Tuesday, January 26, 2010

Trusting God


Triumph of Trust

By James Ryle 



“But I will trust in thee.” Psalm 55:23

It is one thing to boast of faith when all things are great and wonderful. But it is an entirely different matter when one can walk in the triumph of trust while things are desperate all about.

The Psalmist here is a man whose prayers are not being answered; indeed, it would seem to him that his voice is not even being heard in heaven at all. And it’s not like he’s asking for vain things. No, quite the contrary; for all hell has broke loose and he’s fighting for his life!

“The terrors of death are fallen upon me,” he says, “Fearfulness and trembling are come upon me!” It’s a bad day.

Furthermore, he is painfully aware of his own powerlessness in the situation; he doesn’t even have the ability to run away and hide somewhere. He would gladly scamper if he could, but even that is beyond his supply. He is captive in a Philistine prison.

He’s stuck in a bad deal, and it’s only getting worse. A friend, a dear friend; a treasured friend has betrayed him cruelly. A man who worshipped with him in the presence of the Lord, a man whose friendship he had never doubted and on whose loyalty he had staked his life – this man had proven to be false and broke David’s singing heart.

And in this downward spiral of sorrow he cried to God above — and nothing. No answer at all. Nada. Zippo. Zilch.

Yep, it’s a bad day; a real bad day.

Anybody would understand if at this moment David had decided to call it quits on God; after all, people do it all the time. “C’mon David,” they would say, “join the rest of us who are done with childish things like faith and prayers, Bible verses and silly love longs. Welcome to the real world!”

But David was cut from another stock than that, and now in this darkening moment a single ray of light still remained — it was the light of trust. He refused to regard God’s silence as indifference, or to consider God’s inactivity as impotence. No, instead, he triumphed in trust.

“Heaven might be brass today, and God withdrawn and silent, but I will trust in Thee,” he said. “Winds may be howling and demons may be growling, and all things lovely to behold may be blown away, but I will trust in Thee. My heart is faint, my hopes are dim, and my power is gone, but I will trust in Thee. And though friends have fallen and turned to foes, and none can give solace to my deeper wounds, nevertheless I will trust in Thee.”

We know now that David’s trust in the Lord paid off huge, for history holds him forth as one of the greatest of Israel’s kings. And the Church holds him dear as one of God’s great champions. Who knows but that a similar destiny awaits you on the other side of this ordeal?

Stay the course, my friend, and stand in the triumph of trust!











Saturday, January 23, 2010

Begin with God!


"In the Beginning"

By N. Daniel

www.lefi.org


"In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth." -Genesis 1:1 

Is it God who is central in your life? If you look at Abraham's life, we can see that seventy-five years were wasted and burned up, because at seventy-five only he came to know God. We bury ourselves in the grave, ever before others carry us to it. The angels and God weep over our wasted life.

God came into the life of Abraham at the age of seventy-five. And then he lived a hundred years more. They were years when he learnt faith and became the father of the faithful. They were precious years. He left a legacy of faith to Isaac and to all that would walk in the path of faith. Is God in your life? Some enter into fleshly love affairs in their youth and bury their talents thereby.

Have you put your family into the care of God in the beginning of this year? Madame Guyon's thoughts thrilled the hearts of saints. Is there the treasure of heaven in your heart? Then all your thoughts are treasures.

Sarah was a good mother and a good wife to Abraham. She did not hinder but allowed the grace of God to work freely in Abraham. I wanted to compromise in certain things after marriage. But my wife helped me to maintain my spiritual life. Solomon prayed for wisdom. Yet in his middle- age, he married heathen women and he built temples for idols. He had no proper wife to guide him nor a son or a prophet.

The angel of God appeared to Gideon and said, "God is with you." God saw his sorrows, desires and longings. If you see sin and do not condemn it, that sin will come into you and your family too. Are you not storing up money to be given to your children? That money will choke your throat. The needs of the Gospel must be met first. Do you see those dire needs? Have you learnt to serve God? You become mighty by believing in the Lord Jesus with all your heart.

Material things do not satisfy. We claim equal share with other members in the family property. Are we alert to claim spiritual possessions? If we learn to wait on God, we will know how to conquer and how to progress.

Otherwise you will be satisfied with no real achievement. If you wait on God, He will make you a great person. Jesus said that failure must be ruled out of my life. So that became a maxim with me.

God is with you. Why are you despairing? Wait on God and know God's will. Wait on God and He will bring it to pass. We shall walk with God. We must rejoice with trembling. We must learn to follow, not just imitate Christ.

The Word of God must go into us. Americans received the Word of God long ago. Christianity gave them character. They had the strength to fight slavery in times past. Did God ever tell you how to measure your life?

When I had the call of God to leave my work, my hometown, and my people, I obeyed. At that time there were no openings to preach the Gospel. But in God's will when you begin to pray, God will bring people to you. It started with one man and God said, "A little one shall become a thousand, and a small one a strong nation." And God did so. Don't stop praying. Don't give up. Spiritual strength is His. Go and win the people around you. It is through the strength of the Lamb we conquer. What a wonderful person you will become when His Word abides in you!

Your personality is your thought-content. When your thoughts are full of God's thoughts you are a rich person. "More to be desired are they than gold…sweeter than honey…by keeping of them is great reward." These teachings are all on a higher plane. When can we ask according to His will?

Only when we are filled with His thoughts. "When we preserve the word of God in the heart, the prayer that comes out of it will be in the will of God. Then we can pray with great confidence. Begin this year with God. Let God be our Alpha and Omega.











Thursday, January 21, 2010

Praise the Lord!


Psalm 148


Praise the LORD. Praise the LORD from the heavens, praise him in the heights above. Praise him, all his angels, praise him, all his heavenly hosts. Praise him, sun and moon, praise him, all you shining stars. Praise him, you highest heavens and you waters above the skies. Let them praise the name of the LORD, for he commanded and they were created. He set them in place for ever and ever; he gave a decree that will never pass away.

Praise the LORD from the earth, you great sea creatures and all ocean depths, lightning and hail, snow and clouds, stormy winds that do his bidding, you mountains and all hills, fruit trees and all cedars, wild animals and all cattle, small creatures and flying birds, kings of the earth and all nations, you princes and all rulers on earth, young men and maidens, old men and children.


Let them praise the name of the LORD, for his name alone is exalted; his splendor is above the earth and the heavens. He has raised up for his people a horn, the praise of all his saints, of Israel, the people close to his heart. Praise the LORD.


If water is the universal solvent, then praise has to be the universal remedy. There’s nothing that will change your attitude, elevate your mood, take away your painful headache, unbreak your heart or dissolve your fear like praise. The word praise appears 248 times in the Bible. The first time was when Leah had given birth to her 4th son. In her day, birthing four sons was considered to be a sure sign of God’s favor. “Now I will praise the Lord,” she said, and named him Judah. Judah means praise.

Someone wrote recently to ask me how the early Christian martyrs endured such horrible torture. My research took me to a work called Foxe’s Book of Martyrs where I learned that they sang songs of praise while the torturers were doing their worst.

Medical research has shown the healing effects of both laughter and belief in God. Put these emotions together and you have praise. Praising God makes us happy while nourishing our belief. It often creates a mild state of euphoria, assuring us that everything will be OK. Singing songs of praise with other believers heightens that feeling. No matter how dire our circumstances are when we walk in the door on Sunday morning, a few minutes of praising God with our spiritual family seems to put it all into its proper perspective. This too shall pass, we realize, and a burden is lifted off our shoulders. Congregations that unduly restrain or curtail their corporate praise do so to their disadvantage.

So, what’s the point? No matter what the situation is, praise the Lord.

“Rejoice in all things,” Paul told the Philippians. “I say it again. Rejoice!” (Phil 4:4) Then he said, “Finally, brothers, whatever is true, whatever is noble, whatever is right, whatever is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is admirable—if anything is excellent or praiseworthy—think about such things.” Whatever you have learned or received or heard from me, or seen in me—put it into practice. And the God of peace will be with you.” (Phil. 4:8-9) To experience the Peace of God, praise the God of Peace.












Monday, January 18, 2010

Don't Stop Knocking



"Keep on Knocking"

D. L. Moody

www.biblebelievers.com


How often people become discouraged, and say they do not know whether or not God does answer prayer! In the parable of the importunate widow, Christ teaches us how we are not only to pray and seek, but also to find. If the unjust judge heard the petition of the poor woman who pushed her claims, how much more will our Heavenly Father hear our cry!

A good many years ago an Irishman in the State of New Jersey was condemned to be hung. Every possible influence was brought to bear upon the Governor to have the man reprieved; but he stood firm; and refused to alter the sentence. One morning the wife of the condemned man, with her ten children, went to see the Governor. When he came to his office, they all fell on their faces before him, and besought him to have mercy on the husband-the father. The Governor's heart was moved; and he at once wrote out a reprieve. The importunity of the wife and children saved the life of the man, just as the woman in the parable, who pressing her claims, induced the unjust judge to grant her request. It was this that brought the answer to the prayer of blind Bartimeus. The people, and even the disciples, tried to hush him into silence; but he only cried out the louder, "Thou Son of David, have mercy on me!"

Prayer is hardly ever mentioned in the Bible alone; it is prayer and earnestness; prayer and watchfulness; prayer and thanksgiving. It is an instructive fact that throughout Scripture prayer is always linked with something else. Bartimeus was in earnest, and the Lord heard his cry.

Then the highest type of Christian is the one who has got clear beyond asking and seeking, and keeps knocking till the answer comes. If we knock, God has promised to open the door and grant our request. It may be years before the answer comes; He may keep us knocking; but He has promised that the answer will come.

I will tell you what I think it means to knock. A number of years ago, when we were having meetings in a certain city, it came to a point where there seemed to be very little power. We called together all the mothers, and asked them to meet and pray for their children. About fifteen hundred mothers came together, and poured out their hearts to God in prayer. One mother said: "I wish you would pray for my two boys. They have gone off on a drunken spree; and it seems as if my heart would break." She was a widowed mother. A few mothers gathered together and said: "Let us have a prayer-meeting for these boys." They cried to God for these two wandering boys; and now see how God answered their prayer.

That day these two brothers had planned to meet at the corner of the street where our meetings were being held. They were going to spend the night in debauchery and sin. About seven o'clock the first one came to the appointed place; he saw the people going into the meeting. As it was a stormy night, he thought he would go in for a little while. The Word of God reached him, and he went into the inquiry room, where he gave his heart to the Saviour.

The other brother waited at the corner until the meeting broke up, expecting him to come; he did not know that he had been in the meeting. There was a young men's meeting in the church nearby, and this brother thought he would like to see what was going on; so he followed the crowd into the meeting. He also was impressed with what he heard, and was the first one to go into the inquiry-room, where he found peace. While this was happening, the first one had gone home to cheer his mother's heart with the good news. He found her on her knees. She had been knocking at the mercy-seat. While she was doing so, her boy came in and told her that her prayers had been answered; his soul was saved. It was not long before the other brother came in and told his story - how he, too, had been blessed.

On the following Monday night, the first to get up at the young converts' meeting was one of these brothers, who told the story of their conversion. No sooner had he taken his seat, than the other jumped up and said: "All that my brother has told you is true, for I am his brother. The Lord has indeed met us and blessed us."

I heard of a wife in England who had an unconverted husband. She resolved that she would pray every day for twelve months for his conversion. Every day at twelve o'clock she went to her room alone and cried to God. Her husband would not allow her to speak to him on the subject; but she could speak to God on his behalf.

It may be that you have a friend who does not wish to be spoken with about his salvation; you can do as this woman did-go and pray to God about it.

The twelve months passed away, and there was no sign of his yielding. She resolved to pray for six months longer; so every day she went alone and prayed for the conversion of her husband. The six months passed, and still there was no sign, no answer.

The question arose in her mind, could she give him up? "No," she said, "I will pray for him as long as God gives me breath." That very day, when he came home to dinner, instead of going into the dining-room he went upstairs. She waited, and waited, and waited; but he did not come down to dinner.

Finally she went to his room, and found him on his knees crying to God to have mercy upon him. God convicted him of sin; he not only became a Christian, but the Word of God had free course, and was glorified in him.

God used him mightily. That was God answering the prayers of this Christian wife; she knocked, and knocked till the answer came.














Wednesday, January 13, 2010

Be a faith-man!


Abraham – man of faith!


By Rev. Ernest V. George   


www.gardencityag.org




Genesis 12:1-3 – “1Now the LORD had said to Abram: “Get out of your country, From your family And from your father’s house, To a land that I will show you. 2I will make you a great nation; I will bless you And make your name great; And you shall be a blessing. 3I will bless those who bless you, And I will curse him who curses you…”

Dearly beloved in Christ, 

God made a Covenant with Abraham, when he was called and separated to become the father of the great nation of Israel. Abraham is known as the man of faith [Galatians 3:9] and is listed among the heroes of faith in Hebrews 11. His trust in God is proved by the level of surrender that he displayed in his walk with God. Under God’s instruction, Abraham surrendered his native land, family, vale of Jordan, riches of Sodom, himself, Ishmael and Isaac to God. However, every painful ‘surrender’ was followed by increased spiritual wealth! His faith in God was tested many times and each time he drew closer to God. 

There are three specific things that Abraham did wherever he went. He built ALTARS, he lived in TENTS and he dug WELLS. From each of these acts there are some spiritual lessons that we can derive and apply to our own lives. 

Altars symbolize consecration and worship. It reveals the attitude towards one’s self. It is your place of prayer and commitment to God.

Tents speak of progression. It is one’s attitude towards change. Living in tents, Abraham proved that he was a temperory resident on earth looking for an eternal dwelling with the Lord!

Wells signify satisfaction. It is one’s attitude towards God. The fountain of living water is God and God alone!

ALTAR: There are four significant altars that Abraham built to the Lord that traces his journey of faith.  

1. The Altar of Promise! Genesis 12:5-7 – “ 5 Then Abram took Sarai his wife and Lot his brother’s son, and all their possessions that they had gathered, and the people whom they had acquired in Haran, and they departed to go to the land of Canaan. So they came to the land of Canaan.  6 Abram passed through the land to the place of Shechem, as far as the terebinth tree of Moreh. And the Canaanites were then in the land.  7 Then the LORD appeared to Abram and said, “To your descendants I will give this land.” And there he built an altar to the LORD, who had appeared to him.

The first Altar was built at a place called MOREH, which means instruction. The Altar was important to Abram because it was a place to meet with God, to offer sacrifice for sin, to show submission to God, and to worship God. The first ‘Altar moment’ involves two dynamics directly related to our experiences. It was place where God gave Abraham a Promise… “I will give this land.” Also it was a place where there would be adversaries… “the Canaanites were in the land”. You may be in the midst of adversaries/enemies/impossible situations, but if you are willing to build an Altar in their midst – God will give you the land! Right at the beginning of the Year 2010, what are the promises that God had given you? Seal the Promise of God at the Altar! What you have placed into God’s Hand – God will preserve it! Surrender your dreams at the Altar and claim your promises at the Altar of Promise!


2. Altar of Passion! Genesis 12:8 - "And he moved from there to the mountain east of Bethel, and he pitched his tent with Bethel on the west and Ai on the east; there he built an altar to the LORD and called on the name of the LORD.

The second Altar that Abraham built was at BETHEL. Bethel means “House of God”. Abraham’s second Altar is equally demonstrative of a stabilizing step in faith’s progress. It took place at an altar of familiarity, of growth in intimacy and passion for the Lord. Abraham “called on the name of the Lord” Abraham was growing in love with the Lord and it is obvious by the fact that he ‘called on the name of God” Proverbs 18:10 - "The name of the LORD is a strong tower; The righteous run to it and are safe."

How far have you progressed in your relationship with God? Build an Altar and call up on the Name that is above every other name…the Name of Jesus!

3.   Altar of Progress! Genesis 13: 3, 4 - " 3 And he went on his journey from the South as far as Bethel, to the place where his tent had been at the beginning, between Bethel and Ai, 4 to the place of the altar which he had made there at first. And there Abram called on the name of the LORD.”

Bethel means ‘House of God’ and Ai means ‘the heap of ruins’. This is the place that Abraham had built an Altar before. But instead of remaining in Canaan, the land that God had promised him, he moved to Egypt. Why? Because there was famine in Canaan! Is it possible for trouble to lurk in the place that God has promised? Yes. God will allow tests even as you obey His will. The Bible says that the ‘afflictions of the righteous are many, but God will deliver him from them all!” (Psalm 34:19).

You must prove worthy of the call, the blessings that God has given you! It is better to starve in Canaan than to live in luxury in Egypt! However, this move to Egypt was disastrous in the long run. Abraham used deception to live in Egypt, claiming Sarah to be his sister and when he did leave, there came with them extra baggage in the form of Hagar the slave girl, who would later bear his son Ishmael. Disobedience is costly! Sin will take you further than you intended! We see here the wonderful grace of God, bringing Abraham back to where he belonged. But a price had to be paid. This is where Abraham builds an altar again – an Altar of no-return, progressing in the will of God. In the path of faith, there will be many ‘Egypts” to take you away from the plan of God. If you have wandered away, you need to return to the Altar of Progress and make a decision that you will not turn away from God again!


4.   Altar of Possession! Genesis 13:17-18 – “ 17 Arise, walk in the land through its length and its width, for I give it to you.”  18 Then Abram moved his tent, and went and dwelt by the terebinth trees of Mamre, which are in Hebron, and built an altar there to the LORD.

God in His wonderful mercy takes Abraham to the next altar. The fourth Altar was built at Hebron, which means ‘confederacy or communion.” This is the Altar of Possession. God reaffirms His promise to Abraham to give him the length and breadth of the Promised Land. Abraham reclaimed the promise that God had given him at the Altar of Possession!
 
In your Christian walk, you may be at any one of these “Altars”. You must progress and possess what God has for you. Allow the ‘altar’ to alter your life for God’s glory!

1 Peter 2:11- “Beloved, I beg you as sojourners and pilgrims, abstain from fleshly lusts which war against the soul…”
          
As we continue our study on Abraham’s journey of faith. The second aspect that we will focus on is TENTS. Wherever Abraham went, he pitched tents. Tents signify progression and deals with the attitude towards CHANGE. Tents are the homes of those that are passing through and do not want to make permanent roots. Abraham recognised the fact that he was just a pilgrim. As Christians we too are pilgrims here on earth, looking forward to a heavenly city that is being prepared for us. A pilgrim is NOT a drifter, but an individual with a specific goal.
 
Abraham was ready to move when God called him, and wherever God called him. He was not averse to change. Most people resist change; they prefer to stay in their comfort zone. There are three probable reasons as to why we do not like change:
 
1.    Following tradition: Matthew 15:1-3

Ritual/belief/customs of old keep us holding onto to tradition. We just keep doing things because ‘others’ do it without knowing WHY we do it!

2.    Fear of losing reputation: John 12:42

We fear losing our reputation so we do not want to change. We avoid telling people we are Christians, or choose to remain silent about our faith for fear of being mocked.

3.    False conviction: Acts 24:14

When we have a wrong understanding, we tend to stand for the wrong things. The Apostle Paul when he was Saul was persecuting Christians because of his false convictions. He falsely believed that those who followed Christ were in the wrong and was zealous in destroying believers of Jesus Christ. 
 
Change however is the only constant in life! Tents signify our need to be flexible in the things of God. There are few stark differences between a HOUSE and a TENT. Houses are for a settler, a permanent dwelling place, comfortable, insulated and impressive. On the contrary, tents are for a sojourner, movable, uncomfortable, un-insulated and unimpressive. A house keeps us rooted in a particular place and therefore controls us, but a tent is something that is under our control.
 
There are three important implications of living in a tent:
 
1.    Pliable in the Master’s Hand!

Jeremiah 18:1-6 – “1The word which came to Jeremiah from the LORD, saying: 2“Arise and go down to the potter’s house, and there I will cause you to hear My words.” 3Then I went down to the potter’s house, and there he was, making something at the wheel. 4And the vessel that he made of clay was marred in the hand of the potter; so he made it again into another vessel, as it seemed good to the potter to make. 5Then the word of the LORD came to me, saying: 6 “O house of Israel, can I not do with you as this potter?” says the LORD. “Look, as the clay is in the potter’s hand, so are you in My hand, O house of Israel!

From this event, God tells the prophet Jeremiah, that we are to be like clay in His hands. We must be flexible, moldable and willing to become what He wants us to become. We must let go off our past way of life and get back to what God has prepared for us. Let go and let God! The clay that was in the potter’s hand was marred – ruined beyond restoration! Yet, the potter did not throw it away but chose to re-create it into another pot! God will not let go off you! Be teachable and submit to His will so that He can shape you into something beautiful!


2.    Place of Anointed Dependability!

Genesis 12:1 - "Now the LORD had said to Abram: “Get out of your country, From your family And from your father’s house, To a land that I will show you.

Second aspect is trust – an anointed dependability! God had to dislodge Abraham from his familiar surrounding before He could use him. God may need to move you before He can use you! You must totally depend on God and allow Him to move you through uncommon terrain. Abraham simply obeyed the ONE that called him and moved from place to place until he reached the land of Canaan – the Promised Land.


3.    Possessed by the Holy Spirit into Christ-likeness!

Matthew 9:17 – “Nor do they put new wine into old wineskins, or else the wineskins break, the wine is spilled, and the wineskins are ruined. But they put new wine into new wineskins, and both are preserved.”

The One that works change in our lives is the Holy Spirit. Without Him we can do nothing. In speaking of the new wine in new wineskins, Jesus was emphasizing the need to be flexible. Old wineskins lose its elasticity and will burst if new wine is poured into it. We need a new identity – become a new person – in the likeness of the Son of God! The Holy Spirit is separating the wheat and the chaff. Just as the wheat is separated from the chaff, we are refined in the fire and created into the Image of God’s Son!
 
Matthew 3:12 - "His winnowing fan is in His hand, and He will thoroughly clean out His threshing floor, and gather His wheat into the barn; but He will burn up the chaff with unquenchable fire.”
 
Change...into the likeness of Christ!
 

Genesis 21:30 – “And he [Abraham] said, “You will take these seven ewe lambs from my hand, that they may be my witness that I have dug this well.
           
Wells deal with satisfaction. It deals with our attitude towards God. In the Old Testament times, well-digging involved a lot of hard work – locating the right place where water would be and the manpower to dig the well. To be a well-owner meant the person was of good social and economic standing since not everyone could commission this work. Abraham was rich, prosperous and had the ability to dig wells at strategic points that would benefit his people and the flocks that he owned. 

There are 3 important features associated with WELLS as we look through the Word of God:-

1.    Refreshing

John 7:37 – “…Jesus stood and cried out, saying, “If anyone thirsts, let him come to Me and drink.

Water is essential to sustain the human body, and wells are a source of water. When we drink water, we derive refreshment, and ‘wells’ represent that which gives us satisfaction. That is why, the Bible likens WATER to Jesus Christ – the Living Water, the Word of God and the Holy Spirit is symbolized by water. In Jeremiah 2:13, God rebukes His people for two sins that they have committed – 1. They have forsaken God, the source of all living water 2. They have hewn for themselves broken cisterns that hold no water! Jesus is the “fountain of living water” and our Primary Source of existence, when we forsake Him, we are looking at cheaper alternatives that will NOT sustain us in the long run. Broken cisterns could be money, position, status, work, good looks…. Just about anything we place our trust in other than God! The source of your happiness and satisfaction will determine the decisions you take which will ultimately establish your destiny. Go back to the well of refreshing…in God’s Presence!

2.   Relationship

The second aspect of the well is relationship with God, wherein springs every godly blessing. There are three divine relationships that were established at the well. 1. Eliezer met Rebekah at the well: In Genesis 24 we see that Abraham sends forth his chief servant Eliezer to look for a bride for his son Isaac. As Eliezer waits by the well, he puts a fleece before God that the woman who comes to the well and offers to draw water for his ten camels would be the chosen one for Isaac. Rebekah, Abraham’s niece came to the well, drew water for all the camels to drink which was not an easy task thereby confirming her role as the wife of Isaac. 2. Jacob met Rachel his would-be wife at the well. [Genesis 29] Jacob had cheated his twin brother Esau of his birthright and the blessings of the first-born thus incurring Esau’s wrath. Fearing that Jacob would be killed, his mother Rebekah sent him to her brother Laban. At the well a relationship was established with Rachel. 3. Moses met his wife Zipporah at the well. After murdering an Egyptian, Moses ran away to the desert. At the well in Midian, he helps the daughters of the priest to draw water from the well. They took him to their father who gave Moses his eldest daughter Zipporah in marriage. [Exodus 2] The well is a spiritually the place where you’ve had a divine encounter with God. This is where a divine connection has been established, where you came to know your Master for the first time. And in order to know Him more you need to ‘revisit’ the well. Go back to the well of relationship to know God….explore God’s Word!

3.   Revelation

John 4:6,7 – “6Now Jacob’s well was there. Jesus therefore, being wearied from His journey, sat thus by the well. It was about the sixth hour. 7A woman of Samaria came to draw water. Jesus said to her, “Give Me a drink.”

The third aspect of the well is that it is a place of revelation. The perfect example is the Samaritan woman who met the Messiah at the well. Jews avoided Samaritans but that fateful afternoon, Jesus sat by the well and asked this Samaritan woman for some water from the well! Jesus’ request genuinely surprised the woman, for this was probably the first time she heard a kind greeting from a Jew. Jesus used this opportunity to reveal Himself to her – the Promised Savior of mankind! When we are refreshed, we develop a relationship that leads to a revelation of God. There are three ways in which you can know God:- 1. Traditionally- you belong to a Christian family, go to Church and go through the motions just as your parents and their parents did, thus continuing the family tradition. 2. Intellectually – you know God by reading about Him, studied about God in Sunday school, catechism class or even reading the Bible. 3. Experientially – you have a personal encounter with God and know Him through your experience. This is the well of your revelation – when God chooses to make Himself known to you in a special way! Go to the well of revelation… with the enabling of God’s Holy Spirit!

The wells that Abraham dug were stopped by the Philistines by filling it up with earth. There is a spiritual lesson here; the devil will try to stop your ‘well-supply’ by bringing distractions and temptations your way. It is up to you to keep the well open and clean by constantly being in God’s Presence [Prayer], reading the Word of God and praying in the Holy Spirit.  
 
Are you at the WELL???






















Stand in His presence



Never Stop Praying

Greg Laurie

www.harvest.org


Pray in the Spirit at all times and on every occasion. Stay alert and be persistent in your prayers for all believers everywhere.

— Ephesians 6:18

To be successful as a Christian, you must have a prayer life. Prayer, simplified, is hearing from and communicating with God. There are different kinds of prayer identified in Scripture, including public prayer, private prayer, verbal prayer, and silent prayer. Also, any position is acceptable for prayer: you can pray kneeling, standing, sitting, lying down, or even driving (but always keep your eyes open, of course).

God hears our prayers wherever we offer them. Consider some of the places that people of the Bible prayed: Jonah prayed from the stomach of a whale. Daniel prayed in a den of lions. David prayed in a cave and also in the wilderness. And Peter prayed both on the water and in it after he sank. Wherever you are, God will hear your prayer.

The key is that we should pray frequently. We should pray in the morning. We should pray in the afternoon. We should pray in the evening. The Bible says, "Never stop praying. Be thankful in all circumstances, for this is God's will for you who belong to Christ Jesus" (1 Thessalonians 5:17–18).

Prayer can be continuous. Elijah, in seeking an audience with the wicked King Ahab, said, "I swear by the Lord Almighty, in whose presence I stand, that I will present myself to Ahab this very day" (1 Kings 18:15).

Elijah was aware of the fact that wherever he went, he stood in the presence of God.

You, too, are never alone. Wherever you go, God is with you. You can commune with Him and fellowship with Him and pray to Him and hear from Him. That is the idea of continuous prayer: being in fellowship and communion with God.

If you want to grow spiritually, then make prayer a vital and regular part of your life.