Tag Archives: DIY

Anything You Ask – Campus Crusade; Bill Bright

 

“You can get anything – anything you ask for in prayer – if you believe” (Matthew 21:22).

God’s Word reminds us that we have not because we ask not (James 4:2). Jesus said, “If ye abide in Me, and My words abide in you, ye shall ask what ye will, and it shall be done unto you” (John 15:7, KJV).

A godly widow with six children was facing great stress. The family had eaten their last loaf of bread at the evening meal. The next morning, with no food in the house, the trusting mother set seven plates on the table.

“Now, children,” she said, gathering them around her, “we must ask God to supply our need.”

Just as she finished her prayer, one of the children shouted, “There’s the baker at the door.”

“I was stalled in the snow,” the baker said, after entering the house,” and I just stopped by to get warm. Do you need any bread this morning?”

“Yes,” said the mother, “but we have no money.”

“Do you mean to say you have no bread for these children?” he asked.

“Not a bit,” said the mother.

“Well,” said the baker, “you will soon have some.” Whereupon he returned to his wagon, picked up seven loaves and brought them into the house. Then he laid one on each plate.

“Mama!” one of the children cried out. “I prayed for bread, and God heard me and sent me bread.”

“And me!” chorused each of the children, feeling that God had answered personally.

God does not require us to have great faith. We are simply to have faith in a great God.

Bible Reading: Mark 11:20-26

TODAY’S ACTION POINT: I will continue to abide in Christ and have His Word abide in my heart, so that when needs arise today – whether large or small; physical, material or spiritual – I will choose to place my simple faith in God, knowing that He is willing and able to hear and answer prayer. I will also encourage others to join me in the great adventure of prayer.

Coming Home – Ravi Zacharias Ministry

 

There is a line in the story of the prodigal son that is easy to miss. It comes as the transition in the story, but it also seems to mark the transition in the son. The story is familiar. Not long after the younger son demands the right to live as he pleases, after he leaves with his father’s money and gets as far away as possible, and after he loses everything and is forced to hire himself out in the fields, the story reads that the prodigal “came to himself” and, at this, he decides to turn back to the father.

Today it is often translated that the son “came to his senses,” as we might describe a man or woman who, on the precipice of a bad decision or impulsive act, decides to turn around. But the phrase in the Greek literally describes the prodigal as coming to himself, and seems to point at something far more than good decision-making. In a sermon titled “Bread Enough and to Spare,” popular English preacher Charles Spurgeon notes that this Greek expression can be applied to one who comes out of a deep swoon, someone who has lost consciousness and comes back to himself again. The expression can also be applied to one who is recovering from insanity, someone who has been lost somewhere within her own mind and body, only to come back to herself once again.

With both of these metaphors, the son is one who wakes to health and life again, having been unconscious of his true condition. Standing in a foreign field hungry and alone, the son comes to something more than a good decision. He is waking to an identity he knew in part but never fully realized. He is remembering life in his father’s house again, though for the first time.

Human identity seems a succession of inquiry and wakefulness. For some of us, who we are is discovered in layers of life and realization, questioning and consciousness. Essayist Annie Dillard articulates this progression of awareness and the rousing of self as something strangely recognizable—”like people brought back from cardiac arrest or drowning.” There is a familiarity in the midst of our awakenings. We wake to mystery, she writes, but so somehow we wake to something known.

The Christian tells a similar story of waking to life in the most fully human sense of the word. We are like those who have lost consciousness, caught in the madness of our own condition, longing to be released, until we are awakened to life despite ourselves with one so eager for our homecoming. The apostle concurs:

“You were dead through the trespasses and sins in which you once lived, following the course of this world, following the ruler of the power of the air, the spirit that is now at work among those who are disobedient… But God, who is rich in mercy, out of the great love with which he loved us even when we were dead through our trespasses, made us alive together with Christ.”(1)

Coming to ourselves, we wake to human need, to human condition, to our poverty and our dignity, claiming in our very identities our need for resurrection, our need for home.

One further use of this expression comes out of the old world fables of enchantment. With this metaphor, “coming to ourselves” is like coming out of a magician’s spell and assuming once again our true forms. It is reminiscent of the scene in The Silver Chair where the children are trapped beneath Narnia in the land called Underworld and persuaded to believe there is no such thing as a Narnian. The Queen of Underworld, who is really a witch, has thrown a green powder into the fire that produces a sweet and drowsy smell. In this enchanting haze, their identity as Narnians becomes hazy, and the world they thought they knew begins to disappear. But it is at this moment of despair that Puddleglum makes a very brave move. With his bare foot he stomps on the fire, sobering the sweet and heavy air. “One word, Ma’am,” he says coming back from the fire, limping, because of the pain. “Suppose we have only dreamed, or made-up, all those things… Suppose this black pit of a kingdom of yours is the only world.  Well, it strikes me as a pretty poor one… We’re just babies making up a game, if you’re right. But four babies playing a game can make a play-world which licks your real world hollow… I’m on Aslan’s side, even if there isn’t any Aslan to lead it. I’m going to live as much like a Narnian as I can even if there isn’t any Narnia. So, thanking you kindly for our supper, we’re leaving your court at once and setting out in the dark to spend our lives looking for Overland.”

Coming out of their enchantment, the prisoners of Underland remembered they were children of another kingdom. Coming to themselves, they began to realize who they were all along. What if waking to our identities as children of the Father is like uncovering the people God has created us to be from the start? What if coming to ourselves is like remembering we are citizens of a better kingdom, a kingdom we vaguely recall and yet long to return? The prodigal’s awakening came as the startling recognition that there was plenty in his father’s house, and that he himself was starving.  Waking to this, we reclaim the very identities given to us in the beginning. And doing so, we come to ourselves because we are setting out for home again. We come to ourselves because we are going to the Father.

Jill Carattini is managing editor of A Slice of Infinity at Ravi Zacharias International Ministries in Atlanta, Georgia.

(1) Ephesians 2:1-5.

Charles Spurgeon’s Morning and Evening

 

Morning   “I will mention the lovingkindnesses of the Lord, and the praises of the Lord,

according to all that the Lord hath bestowed on us.” / Isaiah 63:7

And canst thou not do this? Are there no mercies which thou hast experienced?

What, though thou art gloomy now, canst thou forget that blessed hour when

Jesus met thee, and said, “Come unto me”? Canst thou not remember that

rapturous moment when he snapped thy fetters, dashed thy chains to the earth,

and said, “I came to break thy bonds and set thee free”? Or if the love of

thine espousals be forgotten, there must surely be some precious milestone

along the road of life not quite grown over with moss, on which thou canst

read a happy memorial of his mercy towards thee? What, didst thou never have a

sickness like that which thou art suffering now, and did he not restore thee?

Wert thou never poor before, and did he not supply thy wants? Wast thou never

in straits before, and did he not deliver thee? Arise, go to the river of

thine experience, and pull up a few bulrushes, and plait them into an ark,

wherein thine infant–faith–may float safely on the stream. Forget not what

thy God has done for thee; turn over the book of thy remembrance, and consider

the days of old. Canst thou not remember the hill Mizar? Did the Lord never

meet with thee at Hermon? Hast thou never climbed the Delectable Mountains?

Hast thou never been helped in time of need? Nay, I know thou hast. Go back,

then, a little way to the choice mercies of yesterday, and though all may be

dark now, light up the lamps of the past, they shall glitter through the

darkness, and thou shalt trust in the Lord till the day break and the shadows

flee away. “Remember, O Lord, thy tender mercies and thy lovingkindnesses, for

they have been ever of old.”

 

Evening  “Do we then make void the law through faith? God forbid: yea, we establish the

law.” / Romans 3:31

When the believer is adopted into the Lord’s family, his relationship to old

Adam and the law ceases at once; but then he is under a new rule, and a new

covenant. Believer, you are God’s child; it is your first duty to obey your

heavenly Father. A servile spirit you have nothing to do with: you are not a

slave, but a child; and now, inasmuch as you are a beloved child, you are

bound to obey your Father’s faintest wish, the least intimation of his will.

Does he bid you fulfil a sacred ordinance? It is at your peril that you

neglect it, for you will be disobeying your Father. Does he command you to

seek the image of Jesus? Is it not your joy to do so? Does Jesus tell you, “Be

ye perfect, even as your Father which is in heaven is perfect”? Then not

because the law commands, but because your Saviour enjoins, you will labour to

be perfect in holiness. Does he bid his saints love one another? Do it, not

because the law says, “Love thy neighbour,” but because Jesus says, “If ye

love me, keep my commandments;” and this is the commandment that he has given

unto you, “that ye love one another.” Are you told to distribute to the poor?

Do it, not because charity is a burden which you dare not shirk, but because

Jesus teaches, “Give to him that asketh of thee.” Does the Word say, “Love God

with all your heart”? Look at the commandment and reply, “Ah! commandment,

Christ hath fulfilled thee already–I have no need, therefore, to fulfil thee

for my salvation, but I rejoice to yield obedience to thee because God is my

Father now and he has a claim upon me, which I would not dispute.” May the

Holy Ghost make your heart obedient to the constraining power of Christ’s

love, that your prayer may be, “Make me to go in the path of thy commandments;

for therein do I delight.” Grace is the mother and nurse of holiness, and not

the apologist of sin.