appear before God in Tziyon.

(8) Adonai, God of armies, hear my prayer;
listen, God of Ya‘akov. (Selah)
10 (9) God, see our shield [the king];
look at the face of your anointed.
11 (10) Better a day in your courtyards
than a thousand [days elsewhere].
Better just standing at the door of my God’s house
than living in the tents of the wicked.

12 (11) For Adonai, God, is a sun and a shield;
Adonai bestows favor and honor;
he will not withhold anything good
from those whose lives are pure.

13 (12) Adonai-Tzva’ot,
how happy is anyone who trusts in you!

The Word of God for the Children of God. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Amen.

“How lovely is your tabernacle, O LORD of hosts,” he intoned (Psalm 84:1).

Not that God dwells in tents or buildings or any other human habitations: but nevertheless, our soul is only ever satisfied (as Augustine of Hippo is often quoted as saying) when it finds its rest in the LORD (Psalm 84:2).

In fact, our ultimate rest is only found in Jesus, the Word who became flesh and dwelt (tabernacled!) among us (John 1:14).

The Psalmist compares his soul to the sparrow, and to the swallow, little birds that are forever flitting around seeking a home (Psalm 84:3).

Not that either of these could ever safely nest on the altar of sacrifice (!) – but his soul has found its rest in the altars (plural) of the LORD of hosts.

Without the shedding of blood, there is no remission of sins (Hebrews 9:22), and his rest and ours is found first in the altar of burnt offering, where the sacrifice is presented (representing to us the Cross of Calvary) and next in the altar of incense, where the risen Lord Jesus lifts our prayers, mingled with His, up to the LORD.

The Psalmist calls the LORD of hosts, “my King and my God” (Psalm 84:3).

The Christian faith is deeply personal, a relationship rather than a religion.

Blessed are those who abide in Christ, and He in them (John 15:4; John 15:7):

THEY “shall ever be praising Him” (Psalm 84:4), and THEY ‘shall have confidence and not be ashamed before Him at His coming’ (1 John 2:28). “Selah.”

Think on this.

Pray over and upon this,

“Blessed is the man whose strength is in thee, in whose heart are the ways” (Psalm 84:5).

So reads the Hebrew, without adding any extra words into the translation.

The word for “ways” here speaks of a prepared way, as for when a ruling monarch is approaching on their royal tour (cf. Isaiah 40:3-4; Matthew 3:1-3).

So, ponder these questions for just a few moments, what kind of person is able to genuinely say, ‘my strength is in the LORD’ (cf. Psalm 84:5) or ‘I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me’ (Philippians 4:13)?

It is a person whose heart has been prepared by the Holy Spirit, that they may ‘repent’ (meaning ‘change their mind about God’)!

The light of God has shined into their hearts (2 Corinthians 4:6), and they are made new people in Christ (2 Corinthians 5:17).

Not only are we made new people, but now we are enabled to “walk uprightly” (Psalm 84:11) upon the path of righteousness.

We have a new purpose, a new direction, a new usefulness in our lives. ‘This is the way, walk ye in it,’ says the Holy Spirit (Isaiah 30:21).

When we are walking in God’s way, it is the LORD who leads us (Genesis 24:27).

When we face trials in “the valley of tears” (Psalm 84:6), we can each be 100% assured that the LORD knows our way, and will not only bring us through, but will bring us out better (Psalm 23:4Job 23:10).

In all these things we are made ‘more than conquerors through Him that loved us’ (Romans 8:37-39).

The pilgrimage of this life may well be for us a vale of tears, but nevertheless we go on from our strength to His strength, our uselessness to His usefulness and will at last appear before God (Psalm 84:7; cf. 2 Corinthians 4:17; Romans 8:18).

‘In this world you shall have tribulation,’ said Jesus, ‘but be of good cheer; I have overcome the world’ (John 16:33).

In our sin, we are essentially useless to God.

Lives lived in a “never-ending” state of being called: complete uselessness

The promise of Hope: “But be of Good Cheer; I have overcome the World”

Translation: Jesus overcame our sin and has made us 100% useful to God!

God lives – We live and our sin dies – crucified with Christ! (Galatians 2:20)

In our sin we were Useful only to ourselves, Useless to God

By profession of faith in Christ Jesus (Romans 10:9-13) – Usefulness to God.

Here the secret of usefulness is set forth by God before us in Psalm 84:5-6 CJB

5 (4) How happy are those who live in your house;
they never cease to praise you! (Selah)
6 (5) How happy the man whose strength is in you,
in whose heart are [pilgrim] highways.

Many of us have either been “useful” or “useless” Christians for a long time.

When you get in difficulties or troubles or pressures, where is your strength?

Have you found that your strength is not within yourself but in God alone, that He is the ONLY One who genuinely makes a difference?

One Saturday night I came home after a rather long day away from my church responsibilities, and I was very tired and looking forward to some useful rest.

My wife told me some of the things that had been happening, some of the pressures that had come that day from the church and from the family.

They were the kind of things I would normally want to lay before the Lord and pray about.

Except, on this particular Saturday, I didn’t feel like praying. I was tired, and I only wanted to go straight to bed. I just thought to myself, What’s the use of praying now, anyway? I’m so tired that my prayers wouldn’t have any power.

Then it struck me: What a thing to say! What difference does it make how I feel?

My reliance isn’t upon my prayers but upon God’s power.

It always bothers me to hear Christians talk about the power of prayer. 

There isn’t any power in our prayer or our praying.

There is only power in the God who answers prayer.

I was swiftly rebuked in my own spirit by the remembrance that it makes no difference how tired or exhausted I happen to be.

So, consequently in that exact moment I prayed–very briefly, because the power of prayer doesn’t lie in the length of it, either.

Charles Spurgeon used to speak of those who had the idea that the power of the ministry lay in the lungs of the preacher.

But it doesn’t lie there, either.

Power lies in the power of God who is behind prayer. 

Blessed are those whose strength is in you.” meaning our strength is in God alone and not ourselves as we look at ourselves looking back at us in a mirror.

Some time ago I was trying to sell my car.

Intending to put an ad in the paper, I read through several car ads to learn how to phrase it.

I noticed a phrase that appeared again and again throughout the ads.

It said, “Power all around.” 

At first, I didn’t know what it meant. Then I realized it meant power steering, power brakes, automatic transmission, power windows, power doors, power seats, power mirrors and, in the case of a convertible, a power top.

Literally Power all around!

All this power is designed to take the terrible strain out of driving so that all you need to do is sit there and push a few little buttons and things will happen.

What a tremendous description of the “useful” Christian life!

Power all around!

The Power of God!

The Power of the Resurrection of Jesus Christ raising us unto Eternal Life!

The Power of the Holy Spirit – Pentecost!

Not one ounce of any of Father, Son and Holy Spirit power is ever useless!

We just have to a useful way to plug our “useless” selves into it and stay there!

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

God of power and might—we give thanks for a song in our hearts.
Our souls long for You;
Our heart and our flesh sing for joy to the living God.
Happy are those who
live in your house, ever singing your praise.

Hear our prayer; give ear, O God!

Behold our shield, O God of our Salvation;
Guide us in times of trouble, through night of sorrow,
and days when deceit lives in our heart more than love,
and hate for the stranger, more than love.
Speak gently to your anointed ones, that we may hear.

Hear our prayer; give ear, O God!

Help us see the stranger, who comes because Your song
is in his heart and on her tongue, ringing through—
help us to hear, to see, to embrace You—
in him, in her, in you, even, in me—
with outstretched arms and mighty hands.

Hear our prayer; give ear, O God!

God of my Strength—we give thanks for a song in our hearts!  Amen.

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Trinity Sunday. The Diversity of God is Interrupting the Silence of the Silent. Bearing up to the Unbearable World. Gospel of John 16:12-15

As we open our devotional time together on this Trinity Sunday 2022, we look to the diversity of all things and sing these words in praise of the Triune God:

“Holy, holy, holy, Lord God Almighty! All thy works shall praise thy name, in land and sky and sea. Holy, holy, holy, Merciful and Mighty! God in three persons, Blessed Trinity.”

The very essence of God the Trinity embodies diversity.

God is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, each distinct, yet also unified. “God in three persons” is one way of speaking about the several ways we experience God – God creates. God loves. God redeems. God sustains.

Our Triune God’s great love for us was present at the very moment of creation.

As the creation story unfolds before us through the Bible, on the sixth day God created humankind in the “image of God” with the absolute fullness of love.

The imago Dei is the Latin term for “image of God.”

The value of all humanity, without exception is permanently rooted here, as it affirms that all human beings have been made in the image and likeness of God.

Everyone – every culture, every diversity of race, ethnicity, language, ability.

The variety of human characteristics is intentional, as God indeed is diverse in His divine nature and character.

All people, without one exception, hold inherent dignity, value and self-worth.

In these days in which we find our “Christian” selves living, we are challenged in understanding, envisioning, what “inherent dignity, value and self-worth” look like beyond what our eyes see, our ears hear, our hearts and souls beat for.

The enormous diversity of world cultures means there is an enormously diverse understanding of what we are taught is, “inherent dignity, value, self-worth.”

Contemporary thought seems to greatly emphasize stress – cultural sensitivity.

Cultural sensitivity, also sometimes referred to as cross-cultural sensitivity or simply cultural awareness, is the knowledge, and awareness, and acceptance of other cultures and others’ cultural identities. 

On the individual level, cultural sensitivity enables travelers and workers to successfully navigate a different culture with which they are interacting.

There is much we are trying to bear up to, to be as sensitive as possible with those we encounter. Except it is an enormous responsibility we fall short at.

There is too much to know and we cannot know everything there is to know about people, their backgrounds, their values, morals their life experiences.

There is much we can be taught here.

As followers of Christ, we are image bearers of God’s love in the world, called to uphold the inherent value, dignity and self-worth of all human beings through our words, actions, and prayer. Together, we who are the Body of Christ, affirm and constantly reaffirm the value, dignity, and self-worth of all human beings.

There is much Jesus tried to teach His Disciples as he walked this earth.

There are much which Jesus tries to teach us – but we cannot remember it all.

Neither can we see, taste, smell or listen to or hear it all.

We simply do not have the capacity to retain all the information available.

But we are each still, into this very day, at this exact and exacting moment, covenanted by God to bear with them and minister unto them all – Matthew 28:16-20

John 16:12-15 Amplified Bible

12 “I have many more things to say to you, but you cannot bear [to hear] them now. 13 But when He, the Spirit of Truth, comes, He will guide you into all the truth [full and complete truth]. For He will not speak on His own initiative, but He will speak whatever He hears [from the Father—the message regarding the Son], and He will disclose to you what is to come [in the future]. 14 He will glorify and honor Me, because He (the Holy Spirit) will take from what is Mine and will disclose it to you. 15 All things that the Father has are Mine. Because of this I said that He [the Spirit] will take from what is Mine and will reveal it to you.

The Word of God for the Children of God. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Amen.

Jesus said to His disciples in the Upper Room, “I have many more things to say to you, but you cannot bear to hear them now.” (Verse 12)

When I hear Jesus talking about the unbearable things of life I want to run away.

But I can’t run away. It’s too late. There’s nowhere to go.

As painful as it is to remember and as difficult as it is to talk about, I understand what Jesus means when he says, “You cannot bear [to hear] them now.”

Every single one of us has thoughts and fears of the unbearable.

Every one of us has lived or maybe is living a reality that is more than we can handle, a reality that has left us wondering how or if you will get through it.

And somehow, we do.

Think about what you have already borne the brunt of that you never asked for, never wanted, if you had been told of it you would have said, “I can’t bear that.”

The unbearable is that which we do not wish for ourselves or our worst enemy.

It comes to us in the death of a loved one, the end of a marriage, the loss of a job, a diagnosis, or in a thousand other actual and perceived ways. It is the most painful experience we can ever imagine. It is that moment when all we can do is either call yell out God’s name or curse God’s name, and sometimes we do both.

So let me ask you this. What comes to mind when you think of the unbearable?

What are your experiences of the unbearable?

Most of us, I suspect, focus on circumstances of pain, loss, and suffering, circumstances that break our hearts, shatter our lives, and bring us to tears.

That is real. It is our experience of our bearing up to the unbearable but it’s not our only experience of trying to bear up to the unbearable with our own might. 

There is an opposite aspect of the unbearable.

Think about a time when love, joy, or beauty was so real, so deep, so full that you could not hold it all.

It was more than your senses could bear, and tears poured forth, your heart was enlarged, and all you could say was, “Thank you, thank you, thank you.”

You stood in awe and utter amazement of what was happening and silently wondered, “Who am I that God would be mindful of me, that God would seek me out?” (Paraphrase of Psalm 8:5)

When has that been your experience of the unbearable?

In what ways have beauty, joy, or love been more than you could bear?

I remember a Wednesday afternoon when a newborn boy was placed in my hands.

He was no more than seven pounds I believe, but he might as well have weighed seven hundred pounds.

It was more than I could bear.

He wasn’t crying but I was.

As someone who has no children of my own, no experience as a father, let alone a soon to be grandfather, I would crumble under the “weight” of my grandson.

Holding myself to a promise I made a long time ago to remain a lifelong bachelor – to love myself better than anyone else I knew, there’s something about my wife’s love that is unbearable, and I mean that in the very best way!

She and her love are more than I can fathom and everything within me cries out “yes; yes” to her, yes to us, yes to God, all that we are and all that we might be.

This kind of unbearable reality is beyond our wildest dreams and imaginings.

It’s more than the greatest, biggest, and best wish for ourselves.

It leaves us in speechless gratitude.

It comes to us in the miracle of birth, a life filled with meaning, a love that is eternal, and in a thousand other ways.

Bearing the unbearable opens us to receiving a life we could never create for or give ourselves.

It shatters our fears, breaks through our defenses, and brings us to tears.

Bearing the unbearable in either aspect can open our heart.

It can make us vulnerable, real, and authentic.

It creates space for and invites intimacy.

That is the beginning of a new life.

After Jesus’ death and resurrection, the church thought more and more of God the Father and Jesus as sharing an identity, so much so they called them both by the name previously reserved for the Father, “Lord,” which just also happened to be the title given to the Roman Emperor Caesar.

Calling Jesus “Lord” in those times was a political act and could get you in considerable trouble and potentially become lion’s food in the Coliseum.

The church began to think of Jesus as God’s human representative. Or to put it another way, Jesus was the human face of God. God in person, we might say. In time the church developed the doctrine of the incarnation.

1 Corinthians 5:19 says, “God was in Christ reconciling the world to himself.”

So, that helps understand the relationship between the Father and Jesus.

But what about the Holy Spirit, where does he come in?

Jesus had promised the disciples that after he left them, the Spirit would come to tell them all that they needed to know.

Our Gospel lesson from John today has Jesus telling them:

“I still have many things to say to you, but you cannot bear them now. When the Spirit of truth comes, he will guide you into all the truth; for he will not speak on his own, but will speak whatever he hears, and he will declare to you the things that are to come. He will glorify me, because he will take what is mine and declare it to you. All that the Father has is mine. For this reason I said that he will take what is mine and declare it to you.”

If we think of Jesus as God “in person,” the human face of God, then we might think of the Spirit as “God present.”

It is the Holy Spirit that makes Jesus our contemporary and not just an inspiring dead man from long ago.

It is God’s Spirit that allows us to know his presence and power now.

That means the Triune God we worship is still quite alive and still acting and speaking and not just a deity we “have heard reports about” from the past.

So, there’s a real sense in which we need to experience bearing the unbearable.

Here’s why I say that.

We tend to live unconscious lives.

We “sleepwalk” through our days missing life, love, beauty, and each other.

If there is a mortal sin it has to be unconscious living.

Bearing the unbearable can awaken us, offer insights into our life, teach us about ourselves, grow us up, and bring us more fully into ourselves.

Ultimately, though, it reveals the presence of God, the Father, Son, Spirit.

Those who stand in the paradox of bearing the unbearable are given ears to hear, eyes to see, hearts to love and souls to serve with.

I can’t help but wonder, what if God is never more present to us than when we bear the unbearable?

The death of a loved one. The loss of a job. The breakup of a marriage.

The loneliness that cripples. The diagnosis that turns life upside down.

The unfathomable catastrophe. The unfathomable love.

The beauty that leaves us speechless. The tears of joy. What if those things that ask more of us than we can handle and offer us more than we could ever have imagined are the very places in which God is most present and most real?

Bearing the unbearable places, humbles us on the threshold of our lives.

It takes us to the limits of who we are, what we have with God versus the world.

It’s the place where life in Father, Son, Holy Spirit is too real, too much, too big.

It’s also the place that calls us to be accountable to ourselves and our neighbors and calls us to be maximally accountable to God, the Father, Son, Holy Spirit.

I’m not talking about blame or guilt.

I’m talking about the accountability of “girding ourselves” and showing up.

When we stand at the edge of life, bearing the unbearable, something stunning and beautiful can happen.

We are standing at the opening “into all the truth.”

That’s a pretty big and bold statement.

But that’s exactly what Jesus says will happen.

The Spirit will guide us into all the truth.

The Spirit will declare, bring, and offer all that Jesus has and all that the Father has.

Nothing is withheld.

This Triune God is a God who still comes among his people in presence and power. This Triune God still speaks to us, and that is a good thing, too, because the way the world is continues to challenge us to hear what God would say to us.

The Bible is our authoritative text, but it is only the living God who can turn the dead letter into a live word to us (Isaiah 55:8-11). That puts upon the church the difficult responsibility of being a community of discernment and imagination.

We may not know it, understand it, or believe it but in the midst of unbearable reality we are being gracefully guided into all the truth we are able to bear up to.

When we bear the unbearable the Holy Trinity becomes a Holy Quaternity.

It’s not about only the three. Yes, there are the three but there is also a fourth.

You and I are the fourth.

How can we bear with that?

The Bible is a reliable guide for faith, because it tells us enough of who God is and what God does for us to discern what God says to us today. God has given us reason to think things through and a conscience to sort the good from the bad.

We have to listen carefully to what God might say to us in these days from what we do know.

And the Bible does tell us about many things.

It tells us about being Children of God, of mercy and forgiveness, about love and justice, about wealth and poverty, about faithfulness and discipleship too, and about stewardship and mission, about wisdom and folly, about life and death.

We can all bear the unbearable because God bears us up – every single moment!

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Psalm 121 Complete Jewish Bible

121 (0) A song of ascents:

(1) If I raise my eyes to the hills,
from where will my help come?
My help comes from Adonai,
the maker of heaven and earth.
He will not let your foot slip —
your guardian is not asleep.
No, the guardian of Isra’el
never slumbers or sleeps.

Adonai is your guardian; at your right hand
Adonai provides you with shade —
the sun can’t strike you during the day
or even the moon at night.

Adonai will guard you against all harm;
he will guard your life.
Adonai will guard your coming and going
from now on and forever.

Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Alleluia! Alleluia! Amen

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Fresh Fire: Plug into His Power. Move from Your strength into His Strength

By myself I have little power and strength of my own, but God, by Himself has all of the power and all of the strength.

If anything at all is going to exist or be created, it will not be by any of my own weak use of my own power, but exclusively, by God’s use of His own power.

God alone has the power and strength required not only to bring things into existence, but all the power and strength to keep them out of existence as well.

I have conceived a lot of things in my mind that God in His wisdom and by His maximum grace, which God has kept me from having any knowledge and possession of.

20 Then Job arose, and rent his mantle, and shaved his head, and fell down upon the ground, and worshipped,

21 And said, Naked came I out of my mother’s womb, and naked shall I return thither: the Lord gave, and the Lord hath taken away; blessed be the name of the Lord.

So, every day I need to end my day by saying, “Lord, I know that, first of all, You are the only one in control of what has happened and not happened to me today.

Thank you, God my Father, that when my life may have seemed out of control to me, Your power, Your grace alone kept me alive long enough to pray to you!”

“You were in control all of the time I perceived I was not. The heavens declare the power of God. The throne of Heaven is never empty. You God are 100% there and seated with Your Son, Jesus, in absolute control and sovereign over it all.”

When in the complete failure and ethical and moral weakness of my humanity I am not strong enough to deal or contend, I simply have no power whatsoever to contain its power over my life, I can plug myself into the full moral power of my God and move from my strength to His strength, my defeats to His victories.

And my prayers link my weaknesses and failures with His strength and victory.

Psalm 84:5-8 Amplified Bible


Blessed and greatly favored is the man whose strength is in You,
In [a]whose heart are the highways to Zion.

Passing through the Valley of Weeping ([b]Baca), they make it a place of springs;
The early rain also covers it with blessings.

They go from strength to strength [increasing in victorious power];
Each of them appears before God in Zion.


O Lord God of hosts, hear my prayer;
Listen, O God of Jacob! Selah.

The Word of God for the Children of God. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Amen.

Being a believer is a journey to God and with God, where your faith is inspired, empowered and strengthened. 

Everything we go through makes us know God more. 

The journey, every trial and the unpleasant paths we must endure, has been making us stronger and stronger; in God, inside us. 

You have been getting stronger, becoming a warrior: brave, courageous, and rich in character.

Your ultimate destination is with Your God.

To come into your inheritance, you must travel forward, claiming, obtaining, and becoming the upgraded identity that God has always intended for you.

Your victory in the past season becomes your platform or moral authority in the new beginnings of the next oncoming season.

Your everyday assignment is to stand on the platform of what God has done in your life and inspire and invite people onto the journey into the life of Christ.

Reverend Charles Haddon Spurgeon:

  • Trusting God in trouble brings present comfort.
  • Present comfort ensures still larger supplies.
  • So far from being wearied they gather strength as they proceed.
  • Each individual becomes happier, each company becomes more numerous, each holy song more sweet and full.
  • We grow as we advance if heaven be our goal.
  • If we spend our strength in God’s ways we shall find it increase.

“Every one of them in Zion appeareth before God.”

This was the end of the pilgrims’ march
-the center where all met
-the delight of all hearts.

Not merely to be in the assembly, but to appear before God was the object of each devout Israelite.

Unless we realize the presence of God, we have done nothing; the mere gathering together is nothing worth.

Malcolm MacLaren:

“One of the deep distinguishing joys of a Christian career of pressing forward towards closer communion and conformity with our Lord and Master, in whom God is manifested: viz. (namely) that we grow day by day in strength, and that effort does not weaken, but invigorates.”

Life is a journey to God, now; where we find the hidden strengths, that we were born with; and develop them, with God, towards God, and for God’s glory and to share with others.

Believers are pilgrims or sojourners whose goal in life is to seek, find, and live with God; and their happiness is found and based in a complete investment of their lives, while they are always growing stronger, from the inside out, until they see God here.

Our lives are redemptive journeys and stories, where we gain strength in God, through ongoing perseverance, where the saints are seasoned into courageous warriors, on a pilgrimage to see God.

Plug into God as God is Plugged into You!

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Father, teach me to do your will, for you are my God. May your Holy Spirit lead me on level ground. I see your faithfulness and goodness in what you have done for me throughout my life. I think about these things, and I thirst for you.

Let me tap into your power and your strength, feel of your unfailing love every morning, for I am empowered by trusting you. Show me where to walk, for I give myself to you. Keep me on firm footing for the glory of your name. Amen.

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Moving forward into Ministry: Trust, Faith, a Living Hope, after a Tragedy. Job 13:13-18

I have been asked several times how we can have trust or faith after tragedy.

Considering the scope and the magnitude of our recent events – several mass shootings, I took it as God’s Spirit moving me today to write this devotional.

As with a host of countless others, I have been through a few tragedies in my life and never genuinely thought of myself as a trauma survivor until I was trained as a Professional Registered Nurse in the field of Psychiatry.

I have never in my life experienced the scope of the tragedies from those events.

The closest: My father was a two-tour combat veteran of the Korean Conflict. I lived my life as a first-generation male child born from his combat experiences.

My Father was 100% Service Connected for Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder. I as the only male child, bore the full brunt of his experiences on those battlefields.

His mental health issues and his alcoholism created enormous challenges for our relationship as father and son. I was constantly, desperately trying to cope.

These struggles and challenges shaped and reshaped each of my career choices.

I tried engineering like my father wanted me to except the math was too hard. I flunked out of college trying everything I could do to make him ‘happy’ with his career choice for my life. I learned to fear what might happen if I indeed failed.

Instead, I followed my RN mother into Nursing and became quite successful.

I got a position as a Psychiatry – Mental Health Counselor for a new Homeless program serving a diverse population of long-term Homeless Veterans, from both peace time military service and military service in a combat zone.

Part of the introductory speech was to be sure you identify yourself as a trauma survivor, if in fact, you were. One identified this way out of maximum respect. I myself am a veteran of both the Navy and Army serving sixteen and a half years.

As that Professional Counselor, I was able to see how people handled their grief and the impact of that tragedy and grief impacted their outlook on their faith.

How you trust, have faith and develop a living hope after a tragedy may be in direct correlation to how you faithfully trusted in living hope prior to tragedy.

Indeed, in good times it is easy to trust, have faith and a living hope and our trust, faith, hope may be a bit shallow and naive, immature and uninformed.

When all is well there is very little to trust since there seems to be so much evidence of God being good and good to you.

Seldom do we genuinely trust that God would ever allow any tragedy or sorrow to come our way. Yet, that is not consistent with what the Word of God teaches.

Job 13:13-18 Amplified Bible

Job Is Sure He Will Be Vindicated

13 
“Be silent before me so that I may speak;
And let happen to me what may.
14 
“Why should I take my flesh in my teeth
And put my life in my hands [incurring the wrath of God]?
15 
“Even though He kills me;
I will hope in Him.
Nevertheless, I will argue my ways to His face.
16 
“This also will be my salvation,
For a godless man may not come before Him.

17 
“Listen diligently to my speech,
And let my declaration fill your ears.
18 
“Behold now, I have prepared my case;
I know that I will be vindicated.

The Word of God for the Children of God. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Amen.

We may quote that verse from the oldest book of the Bible at times and even think we have that kind of trust, but we do not want it tested.

Indeed, all of us would fail that test.

I suspect very few people have suffered as much tragedy as Job.

He lost his wealth, his ten children and his health in a very short time.

The trauma of it all so devastated his wife that she encouraged him to curse God and die. Sometimes folks are hard on Mrs. Job as if she was being heartless.

Indeed, she may have been seeking relief for his suffering and hoping God would kill her as well to stop her pain.

During the many times of war and plagues since then people have had some Job moments.

Still, Job said God could kill him and still he would trust God. Is it any wonder God pointed to him as a man of God and the devil wanted to destroy him?

We tend to forget that we are in a sin cursed world because of Adam and Eve.

Everything was in perfect peace and balance in Eden.

Once they chose to opt for being like God all of that changed and in essence man was in charge of a world he could not control or fix as it deteriorated.

Mankind also began deteriorating so that here we are in the last spasms of the Earth with men and women of minds and souls so depraved that we are seeing indescribably lethal, and unbelievably violent horrors almost on a daily basis.

Indeed, the song “This Is My Father’s World” is accurate in the title, but not in theology.

While God owns the universe, He gave the Earth to man who gave it to the devil at the Fall.

Now that man is cursed and influenced by satan more so than God it is being destroyed like a bad renter who breaks everything and allows animals to use it as their bathroom while never cleaning allowing the place to be infested by roaches and rats. (Apologies for the brooding anger behind that description).

One day God will come to repossess the world and after a thousand years he will destroy it and build new.

In a sense, since man has chosen the devil over God this world is our father, the devil’s world.

Unfortunately, due to some bad theology many people lose their trust or faith after a tragedy because either they have not read the Word, or someone taught them that God wants His people to always be healthy and wealthy.

If you pull some Scripture out of context you can come up with many errors that will blast your brain, your trust and faith and hope when they do not prove true.

3 John 1:2 Beloved, I wish above all things that thou mayest prosper and be in health, even as thy soul prospereth.

Many use this passage to teach health and prosperity is a right.

Yet, John only wished that they would prosper and be in health.

It is not a guarantee any more than when we wish someone to have a good day and stay safe.

Note that John wants it to be in direct proportion to their soul maturing in the grace and knowledge of Christ.

Many immature Christians cling to this as a promise and when they lose their job or their health or worse, then they lose their faith in God and the Word.

If our health, wellbeing and wealth were truly tied to the prosperity of our soul many of us would be in near total poverty and near death. Grace is wonderful.

2 Timothy 4:20 Erastus abode at Corinth: but Trophimus have I left at Miletum sick.

Philippians 2:25-27 25 However, I thought it necessary to send back to you Epaphroditus, [who has been] my brother and companion and fellow soldier, who was also sent as your messenger to take care of my needs. 26 For he has been longing [a]for all of you and was distressed because you had heard that he was sick. 27 He certainly was sick and close to death. But God had mercy on him, and not only on him but also on me, so that I would not have sorrow upon sorrow.

We believe in divine healing and yet God does not always heal as some teach.

Some healers say if you are not healed it is because you did not have faith.

Paul had enormous faith and yet, for some reason he could not instantly heal Trophimus like he did others.

Epaphroditus nearly died and it appears that God did not use instant healing in his case, but still healed him without Paul.

I would easily suggest that all three of men had far more faith or trust than the average “Christian” today, but they suffered, one even to the brink of death.

If you believe that God always heals and must heal every time prayer for healing is made you are going to have a crisis of faith after that loved one died that you had on twenty prayer lists and had them anointed three times.

You are going to be extraordinarily angry with God and throw the Bible on the shelf or in the recycle bin and declare you no longer believe or trust God. Your faith was based and cemented in bad doctrine, your emotions instead of God.

How so many good and bad and horribly bad people can believe the saved are somehow surrounded by an iron dome keeping us free from sickness, poverty, persecution, oppression and death is beyond me when so many in the World did not have a life like that and we are even warned about what we will experience.

Tell that to many believers around the world today who suffer great persecution and yet love the Lord to the max and take great risks to worship and evangelize.

John 16:32-33 (Amplified Version) 32 Take careful notice: an hour is coming, and has arrived, when you will all be scattered, each to his own home, leaving Me alone; and yet I am not alone, because the Father is with Me. 33 I have told you these things, so that in Me you may have [perfect] peace. In the world you have tribulation and distress and suffering, but be courageous [be confident, be undaunted, be filled with joy]; I have overcome the world.” [My conquest is accomplished, My victory abiding.]

Jesus said we would have tribulation!

The word is literally ‘pressure’, but is also translated as persecution, anguish and affliction.

No promise of exemption from it, just that He has overcome and so will the saved though they will have to bear up through heavy burdens or tragedies.

1 Timothy 3:10-13 10 Now you have diligently followed [my example, that is] my teaching, conduct, purpose, faith, patience, love, steadfastness, 11 persecutions, and sufferings—such as happened to me at Antioch, at Iconium, and at Lystra; what persecutions I endured, but the Lord rescued me from them all! 12 Indeed, all who delight in pursuing righteousness and are determined to live godly lives in Christ Jesus will be hunted and persecuted [because of their faith]. 13 But evil men and impostors will go on from bad to worse, deceiving and being deceived.

Paul had listed some of the trials and persecutions he had gone through and is saying this is not just my issue or legacy.

You live godly and the ungodly are going to persecute you.

There is a connotation of fleeing your pursuer in the Greek.

It begs the question that if I am not being persecuted am I living a godly life?

I believe it was Menno Simons who said something like a church that is not being persecuted is not a true church. Ouch! So, if everything is peachy keen maybe we should be in prayer asking why instead of asking why when it is not.

Romans 8:16-21 16 The Spirit Himself testifies and confirms together with our spirit [assuring us] that we [believers] are children of God. 17 And if [we are His] children, [then we are His] heirs also: heirs of God and fellow heirs with Christ [sharing His spiritual blessing and inheritance], if indeed we share in His suffering so that we may also share in His glory.

18 For I consider [from the standpoint of faith] that the sufferings of the present life are not worthy to be compared with the glory that is about to be revealed to us and in us! 19 For [even the whole] creation [all nature] waits eagerly for the children of God to be revealed. 20 For the creation was subjected to frustration and futility, not willingly [because of some intentional fault on its part], but by the will of Him who subjected it, in hope 21 that the creation itself will also be freed from its bondage to decay [and gain entrance] into the glorious freedom of the children of God.

Christ said that the student was not greater than the teacher and if they hated Christ and called him of the devil ultimately crucifying Him what do you think they will do to you if they can?

The “if so be that we suffer “is not saying you might not suffer with Him, but more that it is our lot to look forward to being glorified with Him because we suffer with Him indicating He is near us when we suffer. It comes along with the divine bloodline. If we have to suffer, fine, because we will be glorified.

Romans 8:34-39 34 Who is the one who condemns us? Christ Jesus is the One who died [to pay our penalty], and more than that, who was raised [from the dead], and who is at the right hand of God interceding [with the Father] for us. 35 Who shall ever separate us from the love of [a]Christ? Will tribulation, or distress, or persecution, or famine, or nakedness, or danger, or sword? 36 Just as it is written and forever remains written,

“For Your sake we are put to death all day long;
We are regarded as sheep for the slaughter.”

37 Yet in all these things we are more than conquerors and gain an overwhelming victory through Him who loved us [so much that He died for us]. 38 For I am convinced [and continue to be convinced—beyond any doubt] that neither death, nor life, nor angels, nor principalities, nor things present and threatening, nor things to come, nor powers, 39 nor height, nor depth, nor any other created thing, will be able to separate us from the [unlimited] love of God, which is in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Paul would not go through this list if there was no possibility of these tragedies happening to saints making them wonder if they were separated from Christ.

Jeremiah 29:10-13 10 “For thus says the Lord, ‘When seventy years [of exile] have been completed for Babylon, I will visit (inspect) you and keep My good promise to you, to bring you back to this place. 11 For I know the plans and thoughts that I have for you,’ says the Lord, ‘plans for peace and well-being and not for disaster, to give you a future and a hope. 12 Then you will call on Me and you will come and pray to Me, and I will hear [your voice] and I will listen to you. 13 Then [with a deep longing] you will seek Me and require Me [as a vital necessity] and [you will] find Me when you search for Me with all your heart.

Some of you may have been wondering how in the world does all of this square with Jeremiah 29:10-13.

Israel was in captivity because of sin, but then God promised an end to it and great blessing.

Yet, they suffered and when you tie in the next verses the key to 11 is 12 and 13. When they seek Him with all of their hearts and pray in earnest then He will hear and set them free. That goes for us as well.

How do we trust after tragedy?

It boils down to do we really believe what we often glibly ask. “Is God good all the time and all the time God is good or not?”

If He is, then we can believe that in His omniscience and omnipresence He has opted to exercise or withhold His omnipotence for the greater good or to bring us closer to Him because we have strayed away or because it is just part of this sinful world to lose a loved one because we are in a world of death.

If Christians never died or became ill, disabled or unemployed or financially distressed, then everyone would want to be a Christian to escape those things.

Both believers and unbelievers need to see that we do not ever escape the pain, but we have Jesus Christ who 100% gets us through the pain because He is good.

If He were not good, nothing good would ever happen because both He and the devil would be bringing evil to us.

We always question why bad things happen to good people when really the question is why good things happen to bad people since no one is righteous.

We will never know (why should we want to know?) exactly how bad our lives could be or could have been without the faithfulness of God until we get home.

I have had tragedies in my life, but still He has been faithful and so good to me.

God’s thoughts towards us are not evil.

The devil on the other hand has no good thoughts about us.

He wants to steal everything we value.

He wants to kill all of us and if our good God did not thwart his desires, we surely would all be dead and everything we have sought to build in our lives destroyed; marriage, children, testimonies all gone.

Too often we create our own tragedies.

Free will can cause our greatest pain when we do what God said not to do or not do what He told us to do.

The worst tragedy is running from God instead of to Him.

No one or nothing else will heal your pain and offer your life that is abundant either in quantity, quality or both even when you had to pass through the valley of the shadow of death to get to those green pastures.

2 Corinthians 1:4 Who comforteth us in all our tribulation, that we may be able to comfort them which are in any trouble, by the comfort wherewith we ourselves are comforted of God.

It also comes down to it not being all about us.

God will comfort you, if you allow Him.

When you are ready. Be still and ask Him to take the pain, bring comfort and ultimately peace and joy.

He may never explain why the tragedy was not averted.

We may not know until we get to Heaven and then that puzzle piece with the question mark on it will fit perfectly, but we will not care then.

Listen to Him.

Read the Word.

Fervently Pray even when it seems useless to the maximum.

Let Him change your theology, if necessary.

Parents do not always outlive their children.

People are not always healed.

Not everyone will be rich, but through His Holy Spirit working in you it can be a life rich in many more things than money.

Peace with God and a ministry to use your gift is worth all the material wealth in the universe.

You cannot trust a person until they have been proven trustworthy.

God is the only one you can 100% trust and often you will not fully believe that until He has proven to you that He is in the time of trouble.

Open your hands, your heart and your soul to Him.

Tragedy does not have to define the whole or any single place of your existence

You can be healed of your tragedy, your pain and you can and WILL trust again.

Maranatha!!!

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Lord, we pray for those who have been utterly devastated by recent tragedies. We remember those who have lost their lives so suddenly and without cause. We hold deep within our hearts and souls the families forever changed by grief and loss. By Your mercy, Bring them to their Shalom, their consolation and comfort.

Surround them with our prayers for strength and healing. Bless those who have survived and likewise, in Your own way, in Your own time, heal their memories of trauma and devastation. May they have the courage to face the days ahead.

Help us as compassionate human beings, to respond with generosity in prayer, in assistance, and in comfort to the best of our abilities. Keep our hearts focused on the totality of needs of all the community. We ask this in Jesus’ living name. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Alleluia! Amen.

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Ordering our First Steps. Moving Forth into Mission and Ministry. Proverbs 9:10

Perhaps each and every one of us has our own nuanced version of this story.

A little boy comes to his father: “Daddy, I cannot get these two pieces of my model airplane to fit together. I know they come together somehow, but no matter what I try or how I try it, they just will not come together for me.”

The father walks his young son back to where he was working on his model. He sits down with his son and looks over the table where the model is now laid out.

The father picks up the directions which came in the box with the model, and he carefully looks over and through them – occasionally looking back at the pieces that were laid out on the table. He moved the pieces around a couple of times to try and make sense and match up the individual pieces to the written directions.

He calls his son over to the table and together they now both starts looking at the pieces, then at the directions, then back to the pieces arrayed on the table.

Then together they both discover the problem was that both of the parts should have been brought together s few steps sooner in the model building process.

Dad and son now look at each other with giant smiles plastered on their faces. In the next several hours, both Father and son complete the model as it looked on the box. They put the completed model next to the box – it all came together!

See what happens? The father asked the son. “They tell you to put these pieces together early because they know it will be way more difficult to do so later.”

Lesson being, sometimes when it seems that life’s pieces do not fit together, it maybe because we skipped over the first step because we thought it was all too obvious what that first step was supposed to be. We skip over the first steps.

We seem to “automatically” skip over the first essential steps – then we cannot figure out why all those later steps just do not work the way the directions read.

The first step to any project – big or small – always and forever start with God.

Proverbs 9:9-12 Amplified Bible


Give instruction to a wise man and he will become even wiser;
Teach a righteous man and he will increase his learning.
10 
The [reverent] fear of the Lord [that is, worshiping Him and regarding Him as truly awesome] is the beginning and the preeminent part of wisdom [its starting point and its essence],
And the knowledge of the Holy One is understanding and spiritual insight.
11 
For by me (wisdom from God) your days will be multiplied,
And years of life shall be increased.
12 
If you are wise, you are wise for yourself [for your own benefit];
If you scoff [thoughtlessly ridicule and disdain], you alone will pay the penalty.

The Word of God for the Children of God. Gloria! In Excelsis Deo! Alleluia! Amen.

“What to do first and then what to do next?”

Who is ordering our steps – giving us our directions – step by step directions –

Adam and Eve, evicted from the Garden to cultivate and toil the soil – where did the very first step of those very first step-by-step instructions come from so to even begin what had not been previously known – the cultivating of new soils.

Whose wisdom first taught and then guided Adam on those very first “best gardening practices” how to till and cultivate the previously unworked soils?

Patriarch Noah and God’s command to build the ark. Such a vast and seemingly impossible building project.

What skill sets did Noah possess to even begin such a magnanimous project?

Where did the “blueprints” come from? Who drew them up and hands them off to Noah alone? Blueprints are truly complicated and detailed drawings – who drew, detailed the plans for the construction of the Ark?

Where did Noah begin? Genesis 6:13-17 Amplified Version

It began with God’s command –

13 God said to Noah, “I intend to make an end of all that lives, for through men the land is filled with violence; and behold, I am about to [a]destroy them together with the land. 14 Make yourself an [b]ark of [c]gopher wood; make in it rooms (stalls, pens, coops, nests, cages, compartments) and [d]coat it inside and out with pitch (bitumen). 15 This is the way you are to make it: the length of the ark shall be three hundred cubits, its width fifty cubits, and its height thirty cubits (450’ x 75’ x 45’). 16 You shall make a [e]window [for light and ventilation] for the ark and finish it to at least a cubit (eighteen inches) from the top—and set the [entry] door of the ark in its side; and you shall make it with lower, second and third decks. 17 For behold, I, even I, will bring a flood of waters on the earth, to destroy all life under the heavens in which there is the breath and spirit of life; everything that is on the land shall die.

How would Noah know what the first and most essential steps would be? The first step in any project is always the most essential step to get “exactly right.”

Such a vast and previously untried and seemingly impossible task as building that very first and specifically “God-detailed, God directed, God measured,” mission minded and ministry-oriented project to be finished by man’s hands.

Genesis 12:1-7Amplified Bible

Abram Journeys to Egypt

12 Now [in Haran] the Lord had said to Abram,

“Go away from your country,
And from your relatives
And from your father’s house,
To the land which I will show you;

And [a]I will make you a great nation,
And I will bless you [abundantly],
And make your name great (exalted, distinguished);
And you shall be a blessing [a source of great good to others];

And I will bless (do good for, benefit) those who bless you,
And I will curse [that is, subject to My wrath and judgment] the one who curses (despises, dishonors, has contempt for) you.
And in you all the families (nations) of the earth will be blessed.”

So Abram departed [in faithful obedience] as the Lord had directed him; and Lot [his nephew] left with him. Abram was seventy-five years old when he left Haran. Abram took Sarai his wife and Lot his nephew, and all their possessions which they had acquired, and the people (servants) which they had acquired in Haran, and they set out to go to the land of Canaan. When they came to the land of Canaan, Abram passed through the land as far as the site of Shechem, to the [great] terebinth (oak) tree of Moreh. Now the [b]Canaanites were in the land at that time. Then the Lord appeared to Abram and said, “I will give this land to your descendants.” So, Abram built an altar there to [honor] the Lord who had appeared to him.

Consider the scope and magnitude of the task God placed before Abram –

How did it all begin – “The Lord said to Abram …

The Lord commanded a polytheistic man who had not ever heard God before.

The Command – Verse 1

“Go away from your country,
And from your relatives
And from your father’s house,
To the land which I will show you;”

Can we presume that Abram would automatically know which ‘land’ God was talking about?

Can we presume Abram already knew exactly where that ‘land’ was located?

Can we presume that Abram knew the exact route to any and every ‘land’ God might have in mind to ‘blindly’ send him to?

What maps did Abram possess as there certainly was no Garmin GPS system?

Read that first and last line again – “Go! … To the land which I will show you …”

This incomprehensible mission and ministry project began with God’s Wisdom.

Verses 2 and 3

It outlined the promises of “if you, Abram, follow me step – by – step …” then the rewards of your fullest obedience to “MY step – by – step …” instructions.

It moved to Abram’s obedience – Verses 4 – 6

Verse 7: It concludes with Abram’s praise and worship for God’s step – by – step directions. Then the Lord appeared to Abram and said, “I will give this land to your descendants.” So, Abram built an altar there to [honor] the Lord who had appeared to him.

In fullest possible obedience to God’s carefully detailed, specific step – by – step directions, Abram obeyed! Let God order each of Abrams’ steps and his journey.

The Reward – God made Abraham the Father of “Many Nations.”

Genesis 17:1-5 Amplified Bible

Abraham and the Covenant of Circumcision

17 When Abram was ninety-nine years old, the [a]Lord appeared to him and said,

“I am [b]God Almighty;
Walk [habitually] before Me [with integrity, knowing that you are always in My presence], and be blameless and complete [in obedience to Me].

“I will establish My covenant (everlasting promise) between Me and you,
And I will multiply you exceedingly [through your descendants].”

Then Abram fell on his face [in worship], and God spoke with him, saying,


“As for Me, behold, My covenant is with you,
And [as a result] you shall be the father of many nations.

“No longer shall your name be Abram (exalted father),
But your name shall be Abraham (father of a multitude);
For I will make you the father of many nations.

Everything we have received, everything we have right now in life, everything we will receive in the future always came arrived and will always and forever come to us, will come to us from God, the Father, God the Son and God the Holy Spirit, with the already fulfilled and forever promise of “new beginnings.”

The word ‘beginning’ can mean either “the first part” or “the main part.”

In both cases, the eminently practical message is exactly the same.

The absolute most essential “first step,” and the continual first and foremost priority, in fitting all the parts of life together is to glorify, to honor, to revere, and to worship God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit.

Why?

Because all knowledge, and all wisdom and all truth comes first from God!

And in obedience, we must absolutely first seek our answers only through Him.

If we find ourselves stumped with a part of our life that completely refuses to fit together no matter manners and methodologies, we try –

Revelation 1:8 Amplified Bible

“I am the [a]Alpha and the Omega [the Beginning and the End],” says the Lord God, “Who is [existing forever] and Who was [continually existing in the past] and Who is to come, the Almighty [the Omnipotent, the Ruler of all].”

#1: THINGS WITH GOD!

THEN END ALL THINGS WITH GOD!

Revelation 22:12-14Amplified Bible

12 “Behold, I (Jesus) am coming quickly, and My reward is with Me, [a]to give to each one [b]according to the merit of his deeds (earthly works, faithfulness). 13 I am the Alpha and the Omega, the First and the Last, the Beginning and the End [the Eternal One].”

14 [c]Blessed (happy, prosperous, to be admired) are those who wash their robes [in the blood of Christ by believing and trusting in Him—the righteous who do His commandments], so that they may have the right to the tree of life and may enter by the gates into the city.

In the name of God, the Father and God the Son and God the Holy Spirit,

Let us Pray,

Lead Me on Level Ground Prayer,

God, my Creator, God, the Author of the entirety of my life, teach me to do your will, for you are my only true God. May your Holy Spirit lead me on level ground. I see your faithfulness and goodness in what you have done for me throughout my life. I think about these things, and I thirst for you. Let me hear of your unfailing love every morning, for I am trusting you. Show me where to walk, for I give myself to you. Keep me on firm footing for the glory of your name. Amen.

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