I'm stalking Jesus in the Gospel, pursuing and approaching him up-close and stealthily---and he knows it.
Wednesday, July 21, 2021
Sharing the Gospel Online to 10 Persons a Day
Friday, July 9, 2021
He Got Straight to the Point 2
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
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.
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.
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.
Surrendering to Jesus
Sunday, June 27, 2021
Why We Fear Death
You know why death is really scary? Because first, we don't know what is beyond despite our religion (though we pretend we do), and we cannot control that which is unknown to us. And anything we cannot control (but bears a lot of weight in our lives) we fear. We fear when we cannot decide our fate. Photo above by Matthew Osborn on Unsplash.
Jesus is our only hope!
“There is no one righteous, not even one; there is no one who understands; there is no one who seeks God. All have turned away, they have together become worthless; there is no one who does good, not even one." [Romans 3.10-12]
Actually, somewhere back in our minds, we have a good idea about this, I'm sure, but our religion has covered this up and replaced it with false assurances--especially that our religion, whatever it is (born again religion, Protestantism, Christianity, Roman Catholicism, etc.) has secured our safe passage to heaven.
Nonetheless, the conviction of the Holy Spirit remains stronger so that uncertainties still loom in some corners of our minds. The Holy Spirit does not want us to base our confidence on what our religion claims for us. This is why despite our religiosity and superb churchmanship, we secretly fear the moment of dying. Because the bitter truth is, we are not assured unless the Holy Spirit assures us, bearing witness deep within our spirits--unless we let the Holy Spirit fully have his way in us.
That fear is designed by God to help us come face to face with truth and find out the real score--before it's too late. Are we or are we not going to heaven? We can find out and make certain right now while we're still alive through God's Word in the bible (and not just take our church's word for it), because the Scripture says, once we die there's no more second chance. "After death comes judgment." Our loved ones cannot pray for us when we're dead to somehow help us get promoted or plead or lobby for our gradual acceptance to heaven.
We see this in Lazarus and the Rich Man. When they both died, a verdict was swiftly made and they immediately found themselves in their rightful places in the hereafter. It was a quick, lightning-speed judgment. Lazarus was in Paradise at once and the rich man in hell. No intermediate anything. No more second chances. And Abraham told the rich man that the key to evading hell is believing God's Word.
Abraham replied, "They have Moses and the Prophets (in short, the Old Testament or the bible); let them listen to them...If they do not listen to Moses and the Prophets (the bible), they will not be convinced even if someone rises from the dead.’” [Luke 16]
Search the bible now and find out the truth for yourself.
2. The Family We Leave Behind
Some people search the Scripture and discover the words of Jesus on eternal life. Jesus said, "You search the Scriptures because you think that in them you have eternal life; and it is they that bear witness about me." Scriptures in the bible are reliable because they bear witness about Jesus. As people wholeheartedly study the bible they find out that receiving Jesus into their lives and fully surrendering to him makes them children of God.
Yet to all who did receive him (Jesus), to those who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God—children born not of natural descent, nor of human decision or a husband’s will, but born of God. [John 1;12]
Children of God are "born of God," or in Jesus' words somewhere in the Gospel according to John, "born again." Born again is NOT a religion or church membership. It is the experience we have when we receive Jesus into our hearts and become a new creation in him. His promise is that those who become children of God through Him (and who take God's Word in the bible seriously) have the assurance of eternal life.
My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one will snatch them out of my hand. [John 10. 27-28].
"They shall never perish." This is the only way we can be assured that when we die we go straight to heaven. Not because of our religion or good deeds or nice personality or church attendance or donations. It is because of Jesus' promise and what he did for us on the cross and his resurrection--and how all these things are seen in our lives and characters.
But some people who already have Jesus and experience him in their lives sometimes still fear death, not because they're not assured of heaven or afraid of crossing from here to the hereafter. They fear for the loved ones they'd leave behind. What would become of them? We fear the moment we lose control of things, especially if we see how those we'd leave behind don't seem ready to take on life without us.
Yes we trust Jesus, but we're not so sure if they do, too. And we believe we need to be with them a little while longer to guide them in this matter. But we need to learn to trust God even for this. Anyway, we can hang on to his promise in Acts 16.31 that if we believe in Jesus, our families will be saved, too, provided we have shared the Gospel to them and prayed for them a good deal. Have you? Make sure you do this while you're with them.
Now, back to the assurance of salvation. We need to fully surrender our lives to Jesus to enjoy this assurance. And surrendering, we need to understand the following. See below.
Thursday, June 17, 2021
He Talked to Illnesses
Often, we just read past miracle passages in the Gospel like we do newspaper articles and miss a lot of vital details. Like how Jesus talked to illnesses and commanded them to scram. And they obeyed. Once, Jesus came to Peter’s house and found his mother-in-law “suffering” (hinting at how serious it was) from “high fever.” Gospel accounts say he rebuked the fever, touched the in-law and helped her stand up. Immediately, says Mark, the in-law was healed and stood up to serve them.
If you’re a big fan of Jesus, besides loving him as your God, Savior and Lord, you’d drop everything you’re doing and stop to watch scenes like this in the bible closely. You won't stop till you see them for yourself. You have to see everything “with your own two eyes,” because nothing else is more important. A lot of theology smart Alecks would mock at this, but it’s a powerful way of understanding and imbibing GOD’s Word—actually seeing bible scenes with our spirit, as if watching a movie. Sometimes, we even find ourselves in the midst of it all, taking part (becoming a Jesus stalker).
We fix our eyes on what is unseen [2 Corinthians 4.18]
Jesus “rebuked” the fever. He actually talked to it. The last time I looked, “rebuke” means “expressing with words one’s sharp disapproval of something,” or “speaking angrily to someone.” Imagine getting sick and then someone comes talking angrily to your fever. Or, have it the other way around--someone's sick and you come and talk angrily to his fever.
Jesus talked to the fever (scolded or rebuked it) and it left. Probably, something to this effect: “Get out of her, you fever!” Or perhaps, a word of rebuke: "GO!" Just a short sentence or a word like that from Jesus and everything stands at attention, submits and goes to its proper place. He showed how easy miracles are. All you need is a word from Jesus, and Jesus is easy to persuade about releasing a rhema word for a miracle if you really believe it.
The fever “left.” Smart Alecks will say it's just a figure of speech.
"And God raised us up with Christ and seated us with him in the heavenly realms in Christ Jesus.." [Ephesians 2.6]
God talked to emptiness and spoke creation into existence. "Let there be light." Then something in nothingness moved and responded in obedience. "And then there was light." The Lord also talked to the ground. "Let the land produce vegetation," and land all over the earth obliged and did everything to make happen exactly as its Creator had spoken. It had to obey.
“Anyone who has faith in me will do the things I am doing. And greater things shall he do because I go to the Father.”
Talking to creation or objects with the authority of Jesus Christ by speaking in His Name—we have been granted this power. Once creation discerns that we have God’s authority as His children because of Jesus in us, creation will obey without hesitation.
“For the creation waits in eager expectation for the children of God to be revealed.” [Romans 8.19]
Creation and everything else will obey us if we exercise in full, unwavering faith the authority we have in Jesus, which the church has yet to discover and actually do. We can rebuke and command sickness to go, and God in his faithfulness will back up our words. We are heirs of God and co-heirs with Christ. "If HE did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us, how will he not also freely give us all things, along with Jesus?"
"(GOD) who carries out the words of his servants and fulfills the predictions of his messengers, [Isaiah 44.26]
The LORD was with Samuel as he grew up, and he let none of Samuel's words fall to the ground. [1 Samuel 3.19]
The Word from God is powerful when spoken by his servants. And Jesus did a demo on this by talking to the high fever and telling it to leave the in-law's body. See the dynamics of healing? Part of it is commanding creation to obedience and internalizing the truth that we are seated with Christ in the heavenly realms. We are co-heirs with Christ. What's Christ is also ours by God's grace. Paul said all things are ours. We have to live these truths daily.
All things are yours, 22 whether Paul or Apollos or Cephas or the world or life or death or the present or the future—all are yours, 23 and you are of Christ, and Christ is of God. [1 Corinthians 3]
Unfortunately, to date, the church has not fully realized these supernatural Kingdom principles which God expects the church to fulfill in these last days, before Jesus comes back. They're still stuck in their human theology and philosophy, denominationalism and in their nice church programs and cute ministries. But the genuine things of God they mock.
But one day, soon, we will learn and begin talking to illnesses, too. But everything has to start with total surrender to Jesus.
Surrendering to Jesus
He Found a Door to God
This is a true story. He was brought up in religion and grew up being more zealous for it than anybody else in his time. In fact, he described himself as among the fiercest leaders his religion had ever produced, a champion of it, and this religion followed the laws of God to the letter. He believed he found a door to God. He thought he had discovered real intimacy.
I am the door. If anyone enters by Me, he will be saved, and will go in and out and find pasture. [John 10]
The Door provides quick access to God's "pasture" (spiritual food) whether you go in or out through the door, whether in God's very Throne Room or in the midst of wolf territory in the world, even in a dry and thirsty land where spiritual drought rules over the dying land. You find water because the Door provides easy access to God's pastures, to His provisions, while the rest suffer unquenchable thirst.
They hopelessly seek for God, to no avail, but you "see" Jesus in his sanctuary and behold his power and glory. You easily access the third heaven.
O God, you are my God, earnestly I seek you; my soul thirsts for you, my body longs for you, in a dry and weary land where there is no water. I have seen you in the sanctuary and beheld your power and your glory. [Psalm 63]
Paul found that Door. And he testified that there is no other door between God and man except the man Jesus Christ. He is the Way, Truth and LIFE. He alone is the Door. This discovery was why he junked his religion and all his achievements and titles and trophies there, treating them as "garbage." He confessed that there's no other way to gain Jesus Christ but to trash all your religion, even if his religion was thought to be solidly bible-based.
What is more, I consider everything a loss because of the surpassing worth of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them garbage, that I may gain Christ. [Philippians 3.8]Because you cannot find the Door unless you treat your human religion garbage. You probably think you have found it, like Saul did before he became the apostle Paul.
Surrendering to Jesus
Thursday, June 10, 2021
Love Your Haters? Umm...
Among other radical things, Jesus commanded us is to love our haters. It's not a suggestion. Now, try to get a mental picture of your haters and all the times they pissed you off. Or the troubles you went through because of them--like if your boss, for some strange reason, hates you and takes special note of all your little mistakes and makes a big deal of them.
“But woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you shut the kingdom of heaven in people's faces. For you neither enter yourselves nor allow those who would enter to go in. 15 Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you travel across sea and land to make a single proselyte, and when he becomes a proselyte, you make him twice as much a child of hell as yourselves."
Wait. There's more.
"You blind fools! For which is greater, the gold or the temple that has made the gold sacred? 18 And you say, ‘If anyone swears by the altar, it is nothing, but if anyone swears by the gift that is on the altar, he is bound by his oath.’ 19 You blind men! For which is greater, the gift or the altar that makes the gift sacred?"
And yet, Jesus told his followers to love their enemies and do good to them. Did he treat them to an expensive Mediterranean restaurant or anything like that? Did he produce and serve them the best wine of all? He didn't. So what good did he do to them? Because that was his teaching--do good to them. Well, while in great pain and nailed to a cross and accused unfairly by these religious leaders, Jesus asked the Father to "forgive them for they do not know what they're doing."
That's doing good to those who hate you. He didn't just say, "Okay guys, I really love you!" He bled and died for them, and asked God to bless them with forgiveness.
So, here's the point. Loving your haters doesn't mean you never get pissed off with them. You may (though it's not a privilege, really). But the important thing is to:
1. Forgive them.
2. Do good to them.
You may treat them to a buffet lunch if you feel like it, but the more important thing is to sacrifice your ego and ask God to forgive them. And at least like their posts on FB. Does this mean God will indeed forgive them? Nope, not necessarily. They will have to go through the process--feel remorse and repent. If not, then God won't forgive them. So why ask at all? Because God is after the condition of your heart. He wants you surrendered at all times.
Surrendering to Jesus
Why Some People are Just Too Happy
Count it all joy brethren..- James 1.2
"In this world you will have trouble. But cheer up (or be happy)! I have overcome the world.”
Be genuinely happy! Without effort or trying to, you are naturally in a happy mood all the time, even in sorrows. But it's not sorrows caused by sin, mind you. It's sorrows as Jesus had them. Joy in sorrows? Yup, nothing is impossible with God. But it doesn't mean you keep laughing out loud while in emotional pain. When Jesus agonized in the garden of Gethsemane, I strongly believe he was happy deep within because he knew well his suffering and death would mean our salvation. He was never sad about the fact. His sorrow was about going through the ordeal, and that's normal.
Without meaning to, I sometimes find something funny in my sad moments, and I even laugh out loud in my loneliness. It's because (like what Sarah felt) God gives me laughter. When in company with people and it's a solemn occasion, of course I just laugh in my mind. It's part of a cheerful heart. Cheer is far from just feeling okay or smiling. It means animated or energized happiness. It's a "continual feast," says the bible. It's not just a good meal or snack, it's a continuous feast. And not enjoying this may mean spiritual oppression by the enemy.
All the days of the oppressed are wretched, but the cheerful heart has a continual feast. [Proverbs 15.15]
Mundane Happiness
But temporal or mundane happiness is always short-lived and dependent on circumstances that tickle the ego. Like winning in gambling, getting FB likes or Youtube subscribers, hitting sales targets if you're in sales, things like that. Or even having more income for your church, if you're a minister. These are temporal. This is not the happiness Jesus meant when he said, "Cheer up, I have overcome the world." Mundane cheer is the happiness that material possession or earthly success allows people who have not known Christ in a deep way and which only makes them depressed or anxious eventually.
Even in laughter the heart may ache, and rejoicing may end in grief. [Proverbs 14.13]
Thus, the real secret to genuine happiness is a surrendered life to Jesus Christ. He offers a drink that becomes a "spring of water welling up to eternal life," and that also means eternal happiness inside of you that naturally manifests without effort. It starts with a Jesus meet-up, meeting Jesus in person, in the spirit.
Surrendering to JesusWhy Trials are God's Love for You
The reason my Father loves me is that I lay down my life--only to take it up again. [John 10.17]
Well, in a broader sense, the Father punished sin when Jesus suffered the cross because Jesus, who was sinless, "was made sin" for us [2 Corinthians 5.21]. But that's for another topic to discuss. Right now, you have to understand that most dire situations we're in is actually God's rescue, keeping us safe from worse things, because he loves us. So we have to thank God for everything, even for things we don't have any inkling about. And then ask God to guide you through the ordeal. "God, what's this all about?"
Because we need to be guided in all things.
Once upon a time, I couldn't understand why I had this strange illness that kept me in bed. All medical tests were normal and yet one slight move made me weak and dizzy and breathless. So I was confined to bed in my room for months without understanding why--and I was asking God really serious questions about it--about my life, actually. WHY?
Later, while deep in my dramatic moments, I suddenly turned my sights to my bookshelf and saw the title of a book: "The Jesus I Never Knew." Then I remembered how the Lord had been urging me a long time to read the book again--a second time--because I had the impression that he wanted to point out something there, but I was so busy with other things I thought meant more to me and made me productive in life.
So, feeling so sick and confined to bed, I realized I had more than enough time to spend reading it. God actually arranged everything to get rid of the "snakes and scorpions" I had been pouring time on (and thought made me productive) so I could spend quality time on what was really "fish and eggs." See?
Still cannot get what this is all about? Don't worry, a lot of people also didn't get it even when they heard it straight from Jesus. Even his disciples at times didn't. To get enlightened, you need to have Jesus first in your life, ruling it. When Jesus is in your life, so is his Holy Spirit. And the Holy Spirit will give you enlightenment. Surrender your life to Jesus first.
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.Tuesday, June 8, 2021
Making of a Jesus Stalker
It was okay while I was a kid. There were even times I felt so close to God. High school was tolerable and I was even able to mix Catholicism with Taoism and some Chinese traditions due to my interest in Karate and Kung Fu. But college was a totally different thing. It was chaos. It was then I started rebelling and questioning God though I still attended church on Sundays.
Click here to know more about being free from sins.
One afternoon my fraternity brother, Jonathan, (I joined a tough college fraternity in FEU known for its violent frat wars) started arranging a Jesus meet-up for me. I learned that he had recently "surrendered" his life to Jesus and was now living "a new life." And yup, he looked like he was a changed person. For one, I noticed how he started taking a bath regularly. Those times, it was a miracle. We used to have fun missing our baths (we were so busy with our junior theses in Architecture) for days and comparing smells. But that seemed over with Jonathan. It was weird.
Then he started saying that my religion couldn't save me from hell. Neither my family. I was pissed off. What did he know about my religion and my family? "Don't you know how we never miss church since I was a kid?" I rebutted something to that effect. "And are you saying I and my family will go to hell?" I felt that he was pre-judging us. But he politely showed me Romans 3.23 and especially Isaiah 64.6:
All of us have become like one who is unclean, and all our righteous acts are like filthy rags; we all shrivel up like a leaf, and like the wind our sins sweep us away.
I was shocked, to say the least, especially the part where righteous acts were trashed, just like that. No one told me about this. I was speechless but still pissed off with Jonathan. I warned him never to talk about Jesus or eternal life ever again. He went away sad but unknown to him, what he had said and the bible passages he had shown me stuck in my mind the whole day. God didn't leave me alone. He kind of nagged me about it. I was going to hell?
Until I couldn't stand it anymore. I found Jonathan again another day and asked him to tell me about the Jesus and eternal life thing again, from start to finish. He looked shocked. This time, it was like I arranged my own Jesus meet-up. But later, I was to find out it was Jesus himself who did all the arrangements. Jonathan was just an instrument. After he was through, we parted ways. But Jesus, again, never let me alone. He kept repeating his words in my mind.
So that night, September 05, 1980, at about 8 pm before going to sleep on my native "banig" mat, I said a short, simple prayer. I asked forgiveness of all my sins, repented, received Jesus into my life as Savior and Lord and surrendered my life to Him. Then I went to sleep. The next day was just like other days, but the peace I had was different. I knew Jesus was in me, all 100 percent of Him. I knew my heart was changed. I knew it in my spirit. I was not the same person anymore.
And it was not my doing. I was sure that there was nothing I could do to change myself. It was all God.
Moreover, through Jesus and by God's grace and mercy and his promises in the bible, I knew I had eternal life right there and then. If anything bad would happen to me then, I was sure that Jesus would receive me in heaven because of what he promised and did for me, by grace through faith. Not because of my religion or anything good I have done.
That started my life journey of surrendering my life daily to God in Christ. I've become a Jesus Stalker since. This means I stalk stealthily behind Jesus wherever he goes and whatever he does in the bible, watching him up close. I see everything clearly.
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.
Monday, May 24, 2021
The Poor Pastor 1
This is a series. It's about a poor servant of God--a poor church pastor--I juxtapose with the poor guy in Ecclesiastes 9:13-16. One day while reading, the passage came alive before me and I saw visions of a poor but anointed pastor and his conclusions about certain matters on life and ministry, as if like the Teacher in Ecclesiastes. Photo above by Finding Dan | Dan Grinwis on Unsplash.
13 I also saw under the sun this example of wisdom that greatly impressed me: 14 There was once a small city with only a few people in it. And a powerful king came against it, surrounded it and built huge siege works against it. 15 Now there lived in that city a man poor but wise, and he saved the city by his wisdom. But nobody remembered that poor man. 16 So I said, “Wisdom is better than strength.” But the poor man’s wisdom is despised, and his words are no longer heeded.
Pastor Placido, or Ptr. Ido as members fondly called him, used to serve in a regular-size local church, with membership of about a hundred plus. The church makes a decent monthly income, making it the ardent desire of a number of his ministerial colleagues in the denomination. His first years were exciting, being a plain layman (just an active member of their young people in his younger years) voted overwhelming as pastor of the church. It was all too wonderful, a young people turned full-time minister.
There was a touch of mystery to it. And that's what they needed, the people said. A plain pastor from their own ranks who could understand what the church really needed--unlike titled and degreed ministers who had too much schooling but understood nothing about the church. A lot of titled and degreed ministers tried to "apply" but never made it. Ido was the church's favorite.
But as time went by--when honeymoon between pastor and church was over--the elders and church board began thinking smarter than Ido, which was typical of most church boards, especially when they felt more senior and smarter than the pastor, when they're among the so-called "givers" or supporters, and especially when the pastor had no bible school or seminary background as Ido didn't. They easily bullied the pastor into submission. They saw his simple layman-turned-pastor story no longer romantic but a ministry weakness. So they started looking into his credetials and many more lapses and loopholes to discredit him with.
To the extent that they started thinking he wasn't really a pastor--or at least he was yet an "incomplete" pastor due to the ministerial credentials he lacked, and that to them was pivotal. They reasoned that no one could explain or interpret the bible competently without formal studies at their seminary, especially studies in hermenutics and theology. So they figured, Ptr. Ido probably had a wrong understanding of Scriptures in general, especially when the members felt he was being a bit too offensive with his preaching. He needed to do it right and not unnecessarily hurt people's feelings.
Other pastors in the denomination agreed. They said "unprofessional"preaching like that was due to half-baked pastors uninitiated in formal schooling about ministry, ethics and theology. "He definitely needs to be in bible school and, later, seminary. Or else, he'd just keep teaching you wrong doctrines," the pastors added.
So everybody wanted him to get a title and degree as other church pastors had. They wanted to be proud of their pastor. It was not a suggestion. It was a demand echoed by the local elders and the district board.
But in matters like this, Placido believed the call should come from the Lord, not from the elders or church board or anyone else. He had prayed for it a lot--who knows, the Lord may be speaking through them who were urging him about it. So, to be fair, he sought the Lord. But after prayers, he didn't see any clear leading. Especially when what the board and elders wanted from the title and degree was to "take pride" in their pastor. They wouldn't be proud if he were just a plain pastor. And with the caliber of their local church, they deserved no less.
And also, that the pastor may have more confidence when meeting titled professionals like doctors, engineers or accountants. Or rich folks. How else would people respect him if he was just a plain pastor, compared to being, say, Dr. Rev. Placido Gallego. Then the church would have something to brag about.
But Ido had always suspected the idea--the need to "take pride" in someone or something. Pride and self confidence like that was never from the Lord, he told himself. It's work of the flesh. All the church needed was to take pride in their God. He remembered how Moses was taken to the desert for 40 years to be downgraded from being powerful in speech and educated in all the wisdom of the Egyptians to being a lowly, lowly shepherd. Yet, God didn't think he need to "take pride" in himself or anything he could accomplish, except take pride in the I Am to face Phaorah.
He had once explained this to the district elders and pastors, but all he got was mocking. "Are you Moses?" they asked.
It was then Ido remembered the Ecclesiastes 9 passage. A city weakened by its neglect of wisdom making it easily conquerable by an invading king, which Ido thought, in his present situation, was worldly principles creeping into the church he was pastoring. Worldliness is like a "powerful king" against an unspiritual local church. Much as he avoided the idea, but he couldn't help thinking of himself as the poor hero in the passage, the key to victory and yet disdained by the people he was to save. Just because he was poor.
Not really financially poor, but in the sense of being looked down on for his poor credentials for the job, or so some people thought.
If a church's priorities are like that--priorities that cater to the flesh--it is weak. Ido had always believed that. And what the church needed was not a titled or credentialed pastor but open spiritual eyes to see GOD and take pride in HIM. He once preached about it, but it mostly fell on deaf ears. Some visitng pastors at the time just shook their heads in dismay. They murmured: "Uninitiated." But wrong spiritual priorities, said Ido, made the church easy target for even the weakest attack. "It's not theology we need," he stressed. The more people didn't listen.
Then another king would rise up and take over and grab the church from the Lord. When people are not able to advance spiritually and unable to see what heaven puts real value on--but see only what is earthly--it has been surrounded spiritually by the enemy and "huge siege works" have been built against it. Ido shook his head in disappointment. In the Old Testament, when siege works were built against a kingdom, that kingdom could not see anymore beyond its walls. It had lost connection with reality. It failed to see the real goings-on outside its walls.
And Ido wondered why no one saw that happening--worldly standards creeping into the church. They all thought titles and degrees were the dire needs of the day. He had to be "ordained" so he could add the prefix "Rev." to his name, and that would make his church proud of him. Being simply their "Pastor" was no longer enough for these people. He had to be like this and like that. They decided what's good for their pastor.
Nothing wrong with ordination, Ido reasoned to himself. It's a confirmation of your special call to a particular Kingdom task, with an accompanying specific anointing for spiritual equipment. This is initiated by the Holy Spirit on the body of church elders genuinely filled with the Spirit of God. That was the ordination he learned from the bible--a prophetic utterance from the body of apostles and elders declaring a ministerial anointing on his life and ministry, pretty much what Moses did to Joshua and what the prophet Samuel did to kings. It was something supernatural and had nothing to do with titles and degrees from man-made institutions. Definitely not for "taking pride" in the flesh.
Everything should be the supernatural work of the Holy Spirit, Ptr. Ido insisted.
That was his upbringing from his late dad. His dad had stressed that everything in life and ministry should be through the leading of the Holy Spirit alone. "And nothing of the flesh--meaning, the sinful nature--can be part of God's work," his dad had insisted. "God may speak through other channels, like other people or circumstances, but he'd do it with anointed circumstances or people, not those led by the flesh or who subscribed to the systems of the world."
His dad was not a pastor or active church member. "I simply study the bible and rely solely on the Holy Spirit," his dad had said, adding how you'd get more from God that way than from being active in church today. Church in the old days, perhaps, was good. But today? "All they have are good programs." His dad had murmured. "You can't know more about the Spirit's power with good programs."
Ptr. Ido smiled as he remembered how his dad had looked as he emphasized those things to him. He had always been emphatic on this topic but also quite funny. Ido knew his dad was really spiritual though other people saw him as a heretic, or something of an anti-church. A rebel. Even an envious fault-finder. But his dad had always maintained that he was all for the glorious church of Jesus Christ, which was without spot or wrinkle or any blemish. "If a church isn't like that--or at least doggedly pursuing this--I want nothing of it," his dad declared. "It's not Jesus' church, in the first place."
Ido sighed deeply. That was about a decade ago, a few months before the Lord took his dad home. And the way God took his dad was like how HE took Enoch home. Anyway, some years after--and when honeymoon with his local church was over and people and their denominational leadership was forcing him to go to seminary for titles and degrees for pride--Ido decided to leave the church for good.
But not without saving it first from invasion by a king.
Continued..
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