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Monday, December 13, 2021

You Can't Beak That

The word of the Lord came to Elijah: “Leave here, turn eastward and hide in the Kirith Revine, east of the Jordan. You will drink from the brook, and I have ordered the ravens to feed you there.” 1st Kings 17:2 (NIV)

Elijah the Prophet was in big trouble. He had just finished prophesying that God would withhold rain from Israel as judgment for her sins. The king, Ahab, was really angry.

God told Elijah to lay low for a while. He sent him to a secluded spot where He promised to supply his needs. Morning and evening He sent Ravens to bring him food. God used this time of testing to prepare Elijah for greater trials yet to face.

The LORD always leads us into places where He sustains us and trains us. There’s no sin in wondering why we’re going through a trial. But for myself, I’ve found my own comfort and growth was strengthened when I began to ask, “What does God want to teach me, here?” He brought His prophet into the desert and took care of this Orthodox Jew in a very unorthodox way. Elijah’s food was delivered, prepackaged, in a neat beak.

God shows us that in any situation in which we find ourselves, He can meet our every need, even if it means using the wings of ravens to bring Him honor, praise, and worship.

But this was only part of the story. As we read on, we find that when Elijah’s time in the wilderness was done, God didn’t fly him home to live a life for the birds. Instead, He used him in many more ways. When his time on earth was finished, God dispatched a chariot of fire to fly him to Himself (2nd Kings 2:11).

God is always faithful. Even in the dry and barren wilderness experiences, He seldom works the same way twice. He doesn’t want us to become enamored with routine solutions which we will begin to trust over Him.  

The exciting thing is He’s not limited in what He can do for us or how He accomplishes it. He can use the wings of a 747 or the wings of a raven. Birds of a feather can flock together, to be sure, but the LORD’s ability to meet your needs goes far and away above that. That’s enough to cause a weary heart to take wing! When ravens won’t fit the bill, He will.

Ken   

Monday, December 6, 2021

Look Dad, No Hands!

Now all glory to God, who is able, through His mighty power at work within us, to accomplish infinitely more than we might ask or think. Glory to Him in the church and in Christ Jesus through all generations forever and ever! Amen Ephesians 3:20-21

“Hey, Dad, look, no hands!” Those are words that can strike terror into the souls of dads and moms alike. Like the time my then eight-year-old daughter said it while on a swing. Before I could say "No!", she let go, falling backwards onto the ground. She knocked herself out, but fortunately only broke her arm and not her neck. Thank the Lord for large mercies!

Remember all those great saints of God who stood back and said victoriously, “Hey, no worries, Lord. Don’t need ya. I’ve got this one,”?  No, because there weren’t any. They were broken and fallible men and women, many of whom got themselves into their dire circumstances and couldn’t get out.

But look at those who, taking their hands off and trusted God to do the impossible: Abraham sired the son of promise at 100, Joseph, falsely accused, spent years in prison. However, God made him second in command to Pharoah. Moses was called by God after 40 years of leading flocks in Midian to lead a nation, Rahab, a prostitute, became an ancestral link in the Messianic line, Daniel and his three friends, after being carried into slavery, became influential advisors to the court of kings. And the list goes on.

The lifechanging power of the Supreme God and His risen Christ was affirmed to Jewish believers in the first century. One was a particularly nasty tempered individual, named Saul of Tarsus, whose hatred of Christ and His followers was confronted on a road outside the city of Damascus. Saul, a Hebrew of Hebrews, circumcised the 8th day, of the Tribe of Benjamin, and in regard to the law, a Pharisee (Philippians 3:5), encountered the Jewish Christ and again the impossible was easily done. Saul met his Moshiach (Messiah) and believed, becoming Christianity’s most ardent advocate and defender, Paul, the Apostle to the Gentiles.

If you’re frantically chasing the Impossible Scheme, remember the One who says He can do the impossible, can do it. We are encouraged to persevere in faith and in prayer. Once as a teen, I told my youth leader, “I don’t have enough faith when I pray.”  He answered, “You prayed, didn’t you?”  When I nodded, he said, “Even if you didn’t feel it, that you prayed was an act of faith!” When we say to God, “Look, Father, no hands,” there’s no alarm in His mind. He just smiles and rolls up His sleeves! Pursue, persist, press on!

Now all glory to God, who is able, through His mighty power at work within us, to accomplish infinitely more than we might ask or think. It is to His glory only. All saving release is through the working of His hands alone. Pursue, persist, press on, Beloved!

Ken

Monday, November 29, 2021

Sitting Shiva

When they saw him [Jōb] from a distance, they could hardly recognize him; they began to weep aloud, and they tore their robes and sprinkled dust on their heads. Then they sat on the ground with him for seven days and seven nights. No one said a word to him, because they saw how great his suffering was.  Job 2:12,13 (NIV)

Job (Jōb) was a righteous man who it is believed lived before the time of Abraham. The biblical book that bears his name tells of the catastrophes and suffering Satan brought upon this godly man and his family.

When Job’s friends, Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar learned of his plight they dropped everything and went to comfort him. In the course of the story, their “comfort” quickly turned to judgement, saying the reasons for his calamities were due to his many sins and arrogance. In reality his sufferings were things he held no control over (Job 1:10-12). The three friends meant well and began well, but throughout their visit the wisest thing they did was sit in silence with him for 7 days and nights.

The Jewish people have a custom when bereaved or devastated, called Sitting Shiva. Shiva (shib’ȃh) is the Hebrew word for seven and seems to parallel the Book of Job. In Shiva, a Jewish household opens to visitors (usually for a 3-day period), under a set of certain protocols, where family and community can come and pay their respects. As a people, we more often than not, are uncomfortable with those who suffer and in not knowing what to say will offer comments that are gratuitous, insulting, and can be calloused to their pain. Sitting Shiva means that listening and support more often than not supersedes talk. Sometimes just a simple hug, a meeting of the eyes that says “I see and sense your pain, and I’m here to support you,” is adequate. Sometimes silence is enough said.

You may be in a world of hurt right now and no one has called on you except your own types of Job’s comforters. Most all of us have been there at one time or another.

Christ Jesus is sitting Shiva with you. He’s got your hand in His and He’s looking eye-to-eye with you in your pain, giving you His support. He is perfectly aware of that throbbing heartache, that relentless pit in the stomach and that band of tightness that plays on your every breath. He watches every tear that falls, on your face and in your heart, and has known from eternity past, the darkness you will face in this, the valley of your struggle.

Let me encourage you that God in His silence does not mean God in His absence. If all you’re hearing is silence it doesn’t mean the Lord doesn’t care. It means He’s Sitting Shiva with you, His beloved Child. He’s there. He knows. He cares. Meanwhile, when all you hear is silence, be assured, He’s at the right hand of the Father, pleading your case! He intercedes for you, as your personal advocate. (Romans 8:34).  

Silence may be golden, but the Word of the Lord is His bond. All His words are trustworthy and true. He offers you His peace in the quietness of His presence, with a tender and calming touch. He sits Shiva with you. And that silence, Beloved, speaks volumes.

Ken

Monday, November 22, 2021

Faster Than That

In a flash, in the twinkling of an eye, at the last trumpet. For the trumpet will sound, the dead will be raised imperishable, and we will be changed. 1st Corinthians 15:52

We’ve all heard that well-worn quotation about the certainty of death and taxes, but did you know the Bible teaches there will be some believers in Christ who will not experience physical death?

The Apostle Paul, who received his knowledge of the Gospel through Christ’s revelation (Galatians 1:11,12), wrote of the harpazo (removal with great power) of all believers, both living and dead (1st Corinthians 15:51,52, 1st Thessalonians 4:13-18). The dead in Christ will be resurrected first, then those who are alive will be caught up (harpazo) to be with them and the Lord forever. This is also known as the Rapture. Our modern word rapture comes from the Latin translation of the Greek harpazo. They mean the same thing.

Jesus said He would go away for a time unspecified to prepare a place for us, but He would also return for us (John 14:2,3). We can’t know the exact time of this historical event, but He revealed to us the signs of what would be happening as that day approached (Matthew Chapter 24, Luke 21:5-36).

How quickly will the great gathering of the Church happen when it happens? Paul speaks of it being in an instant (Greek, atomos), and in the twinkling (rhipē) of an eye. The reference is not to the speed of the blink of an eye, but to the movement, or jerk, the eye makes when moving to look at something. To give some reference to the speed that is implied here, it takes an eye 400 milliseconds (4/10s of a second) to blink. For an eye to do one movement, or saccade, it can take only 200 milliseconds (2/10s of a second)! Christ will bring to Himself both dead and living believers in less time than it took your eye to move to read this last word!

How should we then live our lives in light of the current chaos and evil in the world? Jesus said to not allow our hearts to be weighed down with disobedience and the anxieties of life, but to always be on the watch and pray that we may be able to escape the coming judgments and stand before the Son of Man (Luke 21:34, 35). He encourages us to look up with anticipation and joy, for His redemption is near (Luke 21:28).

God tells us these things not to scare us, but to prepare us. Jesus says He will make all things new (Revelation 21:5). The darker things get only reveal the greater brilliance of His Light. He did say if He went away, He would return for us (John 14:2, 3).

What He has already made known to us through the Law & the Prophets, and eye witness and historical accounts, can only be the pre-dawn glow of the Son’s Rising, that will give a new and brilliant radiance to eternity’s skies. When He does all He promises to do, His righteous Kingdom will come. He Himself testifies that what He says is trustworthy and true (Revelation 21:5). He has proven Himself faithful-the unchangeable God-Yesterday, Today, and Forever (Hebrews 13:8). And when He does it it will be faster than the blink of your eye.

Ken

Sunday, November 14, 2021

Is Atheism Dead?

If you're really looking for something that will challenge and encourage your faith, find the time to watch this video by best selling Christian author and apologist/speaker, Eric Metaxas.

Ken
 
Atheism is Dead

Monday, November 8, 2021

Why You Can Stay

From this time many of his disciples turned back and no longer followed him. “You do not want to leave, too, do you?” Jesus asked the Twelve. John 6:66, 67

Back in the early 1970s, David Wilkerson wrote a book titled I’m Not Mad at God.  I’ve never forgotten the title. It has come to mind many times throughout my own life experiences.

I have shared in the past how one day I felt pain when I stood up from my desk, and how that pain evolved into two years of living hell and suffering for myself, and especially for my wife and two teenaged daughters who were held captive in it, yet unable to offer me lasting relief from it.  Doctors, including specialists, misdiagnosed my symptoms time after time, leaving me in my uncertainty to lie in bed to quote Job 13:15 through clinched teeth: “Though he slay me, yet will I hope in him; I will surely defend my ways to his face.”

In my suffering I was attacked from both secular and spiritual sides.  My own doctor’s nurse was convinced I was faking and was constantly telling him so. And one of the ladies from my church, whose identity I later discovered, sent me an unsigned card saying, “If you’ll just get your focus off yourself and onto Jesus, you won’t be suffering.”  

The short story is a medical team at the Scottsdale, AZ, Mayo Clinic were able to identify my issue as a fast growing, mostly benign, brain tumor called an acoustic neuroma. In the interim of the time it went undiagnosed, it grew against my brain stem into the size of a lemon, lodged in a space the size of a walnut. Because it lay against my brain stem and was so massive, the five Mayo surgeons would only removed half of it. I was told I was in surgery 20 hours. The surgeons felt because it was so close to the brain stem, any more aggressive surgery could either kill me or leave me in a vegetative state.

The Mayo team said to wait 6 to 9 months and it was possible the residual tumor could move away from the brain stem and the rest of it could be safely removed. That is what happened. The residual was removed 9 months later in a second surgery and I have remained tumor-free to this day. When my doctor told his nurse of the tumor, my wife heard her exclaim, “You mean there was really something wrong with him?”

I’ve been asked more than once why, through such an ordeal, I didn’t get mad at God or people and lose my faith. I said, “It never occurred to me. God may have allowed it, but He didn’t do it to me. When Jesus asked the Twelve if they would leave Him, Peter said ‘Lord to whom shall we go?  You have the words of eternal life. We have come to believe you are the Holy One of God.’ I came out with my faith and confidence in God strengthened.” 

I’m not putting myself on the par of Job. That brother suffered far more than I could have ever endured. But God’s grace was sufficient for my particular season of suffering. 

In the darkness you may be stumbling through, I can only say Christ is there with you and He’s placed His angels around you to hold you up so you will not stumble (Psalm 91:11, 12). 

No matter the outcome, if you trust Him, His perfect will for you will be accomplished. Where else will you go to find that kind of peace? Only He, as the Holy One of God, has the words of your eternal life. Hold onto Him whose words and promises are true. He knows what you’re facing. He’s skin close to you right now and in the very next breath you take.  Trust in Him Beloved! He will never leave you or forsake you. This is why you can stay. I speak from experience. Blessings to you this week.

Ken  

Monday, November 1, 2021

The Penalty and the Price

 The LORD God made garments of skin for Adam and his wife and clothed them.  Genesis 3:21

When God created everything, it was perfect. Mankind’s purposes and priorities were perfect also. The Big Lie, Lucifer (Satan), used to deceive Adam and Eve out of their eternal inheritance was that God’s motives were questionable at best and His commandments were biased with suspicion and jealousy. 

In reality, in mankind being placed into a perfect and eternal setting, the Creator knew the suffering and destruction sin would bring to Creation and warned of its consequences. God was not withholding anything from our first parents; He was protecting them.

The penalty for sin was the price.  No one could pay it.  There was not enough righteousness outside of God, Himself, that could satisfy His wrath against it. Sin was something so heinous it would hurl mankind into a pit of wretchedness, death, and despair. 

A payment so terrible was demanded to cover it and that demand was the shedding of innocent blood.  The first blood shed was by the animals God sacrificed to clothe Adam and Eve. Scripture doesn’t say how it happened, but I believe God had Adam and Eve watch Him kill two of their beloved, (and innocent), animals, to bring home to them the ruin sin had brought and how horrible a price to Creation it would be. 

So why did God allow humanity to become slaves to sin?  Because He knew Adam and Eve would fail and His plan all along was to reveal His glorious Love and Nature by paying the debt Himself.  He gave the promise in Genesis 3:15, that was fulfilled through the shedding of the innocent blood of His own dear Son, Christ Jesus. Jesus would crush the head of the serpent (destroying slavery to sin) and the serpent would bruise His heel (death by crucifixion). The Perfect Sacrifice was made not with a temporary covering, but a once-for-all offering, meant to bring us into eternal redemption with God when we accept it (Hebrews 9:12).

Satan questioned God’s goodness when he said to Eve, “Did God really say that?” (Genesis 3:1).  While God did say it, the LORD immediately put His payment on the table to deal with it. In a generation yet to come, the world would watch as He allowed His Lamb to be crucified by the very race He came to save.  John the Baptist so rightly declared of Jesus Christ, “Behold the lamb of God that takes away the sin of the world,” (John 1:29). And indeed, that Lamb clothed the world in robes of righteousness to His honor, glory and worship.

People will ask, “But at what price to us?”  The statement ought to be, “What an astounding price God paid with His own little Lamb, while we laughed and mocked Him!” It was truly amazing grace. That is a price that will never be matched.  It is a price that can never be repaid. Thanks be to God for the perfect lamb and the Robe of Righteousness He placed upon us. One Lamb was enough.

Ken