Saturday, May 28, 2011

Let the Light shine


Let the Light shine as such, upon the wounds of the past - that they may be healed and your body made new as the Lord renews His word within you. After the repentance comes the forgiveness, that is filled with God's grace and with gentleness He heals that part of you, that was initially broken. His light, His blood, His sacrifice upon the cross brings us all to our knees in humbleness. Keep your eyes fixed on the cross and Christ crucified, that revelation might manifest its Truth.

Our eyes must stay fixed on this cross, silence the sounds of this world and just look. Look at what God has done, "For God so loved the world..." It is possible to be healed in this time and this moment, what He started - He finished there - so that you might be freed.

Matthew 5:14 "You are the light of the world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden."

Come to Christ and He will set you free. No greater love .... was displayed then that of our God, hung on a tree - pouring out His blood, His life - in moments like these it is the whisper that speaks true, His Spirit calls to you, not to accuse - but simply to tell you, "I love you."


Saturday, May 7, 2011

Our Savior


A quote: "Having faith in God means having faith what God is and what He has always been. If He answers prayer once, we can rest assured that His natural response to prayer is to answer it. If He heals one suffering individual, it is because He is a healer; it’s in His nature to heal. If He forgives one repentant person, it is because He is the Forgiver. He is God our Savior." REINHARD BONNKE

Sunday, May 1, 2011

The Dungeon of Doubt


This is an excerpt from Max Lucado's "The Applause of Heaven" and it is recommended that you read the previous chapter 16 "The Dungeon of Doubt."

"Go back and report to John what you hear and see: The blind receive sight, the lame walk, those who have leprosy are cured, the deaf hear, the dead are raised, and the good news is preached to the poor.

This was Jesus' answer to John's agonized query from the dungeon of doubt: "Are you the one who was to come, or should we expect someone else?"

But before you study what Jesus said, note a couple of things he didn't say.

First, he didn't get angry. He didn't throw up his hands in disgust. He didn't scream, "What in the world do I have to do for John? I've already become flesh! I've already been sinless for three decades. I let him baptize me. What else does he want? go and tell that ungrateful locust eater I am shocked at his disbelief."

He could have done that. (I would have done that.)

But Jesus didn't. Underline that fact: God has never turned away the questions of a sincere searcher. Not Job's nor Abraham's nor Moses' nor John's nor Thomas's nor Max's nor yours.

But note also that Jesus didn't save John. The One who had walked on water could have easily walked on Herod's head, but he didn't. The One who cast out the demons had the power to nuke the king's castle, but he didn't. No battle plan. No SWAT teams. No flashing swords. Just a message--a kingdom message.

"Tell John that everything is gong as planned. The kingdom is being inaugurated."

Jesus' words are much more than a statment from Isaiah. They are the description of a heavenly kingdom being established.

A unique kingdom. An invisible kingdom. A kingdom with three distinct traits." //Lucado, p. 169-170//

1. It is a kingdom where the rejected are received.

2. The dead have life. The grave has no power.

3. The good news is preached to the poor.