Wednesday, November 28, 2012

Death of the Ego by the Death of Christ

As it is written: For your sake We are killed all day; were considered as sheep to the slaughterhouse. (Rom 8:36)

This is a truth which fulfills especially at periods is allowed Satan, from God, which we are delivered to be tested and milled.

Nothing less than death is the result of this delivery for being considered as sheep for the slaughter.

But who dies is the old man Our ego carnal And so Satan provide us a good service.

Therefore it is said in the Bible For consider reason Of great joy To pass through various trials.

In the days of great troubles we must pray to the Lord for deliver us.

His glory is to rescue his people

He loves us so much that will not allow the prolongation of that sufferings.

Praise the Lord all the time He is worthy and powerful forever and ever.

By natural birth, the man does not have God's nature.

He is not provided of such a nature, and therefore is unable to have fellowship with God while remaining in this condition simply natural, or as it is also referred to in the Bible, as carnal. That is why our Lord told Nicodemus that what is born of the flesh is flesh, ie, the natural man can not generate, no spiritual man, which is what has the nature of God. Hence the need of man be born again of the Holy Spirit, that it may have generated the divine nature in him, then will can please God and have fellowship with Him.

While in the flesh, for the most hardworking, fair, friendly, dedicated, caring, religious, patient, cheerful, a person is, she can not give pleasure and joy to God, because for this it is necessary to have fellowship in the Spirit, and who is in the flesh, that is, with only earthly nature, can not in any way be subject to God or please him.

If Adam had not sinned, if nature had not been corrupted, our Lord Jesus Christ does not need to offer as a sacrifice to grant us the divine nature. But Adam sinned and sin entered the world. All his descendants became subject to sin. The man then went on to have a nature earthly fallen, guilty, sentenced to eternal destruction, which is the eternal spiritual death. We have thus not only a situation to be reversed, namely, that man back to the initial condition without sin of Adam in the Garden of Eden, the state of sin to the earthly nature without sin, because God's goal in creation of man, always has been, since before time began, he was one with Jesus Christ in spirit.

Thanks Lord for your grace!

Pr Silvio Dutra

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5 Stewardship Bible Verses for Daily Sustenance

We must interpret Bible verses in context and realize it is God's will we seek, not ours. Stewardship Bible verses or other Bible verses are significant to followers of Jesus because they could guide them to the abundant life that Jesus promised.

Christians are stewards of God's resources. We become better stewards when we learn to deal God's way with anxiety, trust, temptation, people, and when we confess our sins to Jesus regularly.

Memorizing Bible verses helps us handle daily life-issues God's way. That's why I was thrilled, though astonished, when I discovered in an attic, five stewardship Bible verses dealing with anxiety, trust, temptation, people, and confession.

Shortly after I surrendered my life to Jesus the Messiah in 1985, I had a vision of an attic with five large colored boxes. Each box had a huge bold letter from the word attic. Below each letter was a word beginning with that letter, and a Bible verse. Many mornings as I jogged, this picture became more lucid.

One morning about 5:00 AM while jogging in Brisbane, Australia, the picture of the attic was so vivid I returned to my hotel to try to process what was happening. At the hotel, I transcribed the vision.

As I reflected on this vision, I realized it referred to my daily walk with Jesus. It seemed to be the base for a structured way to have extra time with the Lord. I sensed my attic was a way for me to withdraw regularly to see God's hand in the moment.

These are five words on five boxes in my attic, each with its stewardship Bible verse:

Anxiety - Philippians 4:6-7 Trust - Proverbs 3:5-6 Temptation - 1 Corinthians 10:13 Inner Focus - 1 Samuel 16: 6-7 Confession - 1 John 1:9

Anxiety

Two to three times daily I check to see whether events are overtaking me, and I am becoming, or am anxious. Perhaps I am in a stressful meeting, or working to a tight deadline.

When I sense anxiety, I withdraw to a quiet place, often the bathroom, and mull over Philippians 4:6-7. These verses remind me not to be anxious but pray, be thankful to God, give him my concerns, and he will give me a profound peace.

I present my situation to God, ask him to help me accept where I am, what I have, and give me peace to deal with it. The goal is his peace, not a solution to the issue. Recalling these verses several times daily, praying and believing them help me see alternatives. It is difficult to evaluate situations when tensed and anxious.

Trust

This is my great challenge. I try to do things in my own strength instead of leaning on Jesus. That's why daily as my activities challenge me, I withdraw often to evaluate how I am doing, and recall Proverbs 3:5-6. These stewardship Bible verses tell me to trust in the Lord and lean on him, and he will make my path straight. This does not mean I will get the solution I seek; merely, that when I work to God's goals, with his help, I do his will, and I get a peace that's difficult to understand.

Temptation

One of the great assurances in the Bible is this stewardship Bible verse: 1 Corinthians 10:13 (ESV):

No temptation has overtaken you that is not common to man. God is faithful, and he will not let you be tempted beyond your ability, but with the temptation he will also provide the way of escape, that you may be able to endure it.

Daily, I must remember that I can't blame anyone when I fall. The Devil did not "make me do it." Faced with temptation, I pray this verse and ask God to help me see and follow his path. I know it is there and I need his strength to override my fleshly desires. Still, sometimes I reject his path.

Inner Focus

When Samuel went to Jesse's house to anoint the next king of Israel, as Jesse's boys entered the room, Samuel saw Eliab and from his external appearances thought he must be the one. God told Samuel he did not choose Eliab. God reminded Samuel that God looks on the inside but people look on the outside (1 Samuel 16:6-7).

Often I have withdrawn and prayed this verse, particularly when I interview, counsel, or meet someone. I know external appearances influence my thinking, and so I must seek God's help regularly to overcome this flaw.

Confession

Happily, at day's end I review events, go to the attic, and recollect 1 John 1:9. I ask the Lord to show me incidents I need to confess. I confess, repent and ask him to cleanse me. He does, as promised.

Summary

Daily, being conscious of these stewardship Bible verses heighten my awareness for good stewardship in all aspects of life, not only with money.

Frequent withdrawals to my attic to seek God's guidance to respond to events allow me to live in the moment and increase time with him.

Time in my attic has shown me how to be more alert and responsive to the presence of the Lord in daily activities.

I pray my attic blesses you.

Copyright © 2012, Michel A. Bell

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Cyprian of Carthage

The Lord taught us: "You will know the truth, and the truth will make you free". The chapter on Justin was about reaching after the truth. Now, speaking about Cyprian, we seem to pass to the other part of Christ's teaching, to the problem of freedom. When we know the truth we become free. But free from what? Is freedom equivalent to the lack of any rules, hierarchy, order, that is to anarchy?

At Cyprian's time Rome was collapsing. The great Empire was shaken by political and social instability. Everything that seemed stable was going to break down. But the Church grew even stronger, though this process was painful.

Cyprian was born in northern Africa, in the old and glorious city of Carthage. He was a rhetorician, that is had a well-paid and prestigious job. Wealthy Romans of that time lived in grand stile as if there were no tomorrow. Future bishop was no exception.

It is not known why and how Cyprian met an old priest named Cecilius. There were no lengthy sermons: Cecilius simply gave him the Bible. The rest was accomplished by itself. Cyprian's conversion shocked all of Carthage: the young rhetorician was a well-known figure. A Christian? That couldn't be! However, Cyprian made a clean break with the past: such was the strength of repentance in his heart. Moreover, he never mentions heathen authors in his extant works, even though he had classical education. If we draw a parallel between Cyprian and the apostles Peter and Paul, then Cyprian was much closer to Peter: he was not concerned by issues like relations with heathen culture, external influence and the like. He was concentrated on things that were inside the Christian community, not outside it.

Conversion affected all areas of the young man's life. He gave away his fortune (that was rather large) to the poor and was now concerned by only two things: the Scripture and Tertullian's writings. Soon he grew famous in Christian circles. When the time came to elect a new bishop of Carthage, the parishioners chose him among multiple other candidates. It happened early in AD 249. However, as early as in AD 250 Decius' persecutions broke.

When Christians were safe and there was no danger, the community grew large. But now any one who professed Christ, might be killed. Many parishioners panicked. Authorities proclaimed that they would not arrest those who would sacrifice to gods. What did Christians have to do? At that moment Cyprian escaped from the city, having abandoned their flock to their fears and doubts. We might say that the bishop of Carthage acted faint-heartedly, but let us not forget that the apostles also fled when Christ was arrested. Let us remember that Peter denied the Lord three times at that terrible night. Our most "painstaking" task is probably visiting the local Church on Sunday. But in the third century Carthage Christians had to face matters of life and death.

Bereft of their leader, Christians flooded the magistrates to sacrifice and to save both themselves and their families from tortures and execution. Those who did it were called sacrificati (from the Latin word sarificium, sacrifice). But many believers, especially those wealthy, found another solution: this way or another they provided themselves with the official document (libellum), which attested that sacrifices had been accomplished (even though they had not been). Those people were called libellatici. Cyprian was openly blamed for his behavior. In response he wrote letters where he tried to justify himself.

After some time persecutions ceased. Rome had too many other problems, besides Christians. Cyprian came back to the city. What did he see? Thousands of the faithful denied their faith. many others saved their lives through counterfeit libella. But those who persevered to the end, even though they felt insulted, accepted the sacrificati and libellatici back into the community: to do otherwise would mean acting against brotherly love. Cyprian saw clearly that all would believe now that faith is like a game: one can accept it and then renounce if it becomes dangerous. What to do about this situation? Could he, as a bishop, take decisions concerning the issue, if he himself hided during persecutions, even though did not deny his faith.

In May 251 a council was convened, where Cyprian was restored as the bishop of Carthage. The corporate decision was as follows: Libellatici had to accomplish penitence and could be accepted back after some time (a rather long time). Sacrificati, who had in fact denied Christ, were not accepted back into the community, but if they were ill or they were going to die, they were received into the fellowship: earthly Church did not think that it had the right to close the door of salvation before them.

This episode of Churfh history was exceptionally important for later times. Three basic principles were established in the practice of the Church: The power of the keys, that is Church authority, extended as far as to the power of the remission of sins, even such grave sins as denying Christ; final decision should be taken in an assembly of the bishops, under the guidance of the Holy Spirit; lay people who had acted unfairly, still must be received back into the fellowship.

A year passed. At Rome the emperor Gallus came to power. New persecutions followed. Many Christians who denied their faith during previous trial, were now ready for martyrdom. Something was happening in the minds of Christians. Order and discipline brought their first fruit.

Amazingly, citizens of Carthage treated Christians much more amiably than before, and with much more sympathy. There had been an epidemic in the city, and Christians helped everybody, both their brothers and sisters in faith and heathens. They were not afraid to become infected and die. Such courage and charity produced a great impression on Carthaginians.

In AD 251 Cyprian supports Cornelius, the bishop of Rome, in his efforts to reestablish order. It is then that Cyprian wrote his book "On the Unity of the Church". But soon relations between Carthage and Rome became complicated. Cyprian's authority grew considerably, he was often addressed for solving conflicts. Thus in AD 254 two Spanish communities, displeased by the decision of Rome to reestablish two priests who had denied Christ during persecutions, sent their representatives to Carthage. Cyprian always thought that treatment of lay people and clerics cannot be the same: the parish has the right not to receive a priest who committed such a greave sin as denying Christ. Rome grew more and more displeased by the independence of Carthage. An argument about the Sacraments broke.

Cyprian thought that the Baptism of those who subsequently denied the Lord could not be considered as valid. During the time of persecutions such ideas seemed to be rather natural. Everybody understood that it was extremely important to be faithful to God and His Church for each Christian community. At the same time the teaching about Sacraments had not been developed in detail yet. Unfortunately, Cyprian's personal convictions were supported by a council where bishops from Africa and Asia Minor were present. They began to baptize once again those who had renounced their faith after the first Baptism. The Pope of Rome Eutychius rightly believed that such practice was inadmissible. However, he based his arguments not on the Scriptures but on the authority of the Roman chair, with which, he thought, one had to agree without contradiction.

Cyprian made many mistakes. Yet he lived and served in those times during which any step might lead to a catastrophe, and inaction guaranteed defeat. Cyprian's biography is the best confirmation of the old truth: he is lifeless who is faultless. He cared so much about the unity of the Church, but he could not allow Rome to usurp all the power. He thought that none among bishps can give orders to others. Each important decision had to be taken in a council, that is in an assembly of many bishops. His emphasis on that idea led to arguments and was dangerous for the unity of the Church. Cyprian never resolved this painful contradiction. However, the argument with Rome ended by itself: the Pope Eutychius died and the emperor Valerianus started persecutions at Carthage.

On the 30th of August 257 Cyprian was summoned before the proconsul Aspasius Paternus. What did he have to do? Once he had avoided danger be fleeing. But since then much time had passed. Both the Church and Cyprian himself changed. Should he go? If so, what would happen to him? What would happen to his community? Cyprian prayed, stood for a few minutes in front of his Church, looked at the old acacia tree on the other side of the street and went to the proconsul.

That time he was exiled to the city of Curubis on the gulf of Hammamet. But in a year they summoned him back to Carthage, sentenced to death, tortured and executed. Was Cyprian able to resolve the eternal question of combining freedom and order? It is hardly so. But very few people were able to go this way so far as Cyprian of Carthage. That is why Christians do remember this remarkable figure.

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Ignatius of Antioch

October 24, at noon, a small detachment that was deporting a few arrested Christians to Rome entered the city of Smyrna. The soldiers' armor was dusty; their faces were tanned by the hot sun of Asia Minor. They shouted angrily at the prisoners so that they shouldn't tarry: the military men wanted so much to throw off their heavy equipment and to have some fresh water. The job was obviously annoying. They had nothing against fighting hand to hand with hordes of barbarians, but dragging those crazy people through half an Empire... Well, we're supposed to carry out orders, they thought. The point was to bring them to the Eternal City alive: lions wanted blood, and thousands of good Roman citizens wanted their entertainment.

The detachment did not come unexpected. Polycarp, a young bishop of Smyrna, knew that Ignatius, who had been arrested in Antioch, was coming. On the same day Polycarp came to see him together with a group of brethren, who bowed their heads in front of the great confessor. Ignatius smiled quietly. He said that he was all right, mentioned the constant pain in his feet, and assured them that fellow Christians provided him with all necessary things in each city they had been passing through. Polycarp kept silent and tried to drive away from his mind the terrible vision of a huge arena, the mad roar of the crowd and the bloody jaws of wild beasts. The bishop of Antioch looked at him with concern and asked: "Are you uneasy about Rome?" Polycarp nodded. "Don't be. I am God's wheat. When I am milled with the beasts' teeth, I will be the pure bread of Christ". The young man dropped his eyes. Ignatius touched his arm and said: "Bring me a papyrus and some ink. I have to write to the Church in Rome".

On his way to a martyr's crown this incredible man wrote seven epistles, and those letters - which are among the greatest documents of Christianity - are the only source on Ignatius of Antioch. We know nothing about his biography: he wrote for others, not for himself, and therefore always about others. It is in this precisely that his whole personality is clearly seen.

Ignatius' letters are permeated with Pauline thought. The Bishop of Antioch quotes St Paul word for word rarely, but his writings breathe with the apostolic teaching. On the other hand Ignatius' deep mysticism revives that of St John. Something prompts us to believe that he knew personally the Evangelist who passed away later than the other disciples of the Lord.

At the beginning of the second century the Church experienced a crucial moment of its history: the apostles who had planted and nurtured local communities had left this earth. The first heresies were emerging, and nobody was able to say at that time: "Our Savior did not teach these things. You are wrong". Any impostor could say arrogantly in response: "You were not there. How can you know?" Oral accounts still had more authority than the written Gospels: Christ's earthly ministry had not turned into history for those people. They preferred to speak about it rather than to read about it. Moreover, the core of the Christian community was no longer composed of those who shared Jewish cultural background. Most of the newly converted gentiles understood many things with difficulty or even wrongly. Interpretations multiplied and everyone reckoned his or her own opinion as a final truth. Bishops, who tried to bring more order into all of it, often could not restrain discontented people who are always present in any given group or community. Grumbling grew more intense, often resulting in acute conflicts.

In Antioch, where Ignatius labored, the situation was the same as everywhere else. Yet, this city had a kind of distinguished prominence. It was from here that St Paul had gone to bring the Good News to Asia Minor and Greece. It was here that the center of Christian faith had been transferred after Jerusalem had been ransacked and destroyed by Romans. It is known that Antiochene liturgical practices had the greatest impact on the divine service in the early Church in general.

Ignatius was among the first Christian authors converted from paganism. Greek was his native tongue, and the Hellenistic world was a cultural environment where he felt at home. Everything that was written in Christian tradition during the period between the New Testament books and Ignatius' writings bears the impression of the Judaism. On the other hand, in all that Ignatius says, we clearly see the subtle but important differences between Judaizing and biblical thought.

By the time of the persecution unleashed by the emperor Trajan, Ignatius of Antioch was undoubtedly an eminent figure among Christians. When he was arrested and sent to Troas, so that later to be brought to Rome, whole delegations not only welcomed him in each city but also accompanied him on the road. We do not know why, but the detachment stayed for a long time in Smyrna, and the bishop Polycarp, who cared so much about Ignatius and his companions, became not only his interlocutor, but also his personal friend. Later it was Polycarp who united all the epistles written by the bishop of Antioch into a single manuscript.

Messengers from Ephesus, Magnesia, Trallae came to Smyrna, and Ignatius, in irons, wrote letters to their respective communities, so as to leave his word of instruction to them. He also wrote to the Church in Rome, asking them to undertake nothing to prevent his martyrdom. When the group of arrested Christians was transferred to Troas, Ignatius wrote to the communities in Philadelphia and Smyrna, as well as to bishop Polycarp personally. He asked him to write to other Churches in his name, which attests to both their friendship and deep conformity of theological opinions.

A central theme of Ignatius' theology is unity. This word occurs in his writings more often than any other word. He treats this concept in several aspects: first of all in his teaching about God, for He is the supreme unity that is represented in the Persons of the Holy Trinity. This aspect is closely connected with Ignatius' teaching about Christ where he distinguished between the two natures of our Savior. Christ is physical and spiritual; He is born and not born; He is God, but He came in flesh; He underwent death, but He is the true Life. Still He is perfectly whole and represents the supreme unity.

Unity as a theme finds its fullest expression in Ignatius' teaching about the Church. Lay people need to be in unity with clerics. They are to merge with a bishop's will. Elders must be "consonant" with a bishop as strings of a cither are with each other. Ignatius says that in such "consonance of love" Christ is glorified. Thus, musical harmony is also one of the leading themes in the letters of the bishop of Antioch. He wrote: "You need to be like a chorus in order that, being tuned in like-mindedness according to the tone of unity, given by God, you should sing as a one voice to the Father through Jesus Christ, so that He might hear us and acknowledge us, according to our good works, as members of His Son. Therefore it is useful for you to be in perfect unity so as to be in communion with God". Reading these words we cannot but help thinking about the importance of liturgical and musical values in Church life.

Moreover, Ignatius' ecclesiology, or teaching about Church, is closely connected with his teaching about Christ (Christology). The Church represents the unity of our Savior's two natures. That is the believers' unity must be both physical and spiritual. Besides, Ignatius was the first to speak about the "Catholic Church", that is Church Universal. The context where we find this expression, is of utmost importance: "Only such a Eucharist may be reckoned as genuine, which is performed by a bishop or by the one whom he commissioned with it. Where the bishop is, there also people must be, for where Jesus Christ is, there also the Catholic Church is". The greatness of Ignatius' teaching about Holy Communion is overwhelming in its sincere simplicity. He does not philosophize about how exactly the Lord is present in the bread and wine nor exactly how it is possible. Christ is just there. Ignatius says: "I need God's bread, heaven's bread, life's bread, which is the flesh of Jesus Christ, the Son of God, who was born in the last time from the seed of David and Abraham. I also need God's drink, His blood, which is the imperishable love and life eternal".

It is very important that Ignatius teaches not only about the Church on earth, but also about the Church in heaven. According to what he says, the heavenly Church is a "type" of the earthly Church. It is composed of the saints and the apostles who live in perpetual communion with God. Yet the Church in heaven is closely united with the Church on earth, for the Head of the Church in its both forms is our Lord Jesus Christ.

Ignatius' striving for unity urged him to rebuke those who sowed discord and bred strife. At that time two groups were most dangerous. The first one, so-called Judaizers, did not accept the authority of the New Testament and wanted Christians to observe the Sabbath and other Jewish rites (in other words they toiled to transform Christianity into a kind of a sect inside Judaism). The other group was called Docetists (from a Greek verb dokein, "seem"). They taught that it only seemed that Christ suffered and died, that it was an illusion. They believed that God could not suffer and die. On the contrary, Ignatius put a constant emphasis on the fact that the New Testament is a fulfillment of the Old Testament, that the Lord was not a dream, but a real Man, as you and me, and that He was still God.

For Ingatius, both Jesus Christ's death and the glorious resurrection are a pledge of our eternal life in our resurrected Lord.

Ignatius of Antioch both showed new aspects of and beautifully formulated many Christian doctrines that are a cornerstone of the true teaching of the Christian faith. It is amazing how simply and tersely he states them. But there is no secret in it. At that time, people who had known the apostles, were still alive. The person of Ignatius caused hot debates, which we will not mention here. This great man of God must be regarded simply and clearly, for such was his life that ended in a martyr's crown and a meeting with our Lord and Savior, to whom be the glory forever and ever.

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This Is How A Loving God Can Send You To Hell!

How can a loving God, send someone to hell? This is a question that has been asked by millions of people, and for thousands of years. To answer this question, we must first acknowledge what happens to the human soul at the time of death.

When we die, our internal organs shut down, and the inner man leaves the body. Once the inner man completely leaves the body, rigor mortis sets in. The spirit man is the truth of who you are. It is the deepest level of all that you have learned, done, thought, and believed while you were in the body. There are really no words to accurately describe what the spirit is because the spirit is not of this world. The spirit is an inner mirror of all that we truly are. Some even believe that the spirit is similar to a writing tablet that records everything about our true desires and thoughts. In essence; the spirit is the truth.

Because the spirit reflects the truth about us, it doesn't appear as we think it will. Forget what the movies have shown, the spirit doesn't resemble anything in this life. For the righteous, the spiritual form resembles the highest heavens in beauty and splendor. For the wicked, the soul will resemble the lowest of evil.

You see, what lives inside of us isn't human-is celestial. The only thing that makes us human is the fact that we are born into human bodies. What we really look like is beyond your wildest comprehension. Remember that the bible says that Jesus Christ became man; that means that He wasn't always so. He became human in appearance, not in nature. The same is true for us. We all came to this earth in a spiritual form, but we entered into a human body. After the body dies, the spirit form will be judged for what is did while in was in the human body. This is your true history, and your true future. You judgement will not be done on a scale of good deeds versus bad deeds, but on a scale of appearance. What will you look like once you return to your true form?

Every time we commit an act against divine will, we scar our spiritual form with an irremovable blemish. After years and years of sinning, we completely alter our spirits to the point that they are unrecognizable to the creator. When one of these grotesque spirits stands before God, He will tell them that He never knew them because they are not the spirits that He sent into their human body. They will have altered themselves so much that they will have become an abomination in the eyes of heaven. Because they are not in their created forms, the only place fit for them would be outer darkness.

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A Friend, With Benefits!

It happens all over this earth, billions of times every week - and daily, for many. The weekend's over, and you pry your eyes open early Monday morning to face a depressing new day and workweek. Drudgery awaits. As soon as you get to work, you can't help but to longingly pine for next weekend's break to arrive. And so life goes.

But if you're born again, let me ask you something: Why? "Why what?" Why are you drudging through your life like that? "Like what?" Like that, in drudgery? Don't you yet realize that you've got a Friend (2 Chronicles 20:7; Proverbs 27:10; Isaiah 41:8; John 15:15) with benefits? And I'm not just talking about some weak, capricious positive philosophical mindsets here and there. (Now, please don't misunderstand me; positive thinking is good - it's certainly better than negative thinking or no thinking at all.) No, I mean BENEFITS! Benefits that come with - are part and parcel of - the salvation of the Lord (2 Chronicles 6:41; Psalm 3:8, 68:20, 91:16).

The benefits of being in Christ Jesus are recorded all throughout the Bible. But, just in case you need them handy (and who of us doesn't), they're encapsulated in Psalm 103 so that we can remind ourselves daily - uh huh, daily. (God's mercies renew - they begin again in fulness to us - every morning! [Lamentations 3:22-23] Of course, that's not to mean they started runnin' a little short around 10 p.m. last night. It's just a description of His over-the-top love for each and every one of us - you included.) Verse 2 of that Psalm exhorts us not to forget any of them - to keep our thoughts and attention focused on those wonderful advantages.

What are they? Well, just taking verses 3 through 7 for starters, forgiveness from all of our sins (and, remember, all means all). And, healing from all of our diseases (see contents of previous parentheses!). Separation from any and all types of destruction that may come against your life and well-being - large or small. The loving kindness and the tender mercies of God surrounding you at all times - that's grace. He'll put good things (His own Words) into your mouth for you to speak, and your youth and vitality will be renewed. (Hey, God said it! Remember, we don't live by just bread alone; we live by every Word that proceeds out of His mouth [Deuteronomy 8:3; Matthew 4:4].) He executes righteousness and justice in your situations for you. He'll make His ways known to you. (Undoubtedly you've heard the old saying, "God works in mysterious ways." Well, that may be so, but He'll nevertheless teach you how He operates.)

Are you kidding me?? Listen, I'm fully convinced that none of knows just how good we've got it! But that can be changed. Put the 103rd Psalm in front of you every day. Keep it in your heart and mind (Joshua 1:8; Proverbs 4:20-22). It'll not only wake you up to the full, it'll put a spring in your step wherever you go. And why not? If you stay in God's will for your life, everything you touch will turn to gold! (Deuteronomy 28:8, 12; Job 1:10)

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How to Be a Witch

So you want to be a Witch? Let's get into some detail, then, and erase some illusions.

If you're a fan of Charmed or Hollywood movies similar, you might be a bit disappointed. No, you will not be flying in the sky on your brand new broom, or saving the world from monsters any time soon.

Are you still with me? Good.

Witchcraft (also called Wicca) is a spiritual, deeply Nature-conscious religion. Its practitioners are generally humble, and have a huge respect for all of life, from plants and animals, to human beings.

Its roots are firmly planted in the pantheistic religions of ancient Greece, Egypt, Mesopotamia, Ireland and beyond. There is no "one way" in Witchcraft. It is as eclectic as all other religions combined, because it draws its power from just about all of them.

There is a lot of ignorance when it comes to Witchcraft, and it is probably the most misunderstood religion that has ever existed. The mainstream and fundamentalist opinion of Witchcraft is that of pure evil and that to study or practice it is a sure way to Hell.

Calling a Witch a Devil-worshipper is a bit like blaming one's obesity because the neighbor eats donuts. By definition a Witch cannot possibly worship the Devil. They are not part of the Abrahamic religions (Judaism, Christianity & Islam), and therefore do not believe in God. If they don't believe in God, then by default they cannot believe in the Devil.

It is heavily frowned-upon by the great majority of Witches or Wiccans to cast spells that inflict harm. Their credo is 'An it harm none, do as ye will'. There is a tremendous respect for life and Mother Earth, and to do harm to another is to do harm to one's self: 'An ever mind the Rule of Three, what ye send out comes back to thee'.

Hardly what one would call a Satanic and evil religion, now, is it?

Witchcraft does involve rituals, astrology, tarot and other subjects that aren't quite accepted in the everyday world, but in the world of real Witchcraft, these are tools to help one understand themselves and the world around them. It is the frauds that take things like tarot and astrology and try to convince people they have all the answers.

If you want to be a Witch, learn to look at all of life as sacred and what a joy it is to exist, and celebrate it. Show love and kindness to whoever you meet and leave this world a better place than you found it.

That is what it really means to be a Witch.

Hail the Designers   Finding and Building Upon Our Sense-Of-Self   Love Is an Act of the Will, Not a Burst of Emotions   Unspectacularly Supernatural   Corrie ten Boom - The Roots of the Jerusalem Prayer Team   

The End of the World and the Rapture? Signs of the Times in Matthew 24

When the disciples asked about the end of the world in Matthew 24, some signs apply to every age such as wars, famines, earthquakes and pestilence of which we're seeing an unprecedented crescendo.

If we recall that the Greek language had no punctuation, "the end will come when you shall see the abomination of desolation" that the disciples understood to mean military force. When Rome came to Jerusalem in 66 AD, the Christians fled and were spared the siege by Titus in 70 AD.

End Times for Us?

Federal regulators gave banks "3-6 months" notice (Chicago Tribune, August 10) suggesting readiness for when they could not count on government help, and Homeland Security has purchased 450 million rounds of ammunition in anticipation of civil unrest and martial law. With the Patriot Act and Executive Orders in place, we have the ground work laid for what caused the disciples to flee.

With a global economy tying many nations together as in the European Union, one huge event could affect the whole world, "as in the days of Noah." And yes, "as in the days of Noah," it could come suddenly and unexpectedly." In fact, all of the signs in the last half of Matthew 24 are sudden and unexpected, a description that applies to many signs of the times today.

The End of the World v Rapture

Using the Flood as a pivotal sign, Christ said, "Then two will be in the field; one taken, the other left." The Flood "took them all away," so that being left behind is a good thing. This is further supported by a parallel passage in Luke. After one is taken and the other is left--

"And they answered and said unto him, "Where, Lord? And he said unto them, Wheresoever the body is, there will the eagles be gathered together." Luke 17:37.

From the woman "taken" in adultery, to the beast taken and cast into the fire (Revelation 19:20), the predominant use of taken is negative. Those that are taken die; being taken is not about the rapture.

The next sign in Matthew 24 is another sudden and unexpected event.

"If the goodman of the house had known in what watch the thief would come, he would have watched and not suffered his house to be broken up." Matthew 24:43. This coming as a thief is the focus of the apostle Paul's statement:

"The day of the Lord so comes as a thief in the night. For when they shall say, 'Peace and safety, sudden destruction comes.' 1Thessalonians 5:2,3.

"The day of the Lord" is the Old Testament apocalyptic period that begins with an earthquake as seen in Joel 2:10,11. Peace and safety is the supposed reason for the Department of Homeland Security, DHS. The "sudden destruction" may be linked to an unprecedented earthquake initiating the day of the Lord.

Signs of an Evil Servant?

The last sign in Matthew 24 is the evil servant who thinks the Lord delays his coming so that he begins to smite his fellow servants. Detention centers are being activated for those who could be suspected of "domestic terrorism," including gun rights activists, pro-lifers, homeschoolers, Bible prophecy buffs, Constitutionalists, some returning veterans-these have been mentioned in DHS documents. Such persons could be detained without trial under martial law. imposed in a national emergency by executive orders that are now in place.

In spite of "peace and safety" declarations, the reality is ominous. If we listen, we might hear hoof beats of the approaching apocalypse.

Hail the Designers   Finding and Building Upon Our Sense-Of-Self   Love Is an Act of the Will, Not a Burst of Emotions   Corrie ten Boom - The Roots of the Jerusalem Prayer Team   

How To Create Simple Sunday School Lessons

Have you ever asked yourself "What am I going to teach this week"?

Could you use a little help to create powerful, effective lessons which are Christ centered?

I have too! Too many times I've been up late at night trying to match my Pastor's message with Biblical stories appropriate for Sunday School. Here's what worked for me.

1. Stop Worrying! Use the Right Tools to Eliminate Guess Work!

Seriously, this was powerful concept once I grasped it. It allowed everything else to flow naturally. God has gifted us with the gift of teaching. While we love teaching, it may be cumbersome trying to organize our materials into something meaningful for our students.

Be careful! There's a lot of stuff on the internet to sort through. Look for tools which save time and are cost effective. I made an investment in the right tool which has been priceless in assisting me in creating Christ-Centered lesson plans.

2. Get Organized

Stop worrying! Get your tools or templates which help you create your lesson plans and then get organized!

Focus yourself on using only a few resources each week. This will slim down the amount of data you have to sort through, determine if it's relevant and then decide to use. Get folders, stickers and highlighters!! Make it fun! Set up a folder on your computer for each week's lesson and create a naming convention such as Sunday_School_Lessons_Date.

3. Feel the joy of Teaching!

That's a lot of pressure weighing down on our shoulders if you ask me! So much so that every week can be a hectic balancing act between normal life and creating meaningful, engaging and fun Sunday School Lessons.

Never again be afraid to take on a role you know you are gifted for. You now know how get the maximum benefit from your teaching gift.

If your passion is teaching Sunday school, you should be feeling overjoyed. There is no shame in getting help to design a life which allows us to give our best so that others are receiving our best. Do you miss this feeling?

Stop Worrying! Get Organized! Feel The Joy of Teaching!

How would it feel to know your plans are reaching students in a way that helps them develop a better quality of life! Your small contribution into their lives can be life changing. Using lesson plans which are simple, to the point, fun, and memorable all contribute to a better walk with Christ for your students.

Stop Worrying! Get Organized! Feel The Joy of Teaching!

Hail the Designers   Finding and Building Upon Our Sense-Of-Self   Love Is an Act of the Will, Not a Burst of Emotions   Corrie ten Boom - The Roots of the Jerusalem Prayer Team   

New Millennium Exodus - Leaving Cities for Rural Life and a Humble Home in God's Country

It's not about the money!

3-19-02

This is not the beginning. But there needs to be a date here to allow for the reader to get a perspective on the time and money involved in the New Millennium Exodus. Time is money, right? That would make the start and finish of this event, of any human event by modern standards, two of the most important aspects of recording the event. By conventional wisdom, in our age of reason, this would include the measure of a person's life as well. Well, it isn't about the money. And the time is not about days but about a journey that exists in God's time, eternity.

Again today, I arose at 4:30 AM. It is 38 degrees Fahrenheit outside. Almost every day for the past twenty years I have arisen at 4:30 AM or close to it to allow myself time for my daily routine of preparation for each day. The debriefing of subconscious, batch processing reported from the night before, along with tea or coffee and then Bible reading and prayer. Every morning I recalibrate to center myself on the measurements Jesus Christ uses, not man. He is the anchor through the veil.

The main purpose in describing this exodus is to share what I experience and learn with others who are contemplating a similar exodus. It arises from the central need for me to be able to live my life according to my faith in Jesus in harmony with natural bounty God has provided on this earth. Although I am not formally enslaved like the Jews who were led by Moses to the great exodus, I similarly feel called by God to leave the decadent society of urban America to be in a place that is conducive to worshipping God as he commanded his faithful.

It is an exodus that is not exclusively based on my physical location here in Redwood City, CA, or any other specific place on this planet other than being in the confines of an urbanized segment of the modern world. However, in seeking freedom from the grip of the overwhelming and expanding acceptance of pervasive immorality, our physical departure from the epicenter of debauched behavior should enhance the continuing process of sanctification we have undertaken. This is the goal I seek. I wish to shun the race for material wealth that dominates modern America. I wish to be obedient to God's will above any sense that success in this world's estimation controls my actions.

So, it's not about the money. It's not specifically about moving physically. It is about an exodus toward a life that is more closely aligned with what God, Jehovah, I AM,... has commanded for us.

3-20-02

New Millennium Exodus is about building a home in a mountain valley near Yosemite National Park in Yosemite. As my wife, Teri, and I have undertaken to relocate on land we purchased on an alpine meadow there. During a visit to friends living nearby in the Pine Mountain Lake community, they suggested that we should chronicle the experience of building a house in the mountains. Initially, I believe the idea was to keep a record of the research and activities necessary to construct the building that will become our home. It is more than a construction project. It is an exodus I have been in the process of enacting for at least 35 years. I realized at 15 that I am a prisoner within the "veiled" confines of this world and have been following the dream of freedom since then. From Hebrews 6:18-19, speaking of the hope and guarantee of salvation which is our anchor in Jesus..[18] That by two immutable things, in which it was impossible for God to lie, we might have a strong consolation, who have fled for refuge to lay hold upon the hope set before us: [19] Which hope we have as an anchor of the soul, both sure and steadfast, and which entereth into that within the veil

There should be time to explain the history of this exodus as the daily entries unfold but the immediate need of this book is to give you an idea of what you will find in it. I will be including here all the steps taken by us, Teri and I, to exit from the San Francisco bay area to a home on 81 acres near Yosemite. The purpose is to serve as a guide for a similar exodus for others. Will everyone be moving to a valley similar to our destination? Highly unlikely. Will others be moved to explore an exodus to a spiritual home that is like the one we are designing? I hope so.

Do not be overly critical because I appeared to mix up spiritual and physical homes. I know there can be a difference. We are in earthen vessels, as Paul said, and our bodies are the temporary vessels for this lifelong journey. But we also bring into and upon our souls the flavor of the physical life we inhabit. It is by the discipline we establish in how we live our lives in the physical world that we nourish the inner growth of our souls. You can read James in the New Testament for a more complete explanation of this. The discussion of our soul's salvation resting in faith and not works will have to be postponed in the meantime. I need to go swim my 100 lengths (2,500 m) in the outdoor public pool in the next hour before they close the doors.

I would like to talk about the Pilgrims, John Winthrop and Thomas Jefferson as guides to this exodus. And, of course, how Moses led the Jews out of the grasp of Pharaoh. Points A and B on the exodus begin with Redwood City, CA and Greeley Hill, CA respectively. These are the physical points of reference, anyhow. The spiritual milestones flow in a unbroken continuum of growth from conception in the womb and progressing from inside this earthen vessel until disapating as ashes or dust when the time comes for releasing my soul to an eternal home.

Hail the Designers   Finding and Building Upon Our Sense-Of-Self   Love Is an Act of the Will, Not a Burst of Emotions   Corrie ten Boom - The Roots of the Jerusalem Prayer Team   

Countdown to the End of the World: Examining Jesus' Prophetic Parable of Matthew 22

Jesus' parable of the wedding feast in Matthew 22 is in fact a prophetic countdown of events from the time of Israel to the end of the world. Contrary to what evangelicals would have us believe, among the things that are predicted in that parable is the rejection of the Jews as a nation. As we examine the parable we will get a peek into the future and see how God's eternal purpose will be accomplished despite the reluctance of those He once cherished as His peculiar treasure.

The parable started out in this manner: "The kingdom of heaven is like unto a certain king, which made a marriage for his son. And sent forth his servants to call them that were bidden to the wedding: and they would not come. And again he sent forth other servants, saying, Tell them which are bidden, Behold, I have prepared my dinner: my oxen and my fatlings are killed, and all things are ready: come unto the marriage. But they made light of it, and went their ways, one to his farm, another to his merchandise: And the remnant took his servants, and entreated them spitefully, and slew them." Matt. 22:2-6

The parable of the wedding invitation is a prophecy of the gospel commission. The gospel proclamation is represented as being carried by servants that were sent to those who were bidden to the wedding. In other words, the message was directed only to a particular set of people who were specially invited to this occasion. The message that was sent out is not a message of invitation to the wedding; the people were already bidden to the marriage. The servants were sent out to tell those people who were already invited that everything is ready; that they can now come in to the wedding.

However, when the call was made, instead of coming to the wedding, they made light of it and busy themselves with their own affairs. They had no interest in attending this marriage ceremony, and so they show a great deal of indifference to the servants' call. But when the call grows loader and more persistent, the people became disgusted and started to treat them spitefully to the point of murdering some of them.

For those who are at least average in their knowledge of prophecy should know that this parable is an obvious reference to the Jewish people. Because they were already chosen in Abraham, through circumcision, they can be considered as being bidden to the wedding. Simply put, the only thing that each Israelite needed to do to accept the invitation to this wedding is to be born the seed of Abraham. Israel didn't need to make any profession of faith in order for them to be considered the people of God. But because of the unsanctified condition of the people, there was a need for reformation and this is where the call to the wedding comes in.

Therefore, from time to time God would send His prophets to Israel to call them from their waywardness to a life of obedience. For centuries God has been making tireless efforts to bring His people from a religion of legalism to one that will bring them into a meaningful relationship with Him. By dispatching his servants, the prophets, God intends to get the children of Abraham to understand that godliness is more than about participating in the sacrificial service.

As we are aware, the warnings and entreaties of the prophets did not only go unnoticed but was met with enmity and violence. The result of Israel's hatred for the call to the wedding feast was summed up by Christ in the following lamentation against the Jewish nation:

"O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, thou that killest the prophets, and stonest them which are sent unto thee, how often would I have gathered thy children together, even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not!" Matt. 23:37

From the time that Israel became a nation, the message of peace was confined to the sons and daughters of Abraham. It was not intended for the heathen nations except if they wish to become a part of the commonwealth of Israel by circumcision, and to practice the laws of Moses. That the message must first be sent out to the Jews is clearly stated in the following passages:

"These twelve Jesus sent forth, and commanded them, saying, Go not into the way of the Gentiles, and into any city of the Samaritans enter ye not: But go rather to the lost sheep of the house of Israel. And as ye go, preach, saying, The kingdom of heaven is at hand." Matt. 10:5-7

"For I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ: for it is the power of God unto salvation to every one that believeth; to the Jew first, and also to the Greek." Rom. 1:16

When God saw that the Jews will not respond to the call to repent and reform; when He saw the cruelty with which they treated the prophets that was sent unto them, His anger was kindled. Therefore, the people of Israel was forsaken and their house was left unto them desolate (Matt. 23:38).

This is how the parable continues: "But when the king heard thereof, he was wroth: and he sent forth his armies, and destroyed those murderers, and burned up their city." Matt. 22:7

The judgment of the Lord was executed upon Jerusalem when the Roman army laid siege against the city and subsequently razed it to ruins. This event took place in AD70 and it fulfills the parable in no uncertain terms. It was then that the gospel went fully to the Gentiles as a result of the work the apostolic brethren who fled the city of Jerusalem before its destruction. Thus the parable continues:

"Then saith he to his servants, The wedding is ready, but they which were bidden were not worthy. Go ye therefore into the highways, and as many as ye shall find, bid to the marriage. So those servants went out into the highways, and gathered together all as many as they found, both bad and good: and the wedding was furnished with guests." Matt. 22:8-10

Notice the language that is used in the command to go into the highways: "as many as ye find, bid to the marriage." Unlike the case with Israel, this is a set of people who are just getting the invitation to the wedding. Whereas the Israelites were bidden by birth and circumcision, the Gentiles were actually invited. In the church today you have both good and bad; they all received the invitation and come to the wedding. But when the wedding became furnished with guests, something significant happened as the parable went on:

"And when the king came in to see the guests, he saw there a man which had not on a wedding garment: And he saith unto him, Friend, how camest thou in hither not having a wedding garment? And he was speechless. Then said the king to the servants, Bind him hand and foot, and take him away, and cast him into outer darkness, there shall be weeping and gnashing of teeth. For many are called, but few are chosen." Matt. 22:11-14

The wedding garment in question is a symbol of the righteousness of the saints (Rev. 19:8). Because there were good and bad in the church, there will be a need to separate the wheat from the tares in order for it to be purified. Thus, the Father will do an examination of each individual to see if they are clothed in the righteousness of Christ. Some will appear holy on the outside and many will be fooled into thinking that they are genuine and true. But under the searching scrutiny of divine investigation every man's character will be revealed for what it is.

This marriage supper spoken of in the parable is referring the one in Revelation 19. Based on the narrative development of this chapter, the Lamb's wife (His people) has already made herself ready. The readiness of the church must be accomplished before the Second coming. When the work of examination of characters are finished, it will then be known who have passed the test of divine scrutiny and who will be cast into outer darkness. It is after the Lamb's wife was declared ready that the world will come to an end, and Christ will then be seen on a white horse coming in the clouds of heaven (Rev. 19:11) to receive His bride.

Hail the Designers   Finding and Building Upon Our Sense-Of-Self   Love Is an Act of the Will, Not a Burst of Emotions   Corrie ten Boom - The Roots of the Jerusalem Prayer Team   Unspectacularly Supernatural   

Never Faulting Your Worth

"Let your adornment be the inner self with the lasting beauty of a gentle and quiet spirit, which is very precious in God's sight." ~1 Peter 3:4 (NRSV)

It's the quickest, most effective way to a depressed and debilitating result. Comparisons with others, or deriding ourselves for all manners of failure, rejection or embarrassment, are the prime vehicles to questioning our worthiness, as is dabbling again, devoid of God, in past or present guilt, shame or sin.

We can be our own worst enemy when it comes to doubting our intrinsic worth. We quickly forget that our worthiness has been defined, long before we were born.

OUR WORTHINESS HAS BEEN DEFINED

Let's not forget who bought us; if we believe Christ, we are one in him; we are won to him. We are hidden with Christ in God (Colossians 3:3).

An unfathomably high price was paid for us - Jesus died so our sin would not be a barrier excluding us from fellowship with the Father. Sometimes we need to be reminded of this.

Worth is a thing no longer in contention. Not one single person alive, or dead for that matter, is of less worth than Christ dying for their sin. That is a concept so marvellous that we could consider it every conscious minute for the rest of our lives and still not comprehend the fullness and magnitude of it.

No matter what we do or don't do in this life, we are unable to shake or de-shackle from this fact. This fact is beyond all our deeds; what we think and say; or even how worthy we think we are or aren't.

God has defined our worthiness by the measure of Christ.

We cannot argue with the logic of God, for if we do, our defiance of God just leaves us confused and lacking in spiritual sense.

ACCEPTING THE WORK, ON OUR BEHALF, OF JESUS' OBEDIENCE ON THE CROSS

If we can put thoughts of our unworthiness to bed, seriously settling for the inherent worthiness in the glory of being human under God, we begin to live a more spiritually peaceful life - a peace that transcends our understanding.

At the simple transactions of recognising God's grace we are afforded a simple blessing: the knowledge that, because of what God has achieved, we are worthy.

When we accept the work of the cross, the obedience of Jesus to the Father's timing for that once-for-all-time redemptive act, the record of history in the Bible, and these by faith, we do feel worthy and we know our worthiness.

Accept the work of the cross. Accept the unique worth implicit in being you.

© 2012 S. J. Wickham.

Hail the Designers   Finding and Building Upon Our Sense-Of-Self   Love Is an Act of the Will, Not a Burst of Emotions   Corrie ten Boom - The Roots of the Jerusalem Prayer Team   Unspectacularly Supernatural   

New Amendment Uncensoring Religion

Religious differences in U.S. schools have never quite been a topic of widely open discussions presently, perhaps because of all the diversity and acceptance occurring simultaneously. Yet a new amendment passed earlier this week in Missouri, concerning school institutions and the act of praying, is steering up confusion and disagreement. Many are calling the amendment "the right to pray".

"The measure formally known as Amendment 2 passed with 83 percent of the vote," The Huffington Post reported. While this massively supported action was passed in a positive effort to aid the Christian community in the state, it has many worried that it might make minorities feel excluded. There is "hope it will protect Christianity in the state, which they believe is under attack," as the Huff Post reports in another article on the same story.

The ballot included such propositions as having to display The Bill of Rights of the United States Constitution in public schools, most obviously. It was also proposed to make it possible for students to be protected from religious infringement, or in other words, to make it an obligation not to cause discrimination. They now allow students the right to acknowledge a belief in God while at school.

The state's GOP Rep. "McGhee, whose legislation led to the amendment proposal, told FoxNews.com about an incident in which a teacher told a kindergartner singing 'Jesus Loves Me' while swinging on the playground to instead sing 'mommy loves me.'" Will all this reform bring about more positive impact, or preventable issues, such as lawsuits? Sources at Fox are a firm believer in the latter.

The solution to the initial concern might make its way up to federal court.

A recent article by the Kansas City Star reported how people present in-state at the time of controversy, and those who voted towards the passing of the bill really felt. Some were "disappointed while not surprised." Others felt like it was highly important to them.

Disappointment has been forecasted by The New York Times: "It would, instead, create confusion and wreak havoc in classrooms by giving students the right to refuse to read anything or do any assignments that they claim offends their religious views," they propose as the reaction of some students to the outcome of the whole ordeal.

The National Center for Science Education is backfiring, claiming that this is counter-acting against the taught topic of evolution. New Hampshire, Missouri, and Oklahoma have all considered the new amendment measure as well. Those in favor of the polar-opposite side, like those in favor of discussing Biology, like science teachers, have been encouraged to directly aim towards talking about the topic of evolution.

The whole point of all this verbal commotion is to create less restrictions for anyone displeased with their current freedom of conduct: the first amendment. However, this new cause for concern is within reason, as it would allow students to argue for creationism and argue against their science class. It is uncertain if students will misbehave as a result, but the purpose of the new amendment is clear, the people want to make the status of religious openness clear in public instances.

Hail the Designers   Finding and Building Upon Our Sense-Of-Self   Love Is an Act of the Will, Not a Burst of Emotions   Corrie ten Boom - The Roots of the Jerusalem Prayer Team   Unspectacularly Supernatural   

Abraham's Thoughts While Preparing to Sacrifice Isaac

After Isaac was born and weaned, Abraham was asked to send his first son, Ishmael, and his mother, Hagar, away. This grieved him greatly because Ishmael was his only son for fourteen years. God told Abraham that his seed would be passed on through Isaac and not Ishmael. Now God was asking him to sacrifice Isaac. What were Abraham's thoughts at this critical time? My dream god explained to me this way.

I decided to test Abraham's faith a second time. I told him to take his son, Isaac, and go into the land of Moriah. Offer him there for a burnt-offering upon one of the mountains which I will tell you about. Early n the morning Abraham saddled his donkey, took Isaac and two of his young men, some wood for the burnt-offering, and went to the place I told him.

Three days later, when he saw the place in the distance, Abraham told the young men to stay there with the donkey while he and Isaac went further to worship, and then return. They both went off together, Isaac with the wood and Abraham with the fire and a knife.

Isaac said, "I see the fire and the wood, but where is the lamb for a burnt-offering?"

Abraham answered, "God will provide Himself a lamb for a burnt-offering, my son." So they went both of them together.

When they came to the place, Abraham built an altar, laid out the wood, bound Isaac, and laid him on the altar upon the wood. Then Abraham took the knife to slay his son.

My dream god then said that Abraham was wise and his brain was always working. Before he raised the knife, he wondered if I, his God, was a great deceiver or if I was testing him. After all, he thought, God had promised me that He would multiply my seed greatly through Isaac, but now He is asking me to sacrifice Isaac. Abraham felt that a good and truthful God would have to stop his sacrifice of Isaac at some time. He was a God-fearing man, but he was not willing to sacrifice his son on the altar of an untruthful God. Abraham's dilemma was: if he raised his knife and struck Isaac, he would, indeed, have lost his son in the service of an untruthful God; but if this was a test that God was planning to stop, and he hesitated, then he would have proved himself lacking in faith. I was monitoring Abraham's thoughts all the while, and when he picked up the knife, because it grieved him greatly, he was unsure of what he would do. I stopped him then because he had done enough to prove himself. At the same time, I proved to him that I was a good and truthful God, worthy of his loyalty.

At that moment I called to him out of heaven and said, "Lay not your hand upon the lad, neither do you any thing to him; for now I know that you are a God-fearing man, seeing you have not withheld your son, your only son, from Me."

Abraham looked up and saw a ram caught in a thicket. He took the ram and offered it up for a burnt offering.

While this incident was a test of Abraham's faith, it also was, in part, a test of Isaac's faith. Isaac was a young man when he allowed his father to bind him and lie him on the altar with the wood. To see his father raise the knife without resisting and trying to get away was sure proof that Isaac was as God-fearing as his father.

Hail the Designers   Finding and Building Upon Our Sense-Of-Self   Love Is an Act of the Will, Not a Burst of Emotions   Corrie ten Boom - The Roots of the Jerusalem Prayer Team   Unspectacularly Supernatural   

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