Wednesday, October 23, 2013

Oct 23 - How to Experience God's Presence (2) SUBMIT

Do you want more of the presence of God?
Today I offer the second of a three-step process.

Yesterday we said that the first step to experiencing more of the Presence of God is to choose. We must want it. We must choose it. We must do it. According to Joshua 3, that means stepping bolding into the flood. And it means choosing time with God instead of time with other activities that we normally choose instead.

Today we take the second step: Submit. Here are our guiding verses …
  •      Joshua 1:4 [God said … When you] cross … into the land … 6 be … 7 careful to act in accordance with all the law … 8 [Furthermore,] this book of the law shall not depart out of your mouth; you shall meditate on it day and night … 11 [Then Joshua commanded] “… in three days you are to cross over the Jordan, to go in to take possession of the land that the Lord your God gives you to possess.'"

  •      Joshua 3:15 [When] the feet of the priests bearing the ark were dipped in the … flood, 16 the waters flowing from above stood still.

  •      2 Chronicles 7:14 if my people who are called by my name will humble themselves … and pray … and seek my face … and turn from their wicked ways, I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sins and heal their land.

Step 2: Submit

The biggest barrier to experiencing the presence of God is …

… us.

We say that we want God, but we continually want to do things our way. (We call that disobedience.)
We say that we want God, but we keep insisting that we have a better way and that we know what’s best for ourselves. (We call that pride.)
We say that we want God, but we hold back parts of our lives, refusing to give God full access – “He can have me, except he can’t have my ___________.” (We call that a failure-to-submit-everything-to-him.)
We say that we want more of God, but flat out like some of our bad habits. (We call that sin.)

The passages above reveal the next step. It is humbleness, obedience, and submission.

      1.     2 Chronicles 7:14 implores us to “humble [our]selves,” and humbleness is obviously a form of submission.

      2.     Joshua 1:7 tells us to “be careful to act in accordance with all the law.” Obedience is another obvious form of submission. And notice the percentage of obedience that God requires. It’s 100%. We’re called to devote ALL. It’s no more picking and choosing and excusing.

Yes, we’ll still sin and fall short. And yes, God will absolutely still forgive. But we must not continue being so naïve as to that when can dwell in his presence when we’re still intentionally living in (and excusing) sin.

Assignment: My favorite way to discuss this is to attack the one big thing that’s holding you back. You know what it is. Name it? What’s your one big thing that you’ve so far continued to refuse to give to God?





Assignment: Today, what do you know you need to change?


Tuesday, October 22, 2013

Oct 22 -- How to Experience God's Presence (1) CHOOSE

Do you want more of the presence of God?
Today I offer the first of a three-step process.

If we misunderstand the Presence of God, we view it a noun, a thing, something that sits there.
  •      Number one, God – and his Presence – is active, moving, living, breathing, and transforming. His Presence is a verb 
  •       Number two, we are invited to make our experience of his Presence a verb too! We don’t want our faith to be more than something that just sits there. As Paul describes it – and listen for the verbs – “in him we live and move and have our being” (Acts 17:28).

Is that how you experience God’s Presence?!

If you want to grow in this awareness, let me commend to you three verbs – choose, submit, and practice. I base these actions on scripture – on scripture related 1) to Israel coming into the Promised Land / into the Presence of God (Joshua 1 and 3) and 2) continuing to living successfully in the land / in God’s Presence (2 Chronicles 7:14)
  •      Joshua 1:4 [God said … When you] cross … into the land … 6 be … 7 careful to act in accordance with all the law … 8 [Furthermore,] this book of the law shall not depart out of your mouth; you shall meditate on it day and night … 11 [Then Joshua commanded] “… in three days you are to cross over the Jordan, to go in to take possession of the land that the Lord your God gives you to possess.'"

  •      Joshua 3:15 [When] the feet of the priests bearing the ark were dipped in the … flood, 16 the waters flowing from above stood still.

  •      2 Chronicles 7:14 if my people who are called by my name will humble themselves … and pray … and seek my face … and turn from their wicked ways, I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sins and heal their land.

Step 1: Choose

If we are going to achieve access to the Presence of God (our Promised Land), we have to consciously choose to accept the gift that God has promised and is already giving …
  •      We don’t get it by just standing comfortable where we are. We must be bold. We must step into the flood! And then – and only then, precisely then! – will he stop the waters

  •      In fact, we need to “Just do it!” He’s already given us the territory (“the land … God gives you” – already gives you.)


It’s a choice.

Do you want more of God’s presence? It’s just waiting there for you. God has it in a gift wrapped package with a big red bow. But you have to take the first step. You must choose.

And that means, that the first step is to change. If you want more of him, you have to spend more time with him (and less time with certain other things in the world).

Assignment: Today, what do you know you need to change?

Monday, October 21, 2013

Oct 21 - Presence = Fullness and Joy

You show me the path of life.
In your presence there is fullness of joy.
Psalm 16:11

God brought Israel into the Promised Land.

And God wants to bring you into the Promised Land. But what is YOUR Promised Land?

Yesterday at church, I made the case that God’s Presence is our greatest blessing and is, thus, our true Promised Land. (Quick analysis: In the Old Testament physical places sometimes prefigured New Testament spiritual realities. For example, where did God’s people go to meet God in the Old Testament? To a physical temple made of stone. In the New Testament where do God’s people meet him? To a spiritual place, deep within their hearts. The Apostle says, “Do you not know that you are God’s temple and that God’s Spirit dwells within you?” – 1 Cor 3:16.)

Just as the Promised Land existed as a physical reality -- whether or not the Israelites were living there or wandering in the wilderness – God’s presence (our spiritual Promised Land) exists as a spiritual reality (and a spiritual guarantee to all believers) whether we are experiencing it daily or choosing to continue wandering in a prolonged spiritual wilderness.

That’s a long sentence. Read it again and again until it sinks in. Are you experiencing God’s presence daily and powerfully? Or are you still wandering in a spiritual wilderness?

God’s presence is promised (indeed, guaranteed) to all believers. Thus, if you are not experiencing it fully, the problem is on your end, not on God’s. Tomorrow, I’ll help you discover how to receive the blessing of God’s presence more and more fully. Today, I simply want to help you desire that gift!

What is the blessing of God’s presence in our life? Read today’s verse.

      It is fullness.
      It is joy.
     And it is guidance. This Psalm tells us that God wants to show you the path to life … to true life … to full life … to joyful life … to abundance, peace, hope, encouragement, and blessing.

That’s what just one verse says! And that’s just the tip of the iceberg of God’s revelation about His Presence! Do you want to discover the fullness of life? Do you want to discover abundance, peace, hope, blessing, and joy?!! If so, it’s time to choose. Will it be more wilderness or more Presence?! (And what’s the one thing, the one sin, the one lacking discipline that you know you need to do to escape the wilderness and discover God more fully?!)

In Christ’s Love,
a guy who’s shaking any remaining
wilderness dust off his feet
and is chasing after God!


Thursday, October 17, 2013

Oct 17 - Question 4

He who conceals his sins
does not prosper,
but whoever confesses and
renounces them finds mercy.
Proverbs 28:13

Wait … Do NOT write me back on this one. You may not want to spin it out into cyberspace. Here’s the question …

What is your one big thing that you know is hurting you, harming you, and holding you back?

So here is an answerable question:

Have you told anyone who is willing to hold you accountable?

As you’ve heard me say, sin is like a vampire. It thrives in the dark. But when you bring it out into the light, it dies. That’s why Solomon says, “He who conceals his sins does not prosper.”

Now, do not confess your sin in a way that will ever hurt anyone. Rather, confess it to a friend who will hold you accountable … and will help you (if necessary) to find a way to be truthful and make reparations.

This is part of the path to freedom.

In Christ’s Love,
a vampire slayer






Wednesday, October 16, 2013

Oct 16 - Question 4

Out of the wilderness …
and into the Promised Land …

Today, I’m just going to ask the question … and then after you think and respond to make sure you read my confession!

What are you most disappointed with in your life?

RIGHT
NOW,
WRITE
ME
YOUR
ANSWER
BEFORE
I
SHOW
YOU
MY
ANSWER.

JUST
BELOW
IS
MY
ANSWER.

BUT
I
WANT
YOU
TO
THINK
ABOUT
YOUR
LIFE
ACTIVELY …
BEFORE
FOCUSING
ON
MINE
PASSIVELY!!!

SO
WHAT
DO
YOU
COMPLAIN
ABOUT
MOST?

I asked Mary Louise, “What would you say I’m most disappointed with in my life?”

And she said, “Well, I think you’re disappointed in _________.” And I stopped her and said, “No. I was formerly disappointed in that, but I’m talking about right now.”

So she said, “Well, I think you’re disappointed in __________.” And I stopped her and said, “No. I I was formerly disappointed in that, but I’m talking about right now.”

All of us have regrets. I’ve done a million things that range from silly and immature to sinful and hurtful. I’ve got plenty of regrets, but as I said to Mary Louise, “I’m talking about right now.”

And when I realized that, I fully comprehended the importance of this question. (Given, by the way, by Kyle Idleman, who wrote Not a Fan).

The weight of this question is two-fold.
  •      First, am I living in the past or in the present? If I’m living in the past, old emotions like guilt can swallow me in the present. Sometimes my guilt is over things I’ve done. Sometimes it’s over things I’ve left undone (like the opportunity I didn’t chase, and I can’t get out of my head how much better my life would be if I would have just done ___________.) Do you see the first prison of dwelling in the past?

  •      Guilt can swallow us for a second reason. Why do we carry guilt? Because we aren’t trusting God to really be able to fully and truly forgive. We say essentially, “I can’t forgive myself. How can God forgive me?” That’s a huge spiritual issue.

  •      Similar to guilt, unforgiveness is another first-form of bondage to our hurts and disappointments. Way too many people are mean and cruel and abusive, and way too many of us have been hurt – badly, badly, badly, badly. Just like we deal with war vets and post-traumatic stress, abuse has battered too many good souls years and years after the event(s). It may take a lot of good counseling, but healing begins to occur when we quit facing backward and focus as Jesus suggested (in Matthew 6:34) on today. 

Again and again I kept saying to Mary Louise, “No. I was formerly disappointed in that, but I’m talking about right now.” Suddenly it dawned on me: While I definitely have past regrets from my life … right now I AM not disappointed in anything in life!!!”

That’s huge!!! The daily, mundane, routine attempts to follow Jesus as a disciple is having a huge impact on my life!!! Sometimes we want big, splashy, and immediate results. But I’m seeing a canyon of faith being deeply cut … one day … after another … after another. One of my favorite Christian book titles ever was, “A Long Obedience in the Same Direction.” It works!!!

When I pressed Mary Louise about what I was formerly most disappointed in, she said, other people. “You set high standards for what needed to be done, and you got angry when people didn’t live up to your expectations.” Ouch. But what about now? Yes, people can still disappoint me, but I don’t hurt for me (because my worth is measured in God’s eyes and not in my accomplishments that they are either helping or slowing) … rather, I hurt for them. God has peace and love and blessing, and people I love keep turning the other way.

I’m not disappointed in anything in my current God-centered life.

But I am constantly and increasing disappointed that people aren’t discovering personally this gift that can be for them too.


Tuesday, October 15, 2013

Oct 15 - Question 1

Out of the wilderness …
and into the Promised Land …

Yesterday we asked the first of four questions – What do you complain about most?

Yesterday, I confessed that I’m constantly complaining about – let’s call it – “busyness.” According to my complaints, I’m continually frustrated by how little I accomplish in a day.

But diagnostically, what does that say about my faith in practice? When I’m constantly focused on what I can accomplish, I’m regularly forgetting God’s power and provision.

How about you?

Here’s question two: 1) Remember to email me your answer, and 2) remember, my answer to this question is below.

Where do you go when you’re hurting?
Some of us plop down in front of the TV. Some of us go to the refrigerator. Some of us escape into a bottle. Some of us try running out of town, thinking a change of location will change the hurt within. Where do you go when you’re hurting?

RIGHT
NOW,
WRITE
ME
YOUR
ANSWER
BEFORE
I
SHOW
YOU
MY
ANSWER.

JUST
BELOW
IS
MY
ANSWER.

BUT
I
WANT
YOU
TO
THINK
ABOUT
YOUR
LIFE
ACTIVELY …
BEFORE
FOCUSING
ON
MINE
PASSIVELY!!!

SO
WHERE
DO
YOU
GO
WHEN
YOU’RE
HURTING?

When I asked this question, one friend quickly said, “I know where I go when I’m hurting. I escape into a book. I’m more interested in someone else’s reality than dealing with my own.”

That reminded me of another friend. She’d read at least a dozen cheap novels a week. By her own admission, she couldn’t remember any detail about any book! So why read? She kept trying to escape reality for hours on end.

As I pastor, I know another way to escape reality. I see it all the time. Too many people are self-medicating for this same purpose. It’s an epidemic. Our generation keeps trying to escape … because it’s easier than trying to deal with our own reality.

Is that why I turn on the TV? That’s where I’ve always gone when I’m … tired. (And yes, I said “where I go when I’m tired” rather than “hurting” because busyness and exhaustion are what seem to make me hurt most. But …) when I’m tired and hurting, I constantly plop down on the couch. But here’s the question …

Am I escaping reality?

Or just postponing it?
  •      I need to be less busy.
  •      That means – as I confessed yesterday – I need to trust the results to God.
  •      I need to take a real Sabbath (which means I need to trust the results to God).

In Christ’s Love,
A guy who needs quit escaping to the TV
(actually, we cut cable, but
my substitute addiction is my iPhone)
hmm … maybe I’m …
… a guy who needs to quit trying to escape reality,
and start embracing God’s power to change it!!!

Monday, October 14, 2013

Oct 14 - Question 1

Out of the wilderness …
and into the Promised Land …

That’s our current goal at Spirit of Joy.

We’re tired of being tired. We’re frustrated with being lost. Like the Israelites, we thought that by being nice Christians we’d escape the shackles of Egypt, but we still don’t know how to get out of the desert! Here’s this week’s question: Are you ready for some freedom?!

Yesterday the first words of my sermon started with four questions. They are diagnostic. Like in the practice of good medicine, we’ve got to know the problem before we can start the healing.

Here’s what I’d like you to do with the next several day’s questions: Email me back your answer. It doesn’t have to be long … just honest. I will of course keep confidence. (But if it’s real sensitive, don’t send it across cyberspace! Just come and talk to me.)

Here’s the first of four diagnostic questions (and I’ll give you my answer in a moment …)

What do you complain about most?
(Hint: If you don’t know the answer to this, ask someone you live with. They know!)

RIGHT
NOW,
WRITE
ME
YOUR
ANSWER
BEFORE
I
SHOW
YOU
MY
ANSWER.

JUST
BELOW
IS
MY
ANSWER.

BUT
I
WANT
YOU
TO
THINK
ABOUT
YOUR
LIFE
ACTIVELY …
BEFORE
FOCUSING
ON
MINE
PASSIVELY!!!

SO
WHAT
DO
YOU
COMPLAIN
ABOUT
MOST?

I didn’t have to even think to know my answer to this question.

Whenever I come home from work, Mary Louise says, “How was your day?” Nine days out of ten, I complain, “I didn’t get enough done.” “I didn’t get accomplished what I wanted today.”

That’s honest. But do you see my problem?

When I’m focusing on what I accomplish, I’m relying on myself. “It is my job to accomplish things in the kingdom.” And while it’s good to work hard at any job (especially one in the church), this reveals a major flaw in my practical theology.

I may SAY that “God is powerful.” Indeed, I may truly BELIEVE it in my heart. But at a deep down practical level, day-after-day-after-day-after-day my actions reveal that I believe accomplishments in God’s kingdom are up to me.

I believe like a theist. I live like an atheist.

That’s a harsh self-examination. But that’s what I need.

I know God. I love God. I want his blessings. But it’s not until I’m honest with myself that I can see why I’m sometimes wandering in exhausted circles like the Israelites in the desert.

To make it to the Promised Land, I have to see the hole in my faith and practice. And most days, I trust in my effort … not God’s power and provision.

What do your complaints reveal about you?! Can you share it with me? And can you trust that this is the beginning of the victory?!

In Christ’s Love,
a guy who wants to shake
the desert sand out of my shoes
… Promised Land, here I come!

Sunday, October 13, 2013

Oct 13 - Always God's Chosen

To conclude our discussion from last week, there was one more part of the sermon.

It’s a part, in fact, that many of us have wondered about for years.
  •      The Jews were God’s people.
  •      Many Jews rejected Jesus.
  •      Are they still God’s people?
  •      And is there any hope (or role) for them in the future?

I’ll let the Apostle Paul answer! And I invite you to read the next section out loud!  like a real letter being read to you. (That always helps me not skip over details.)

Paul says … Romans 9:2 My heart is filled with bitter sorrow and unending grief 3 … for my Jewish brothers and sisters. I would be willing to be forever cursed -- cut off from Christ! -- if that would save them. 4 They are the people of Israel, chosen to be God's special children. God revealed his glory to them. He made covenants with them and gave his law to them … 5 and Christ himself was a Jew as far as his human nature is concerned. … 7 [But] the fact that they are descendants of Abraham doesn't make them truly Abraham's children. …

10:2 I know what enthusiasm they have for God, but it is misdirected zeal. 3 For they don't understand God's way of making people right with himself. … They are clinging to their own way of getting right with God by trying to keep the law. [But] they won't go along with God's way. 4 For Christ has accomplished the whole purpose of the law. [And] all who believe in him are made right with God.

11:1 I ask, then, has God rejected his people, the Jews? Of course not! …

11:7 [But] this is the situation: Most of the Jews have not found the favor of God they are looking for so earnestly.

11:11 [But shall] God's people stumble and fall beyond recovery? Of course not! His purpose was to make his salvation available to the Gentiles, and then the Jews would be jealous and want it for themselves.

11:25 I want you to understand this mystery … Some of the Jews have hard hearts, but this will last only until the complete number of Gentiles comes to Christ. 26 And all Israel will be saved … 28 The Jews are still his chosen people because of his promises to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob. 29 For God's gifts … can never be withdrawn. …

11:33 Oh, what a wonderful God we have! How great are his riches and wisdom and knowledge! How impossible it is for us to understand his decisions and his methods! …36 For everything comes from him; everything exists by his power and is intended for his glory. To him be glory evermore. Amen.

Re-read 11:25-28 as Jesus points to that awesome day when his covenant people turn to him again in faith …

Matthew 23:37 Jesus said, "O Jerusalem, Jerusalem, you who kill the prophets and stone those sent to you… 39 I tell you, you will not see me again until you say, 'Blessed is he who comes in the name of the Lord.'"

What is the fate of the Jews? Complementing what we’ve already read, the Book of Revelation describes it like this …
  •      Revelation paints the picture of things getting worse before they get better.

  •      Early on, during these final days, it says God will seal and save 144,000 Jews (Revelation 7:1-8).

  •      But then the tribulation will deepen.

  •      Through earthquakes, wars, famines, and other cataclysmic events, large percentages of the world population will be killed, including two-thirds of the Jews (Revelation 12:13-17 & Zechariah 13:8-9).

  •      But then God’s covenant people will finally come to the end of themselves and finally wake up to Jesus’ true identity! Then they will turn to God and receive Jesus as their long-awaited Messiah! (Zechariah 12:10 & Romans 11:25-28).

Let us close with these words … written hundreds of years before Jesus’ birth and not yet fully fulfilled …

Zechariah 12:10 And I will pour out a spirit of compassion and supplication on the house of David and the inhabitants of Jerusalem, so that, when they look on the one whom they have pierced, they shall mourn for him, as one mourns for an only child, and weep bitterly over him, as one weeps over a firstborn.

Jesus was pierced for our sins too. Let us weep alongside our Jewish brothers and sisters for we all are still piercing him.




Saturday, October 12, 2013

Oct 12 - Moses and Jesus: The Major Prefiguring (and the Wow!)

  •      Two days ago, I showed the minor ways in which Moses prefigured Jesus.
  •      Today we focus on the major ways.
  •      I’ll tell you why at the end!

Moses and Jesus both interceded for God’s people.
  •      Exodus 32:11 Moses interceded with the Lord his God: “Lord, why does your anger burn against your people …?”
  •      Romans 8:34 Christ Jesus died for us and was raised to life for us, and he is sitting in the place of honor at God’s right hand, interceding for us. 

Moses and Jesus both make an atonement for people’s sins.
  •      Exodus 32:30 Moses said, "You have committed a great sin; but now I will go up to the Lord; perhaps I can make an atonement for your sin“
  •      Romans 3:25 “God presented Christ as a sacrifice of atonement, through the shedding of his blood.” / 1 John 4:10 “This is love: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent his Son as an atoning sacrifice for our sins.”

Moses and Jesus both “established” a New Covenant through the use of blood
  •      Exodus 24:8 “Moses took the blood and dashed it on the people, and said, ‘See the blood of the covenant that the Lord has made with you in accordance with all these words.’”
  •      1 Corinthians 11:25 In the same way he took the cup also, after supper, saying, "This cup is the new covenant in my blood. Do this, as often as you drink it, in remembrance of me."

Moses and Jesus both Mediated the Law
  •      Moses gave the Law (which was from God).
  •      Jesus fulfilled the Law, saying, "Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets; I have come not to abolish but to fulfill.” 

Moses and Jesus both did the work of Prophets, Priests, and Kings.
  •      They are the only two in Scripture who perfectly fulfilled all three of the most important roles in Jewish History

Moses and Jesus both mediated the Passover Sacrifice
  •      Moses (from God) instituted the Passover sacrifice.
  •      Jesus was the perfect and final Passover sacrifice. 

Moses and Jesus both delivered their people from bondage
  •      Moses delivered them from slavery in Egypt.
  •      Jesus delivers us from bondage to sin.

Moses and Jesus both bring God’s people from slavery to the freedom of the Promised Land.
  •      While Moses didn’t actually get to go in, he still brought God’s people to the Promised Land of Canaan.
  •      Jesus finally and eternally brings us to the true Promised Land of Heaven!

WHY IS THIS IMPORTANT?
  1.        I hope this makes you say, “Wow! Our God is an active God.”
  2.      The Jews in Jesus’ day – knowing Moses and seeing Jesus – should have said, “Jesus really is the Messiah, the Son of God.”
  3.      Some did.
  4.      Too many didn’t.
  5.      As a result, has God forsaken the Jews? As the Apostle Paul would say, “By no means!” (Indeed, see Romans 9-11. In fact, tomorrow, I’ll show you a quick discussion on this matter.)
  6.      Indeed, God’s final, prophetic plan for humanity flows through Jerusalem and the redemption of the Jews (along with the redemption with all who have faith!).
  7.      And I believe the prophecies and prefigurings of Jesus (like these which mirror Moses) will finally click into place for the Jews and they will say, “Wow! How did I miss this before!”


“Wow!!!” Are you saying it yet?! If so, you’re ready for what will be revealed tomorrow’s sermon. (Did you get that email about the next few sermons? God’s call always works best when we start with a sense of wonder!)


Note:
All prejudice is wrong. But anti-Semitism is an infinitely greater wrong. Throughout history, the world has persecuted and scapegoated the Jews. Many of us have been taught to subtly (yet offensively) participate in that too. While we don’t build Holocaust ovens, our society, nevertheless, makes jokes about Jews and money. But what we joke about reveals in fact the character of our heart.
The question is: Why have the Jews – a small percentage of earth’s population – been a massively disproportionate object of hatred and oppression throughout the generations?
I think part of it is that Satan hates the Jews and believes that by persecuting God’s people, he can frustrate the plans of God. Therefore, I believe that “the father of lies” whispers gossip, envy, and hatred. And I believe too many humans (including way too many Christians) go along, mostly naively and unintentionally, with this hatred.
Have you? Stop the jokes and start the prayers.



Friday, October 11, 2013

It sounds like a bad movie line, but "God has a message for you."

If you aren't in the Charlotte area or members of Spirit of Joy, 
pray for us as we launch a bold new vision.

We’re tired of being in the wilderness. 
We’re ready for God’s plan and the Promised Land. 
Please pray for open hearts.
  •      People are tired, lost, hurting, and worried. I grieve more over it every day.
  •      In the midst of my cries, God has been speaking powerfully to me this Fall.
  •      I desperately need to share God’s Vision with Spirit of Joy!


I know you’re busy, but please come to Worship, this Sunday and next. This is bigger than any weekend clubs, campouts, and competitions. I’d even urge you to come back early from a vacation. Why? Because I believe GOD’S ANSWER will prove much more restful and freeing than one extra night in the mountains and much more victorious than one more game on a long schedule. Please do this for me … please do this for yourself … please come Sunday, October 13 and 20. —Pastor Ed


Oct 11 - Prophecies being fulfilled in our day (?) (!!!)

When I was growing up, I was taught that while maybe God acted in the past, he doesn’t (really) act now.

Rendering God impotent-on-the-big-issues had the (unintended) effect of rendering him irrelevant on the smaller, day-to-day issues too … like my life.

God was painted as a distant deity. An inactive God. He may have existed … and maybe in some mystic way he could still comfort and encourage … but basically, we were on our own to “do life.”

That view may be well-intentioned … but it bears zero resemblance to the witness of scripture!

While none of us knows exactly when the next round of prophetic fulfillments will take place (see Matthew 24:36!), scripture repeatedly urges us to be awake and ready! Jesus spoke to the sleeping Pharisees in his day, saying, “You know how to interpret the appearance of the sky” [and the signs and seasons of nature] “but you cannot interpret the signs of the times.”

With no prediction of where history is heading – but wanting you to be much more curious – here are some fascinating prophesies that have been fulfilled in recent generations … 1

The Jewish people will be re-gathered from the four corners of the earth.
Fulfillment: 20th Century and continuing
Isaiah 11:11  Then it will happen on that day that the Lord will again recover … the remnant of His people … 12  And He will assemble the banished ones of Israel, and will gather the dispersed of Judah from the four corners of the earth.
The state of Israel will be re-established.
Fulfillment: May 14, 1948
Ezekiel 37:21  Thus says the Lord God, “Behold, I will take the sons of Israel from among the nations where they have gone, and I will gather them from every side and bring them into their own land; 22  and I will make them one nation in the land, on the mountains of Israel …
The Jews will once again re-occupy the city of Jerusalem.
Fulfillment: June 7, 1967
Zechariah 8:7 Thus says the Lord of Hosts … 8 I will bring them back and they will live in the midst of Jerusalem; and they shall be My people, and I will be their God in truth and righteousness.’
The land of Israel will be reclaimed from its desolation, becoming once again a land of agricultural abundance.
Fulfillment: 20th Century and continuing
Personal note: It’s amazing to see what is growing in the most desolate deserts you can imagine!
Ezekiel 36:34  “The desolate land will be cultivated instead of being a desolation … everyone who passes by 35  will say, ‘This desolate land has become like the garden of Eden; and the waste, desolate and ruined cities are fortified and inhabited.’
All the nations of the world will come together against Israel over the issue of the control of Jerusalem.
Fulfillment: Currently occurring
Zechariah 12:1 This is the burden of the word of the Lord concerning Israel. Thus declares the Lord who stretches out the heavens, lays the foundation of the earth, and forms the spirit of man within him, 2  “Behold, I am going to make Jerusalem a cup that causes reeling to all the peoples around … 3 All the nations of the earth will be gathered against it. … 2 And when the siege is against Jerusalem … 3  in that day that I will make Jerusalem a heavy stone [and] all who lift it will be severely injured. 
Prophecies Yet To Be Fulfilled The nations of the world will attack Israel in a coordinated effort to annihilate this nation.
Psalm 83:6 These Edomites and Ishmaelites, Moabites and Hagrites, 7 Gebalites, Ammonites, and Amalekites, and people from Philistia and Tyre … 8 Assyria has joined them too [i.e. The Arab countries] 4 say, "Come, let us wipe out Israel as a nation. We will destroy the very memory of its existence."
[Some say that this will be the first of two major battles.
The second battle will include – see italic below …]
Ezekiel 38:2 Gog of the land of Magog, the prince who rules over the nations of Meshech and Tubal [Russia] … 5 Persia [Iran], Ethiopia, and Libya … with all their weapons. 8 will be called into action … a long time from now .... In the distant future you will swoop down on the land of Israel, which will be lying in peace after her recovery from war and after the return of her people from many lands. 11 You will say …12 “I will go to those once-desolate cities that are again filled with people who have returned from exile in many nations. I will capture vast amounts of plunder … 14 "Therefore, son of man, prophesy against Gog [Russia]. Give him this message from the Sovereign LORD … 15 You will come from your homeland in the distant north with … your mighty army, 16 and you will cover the land like a cloud. This will happen in the distant future. I will bring you against my land as everyone watches, and my holiness will be displayed by what happens to you. Then all the nations will know that I am the LORD. 18 But when Gog invades the land of Israel … 21 I will summon the sword against you … 22 I will punish you … with disease and bloodshed; I will send torrential rain, hailstones, fire, and burning sulfur! 23 Thus … I will make myself known to all the nations of the world. Then they will know that I am the LORD!

Again, I’m not predicting where any of this is heading. But isn’t some of this eerily similar to this past month’s headlines?
As Syria deteriorates as a city …
Prophesied in Isaiah 17:1-3? “Damascus is … to be removed from being a city. … The fortified city will disappear.”
Russia (Gog) is suddenly reasserting world dominance.
Some are arguing that in one week last month the U.S. (which was rebuked nationally and internationally over our weakness in handling the Syrian situation) abdicated our role as world leader (Pax Americana dominated peacefully from 1943-2013) and handed it over to a resurgent Russia (Pax – or “peace” – may not define Russian stewardship under the leadership of the former head of the KGB).
Curious!

And again, I’m not predicting anything. I just want you to say, “Hmm. Maybe I ought to pay more attention!”

Or here’s the real key … “Maybe I ought to be living with a greater sense of urgency!!!”



Note 1:
Much of this is taken directly from David R. Reagan of Lion and Lamb Ministries, http://www.lamblion.com/articles/articles_jews12.php. (The danger of footnoting: When citing any human being – especially any internet commentator – I surely can’t say I agree with 100% of what he believes because I surely haven’t read 100% of his writings! I’m just saying that on this matter, his summary is quick and helpful!)

Note 2:
Historically, prophecy has been fulfilled on multiple levels. It was written, originally, yes, for the people of the prophets day. But as is the case with many Messianic prophesies (prophesies of Jesus), the fulfillment in the prophets day prefigured the fulfillment in Jesus’ day. Indeed, it’s the dual fulfillment that has been historically understood as revealing the power, sovereignty, and consistency of the Lord!
I say this because many “modern” scholars have a different take. And I want you to hear this from me before you go researching. There is a school of thought that says if these prophecies were fulfilled at all, they were fulfilled in the past. For example, Isaiah was speaking of Judah’s 5th Century BC return from Exile, not some 20th Century AD return after a Holocaust. (In fact, do a little digging and you’ll find that most of these “scholars” claim that Isaiah’s prophecy wasn’t “prophecy” at all. They generally believe that passages like this were written after the event.)
Before you go researching, know the two worldviews!!! One says “our God is an active God.” The other is what I described at the beginning of today’s reflections. It may be well-meaning, but they essentially describe an impotent God (and a man-made Bible) that ultimately is irrelevant to our lives.