Preaching, Teaching, and Notes

Blessed

Psalm 65:4 “Blessed is the man whom thou choosest,  and causest to approach unto thee,  that he may dwell in thy courts:  we shall be satisfied with the goodness of thy house,  even of thy holy temple.”

Blessed means twice happy!

God sees us blessed;   How do we see ourselves, in His work?

When He chooses us,  He causes us to draw near to Him.  Would we resist that drawing?

When I was first brought back into the right way, after wandering away from God;  I was in awe, that  He loved me enough to welcome me back.

My thought was to grow closer to Him.  Nearer, Nearer, I prayed.  That is what I want.

The song of Nearer My God to Thee,  seemed to play in my head, often.

“Even though it be a cross that raises me…”.  

The “pig pen” of the world I had experienced;  I wanted the “home” of closeness with God.

Blessed I was, and am, for God’s mercy to me.

This Psalm typifies God’s great arms.  Drawing us, even when we run away.

Calling us, even when we have refused before.

“We shall be satisfied with the goodness of thy house,”

For Christians, the closer we get to the Lord,  the more satisfied we are.  The further away from God,  the more opportunity for things to come in between us.   These cause barriers.

The barriers we place, between the Lord and ourselves, cause discontent.

And discontent is to be dissatisfied.

And when we are dissatisfied,  we start looking for other things.

There are many temptations in the world,  the best place to be safe is in the holy temple of fellowship and nearness to the Lord.

Blessed is the one who is close to the Lord.

Blessed, also, is the one who is given opportunity to get near to the Lord again.

Most blessed is the one who never looks for any other satisfaction,  than in Him.

Preaching, Teaching, and Notes

The Power of the Word of God

Psalm 119:9 “Wherewithall shall a young man cleanse his way?  By taking heed thereto according to Thy word.”

[Psalm 119 is the longest chapter in the Bible.  It is divided into 22 sections, a number according to the Hebrew Alphabet.  Almost every verse has a reference to God’s Word. (Commandment, Statutes, Precepts, Testimonies, Way, Law, Judgments, and Righteousness)]

These verses (9-16) deal with the power of the word of God to cleanse, and to keep the soul from the influence of the world.

So God shows a test-case:  a young man.   He is just starting into the world.  And there are a lot of natural attractions to draw him away from God.  Things untried, which could lead him into a path away from God.

Is the Word of God able to keep him?  

Yes.  For the light of the Word draws the soul, showing it the whole scene,  not just what the world would present.   

(Psalm 119:105 “Thy Word is a lamp until my feet, and a light unto my path.”)

Psalm 119:10 “With my whole heart I have sought Thee:  O let me not wander from Thy commandments.”

The Word of God shows things in there true character.  

It does not “sugar-coat” the darkness which the “highs”, “fun”, or “following the crowd”,  can bring;  but shows it plainly.

It brings God into the picture before him.  The world would leave God out of everything.  Saying, “He will ruin everything.  He is so narrow-minded.”

(The world sees the “narrow way” [Matthew 7:13-14) as restricting, and harsh.  But every child of God which walks in this way, finds it freeing.  We are watched over, guided, provided for even in trials,  and most of all,  we are never alone.)

But God’s Word testifies that God always has His children’s best interests at heart.  He draws them with the Word, which opens up everything before them 

The soul, when sees what God says, believes and gets freedom, or the power of choice.  

(We are not able when we are first born again to be free from the besetting sins which so easily plague us.   They come back again and again.  

But as we deny ourselves, and follow Christ, we begin to be free from these things;       for the power of the Word and the Holy Spirit enable us to master ourselves and our circumstances.  At the same time we know our need of Christ more and more.  

This is a blessed paradox:  We are more free, yet more dependent.  It really comes down to the “master” we choose.

This is sanctification, or willing to be set aside to God.  This is freedom: closer to God, further from sin.)

John 8:31-32. “Then said Jesus to those Jews which believed on Him,   If ye continue in My Word, then are ye My disciples indeed;

                            And ye shall know the truth, and the truth shall make you free.”

And with that freedom, there is such enlargement of heart, mind, and will.  

There is power in the Word,  by His Spirit.  And by our obedience we bring that power within our own set of circumstances.

Psalm 119:11 “Thy Word have I hid in mine heart,  that I might not sin against Thee.”

Since it is hid in the heart,  it begins to mold and shape it.  Opening it up to more of the love, and peace of God.

Praise God:  Where the Word is taken in our hearts,  it leads.    When the Word of God is written on my heart,  it brings joy.

Joy is a choice fruit of the Spirit.  It lifts us, it strengthens us, it teaches us to believe and trust the Lord.

Psalm 119:14-16 “I have rejoiced in the way of Thy testimonies,  as much as in all riches.

                               I will meditate in Thy precepts, and have respect unto Thy ways.

                               I will delight myself in Thy statutes:  I will not forget Thy Word.”

The young man,  who was the “test-case”,  and we, ourselves, can find the power of God’s Word in our circumstances,  now.  

Light given, sight received,  and power to enable.

Listen to some of the other verses in this psalm:

Psalm 119:28 “My soul melteth for heaviness: strengthen Thou me according unto Thy word.”

(No matter how I “feel”,  Your strength is there for me.  Let me see it)

Psalm 119:45 “And I will walk at liberty: for I seek Thy precepts.”

(His precepts, are His prescriptions for my spiritual health.  He writes them, like medicine:  which may not taste good going down, but heals.)

Psalm 119:114 “Thou art my hiding place and my shield:  I hope in Thy word.”

(We are always “hidden” in Christ, and behind Him.   In Him, and can never be forsaken.   Behind Him,  for as He leads, we are protected.)

Psalm 119:165 “Great peace have they which love Thy law; and nothing shall offend them.” 

(Have you ever met a person which could not be offended?  they forgive freely,  and they have great peace;  for they are founded upon a solid Rock of Love.)

Psalm 119:176 “I have gone astray like a lost sheep;  seek Thy servant;  for I do not forget Thy commandments.”

(We are always the sheep of His pasture.  We are always cared for, lest we slip or stumble;  His word is always our prop.)

Let us use the power of His Word to us,  and be strong in the Lord.

Preaching, Teaching, and Notes

Elisha and the cruse of Salt

2 Kings 2:19  “And the men of the city said unto Elisha,  Behold,  I pray thee,  the situation of this city is pleasant,  as my lord seeth:  but the water is nought,  and the ground barren.”

The city of Jericho was situated near the Jordan River;  it was a beautiful city, but the spring water that watered the land was bitter and caused the crops to fail.

Jericho was rebuilt under a curse.  (Joshua 6:26).   I am only mentioning this because the world system we live in is also under a curse.  One day there will be a new heaven and earth,  but now we are called to live here for Christ Jesus.

To “build” here, as though this was our final home;  and not keep our hearts for Heaven, will cause any Christian to be barren, and not produce the fruit of joy and peace in the soul.

The men of Jericho, hearing that Elisha had been anointed by the Holy Spirit to be prophet after Elijah, came to him and asked that he would seek God for help to heal the waters.

2 Kings 2:20 “And he said,   Bring me a new cruse (jar) and put salt therein,  and they brought it to him.”

Salt, we know is a preservative.  We, as Christians,  are to be the salt of the earth (Matthew 5:13),   to preserve it (the part we have influence in) from God’s Wrath, until the day appointed. 

We are to honor the Holy Spirit within us, and witness of Christ’s life.

But this healing the waters was not to cost them nothing.  They were to buy a new cruse (jar) and the salt,  and bring it to him.

The Lord was not going to heal,  till they did this.   It would have cost them little,  but it would have showed their willing diligence to be obedient to God’s requirements.

When they did this,  Elisha was instructed to:

2 Kings 2:21-22 “And he went forth unto the spring of the waters,  and cast the salt in there,  and said,    Thus saith the Lord,  I have healed these waters; there shall not be from thence any more death or barren land.

                              So the waters were healed unto this day,  according to the saying of Elisha which he spake.”

The salt, itself, was not the healer.   Nor was Elisha.

The salt was the means God wanted used,  and Elisha was the instrument the Lord used, for that time.

This is a picture of how we, as Christians, can be fruitful in this barren world.

The world looks good, but without the “living waters” of the Holy Spirit springing up in us,  we won’t bring forth fruit, in this world.

The Lord requires new, clean vessels;  by being born again.   And we need to be salt;  the preserving power of the Holy Spirit working through us to a sad world.

That is simply doing what were told by God, and that will preserve us and those around us.

The waters were healed,  not just for a day or two.   They could have harvests of plenty.

God wants that for each life He saves:   To bring forth the fruits of the Holy Spirit within (to have His joy and peace, even in this world);  and to manifest His gospel without.

(Galatians 5:22-23 “But the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy peace, long-suffering, gentleness, goodness, faith, meekness, temperance….”)

                                  

Preaching, Teaching, and Notes

Demas

Col. 4:14 “Luke, the beloved physician, and Demas, greet you.”

Philemon 23-24 “There salute the Epaphras, my fellow prisoner in Christ Jesus;       Mark , Aristarchus,  Demas,  Luke, my fellow laborers.”

              

2 Timothy 4:9-10 “Do thy diligence to come shortly unto me:     For Demas hath forsaken me,  having loved this present world,  and is departed unto Thessalonica;….”

It matters a great deal Who or what we love.

Demas is an example of this.

He was found in the writings of Paul as a fellow-laborer.   If Paul had taken him with him, then surely he would have seemed faithful.

Yet, when Paul was arrested the second time,  Demas forsook him, having loved “this present world”.

(Paul was arrested two times.   Once in Jerusalem, and sent before the Roman governor,  where he appealed unto Caesar.  

He was tried and released for a while, traveling west.  Then arrested again when he came back through Rome.)

Whether Demas was from a wealthy family,  or from the poor section of people, it does not say.   He was apparently saved, and joined Paul’s ministry. 

He is always mentioned with Luke, so perhaps he was a colleague, or student of his.

Paul wrote:

2 Timothy 3:1, 10-12 “This know also,  that in the last days perilous times shall come.

                      But thou hast fully known my doctrine, manner of life,  purpose, faith, longsuffering,  charity, patience, 

                       Persecutions, afflictions, which came unto me at Antioch, at Iconium, at Lystra;  what persecutions I endured:  but out of them all the Lord delivered me.

                        Yea, and all that shall live godly in Christ Jesus shall suffer persecution.”

But at a certain time,  Demas looked around and saw the way things were going for Christians,  and decided that he did not love Christ Jesus enough to suffer and die as a testimony for Him.

He was going to leave Paul, and head out.  He would go back to the world.  He loved it more than Christ.

What does it mean, “this present world”?    Simply,  Demas wanted his blessings here.  There had probably been many wonderful things he had seen Paul do.  Many coming to the Lord, and people being healed, lives changed.  Wow!

But when it came to himself, and “gaining or losing”  here,  he did not love the Lord more than  what he could get out of life now.

Matthew 16:24-26 “Then said Jesus unto his disciples,   If any man will come after Me, let him deny himself,  take up his cross, and follow Me.

                      For whosoever will save his life shall lose it:  and whosoever will lose his life for My sake shall find it.

                      For what is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world,  and lose his own soul?  Or what shall a man give in exchange for his soul?”

Luke 17:33 “Whosoever will seek to save his life shall lose it;  and whosoever shall lose his life shall preserve it.”

This life is a short expanse of time.  For it is just time.   But the everlasting Kingdom and the rewards there, are for eternity.

Demas may be rewarded with good things now.  

But Paul will have his good things forever.

2 Timothy 4:16-17 “At my first answer no man stood with me,  and all men forsook me:  I pray God that it may not be laid to their charge.

                         Not withstanding the Lord stood with me,  and strengthened me;  that by me the preaching might be fully known,  and that all the Gentiles might hear: and I was delivered out of the mouth of the lion.”

Picture Paul:  alone, standing before Caesar and a crowd of people, who were always around him.  Onlookers, or favor seekers; standing and hearing this Paul preach about Jesus Christ, his Lord.  

No man stood with him before Caesar.  

It mattered who you had to stand with you.   If it was a man of influence, then Ceasar might take into account that he might need that man’s influence sometime, and so be lenient on Paul.

But no man did.  

Yet Paul did not want any to be charged before God with this sin.  He forgave them, and prayed that God would forgive them. 

But God stood with him.

2 Timothy 4:18 “And the Lord shall deliver me from every evil work,  and will preserve me unto His heavenly kingdom:  to whom be glory forever and ever. Amen.”

I must admit, ridicule, slander, and persecution are not things I want to have happen to me, either.   But I love my Lord Jesus Christ.

I want the Lord Jesus Christ to stand with me;  therefore I must stand with Him, even in the perilous times.

It matters, Who or what we love,  for that effects every decision we make.

Let us love the Lord Jesus Christ with all our hearts,  that we may be faithful to Him, unto the end.

Preaching, Teaching, and Notes

Ask and Ye shall Receive

Matthew 7:7-11 “Ask and it shall be given you;  seek, and ye shall find;  knock, and it shall be opened unto you:

                           For everyone that asketh  recieveth;  and he that seeketh findeth;  and to him that knocketh it shall be opened.

                           For what man is there of you,  whom if his son ask bread,  will he give him a stone?   

                           Or if he ask a fish,  will he give him a serpent?  

                            If ye then,  being evil,  know how to give good gifts unto your children,  how much more shall your Father which is in heaven give good things to them that ask Him?”

First, let me ask you:   do you want what God has for you?

Then ask for it—you will receive an answer.

But sometimes it is an answer that has a fulfillment,  later.

So what do you do?   You seek for the means of getting the fulfillment.   And use it—that is seeking.

(Perhaps it is a promise that needs to be accomplished:  for overcoming sin, for spiritual growth, for healing, for meeting your needs [yes, God is interested in every part of you;  your wellbeing, safety, and finances])

What can the means be?  Prayer is a great means.  It is not reminding the Lord of what He said,  but showing the Lord that you expect Him to do it. 

This is the knocking:  you keep after this promise.

Ezekiel 36:36-37 “Then the heathen that are left round about you shall know that I the Lord build the ruined places, and plant that  that was desolate:   I the Lord have spoken it, and I will do it.

(Here is the promise,  but what did Israel do with it?   It saddened the Lord that they did not seek for it enough to inquire after it.)

                                  Thus saith the Lord God;   I will yet for this be inquired of by the house of Israel, to do it for them;…”

Belief is a great means: 

It strengthens you against the whispers of the Adversary, the devil, that God is not going to do this for you.   (“Sure,” he whispers, “God might do it for others,  but not for you.”)

Belief, on the other hand says:  I am staying with the Lord.  I know He knows  my circumstance….I also know He will help me in it,  bring me through it,  and be with me in it.   We “knock” by believing.  Even to the point of telling the Lord: “I believe,  help my unbelief.”    He will.

(Mark 9:23-24 “Jesus said unto him,   If thou canst believe,  all things are possible to him that believeth. 

                            And straightway the father of the child cried out,  and said with tears,  Lord,  I believe; help Thou mine unbelief.”)

Obedience is another means:   Sometimes we just have to get up and do what is next,  and next;  leaving the final outcome to God.  The “knocking” is the obedience.

Mark 11:12-15 “And on the morrow,  when they were come from Bethany,  He was hungry:

                           And seeing a fig tree afar off having leaves,  He came, if haply He might find anything thereon: and when He came to it,  He found nothing but leaves;  for the time of figs was not yet. 

(If a fig tree had leaves,  it ought to have fruit; since the fruit comes on the tree before the leaves.  But it did not.)

                           And Jesus answered and said unto it,  No man eat fruit of thee hereafter forever.  And His disciples heard it.

                           And they came to Jerusalem…..”

They did not hang around and see if it was going to happen;  they went into Jerusalem where the Lord cleansed the Temple the last time.  They had a day of work to do.  And did it.

Mark 11:19-22 “When even was come,  He went out of the city.

                             And in the morning,  as they passed by,  they saw the fig tree dried up from the roots.

                             And Peter calling to remembrance saith unto Him,   Master, behold, the fig tree which Thou cursedst is withered away. 

                             And Jesus answering said unto them,   Have faith in God.”

We ask, because we need.   He answers many different ways:  with further instructions,  with promises,  with power at the moment.  

(How wonderful are His ways!  How many lessons I have learned by them.)

We seek, because the need is still there, and we need to know the means God is going to use.

And we knock, because we know God has heard, and encouraged us to keep going to get the blessing.   And when He opens, He will give it.

He does not give “look alike” blessings,  which are the stone for bread, the snake for the fish (eel).   

But He knows how to give “good gifts” to those of His children which ask Him.

Preaching, Teaching, and Notes

Go down to the Potter’s House.

Jeremiah 18:1-2 “The word which came to Jeremiah from the Lord saying,  Arise,  and go down to the potter’s house,  and there will I cause thee to hear my words.”

Jeremiah was God’s Prophet.  He spoke to Judah for God.  But when callled to go to the potter’s house, he did not refuse,   because God spoke to him.  

He  went, without question, to hear what God would say,  even through a mere potter.

He didn’t say. “Hey, Lord, I am your prophet.  I don’t need to go to a potter’s house.  You know he only makes pots,  but I give your message to priests, the king, and the people.”

No, Jeremiah wanted to hear the Lord’s Word, no matter how it came.

Jeremiah 18:3-4 “Then I went down to the potter’s house,  and,  behold, he wrought a work on the wheels.  

And the vessel that he made of clay was marred in the hand of the potter:  so he made it again another vessel  as seemed good to the potter to make it.”

Now the potter uses clay and water (lots of water) to make the clay very pliable in his hands.

The two are mixed together, and when the clay seems soft enough; the shaping  starts.

The potter starts the wheel and puts the clay on; and begins to shape the vessel he wants to make.

But the vessel was marred,  because the clay had a hard spot.  The water had not been absorbed into that part of the clay, so when the potter’s hand was trying to form it,  it refused to bend,  and so it destroyed the pattern,  marring the vessel.

Often we are the same way.  The Holy Spirit has spoken to us, trying to work the “water” of the Lord’s Word in us, and we just refuse to hear.  

(In scripture water is a picture of the Holy Spirit working through the Word;  Ephesians 5:26 “That He might sanctify and cleanse it with the washing of water by the Word.) 

It becomes a dry, hard spot in our life.  Then when the Lord is forming us according to His Will, we become marred, and unable to be molded into what He wants. (Sometimes the hard part tears a hole in the vessel,  sometimes it just will not bend, or yield to the Potter’s hand.)

“So he made it again another vessel, as seemed good to the potter to make it.”

So what does the potter do?  What did He do with Israel?  And what does God do with us?

Does He give up on us?  No.

Jeremiah 18:6 “O house of Israel,  can not I do with you as this potter?  Saith the Lord.   Behold,  as the clay is in the potter’s hand,  so are ye in Mine hand,  O house of Israel.”

He takes the hard clay out ,  and then adds more water till the clay is completely pliable, so that the rest of the clay is reusable: to be able to be made into what the Lord wants.  

The hard spots in us are varied:    

They are those things the Lord has told us to do, and we have put off.

We know what the Lord is telling us.  We know what we should do; but we think we have a better plan.  

We even come to believe that the Lord will not care…it is such a small thing.

But it becomes a hard place, and comes between us and God in our lives, until it is removed.

Or this hard spot is a resentment we have left unconfessed (why should I confess this attitude?  They did this to me.  Let them apologize first!),  so it festers into something between the Lord and us.    

[I will tell you, speaking from personal experience, that these things are deadening.    They make you insensible to God’s voice.   Any attitude , hurt, or affections which pushes you away from God (His call, His love, His power to do for you) causes real separation.   Forgiveness is freedom—do not let anyone tell you different.   Forgiving someone frees you from their control.  They can not hurt you anymore;  for forgiveness lifts you above them.]

But once these (and any other “hard” places) are removed,  the Holy Spirit can add the water of the Word to us, making us pliable in His hands; so he can form us into a Vessel unto honor, meet for the Master’s use.

(Pliable to His hands.   See what He does!  His hands in us, and for us—for He shapes our circumstances, our path, as well as us.)

2 Timothy 2:19-21 “Nevertheless the foundation of God standeth sure, having this seal,  The Lord knoweth them that are his.  And,   Let every one that name  the the name of Christ depart from iniquity.

But in a great house there are not only vessels of gold and of silver, but also of wood and of earth;  and some to honor and some of dishonor.

If an man therefore purge himself from these, he shall be a vessel unto honor, sanctified, and meet for the master’s use, and prepared unto every good work.”

Do you want to be “prepared”?  Nothing coming between you and your Lord?

Ready to face any challenge, or call?   

Then yield;  give yourselves into the hands of the Almighty Potter,  and let Him work within you—and see what He will work for you.

Preaching, Teaching, and Notes

Always to Pray

Luke 18:1 “ And he(Jesus)spake a parable unto them to this end,  that men ought always to pray,  and not to faint;”

To faint means to weaken in purpose.

In other words,  we are to continue to pray, and not give up the purpose of our prayers,  even when they are not answered right away.

Then He tells this story:

Luke 18:2-3 “…There was in a city a judge,  which feared not God,  neither regarded man:  

                       And there was a widow in that city;  and she came unto him,  saying,  Avenge me of mine adversary.”

Here are the two persons involved in Jesus parable:

A judge,  who could do what he wanted in his court. (Probably a Roman judge, because Jewish judges were in threes).  Who cared about no one;  not God or man.  But he only cared for himself.

And a widow,  who was usually the poorest and lowest of the decent people in the city.  She would have no family to speak for her,  no money to bribe this judge;  so she did what she could do to get relief from the one who was harassing her.

She asked this judge to “Avenge her”.   This would have been like a restraining order today.   Something to keep him from do damage to her.

This is like prayer?   

Yes,  for we shall see,  she prevailed,  not because of the kindness of the judge….he had none.

Not because she had influential friends…she did not.

But because she kept coming back and asking him, and asking him, and asking him.

Luke 18:4-5 “And he would not for a while:  but afterward he said within himself,  though I fear not God,  nor regard man;   

                       Yet because this widow troubleth me,  I will avenge her,  lest by her continual coming she weary me.”

This “weary” here, means that she might ruin his reputation.  Since he cared for no one, but himself;   he answered her request because of selfish motives.

He did not want her to make him look bad, by being in his court so often.

So he gave her that restraining order against her adversary,  just to get rid of her.

Christ Jesus says that God shall avenge His people, when they pray the same way:  with diligence for an answer, against our Adversary, the devil.   He interrupts our prayers,  try’s to make us tired of praying,  gives us doubts, etc.

Luke 18:7-8 “And shall not God avenge his own elect,  which cry day and night unto him,  though he bear long with them?

                       I tell you that he will avenge them speedily.   Nevertheless,  when the Son of man cometh,  shall he find faith on the earth?”

To stay after God for our prayers, shows we really want what we pray for.

And that we believe He will answer us.  That is faith,  for it holds on to God for an answer.  Heavenly Father, avenge me of my adversary.

Christ Jesus honors faith in Him. (And again,  faith holds on to God.)

For faith honors God.  

In this world of troubles (and who can say they do not have some),  Jesus says we are “always to pray, and not to faint”.

Hang on to Me,  He says;  I hear, and will avenge or restrain your Adversary when you pray….if you ask Me.

Preaching, Teaching, and Notes

Not willing that any should Perish,  But that All should come to Repentance

2 Peter 3:9 “The Lord is not slack concerning his promise,  as some men count slackness;   But is longsuffering to  usward,  not willing that any should perish,  but that all should come to repentance.”

Jesus promise is:

John 6:37 “All that the Father giveth me, shall come to me,  and him that cometh to me I will in no wise cast out.”

Christ Jesus came to save all who would come to Him.

Salvation is four fold:

First,  from the love of sin. (Conviction)

Second, from the guilt of sin. (By being Born Again)

Third, from the power of sin. (Called Sanctification, or the Natural man becoming Spiritual)

Fourth, from the presence of sin. (In Heaven)

And we are saved by the Word of God, believing and receiving what Christ has said, in the Bible.

1 Peter 1:23 “Being born again,  not of corruptible seed,  but of incorruptible, by the word of God,  which liveth and abideth forever.”

Jesus said,  “Ye must be born again.”

John 3:7 “Marvel not that I said unto thee,  Ye must be born again.”

Now this was said to a very religious Pharisee. 

He had come to Jesus (although at night, for he was concerned what others might think), to understand His message;  for he knew it was of God.

John 3:1-2 “There was a man of the Pharisees,  named Nicodemus,  a ruler of the Jews:

The same came to Jesus by night,  and said unto him,   Rabbi, we know that thou art a teacher come from God:  for no man can do these miracles that thou doest, except God be with him.”

And Jesus got right to the point:  If you want to see the kingdom of God,  you must be born again.

Nicodemus asked what that meant,  exactly.

So Jesus begins to teach this very religious Pharisee,  exactly what God requires from the man who would have everlasting life.

John 3:5-8 “Jesus answered,  Verily, verily,(or Truth, truth), I say unto you,  Except a man be born of water and of the Spirit,  he cannot enter into the kingdom of God.

That which is born of the flesh is flesh;  and that which is born of the Spirit is spirit.   

Marvel not that I said unto thee,  Ye must be born again.

The wind bloweth where it listeth,  and thou hearest the sound thereof,  but can not tell whence it cometh,  and whither it goeth:  so is everyone that is born of the Spirit.”

In other words, Nicodemus,   you must be born of the Holy Spirit from above to enter into the kingdom of God.

It is not natural birth, even for a Jew (though they had the oracles of God, they refused to honor and obey God).

It is the “birth” of the Holy Spirit within you, in your heart and life, that makes you a subject of God’s Kingdom.  This new birth gives you a new nature (desires, and attitudes) for it is Christ’s life in you.

And, Nicodemus, like the wind which blows; it is shown by it’s effects within you (you can not see the wind:  but you can see the leaves and things blowing around).   

“So is everyone that is born of the Spirit”: they will show it, by changing into His character, and doing His Will.

John 3:9 “Nicodemus answered and said unto him,   How can these things be?”

Under the Law, it was your own power which was at work.  And Nicodemus wondered how could he do such things!

But here, Jesus was saying that God would, by His Spirit, work within each man, who came to Him, to be born again.

This was something wonderful.  So much so, that at first Nicodemus did not understand it. (It had been spoken of in the Old Testament, but for the future.

Ezekiel 11:19-20 “And I will give them one heart,  and  I will put a new spirit within you; and I will take the stony heart out of their flesh,  and will give them a heart of flesh:

That they may walk in my statues,  and keep my ordinances,  and do them:  and they shall be my people, and I will be their God.”)

So Jesus again explains exactly what would happen, and how this life could be;  but first He corrects Nicodemus:

John 3:10 “And Jesus answered and said unto him,   Art thou a master in Israel,  and knowest not these things?”

“Are you a ruler of religion,  a Pharisee,  which ought to know the Scriptures;  and yet do not know these things I am speaking about?   This life was foretold in the Scriptures, do you not know them?”

John 3:14-18 “And as Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness,  even so must the Son of man be lifted up:

And whosoever believeth in him should not perish,  but have eternal life.

For God so loved the world,  that he gave his only begotten Son,  that whosoever believeth in him shall not perish,  but have everlasting life.

For God sent not his Son into the world to condemn the world;  but that the world through him might be saved.

He that believeth on him is not condemned:  but he that believeth not is condemned already,  because he hath not believed in the name of the only begotten Son of God.”

(Condemnation from God is a horrible thing:  To hear “Depart from Me” will sink a man to Hell.

“And this is the condemnation,  that light is come into the world,  and men love darkness rather than light,  because their deeds were evil.” John 3:19)

Jesus is saying here,  quite plainly, that He was going to be “lifted up” (on the cross),  

and that all who looked to Him and believed on Him as the Son of God,  would be saved.

(Moses “lifted up” or put on a pole, a serpent.  He placed it high above the camp of Israel, when they were in the wilderness. 

He did this by command of the Lord, because the people had spake against God,  Moses, and the manna God had given them.  

He , therefore, sent fiery serpents among the people;  which when they were bit, died.

Repenting, the people came to Moses to pray for them; and the Lord told Moses to place a serpent of brass on a pole.    

Anyone who was bitten by a serpent, and would looked up to the Brazen serpent, believing in God’s promise,  would live.)

John 1:12 “But as many as received him,  to them gave he power to become the sons of God,  even to them that believe on his name:”

We are to receive Him into our heart and lives. 

And How do we receive Him?

Romans 10:8-13 “But what saith it?  The word is nigh thee,  even in thy mouth,  and in thy heart:  that is,  the word of faith,  which we preach;

That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus,  and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead,  thou shalt be saved.

For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness,  and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.

For the scripture saith,  Whosoever believeth on him shall not be ashamed.

For there is no difference between the Jew and the Greek:  for the same Lord over all is rich unto all that call upon him.

For whosoever that call upon the name of the Lord shall be saved.”

We receive Him, by coming to Him in belief, and calling on Him with our mouths to save us from our sins.

“God, be merciful unto me, a sinner;  and save me for Jesus sake.  Amen.”

The Lord is not willing that any should perish, but that all should come to repentance.

Have you received Christ Jesus?

Preaching, Teaching, and Notes

The Widow’s Mites

Mark 12:41-42  “And Jesus set over against the treasury, and beheld how people cast money into the treasury:  and many that were rich cast in much.

                             And there came a certain poor widow, and she threw in two mites which make a farthing.”

Jesus had been preaching in the temple to the people,  and had warned them about the those who love to be religious (look religious), but whose main goal was to have men think well of them, while often sinning against their fellow man.

Then He watches as the people bring offerings to God.

Mark 12:43-44 “And he called to him his disciples,  and saith unto them,   Verily,  I say unto you,  that this poor widow hath cast more in,  then all they that have cast into the treasury; 

                            For they did cast in of their abundance;  but she of her want, did cast in all that she had, even all her living.”

For an Israelite, there were certain things which must be given:  tithes, and certain offerings at certain times.

But the offerings to the treasury,  were to be,  because you loved the Lord.

This she did, and it was recognized by Jesus, for it.  

Many put in more:  they put in “out of” their abundance.  But she gave “out of her want”,  or the money she would have bought things, she needed.

For this widow, it did not matter if she had anything.  It did matter if the Lord’s house was lacking. (This is what they took the money for.  For the upkeep of the house of God.)

We often think,  “If we could do some great thing for God.”

But the Lord wants us.   Two mites are not great.   Hardly anything in the world’s estimation.

But the Lord Jesus said she had put in more than they all did.

Because she put in her living.  All that she had.

What are we giving to God?    Are we giving our all?

No,  I don’t ask about your money.

 

I am asking about your love.   How much love are you showing to God?

Do you love Him?   And how much time do you spend with Him?

Morning prayers (and they don’t have to be long)

Evening prayers, to set everything from the day in order before Him. (So you don’t wake up the next day, carrying the same burdens you went to bed with)

The widow’s mites were cast to the Lord’s treasury.   In among the rich and affluent;  she came.

Giving to God, all she had, because she loved Him and His work there.

Again I ask,   How much of ourselves are we giving God? 

Are you doing,  for admiration from others?

Or are you giving God your life?

May we all get the same praise from Jesus, as she had.  

Preaching, Teaching, and Notes

Our Souls

Genesis 2:7 “And the Lord God formed man of the dust of the ground,  and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life;  and man became a living soul.”

1 Thessalonians 5:23-24 “And the very God of peace sanctify you wholly; and I pray God your whole spirit and soul and body be preserved blameless unto the coming of our Lord Jesus Christ.

                                         Faithful is He that calleth you, Who also will do it.”

Our souls are what make us, as human beings, unique.  

The Bible says that God “formed” us, and breathed into us the breath of life,  which was the Holy Spirit, and we became a living soul.

None other was so formed, or breathed upon. (All other creation was spoken into being.)

We are unique.

The soul is the place of our personality.  I believe our souls are the most important thing in His creation;  for He paid such a high price to buy it back again for Himself.

Our personalities are naturally “formed” in the world by our parents, place we live, friends or family, and what happens to us.

But when we are born again,  our souls, our personality can be molded into the character of Christ Jesus.  They are freed from the restrains of sin, anger, fear, jealousy, etc.;  and us,  the true us, under the help of the Holy Spirit can shine through.

[Our spirit is the abode of the Holy Spirit when we are born again.  He dwells within us as our Comforter: guiding, instructing, and helping us.  As we yield to Him,  His influence is felt through our spirits into our souls, and bodies;  and we are changed (conformed) to Christ’s image (character) Romans 8:29.

Our bodies are the “time clocks” of our existence.  When they fail and stop,  so do we.]

The characteristics of the soul are many;  but come down to three major faculties.

The mind: our thoughts—those which come and go quickly;  and those which linger and are built upon, in our imaginations,  or meditations.

The heart: our affections and emotions—desire for things, as well as true love come from here.

The will: our “action-packed” faculty.  For what we will to do,  we do. 

[We may “wish to”,  or dream after;  but nothing will ever get done until the will wills to do it.]

God says:

Proverbs 23:26 “My son, give Me thine heart, and let thine eyes observe My ways.”

1 Peter 1:13 “Wherefore gird up the loins of your mind, be sober, and hope to the end for the grace that is to be brought unto you at the revelation of Jesus Christ;”

Our hearts are uniquely made for the Son of God to dwell there. 

They are made to love Him, and know His peaceful, powerful Presence.

How much this influences our will to obey Him (for that shows Him we love Him).

Our minds are uniquely made to search Him out in the scriptures, by prayer and fellowship, and to take in His Word to us, understanding it by the light of the Holy Spirit. 

How much this influences our will to obey Him.

The Lord has said:

Proverbs 4:23 “Keep thy heart with all diligence; for out of it are the issues of life.”

Proverbs 4:26 “Ponder (think about) the path of thy feet,  and let all thy ways be established.”

God is Faithful.  He has not left us as spiritual orphans;  but has given us His Holy Spirit in our spirits, to help us be all we are meant to be,  in Christ Jesus.

Let us yield to His influence within our hearts, and the Word of God by our minds, and will to be conformed to Christ in our circumstances….for that is His saving power;  here and now,  and for eternity.

Yield is like giving in to the current of power.   Sometimes it feels like a rushing wave,  others like a hand in your hand, others like a look from the Lord to you:  each, calling you,  drawing you on with Him.

But we must yield.  Our souls (mind, heart, and will) must yield to the Holy Spirit within;  then we are growing, then we are empowered, then we are His obedient servants.