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Walking in the Spirit

September 24, 2016 by Disciple 3 Comments

Anyone who believes in me may come and drink! For the Scriptures declare, ‘Rivers of living water will flow from his heart.’ (when he said “living water” he was speaking of the Spirit who would be given to everyone believing in him. But the Spirit had not yet been given). – John 7:38

After decades of knowing Jesus, I am finally learning to walk in the Spirit. It is a phrase that has occurred in conversations or readings many times over the past months, and slow that I am, I am trying hard to listen.

It seems to me that walking in the Spirit is the pinnacle of our walk with Jesus, because at long last we listen to what he says, and try to act on it; strange though that may be at times. Jesus tells us here that anyone who believes in him may come and drink. Walking in the Spirit is for all believers, not just the chosen few. About the only two things I understand in this area, are that it takes time to cultivate, and time to listen. Don’t come to God in a rush and expect to understand him clearly, and be prepared to work at it.

We can walk in the Spirit every day of our lives, listening to him almost moment by moment, and it can be powerful. At no time is this more true than when we are looking for opportunities to speak to others about Christ. Over the years I look back and perceive the many times the Spirit was prompting me to talk to someone, and alas, I ignored it as a figment of my own imagination. In the past week, 3 incredible incidents have occurred that illustrate exactly why God wants us all to walk in the Spirit, listening carefully and closely to the Holy Spirit.

This morning I went out for an early surf, and waiting at the shower afterwards, I listened to 2 women my age talking about various male encounters in their lives, with little satisfaction. One was talking honestly about whether to leave her husband. At this point I was able to light-heartedly talk to them about the beauty and benefits of my own marriage experience, which like many I know, has taken time to nurture. The wait though is worth it. She listened, interested and ended up thanking me gratefully, genuinely – it’s as if she had been waiting for someone to come along and confirm her deep desire to stay. She would give it time. It was a prompting from the Holy Spirit to converse, and I’m delighted I did. Jesus in our everyday world, walking in the Spirit.

Last night a young man in our gathering whom we have come to admire told us how he prayed differently with the Lord this week, asking God to speak to him more directly about their future. So God obliged, and woke him up at 5am saying, ‘Buy a one-way ticket to China, and meet a man with this name.’ He, and his wife were surprised. They waited for confirmation given it was a huge decision, and were shown it later in the week. The man’s wife was applying for a particular job in the city and had been told she had been unsuccessful, but – they noticed a certain TESOL qualification on her resume and asked if she would be interested in working in China! They leave early next year. Walking in the Spirit, listening to the voice of the Spirit as he directs our paths.

A week ago, a dear friend was down visiting and we were in our local town, looking for opportunities to talk to people. As we sat having coffee, a young toddler rode up to us on her shiny bike, and stopped and stared. Our friend asked her name, at which she rode on – what a strange man. The girl’s father walked up, and we asked his name, to which he responded and then asked ours. Our visitor, out of the blue came up with a rather cryptic response, and said “I don’t know yet. I have a new name, but I don’t know what it is.” Only a very few would understand such a response, and who would say that to a stranger? But, our stranger understood, he retorted, “is it written on a white stone, your new name?”, to which I replied, “yes, as in Revelation 2.”  We couldn’t believe it, he understood.

He, his wife (who was on the next table already talking to one of our wives) and their daughter were from Brazil and they were believers, looking for a group to join who would go out on the streets to witness with. We have since connected with them, and are really looking forward to getting to know them, as we talk to so many Brazilian students where we are.  Walking, doing, while listening to the Spirit. When he leads, the conversations are meaningful.

As we’ve already decided, it takes time to move into a deep relationship with God. Few ever take the time. It is for me, a huge challenge. Slow down enough to spend time with him. Yet, without it we will be less effective than we might be. We are likely to miss those opportunities that only he can point out, because only he knows the hearts of each of us.

The beauty of it all – aside from a deep and intimate relationship with the Saviour though, is that we can bring Christ into our everyday world. There is no magic or mystique, we don’t need to be a famous preacher, or a ‘known personality’ in church circles, neither do we need to have all our theology correct and accounted for; all we need is to listen to him and to act on what he prompts us.

Walking in the Spirit of Christ, bringing Jesus into our world right where we are. Available to every believer in him. Fabulous isn’t it.

Just Give Me Jesus

September 2, 2016 by Disciple Leave a Comment

For God the Father has given me his seal of approval – John 6:27

This is the only work God wants from you; believe in the one he has sent – John 6: 29

Anne Graham Lotz has written a book with the title, Just Give me Jesus. In the Gospel of John, more so than anywhere else, Jesus tells us that he is the chosen Messiah, the living Son of God and the only way to God. There is no other.

I have come to realise that he is the very epicentre of all things. Wars are fought because of him, families are held together in his name, people curse others using his name, or bless them as a result of him. This entire universe revolves around him, whether we can see it or not. We talk with a great deal of people on the streets from other religions, and all of them have an opinion about Jesus, Isa as Muslims call him. He figures in virtually all of the world’s religions. In our view, most of them want Jesus in ‘their religion’, a figure who is both divine and human, a way back to God. What they don’t understand, is that he belongs to no religion but if they would only accept his claims, they could claim him for themselves. That is what he wants.

It is possible to tell a person’s true relationship with God by how much they bring Jesus into conversation. Those who truly know him, talk about him openly and often, pray to him, usually in total freedom with others on the spur of the moment and seem to walk with him throughout every day of the week. He is anything but a religious institution in their lives. Conversely we know many Christians who rarely talk about him, or mention him by name and their relationship to him is strictly for Sundays. As a consequence, they rarely share their precious jewel with anybody else.

So how about you, in the hierarchy of your life, where does he rank in importance?

While on the subject of the Graham family, father Billy recently wrote that the greatest mistake a believer can make is to assume they need to work to get in the Kingdom. All too often, every one of us assumes somehow we can make it to God on our own. Jesus warns us off that path very quickly though, and tells us that God has put his Son front and centre of everything as our only chance of entering the presence of God. Believe in him, God points.

There is a fine line of course, in a statement like this. Those who truly relate to Him, understand that the Kingdom is a work, sometimes even a grind, yet they do it with relish not because it saves us, but because we are now motivated by his love. In our relationship with him, he has given us tasks to accomplish and as our loving King, he expects us to do them. He though, not our works will only save us in the end.

The world of course, gives scant regard to him or God, dismissing both as nothing more than a figment of our crazed mind. Some even fight to disprove his very existence.

All too many of us make a mental ascent to Jesus and his claims (and so believe) without it ever affecting our lives. This often drifts off into tick box religious work of sitting in pews, Sunday attendance, weekly prayer meeting and occasional choir practice, sometimes not even that. In our experience, this is deadly. It allows us to walk the fine line of somehow believing we are acceptable to God by going through a few rituals, without ever bothering with the relationship. We allow our activity to define relationship, not his expectation. All too often, as we listen to people tell us ‘we go to church’ or ‘we are Anglicans [or whatever brand it is]’ the conversation, the opportunity for real relationship passes by. Who knows when they will think about such things again? Deadly.

If you think I exaggerate, then consider throughout the Gospels, who Jesus railed against; was it ever the poor who knew in their hearts they could never reach God (after all just look at the state he left them in, went the Pharisees)? No, it was the religious elite those who set the bar so high that nobody could ever achieve it, those who changed the rules to suit themselves, those who made sure that God remained a complex and distant deity that nobody would ever get close to.

So, God sent his Son. We write, talk and preach of him. His beauty, his majesty is simply astounding, but so is his simplicity. In these simple verses and in the life he lived, he made his Father, the great Yahweh, accessible to all who were never good enough and knew it. To ascend to the heavens, you need to humble yourself first. He showed us that, if we would only dispense with our immense human pride and arrogance, we could not only come to the throne we could even call him Father.

That all the works but one were unnecessary, and that one was to believe in his Son with everything we had. Along the way, we will find every desire, every want and need, all our peace and contentment is found in him. Then one day, when we finally pass, he will take our hand and walk us into the throne room to introduce us to his Father.

Every single day of my life, I continue to be astounded by him. Just give me Jesus.

The Fickle Crowd

August 20, 2016 by Disciple 2 Comments

When people saw him do this miraculous sign, they exclaimed, “surely he is the Prophet we have been expecting!” – John 6:14

They answered, “Show us a miraculous sign if you want us to believe in you” – John 6:30

Humanity is immensely fickle. We are prepared, on the whole, to do or say anything to get what we need or want, such is our insecurity. Who will help us if we don’t help ourselves?

We are connected with a couple whose lives are messy. They have an unwanted one-year-old and are addicts. Their tendency is to drift in and out of our lives, depending on their needs. When the ‘God stuff’ we bring to them is too much, they drift away. They can do without him for now. Just recently, we became rather concerned about the mixing of a lifestyle of drugs and bringing up a toddler, and told them so in as loving a way as we knew how. The response was fierce, how dare we “Jesus freaks”… and on it went.

Their substance abuse though, caused them to write off their car, and having nobody else to turn to, they reached out to us. Perhaps the Jesus people weren’t so bad. Would you help us? We joyously laughed at their fickleness.

The opposite of fickleness is to remain steadfast. That doesn’t mean that we don’t know exactly what is going on around us, but it means we are able to live through it. Jesus was steadfast, and remains so. Earlier in Matthew, it said he would not entrust themselves to them, it means that he knew exactly what they (we) are really like. When it all becomes too hard, God is shoved to the side and we stamp our feet to get our own way. ‘Show us a sign’ we yell at him.

Jesus loved people regardless of who they were, or what they thought they might be able to do for him. He healed them whether they believed in him afterwards or not, he forgave them whether they were grateful, he loved them even when he knew they would commit an atrocity against him personally. He was in all his actions, steadfast.

How do we become like him?

As I was thinking about these verses over the past few weeks, I realised that we move away from being fickle when we root ourselves in Jesus. When we are not dependent on the opinion of others, when we no longer care what people really think, when we understand that we will not get everything we want on this earth, and in fact the very worst may happen, then we can begin to enjoy a steady life, filled with contentment and peace.

The Apostle Paul understood this perhaps more than anyone. Throughout his beautiful letters, he refers time and again to the changing circumstances around him, yet he himself is anchored. What is it though that he has learned to anchor himself with, so that such circumstances, wearing as they may be, didn’t drag him down? It is the constancy of the love of God. Magnificently in Romans 8:31-39 we are given a glimpse of what Paul holds onto. The fact that God loves him through Christ, and that no matter what happens to him in this life, it is a love that will continue on forever.

I have watched this in my own life. I think as a young man I was the prince of fickle, able to change my mind on any whim or desire that needed gratifying. Living only for the moment, I was the master of mistrust. Looking back, it seems hard to believe I am the same person, if we met now I wonder if we would be strangers? His love now permeates my life. God has changed me, and the more he has, the more I have asked him too.

But the change process can be tough, we don’t change easily.

It is this constancy, this steadfastness that we must so desperately share with others. Many of the people we meet are tired of life. They have tried all the world has to offer and it has come up short. They want, something or someone who is reliable. We should introduce them to the steadfast one.

But, it takes time. Time for people to see who the answer really is, time for them to change. In the meantime, mostly they remain fickle as the crowds were with Jesus. Feed us one day, crucify him the next, just for a few coins.

We love our friends who waver, because we want them to see, to know the one who does not. We want to show them that there is another way, a better way – not our way, but his way. Delightfully, we can relate. We are no better, which makes it so wonderful, we have simply been changed.

We must tell others, that he, the one who is constant, who is true, can change them as well. All they must do is ask. Let us begin that this week because he asks us too.  Then, if they invite us, lets walk with them as he changes them and us as well. What a delight!

The Greatness of the Son

August 5, 2016 by Disciple 3 Comments

Jesus soon saw a huge crowd of people come to look for him. Turning to Philip he asked, where can we buy bread to feed all these people? He was testing Philip, for he already knew what he was going to do – John 6: 5-6

The Book of John reveals a God who came near to us. In Jesus we see Emmanuel, ‘God with us’ and he walks, talks, eats and shares his life among us. We get to see Gods character up close, and it is a beautiful picture in all ways. Here, in this simple and often read passage we see another of his characteristics, his greatness. With that, we are able to compare his greatness with ours.

I read this week that the next ‘biggest’ complex in the world is due to be finished in Dubai at a height of 1 km. It is one of a number of monuments going up to man’s greatness around the world at the moment. Without doubt many of these will be spectacular. We might ask, which one exactly is the pinnacle of human achievement – which empire can we point to across the ages and say, ‘that is one that achieved so much?’ Babylon perhaps, or maybe Rome? The British empire as a more modern example. We can consider the glory of each, with monuments and beacons that in some cases have endured through to today, a legacy to a bygone era of greatness.

The contrast with God’s greatness though, is that his greatness is for all of us. The empires of the world, both past and modern are built for the benefit of just a few. Few get to really enjoy them, but we are left in no doubt as to who they are really built for. This is in total contrast to the great works of God in Scripture, which are for the benefit of mankind and always have a purpose to achieve good for all.

God’s greatness also seems so effortless compared to our own. While we need to muster all of our intelligence and power, with months even years of consumed planning and preparation, his greatness seems always to be to hand.

There is a winsome teasing with Philip the disciple here, that belies what Jesus really did. In the Old Testament, His Father sustained an entire nation in a Limestone desert for 40 years (the same desert that defeated the entire army with all of its modern machinery in just a few days) through the provision of a daily supply of food. Jesus readily and easily achieves the same feat, sustaining people in their time of need, again with food. Father and Son in harmony, at work. Greatness.

With effortless compassion, his divine power shows each of us that our ability to sustain ourselves is limited, that our achievements are contained within his much greater ones. Did Philip have the answer to the needs of those around him? Were any of those in the crowd able to offer suitable provision; when it really counted, did their, or do our achievements count for anything much?

But what of God, does he ask anything of us in return? What does he ask us to achieve in this life? I might be simplistic in my thinking, but I think that what God asks each of us to achieve in our lifetime is simple obedience to him. Little, if anything more.

For the believer, this is most important. We must come simply to God, take what he has given us and share it among those around us. We must minister to the sick, to the poor, the marginalised and those in need. In doing so, we copy his Son. We are not called to elevate ourselves in anyway, but to be the humble servant of Christ, sharing his greatness amongst all people. That is important as well. We have access to the greatness of God because of the Son, who sent his Spirit to us.

In my view, a changed life is truly evidence of the greatness of God, perhaps far more impressive than feeding multitudes or parting oceans. Lives that are stuck, lives that cannot move forward are able to be changed by him alone. That is our ministry to this world, the life of a believer. Taking his greatness to a cynical and hardened world, and watching hearts of stone being replaced with hearts of flesh.

We have read this passage many times, and perhaps the greatness of God has escaped us here. Maybe it is the humility of his greatness that passes us by, but it is there nonetheless. In fact, the greatness of God is on display all around us, mostly in the lives of those who have been changed by him. Do we miss it because we are consumed by our own achievements, our own successes and greatness?

One day, God is going to erase all the achievements of man in an instant.

How will we be when each of us, with nothing in our hands, stands before God? He may I fear, ask each of us just one question as we stand before him, and it will be this: ‘What did you do with my Son in your life?’

The answer to that question will provide a complete picture of our lives and all we achieved. Let us be prepared.

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