Friday, December 21, 2012

Is God Calling You to Go Out On a Limb?




By Judy Johnston

I’ve been reading through Max Lucado’s book, “God Came Near” with a new friend.  I met Michelle at church in a small group and since then we have had some sweet times of fellowship together. 

“God Came Near,” was the first Max Lucado book that I read and it has been a pleasure to re-read it with Michelle.  The day I gave her the book we were at the beach.  Michelle was so excited she couldn’t sleep and I remember waking up at 3AM and hearing her in the bathroom with the door closed reading aloud to herself in a whisper, the first chapter of the book.  It is a precious memory of two ladies beginning an exciting adventure into a new friendship. 

The book is especially nice to read before Christmas.  Lucado expands our mindset on the incarnation of Christ.  This week we went over the chapter about the Joseph and the risks that he took when he trusted God for his future and the future of his family.  Lucado’s word picture was of Joseph being, “out on a limb.”  Let me tell you it was a tiny little branch with the weight of the world on it, ready to fracture at any minute. 

Can you imagine putting yourself in Joseph’s place and thinking of what you would have to do to stand beside Mary and take her as his wife? Here’s a partial list:

To stand beside Mary, Joseph had to:

·        Ignore the gossip

·        Defend her

·        Protect her

o   From rumors

o   From a tyrannical King who killed babies

o   From his synagogue, who would tell him to divorce and let her suffer her own shame

o   From his own arguing family-his parents would have demanded his loyalty to them

·        Trust Mary, God & Gabriel in impossible circumstances

·        Provide for her pregnancy

 

In the bible study that follows the 3 page chapter, Lucado asks many questions that maybe you should ask yourself.

 

In what ways today does God call us to venture into the unknown?

 

When have you felt God asked you to go out on a limb for Him?

How did you respond?

What were the results?

 

We are constantly confronted with this comfort zone that we live in.  Like a bubble it can keep us from experiencing the fullness of what God has for us.  Yes, we are safe and taken care of but never-the-less God calls us to something more.  Life without risks is daily, uneventful.  I’m so glad I have always answered “Yes” to God’s requests of me to take a chance on the unknown.  Lucado’s final question is telling, “Is God calling me to go out on a limb? “  Ask yourself; maybe just maybe God has a new plan for your life in 2013?

Thursday, November 29, 2012

203 Personal Revival Final by Patty Reiswig



By Patty Reiswig

                The Culture of Honor Sustaining A Supernatural Environment by Danny Silk is a book that I intend to re-read again and again until all aspects are truly embedded within my spiritual being. It is my prayer that God will continue to use this book to bring clarity and change to the way I view my relationships with God, family, other Christians and all those in the world yet to hear the good news of Jesus Christ.  I believe I gleaned principles from every chapter but there are a few truths that particularly “stung like a bee” but positively impacted the spiritual woman in me. I can never be the same or think the same.
            The most painful realizations were found in the principles of—being “unpunishable” in Jesus and preserving “restoration of relationships” rather than the seeking instead a form of repentance by following the rules (Chapters 3 and 4).  I was left with a “huge painful welt” as I read these words,
“We have to be aware of how natural it is to be offended, and what offense does to you. What offense does to you is it justifies you withholding your love. I get to withhold my love from you when you have broken the rules, because people who fail are unworthy of love, and they deserve to be punished. In fact, what punishment looks like most often is withholding love. And when I withhold love, anxiety fills the void, and a spirit of fear directs my behavior toward the offender.”[1]
 Even as I write this review, I feel shame and I am grieved in my spirit by my own failures to fully understand the essential core values of heaven to earth before I first read these lines. As I think back over my life thus far, I cannot recall a time when any earthly relationship has modeled anything other than punishment and a withdrawal of affection. Not that this is any excuse but it does explain why it never occurred to me.  Back to the point, as I was reading this section God spoke to me, “You know this is exactly what is happening in your relationship with …….?” I never knew I was doing this. How could I be withholding my love? And if I was, well, yes they do deserve to be ostracized from the intimate details of my life. If I let them back in, they are only going to hurt me again—they cannot be trusted with my heart. Surely you know that Lord, right? Well, okay, they said they were sorry and desire a healthy relationship and to make it right but I cannot trust them. I am afraid of them… Do you hear me Lord? I guess it’s clear I fought to justify myself but the sting of the truth had already left its mark. This is a hard truth to accept because it demands that you live it; that you remain open and vulnerable and seek restoration. The author of the Culture of Honor writes, “Sin does not need to be punished. It doesn’t need to be controlled. It’s not a powerful force. It’s just that we don’t believe it. It’s easy to preach stuff. It’s another deal living it!”[2] And again he writes, “Walking in the light is not for wimps. It requires a deep faith in God’s love and the power of His grace to give us what we need to change.”[3]
“There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves punishment, and the one who fears is not perfected in love. We love, because He first loved us. If someone says, “I love God,” and hates his brother, he is a liar; for the one who does not love his brother whom he has seen, cannot love God whom he has not seen.  And this commandment we have from Him, that the one who loves God should love his brother also.”[4]
            The consequence of continuing with the practice of punishment and withdrawal of affection is contrary to developing healthy relationships. It is not bringing down the “Heavenly” to earth. I no longer desire to be directed by fear or to live with the anxiety the offender’s presence in my life has caused because of that fear. I do not wish to continue a behavior that does not please the heart of God. I wish to let go, seek restoration, and with God’s help to forgive as He has forgiven me—He withholds nothing! And yet, I cannot express the depth of the spirit versus flesh war within me to just let the offense go, to give up control. It must be accomplished by His grace. I am willing to be love-driven. Yet, I am powerless.
“I find then the principle that evil is present in me, the one who wants to do good. For I joyfully concur with the law of God in the inner man, but I see a different law in the members of my body, waging war against the law of my mind and making me a prisoner of the law of sin which is in my members. Wretched man that I am! Who will set me free from  the body of this death? Thanks be to God through Jesus Christ our Lord! So then, on the one hand I myself with my mind am serving the law of God, but on the other, with my flesh the law of sin.”[5]
            Another principle that stirred the bee hive to its height of activity, deals with the freedom in having a “wealthy-mindset” (Chapter 5).  Danny Silk writes, “The development and expansion of a wealth mindset is an essential key to our successful introduction of Heaven coming to earth and having it remain on earth.” Okay, Mr. Silk, I accept that, “I am rich in Christ.” However, upon reading further, I found out I did not understand the principles of a “wealthy-mindset.”  That I have in fact, most often operated in the mindset and limited view of being poor or middle-class in my relationship with Heaven. This is unacceptable! I’m now in real pain. I’m having a major allergic reaction.  A change of view is being birthed out of this pain.
            So, here is what I really want to see in me. First, I want to encounter the beauty of God daily.  It is often my prayer, “God orchestrate something beautiful today.”  I don’t know if I have “expected it” in an unlimited supply every day, all day as a description of what my life on this earth is all about. But, “I want it!” “Got to, Got to have it!”  Second, I want to be described as “one of generosity.” I not only want to receive the inheritance but to pour my life out for the benefit of others now and for future generations to come. I desire to move forward and access what God seeks to accomplish through this time in history. Third, I want to partner with God in the “global picture” to reach the world with the Gospel of Jesus Christ. Lastly, I don’t want to be motivated to just survive or to somehow escape my pain. I don’t want to live in the chaos of my own creation. I don’t want to strive for self-achievement. I want to live a life fully connected to God, to make the necessary sacrifices to be in the presence of God, and to connect with and actively support God’s anointed in resources and time. I want to give my life for those things that are eternal and deserve honor. To find a worthy cause in EVERYONE I meet. To quote Danny Silk, “Every person you encounter is one Christ has honored in His life, death, and resurrection. The person may not know who he really is from an eternal standpoint, but we do, and when we have a wealth mindset and a heart of honor, we will treat him accordingly.”
            When I was a child…I was often embarrassed by my father’s need to always witness to my friends. I would find myself saying, “Dad, so and so goes to the Methodist Church just down the street” or I would just try to change the subject somehow.  Now, I think back on this time with regret. In fact, I find myself typing through stinging tears. I should have embraced it, encouraged it; accepted as my own birth right, responsibility and privilege.  I will not repeat the mistakes of my past. EVERYONE my life touches is my mission! I will clothe them with the clothes of royalty that they may encounter the King of Kings and Lord of Lords. So I may not be ashamed, I will say, “I chose to honor my identity as a daughter, Princess of the Most High God!”
“But you are a chosen race, a royal priesthood, a holy nation, a people for God’s own possession, so that you may proclaim the excellencies of Him who has called you out of darkness into His marvelous light; for you once were not a people, but now you are the people of God; you had not received mercy, but now you have received mercy.”[6]

BIOLOGRAPHY
Silk, Danny. Culture of Honor Sustaining A Supernatural Environment. Shippensburg, PA:          Destiny Image Publishers Inc. 2009
New American Standard Bible (NASB) Copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972,        1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation


[1] Silk, Danny, Culture of Honor Sustaining A Supernatural Environment (Shippensburg, PA: Destiny Image Publishers Inc. 2009)  93
[2] Silk, Danny, Culture of Honor Sustaining A Supernatural Environment (Shippensburg, PA: Destiny Image Publishers Inc. 2009) 80
[3] Ibid 114
[4] 1 John 4:18-21 (NASB), emphasis added
[5] Romans 7:21-25 (NASB)
[6] 1 Peter 2:9-10 (NASB)

Thursday, November 8, 2012

203 Personal Deliverance Final --- By John Reiswig


203 Personal Deliverance Final
By John Reiswig

CHAPTER THREE: GOVERNING FROM HEAVEN.
Relationship with the Rules
"All that the Father gives Me will come to Me, and the one who comes to Me I will certainly not cast out.”[1]
            This course was “transformative” to my life as a believer, so I suppose the title of the course, “Personal Revival” is a suitable name as to its functionality. When I purchased the book, “Culture of Honor,” by Danny Silk, my first thought was “cool cover.” My second thought was “cool beans” when I read what church the author was from, Bethel Church, Redding, California. Our worship team uses a LOT of songs from “Jesus Culture” and I am familiar with Bill Johnson from watching God TV, so I was excited to read about this “culture of honor.” I simply had no idea what lie ahead but the Holy Spirit obviously did.
            Deciding which chapter or chapters to write on was a dilemma to say the least. It was like choosing which flavor Sonic Blast to get, there are no losers in the decision, only different levels of delicious. I suppose delicious in ice cream versus the flavors of “Culture of Honor:” challenging, confronting, enlightening, encouraging, stripping, correcting, and reconstructing, among others, could be considered paradoxical but the book leaves you feeling empowered and encouraged all the while changing how you think about everything you learned in church before reading it. So the decision was made on the basis of where the course and the book had the most effect on my own personal revival. This will be a very personal final examination to say the least!
            I didn’t know it before reading “Culture of Honor” but I have had an intimate, strong relationship with the rules for most of my Christian life. I evaluated my relationship with God, as well as others’ relationship with God, based upon adherence to, or the breaking of, the rules. It is not that I used a different measuring rod for myself as I did on others. I was most hard on myself, so as a result, others received the same punishment as I did because “I was obeying the rules.” Let me clarify, I was exacting this punishment on fellow believers and not the lost. The lost were not in the game but once they entered the game, I cast my gaze down toward them as well. I had appointed myself God’s referee. I have yet to find that “gift” in the scriptures because it doesn’t exist, thankfully. My choice, Chapter 3 of “Culture of Honor,” “Governing from Heaven” disrobed me of my referee uniform. Praise the Lord!
            As God’s referee, I had made myself heaven’s gate-keeper. Of course, this is a title with no authority but tremendous ability to harm others. "All that the Father gives Me will come to Me, and the one who comes to Me I will certainly not cast out.”[2] As the scripture reference from John points out, those who come to Jesus are sent to him by the Father. They are sent to him just as they are, no cleanup required, and Jesus accepts them. The eyes of the self-appointed referee are attuned to the dirt of others; we referees cast out all the time. “YOU – ARE – OUT – OF - HERE!” What the culture of honor says is “You are welcome here.”
“This whole chapter strikes at the heart of the Accuser. But first, I have to give you a little warning because I am going to offend you for a few moments. I’m going to mess with your entire paradigm of justice. I’m going to take it out, laugh at it, tickle it, and then I’m going to kick it down the stairs. Okay? You’re going to have to chase it down the stairs if you want it back.”[3]
            If this were a Facebook post, it might be followed by lol, jk, or the emoticon ;o). I was not laughing because the first two chapters had done enough to my paradigm of Christianity to know that the author was not laughing out loud, kidding, or giving me a little wink. I have come to grips with the condition of my heart, as described above, and I have repented, so I can read this paragraph with some ease now. At the time, I realized that the way I had contributed to the culture of “punish the rule breaker” was absolutely the work of Satan or the Accuser and I was Satan’s referee, and not God’s. “Ouch!”
            As a child, I grew up in a house of plenteous intelligence mixed with sardonic senses of humor, especially among the siblings. As a result, the standards for achievement were very high and, unfortunately, the environment had an atmosphere of ridicule ready to burst forth when failure to meet the standards occurred. Every family member showed signs of coping mechanisms from the battles. Some brushed the attacks aside, some run away in anger but everyone enjoyed the repartee until it got too close to home. As you can imagine, these personalities set loose on an unsuspecting population could be quite explosive. So we associated with like-minded people who enjoyed the sword play of the mouth. My wife and her family were caught by surprise by the family dynamic: we were always correcting, always jabbing, always on our games. We could be hilarious and very hurtful all in the same sentence. Doesn’t sound like heaven, does it? I am thinking of a place that starts with an “H” but it is not heaven… The story of the child who receives an “F” grade struck hard at who I was as a child. The method of correction for an “F” in our house was definitely one of punishment. Encouragement was not there because achievement was expected. This is not an unusual method of correction for persons from my generation, so it is not surprising we had it but it affected the way we dealt with failure in ourselves and others.
            Being the youngest of five children, with my nearest sibling four years my elder, I was the one who ran from the ridicule. Now, this behavior often reveals itself in my relationships, my efforts at work, any place where I am making myself vulnerable, a powder keg is under the surface with a fuse in the hole, waiting to be lit by my failure. Eventually, because I could not run away as an adult, I developed other flight strategies: excuses, blaming, and quitting, be it quitting literally or inside of me. Understanding this about me is where my personal revival has begun. I can see the effects of a lack of encouragement in my own life, so I have begun the process of developing an environment of encouragement around me. My pastor, Eddie Summers, calls this, “Changing your atmosphere.”
            “The way we parent our children when they make mistakes reflects most clearly what we believe about human failure, particularly sin.”[4] I might add that the way one is parented most clearly shapes the way one views human failure or sin, as well as the way we treat those who have failed or sinned. Chapter three talks about being afraid of sin and afraid of mistakes and that this makes us crazy around sin. With my flight response learned as a child, I would as an adult, isolate myself from the “sinner” under the guise of “touch not the unclean thing.” “I cannot believe that he/she is doing that!” would be my thought and, of course, the referee that I was, I would throw them out of my game. Now that the sinner is gone, I am “safe.” Yet in this condition, without realizing it, I found myself in abject disobedience to the scripture’s command to love my brother or sister.
WE ARE UNPUNISHABLE!
            What? I have been a believer all my life and I recoiled at this statement. Then the Holy Spirit reminded me that Jesus took the punishment for my sin. Glory to God, the lights are coming on! “Sin does not need to be punished. It does not need to be controlled. It’s not a powerful force. It’s just that we don’t believe it. It’s easy to preach stuff. It’s another deal living it!”[5] The truth in this statement is absolute. I could have taken a test on the theory behind the “Culture of Honor” and cited scripture to back it up but I wasn’t living it because I had never experienced it. My view of God was that he is the punisher of those that diligently seek him but fail on a continuous basis. Oops! After reading this book, I can see that God has been saying to me my entire life, “THAT IS NOT ME! I love you! I paid the price! Get a grip! Sit in my lap! Let’s reason together!” This is so freeing. As the old Gaither song says, “We are free to love each other, we are loved.”
Torn Between Two Covenants, Feeling Like A Fool
            The Fork in The Road: learning to live in the grace of God and not the Law. “What’s going on? Who has deceived you? Who has allowed you to completely alter your belief system? Then he (Paul) diagnoses the problem: ‘You’re trying to practice two covenants. You’re trying to live in two camps.”[6] I have understood for a long time that we are saved by grace, through faith. But as a referee, or as others may say, one with the spirit of a Pharisee, I was living under the Law. You cannot give that which you have not received or have in your possession. I had understood about grace but I had not fully appropriated the reality of it for myself.
            Recently, the Lord has “coincidentally” brought me to places where grace is understood and more importantly, grace is practiced. One of these places is Grace Assembly of God, in Bakersfield, CA. His instructions for me when I started attending Grace were as follows: “Shut up, watch, listen and learn.” If you know me, this is nearly impossible for me to do.  But in obedience, not only have I begun to understand the grace of God more fully, I have started appropriating grace in my own life and with grace in me, I am able to let it be an outflow from my life to others. I am losing my fear of sin. If we fear something we give it power. If we lose the fear of sin, the power of sin is removed from us!
            The second place I am learning about the grace of God is Summit Bible College. I have been touched by Summit’s instructors’ relationship with God. The education I am receiving is valuable but the experience of the supernatural touch of the Holy Spirit is life-changing. One can really feel the love of God at Summit.
             In conclusion, as I have stated earlier, I have had in the past a relationship with the rules. The primary place that this rule relationship has revealed itself is with God. My relationship with God has been very familiar to me and according to the author it is familiar for good reason.  “If you don’t know God, He’ll look a lot like you. You’ll make him up, and you’ll be a rock star in that relationship. When we don’t know who God is because we don’t know His love and how His love works, we get scared and turn Him and our relationship with Him into what we already know.”[7] Can one be saved for forty-five years and not really know God? Yes, apparently so. Job said it this way:
“Then Job answered the LORD and said, "I know that You can do all things, And that no purpose of Yours can be thwarted. Who is this that hides counsel without knowledge?' "Therefore I have declared that which I did not understand, Things too wonderful for me, which I did not know." 'Hear, now, and I will speak; I will ask You, and You instruct me.' "I have heard of You by the hearing of the ear; But now my eye sees You; Therefore I retract, And I repent in dust and ashes."[8]
Job thought he knew God and God called Job blameless in his generation but he had as yet not “seen” God. When we truly see God, we can accept His love, forgiveness and his grace. When we do this we can lead others into this love. In this love, resides the “Culture of Honor.” How will I apply this to my life? God has already begun the work in me and I can see the results in every aspect of my relationship with Him and with other people. Praise the Lord!
  
BIBLIOGRAPHY
New American Standard Bible [Book]. - La Habra, CA : The Lockman Foundation, 1977.
Silk Danny Culture of Honor: Sustaining A Supernatural Environment [Book]. - Shippensburg, PA : Destiny Image Publishers, 2009.

[1] John 6:37, New America Standard Bible, The Lockman Foundation, (1977)
[2] John 6:37, New America Standard Bible, The Lockman Foundation, (1977)
[3] Silk, Danny, Culture of Honor, p. 77, Destiny Image Publishers, (Silk, 2009)
[4] Silk, Danny, Culture of Honor, p. 78, Destiny Image Publishers, (Silk, 2009)
[5] Silk, Danny, Culture of Honor, p. 80, Destiny Image Publishers, (Silk, 2009)
[6] Silk, Danny, Culture of Honor, p. 82, Destiny Image Publishers, (Silk, 2009)
[7] Silk, Danny, Culture of Honor, p. 88, Destiny Image Publishers, (Silk, 2009)
[8] Job 42:1-6, New America Standard Bible, The Lockman Foundation, (1977)