Showing posts with label student final. Show all posts
Showing posts with label student final. Show all posts

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)

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Victory in the Name of Jesus



         This is a final written by one of Summit Bible College's students for the class 109 Spiritual Warfare.   




             Ephesians 6 tells us that there is a war going on.  This war is not against flesh and blood, but against the rulers, the authorities, the powers of this dark world and the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly realms.[1]  This war is for the souls of mankind.
 Many Christians do not even realize that they are immersed in spiritual warfare.  It does not matter if Christians actively participate in spiritual warfare or not; Satan is actively seeking to find ways to lead Christians into destruction.
            Satan’s greatest weapons are his lies. He is the father of lies[2] and has had centuries to perfect his skills in deception.
The enemy’s lies are spreading throughout the world, causing many Christians to live in oppression. We must identify sources of strongholds and tear them down, replacing them with the stronghold of Christlikeness.
2 Corinthians 10:4-5 tells us that: “The weapons we fight with are not the weapons of the world. On the contrary, they have divine power to demolish strongholds. We demolish arguments and every pretension that sets itself up against the knowledge of God, and we take captive every thought to make it obedient to Christ.”[3]
God has given us power to demolish strongholds, but we need to understand what a stronghold is and how the enemy gains access to our minds.
The dictionary describes a stronghold as a “well-fortified place; fortress”[4] and “a place that serves as the center of a group, as of militants or of persons holding a controversial viewpoint.”[5] As Christians, our definition of a stronghold would be “a source of protection for the devil, where demonic or sinful activity is actually defended within us by our sympathetic thoughts towards evil.”[6]
Stronghold is also a thought, a pattern of thinking, or something that has a hold over you and interferes with your relationship with Christ. It influences how we think.
Strongholds become a resting place for unclean spirits, which prey upon our sympathetic carnal thoughts. They are expert at disguising themselves as our own thoughts.
Mark 4:24 states: [7] “And He said to them, be careful what you are hearing. The measure [of thought and study] you give [to the truth you hear] will be the measure [of virtue and knowledge] that comes back to you--and more [besides] will be given to you who hear.” We need to take every thought captive to the obedience of Christ, crucifying our carnal nature and placing our full focus on God.
Our priories will be reflected in how we spend our time.  Are we actively seeking to grow in the Lord or are we dwelling on the things of the flesh? Are we trusting in God and walking in peace or are we living in fear and anxiety?
We must recognize the areas of our lives that we have put ahead of Christ and cast down everything that exalts itself against the knowledge of God. The goal of a believer should be complete conformity with the mind of Christ. This is essential to achieve victory in spiritual warfare.
How do we recognize the strongholds that we have in our minds? Francis Frangipane notes that often the things that are oppressing us today are the things that we planted yesterday.[8]
Strongholds of fear, pride, failure, wrong doctrines, and unbelief are all strongholds that can exist in the mind of a believer. Even our experiences can be a stronghold.  We must yield control to God as the strongholds in our minds are cast down and destroyed.  The strongholds of Christlikeness and humility must be built up in our minds. Faith must replace fear.
            We must surrender ourselves completely to God. Any part of the mind that is not surrendered is an area where Satan has access to our minds.[9]“Victory begins with the name of Jesus on our lips. It is consummated by the nature of Jesus in our hearts[10].”
            Taking every thought captive is bringing every thought into alignment with Christ. We have to capture wrong thoughts and replace them with what God says.  The thoughts that we use to replace incorrect thoughts have to be realistic thoughts that align with Christ.
            We must put off the old man and put on the new man[11], who has been created in the image of God.
            Our goal in spiritual warfare should not be to wage warfare, but to continue to grow in Christlikeness. We need to be aware of the enemy but focused on God.
God has not left us defenseless against the enemy. He has given us spiritual authority and given us armor to protect and defend us. Ephesians 6:14-17 says: “Stand firm then, with the belt of truth buckled around your waist, with the breastplate of righteousness in place, and with your feet fitted with the readiness that comes from the gospel of peace. In addition to all this, take up the shield of faith, with which you can extinguish all the flaming arrows of the evil one. Take the helmet of salvation and the sword of the Spirit, which is the word of God.”[12]
            We must take up the full armor of God. Too often we do not utilize the full armor. We strike with the sword of the Spirit, forgetting that we have the shield of faith.
            To achieve victory in spiritual warfare, we must walk in peace. Before we can fully walk in authority we must have peace. “Peace is spirit power. Peace is an attribute of the Holy Spirit, and when you are walking in peace, you are walking in power.”[13]
            Satan will use fear, worry, doubt and self-pity to rob us of peace. We must discern the areas in our lives where we do not have peace for: “Where there is not peace, you have war. Conversely, wherever you have peace, you have victory[14].”
We must also have rest. God calls us to sit at a foot stool at His feet.  It is with rest that we can “rule in the midst of our enemies[15].”
            Victory in spiritual warfare comes from becoming more and more like Christ. He is our stronghold and it is with His name that we can have victory. As we yield control to God and conform our minds to Christ, our lives will change and we will be transformed into the ‘new man’.  Remember: “Victory begins with the name of Jesus on our lips. It is consummated by it is consummated by the nature of Jesus in our hearts[16].”


[1] Ephesians 6:12 NIV Bible
[2] John 8:44 NIV Bible
[3] 2 Corinthians 10:4-5 NIV Bible
[4] Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Dictionary
[5] Dictionary.com Unabridged Based on the Random House Dictionary
[6] The Three Battlegrounds by Francis Frangipane, pg. 28
[7] Mark 4:24 AMP Bible
[8] IBD, pg. 23
[9] IBD, pg. 30
[10] IBD, pg. 48
[11] Ephesians 4:22-24 KJV Public Domain
[12] Ephesians 6:14-17, NIV
[13] IBD, pg.57
[14] IBD, pg.56
[15] Psalm 110:2, NIV Bible.
[16] IBD, pg.56