google.com, pub-8694186777780375, DIRECT, f08c47fec0942fa0 Jesus Stalker: July 2021

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Wednesday, July 21, 2021

Sharing the Gospel Online to 10 Persons a Day



Sharing the Gospel to 10 persons a day online--and discipleship--made so easy. 

Now, anybody can do personal evangelism and discipleship in much simpler ways, even without any training, hassle-free, and yet consistent with the evangelism principles used by Jesus in the Gospel. Watch the video below!




The e-book comes with another e-book on "Your Blueprint of Success from God," that helps you live every day life and the spiritual life successfully and prosperously even with a radically simple lifestyle. Get your PDF copies when you buy.


Friday, July 9, 2021

He Got Straight to the Point 2




Photo by Cole Patrick on Unsplash.

Ever noticed how the centurion, who made Jesus happy with his faith, was straightforward? The advance party he sent ahead to Jesus, though, was different. They were roundabout, telling Jesus about the centurion's credentials and how he was "worthy" of Jesus' attention and all that, according to Luke. A lot of further ado. Out of his wealth of patience, Jesus just agreed to go. 

But Matthew focused on the centurion's direct approach. No formal introduction or litany of his achievements or credentials or proofs of his worthiness, he simply told Jesus directly what he needed. 
When Jesus had entered Capernaum, a centurion came to him, asking for help. 6 “Lord,” he said, “my servant lies at home paralyzed, suffering terribly.” [Matthew 8]

The non-roundabout protocols of the Kingdom. This is where you start.

Imagine meeting someone the first time around and not even saying hello or hi. I would have said, "Umm, excuse me. Good morning!" and then introduce myself and ask for healing. You know, proper protocols. Some big-time preachers (even some "apostles" and "prophets" today) would probably insist on scheduling an appointment with their secretaries before you could talk to them. The centurion simply went straight to Jesus and got straight to the point. Jesus obviously liked it that way. The Father had probably already given Jesus pertinent backgrounds about the centurion's case, as genuine prophetic people should have, supernaturally.

And after all, Jesus did teach in his Beatitudes to simply, "Ask and it will be given." No need to circumvent or smooth-talk or give a well prepared intro. Flowery intros are earthly religion. You can go straight to the point because Kingdom protocol says, "Ask and it will be given, or ask and you shall receive." As simple as that. You don't need to have your approach following some winding worldly protocols. Or formula. Or program. Like what they say about ACTS; how prayer should include Adoration, Confession, Thanksgiving and Supplication. The centurion simply approached and told Jesus what he needed. 

Nothing reeked of man's religion. Some ministries require you to attend all sorts of seminars and conferences to "get things done correctly" or get the "right" steps and procedures. Then they give you a certificate for learning to do things their way or according to the accepted norm, as if certificates matter in the spiritual realms. That's not Kingdom. That's earthly. That's man's empire. The Kingdom is simple, straight and direct to the point, but supernaturally POWERFUL.

Freed from man's religion. Click here.

Jesus answered immediately. He even gave the centurion a choice. "Shall I come and heal him?" You see that favor when you cut out the crap and ritual and formalities and just be simple and direct with Jesus and really believe him? It's not the words or approach or protocol but the boldness of simple faith. The bold belief in what Jesus can do. If you do it the Kingdom way, Jesus gives you a bonus favor--picking the means by which things happen. "Shall I come and heal him?"

You're given an option and your option becomes "God's will."

That's when the centurion explained himself a little bit. Because Jesus asked him something.

The centurion replied, “Lord, I do not deserve to have you come under my roof. But just say the word, and my servant will be healed. 9 For I myself am a man under authority, with soldiers under me. I tell this one, ‘Go,’ and he goes; and that one, ‘Come,’ and he comes. I say to my servant, ‘Do this,’ and he does it.”

That's a short thirty-second prayer. How long do you pray and how effective? Do your prayers get instant results?

But note here--he magnified how he was unworthy (opposed to what his advanced party told Jesus about his "worthiness") and his deep, authentic and simple yet radical faith in Jesus. These are two elements the Lord wants to see in us, not the grand sounding words or modulated voice we use or the drama in our prayer. The centurion really believed that a mere word was all it took to produce a miracle. Activating the supernatural with a "mere word" is what God's move in the last days is about. Click here.

A mere word!

"But just say the word..."

That's radically straight to the point! Yet, this is something most of us have difficulty learning and believing up to this day. We still believe long, roundabout prayer (or worship service) does the trick with lots of formal intros, rituals and niceties. Lots of this and that. We can't get it that the Lord's Prayer in Matthew 6 is not what we should pray but how we should pray--or "after this manner." It's not a formula of what prayer should contain but what faith prayers should have. It's faith based on a bold or daring relationship. It's why Jesus started with "Our Father." 

The whole prayer is predicated on our relationship with the Father. Without that, the rest of the prayer is null and void. Imagine calling God--the Creator of all things--your Father! This is why prayer is asking, not begging. We ask and everyone who asks receives. No need to beg. Beggars get often rejected because begging does not hinge on bold relationship.

And they say prayer should be specific. It's actually what makes prayers long and religious, this talk of being specific. You have to indicate what size, shape, color, make, and whatnot. I've even heard of meal prayers explaining to God what happens to food when it goes down the esophagus. But Jesus says the Father knows what we need before we ask him (or what happens to food after we swallow it). So, what's the use of specificity? Hence, Jesus taught his disciples a short prayer which I can do in about 10 seconds. I'm not saying prayers should be short, but they should be simple and direct to the point, full of bold and daring faith. 

The more the words, the less the meaning, and how does that profit anyone? [Ecclesiastes 6.11]

I don't know if the centurion was around when Jesus prayed for the loaves and fish that fed 5,000 folks, but he surely got the point. Jesus merely looked up to heaven and said "Thanks!" and the astounding miracle happened. No ACTS whatsoever. No religious niceties or protocols or programs. So when the centurion asked Jesus for a long-distance miracle, he did it in merely 9 words. "“Lord, my servant lies at home paralyzed, suffering terribly.” You see how short that prayer was?

How do we pray for the seriously ill? Sometimes we need prayer warriors who pray and worship non-stop. Sometimes we make sure our words sound very dignified (even stately), churchy and religious. With a lot of ado. And without the ado, we feel our prayers will not please God. Somehow we have made ourselves believe that this is prayer, and this is what we teach in church. 

So, I train myself to often cut out the crap in what I do and be direct and simple. Especially when I'm introduced as a church speaker. I don't need to be introduced. And I don't need to have an intro for the message when I speak. I don't need to open in prayer--things Jesus never did. When he taught or preached, he just went right on with it. But we see a hint of what he did to prepare for ministry. He prayed to the Father in his special quiet times and in each moment of the day through mental prayers. He prayed in secret--and the Father who sees things done in secret rewarded him.

We see this when he resurrected Lazarus.

Then Jesus looked up and said, “Father, I thank you that you have heard me. 42 I knew that you always hear me, but I said this for the benefit of the people standing here, that they may believe that you sent me.”

He said, "I thank you that you have heard me"? This means he had prayed beforehand. But when? In the context, there was no mention of Jesus praying. So it's safe to conclude that he did it mentally while on his way to the tomb. By the way, if we were to resurrect someone from the dead, I'm sure our prayers will not be as short and simple and direct as Jesus' prayer was. We may even think of having a program with scripture reading, opening prayer, special number and all that fuss--and still to no avail.

Often, we need to also take off our grave clothes and be let loose as Lazarus. And here we need to start with the right way of surrendering to Jesus.

Surrendering to Jesus 

Ask forgiveness and repent of your sins. Believe God's forgiveness. It is promised in the bible. Then receive Jesus Christ into your heart as your sole Savior and Lord, then be assured of heaven, not because of anything you have or do, but because of God's grace and mercy through Jesus Christ. 

Surrender to Him by intently studying the bible daily (ask guidance from the Holy Spirit) and applying in life everything you learn. And then pray that God lead you to the right person who'd disciple you, one who is totally surrendered to Jesus and living His words in the bible.

Sunday, July 4, 2021

He Got Straight to the Point


Remember how Nicodemus seemed uneasy breaking the ice when he first met Jesus? He seemed lost for words on how to start a cordial conversation with the Messiah. "Rabbi, we know that you are a teacher who has come from God. For no one could perform the signs you are doing if God were not with him.” Umm, I don't think that was why he wanted to meet Jesus. Jesus went straight to the point. He knew that Nicodemus was there to ask about the Kingdom of God. Jesus said there was no other way to see or enter it than experiencing being born again. We know the story.

Photo above by Thibault Mokuenko on Unsplash.

Jesus wasn't one to beat around the bush or go through certain formalities or pleasantries or introductions or rituals--or go roundabout--before getting to the main thing. Meeting Nathaniel, for instance, Jesus abruptly prophesied about his present life even if they weren't introduced yet. Nathaniel was probably shocked by the Master's straightforwardness.
When Jesus saw Nathanael approaching, he said of him, “Here truly is an Israelite in whom there is no deceit.” 48 “How do you know me?” Nathanael asked. Jesus answered, “I saw you while you were still under the fig tree before Philip called you.” 49 Then Nathanael declared, “Rabbi, you are the Son of God; you are the king of Israel.” [John 1]

Developing Jesus' straightforwardness. Click here. 

Imagine meeting a stranger who suddenly tells you out of the blue who you are? Or you telling him who he is? That breaks all "normal protocols" or anything similarly termed by men supposedly for propriety's sake. It's the prophetic aspect of Jesus to be direct  (without much ado) which, I believe, should also be ours because we claim he lives in us. I cannot imagine Christ losing his prophetic character just because he is in our bodies. 

The last move of God.

Or remember the Samaritan woman? Jesus just asked straightaway for a drink of water, without even introducing or explaining himself. "Will you give me a drink?" he said. The woman was shocked. She was probably used to formalities, pleasantries or introductions, aside from feeling awkward talking to a male Jew. "He should've at least said 'excuse me' or 'good morning,'" she probably thought.

Most times, all these formalities, "meek" introductions, pleasantries and things like that just reek of man's religions. Anything to appear nice and decent to gain people's confidence (sometimes to sneak into their private lives and trap them into church membership). Or anything resembling the rigors and refinements of pretended royalty. Yes we're God's chosen people, endowed with royal priesthood (and it's royal protocols), says Peter. Moreover, being children of the KING of kings makes us royal in the spirit realms. But Jesus demonstrated with his life what kind of royalty this is. It's not the royalty we see in the world. It's completely something else. 

It's royalty that makes you lowly and the least. Royalty rejected by men.

Probably why Jesus avoided being formal or proper and decent (in the eyes of men) or observing men's propriety, and instead always getting straight to the point. No circumvention or detours or digressions. Always going straight smack to the point with a bullseye, except with his use of parables when he wanted people not to get the point outright so they'd pursue getting it straight later, but which most of them never did.

The first thing when having Jesus' character.

Again, we find him skipping formalities and intros in the Sermon on the Mount and getting straight to teaching the powerful fundamentals of the Kingdom. In fact, he did away with programs and opening and closing prayers and scripture reading and all that. He was walking with his disciples and saw the crowd coming to them on a mountain side. And then he made the disciples sit and started teaching them outright. No program. Not even an opening prayer. Do you realize that Jesus taught the Beatitudes without opening in prayer, which to us is a definite no-no because we've been taught that we should always start with prayer?

I mean, he was about to teach vital Kingdom principles and he didn't care to do it with a program? Even with a big crowd like that? We have the propensity to please crowds with our nice programs, but not Jesus, even if this was a major event. And if we were to do it, we'd surely embellish it with a well planned program, print out nice copies of it, use flowery titles and subtitles, open in poetic prayer, do a scripture reading and render special numbers we'd practiced for nights. And we'd make sure that everybody who had a part in it was well dressed and presentable.

Other church ministers would even wear ridiculous Pharisaical outfits or costumes.

We do this in our church anniversaries and concerts and spend lots of money, but what are they compared to the Sermon on the mount? The Beatitudes are tops in GOD's Kingdom and yet Jesus made everything so simple. Nothing fancy. So direct to the point. This clearly shows us that power or effectiveness does not come with our elaborate programs or ministries but by pure reliance on the Holy Spirit as Jesus did, without fanfare, sophistication or rituals. Without programs.

You remember Isaiah when he literally saw God in the temple? He saw God even if he didn't have any nice worship programs or poetic opening or closing prayers or scripture reading with a dignified, modulated voice tone. He didn't even had to sing choruses repeatedly or expressively. But he was given incredible visual access to God's very throne room, something our elaborate Sunday worship services never have. 

And see how it radically transformed him from a man of unclean lips to one who dared volunteer to be sent on a mission to hostile territory. The most our church revival services achieve are people willing to committment themsleves to active church participaltion, or be seen performing on stage.

And see how the angel simply took a burning coal directly from the altar (without any ritual) and touched the prophet's lips with it to cleanse his guilt. No programs or ceremonies or anything like that. Everything simple and direct. But it was powerfully effective.

Nice programs can attract people and fill churches with memberships and incomes, but they can never replace the fruit that God seeks--the fruit of relying solely, simply and directly on the power and leading of the Holy Spirit and God's spoken Word in the bible. Jesus was hated in the end and was killed on a cross. That's what he got for doing everything in God's simple and direct way---without ado or making things look attractive or giving sweet and colorful icing-intros---and I know how this radical simplicity won't look so exciting to churches because it doesn't translate to bigger church income. What they prefer is anything that always translates into big membership and income. Jesus had it differently. He was hated by the world but found by those specifically drawn by the Father to him. We get this same result ONLY IF we do away with religious convolutions and drama.

And it all starts with genuinely and totally surrendering ourselves to Jesus Christ.

Click here for Part 2

Surrendering to Jesus 

Ask forgiveness and repent of your sins. Believe God's forgiveness. It is promised in the bible. Then receive Jesus Christ into your heart as your sole Savior and Lord, then be assured of heaven, not because of anything you have or do, but because of God's grace and mercy through Jesus Christ.

Surrender to Him by intently studying the bible daily (ask guidance from the Holy Spirit) and applying in life everything you learn. And then pray that God lead you to the right person who'd disciple you, one who is totally surrendered to Jesus and living His words in the bible.

Going the Other Way

A law expert came to Jesus asking about how to go to heaven. Surprisingly, (at least to me it is) Jesus didn't mention anything about re...