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Entrusting Our Lives

I hope this letter finds your new year going well. I am recovering from Achilles tendon surgery which, of course, comes at the very worst time of year for this busy ministry. I am sure you can identify with that!

Yet, I am finding whole new ways to pray and trust our Father as I am more “dependent” than usual. Which brings me to my word of encouragement for you, from Andrew Murray.

He was a pastor in South Africa in the 19th century. Full of excitement about his work and love for the rural farmers and their families in his church, he was driven by a need to get “practical” in the way he loved and ministered to them.

He ended up being one of the most prolific writers about prayer that the world has ever known. This edition of our encouragement letter comes from his pen. I hope it puts fresh wind in your sails, as the saying goes, the way it does mine.


“And your Father who sees in secret shall reward you.” (Matthew 6:5, ESV)

"Jesus assures us that secret prayer cannot be fruitless. Its blessing will be evident in our lives. All we have to do is entrust our lives on earth to God when we are in secret and alone with Him. He will reward us openly and see that the answers to our prayers are made manifest in His blessing upon us. Our Lord teaches us that because God meets us in secret with infinite Fatherliness and faithfulness, we should meet Him with childlike simplicity of faith and be confident that our prayers will receive a blessing. ‘He that cometh to God must believe…that He is a rewarder of them that diligently seek Him’ (Heb. 11:6). The blessing of the closet does not depend on the strong or fervent feeling with which I pray, but on the love and power of the Father to whom I entrust my needs. Remember your Father sees and hears in secret. Go there and stay there; then leave in confidence…"

- Andrew Murray, Alone with God, pg. 327


Prayer Request: Please pray for us at A Praying Life. We are busy trying to cover all of the seminars that were booked before I knew I needed this surgery. And, would you mind praying for us as we labor through all of the tasks, challenges and setbacks to get our first ever on-line course up and running on APrayingLife.com? We are most grateful!

Warmly,

Bob

Bob Allums
Director
A Praying Life Ministries

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Top Books on Prayer

There are volumes of books and reading material on all subjects and matters; good and bad.  Sir Francis Bacon once wrote, "some books are to be tasted, others to be swallowed, and some few to be chewed and digested: that is, some books are to be read only in parts, others to be read, but not curiously, and some few to be read wholly, and with diligence and attention."

With hundreds of books on the subject of prayer, ranging from how-to books, to books that answer why we pray, to books filled with others' written prayers, and more, where does one begin?  What are the best books on prayer out there?

Here's a humble attempt to begin answering these questions.  This list is not exhaustive by any means!


#1- The Bible

The whole counsel of God gives us all we need to pray, study prayer, draw near to the heart of God, and much, much, more.  If there's one book on prayer that's a must to read, re-read, and read again, without question, it's the Bible!


#2- Matthew

Jesus' teaching on how to pray is chock full of wisdom, instruction, and practical application.  Chapter 6 in Matthew is one of the places where Jesus answers His disciples' request, "Lord, teach us to pray."  He models how to pray (worship and exalt God, seek His will to be done in your life and all around you, request for your needs to be met, confess sins and forgive others, request for protection and guidance- also confessing your full reliance on Him, return to worship and continue in praising and worshiping Him).  If you struggle with knowing how best to pray, follow Jesus' example here (and practice substituting your own words in place of reading or reciting Jesus' prayer.  He wants to hear your heart, expressed your way, not only in his modeled way shared in this chapter!).

#3- Psalms

The Bible's book of prayer!  Some psalms center on worshiping God and are helpful to help us worship and praise Him in prayer.  Others are laments mixed with praise and adoration.  Psalms show raw prayer and emotion by David and the other writers of this book.  It's a book that will likely help you expand the ways you pray.  Read and pray through a chapter or section today!


#4- Luke

In Luke 11, Jesus' model prayer is recorded again, but this record shows Jesus' encouragement to continue in prayer; persisting and following through in prayer until God shapes and answers your prayer by His Holy Spirit.  The Holy Spirit helps us pray!


#5- John

John 17 records Jesus' prayers for Himself, his disciples, and for all who follow Him.  In this record, we see Jesus' heart to see the Father's will perfectly accomplished through Him and His followers, plus He gives us another model in how we can pray for ourselves and others (beyond our personal, immediate wants, needs, and desires that can often encompass most if not all we think to pray about).  It's an excellent chapter to read, study, and pray!


#6- 1 Thessalonians

Paul exhorts the Thessalonians to pray in all ways- giving thanks in all things, praying continually, be joyful always (in the Lord's strength), and be careful not to quench or put out the Holy Spirit's fire in willful sin.  Many applications to our daily lives in prayer are listed toward the end of chapter 5.

#7- James

James exhorts his readers to pray and praise in all times and places, and describes ways to go about doing so in all circumstances (James 5).  In Chapter 1,  he also reminds us to be doers of the word, and not only watchers, listeners, and idle observers.


#8- Acts

The first-century followers of Christ prayed together corporately (recorded in chapter 4), and as they did, the Holy Spirit moved upon them and gave them boldness to speak the Word of God with boldness.  This is a great reminder of the importance of praying with others- and seeking God to empower us to speak the Word boldly in the power of the Holy Spirit; not only of our own strength or wisdom!


#9- Ephesians

Paul writes his prayer for the Ephesians toward the end of chapter 3.  It exalts God while covering those he prays for with powerful requests that strengthen them and honor God all at once!  This is another great model of prayer that we can benefit from applying to our lives when we pray!


As you began to read the list, you may have felt a twinge of disappointment if you were expecting a top 10 list of books on prayer that are separate from the Bible itself.  While there are many quality writings on prayer by many authors, recent and past, we are wise to keep our #1 source as the #1 source now and always! 

If you already own a Bible, you already possess all you need for your prayer life

You don't need to invest hundreds or thousands of dollars into building a library of books that will likely catch dust, take up space, and frustrate you in the future if they're left on the shelves unread.  You have all you already need.  Open your Bible to one or more of these books/chapters and before you read a single word, ask the Holy Spirit to reveal truths and practical ways He'd have you pray from what you're about to read.  Ask Him to lead you through what you read.  Thank Him afterward for what He revealed to you, and then pray about what He taught you.

Lord, today and every day, continue to teach us to pray!


Rob Griepentrog

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WITHOUT CEASING

Scripture commands us to pray continually. What does that mean? I have heard preachers say, (I have said this myself.) "This means we are to maintain an attitude of prayer.” But I do not think that is a practical way of thinking about prayer. Prayer is communication with God. It is asking Him for something or thanking Him, confessing sin or lavishing praise on His Name. It may even be listening to His still small voice. But it is always more than an attitude.

I recommend an exercise that helps us pray continually. Driving is one of those times when you cannot pray in your closet. I have been suggesting to people that they start trying to pray for the driver and passengers in every other car you meet on the road. This is a good beginning toward praying silently for everyone you see in the grocery store, the bank or at church.

http://daveswatch.com/

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Religious Liberty Prayer Bulletin | RLPB 251 | Wed 12 Mar 2014

NORTH KOREA: DOZENS DETAINED, 33 TO BE EXECUTED


by Elizabeth Kendal

On 27 February South Korean Baptist missionary Kim Jung-wook (50) fronted a North Korean press conference in Pyongyang to 'confess' to his crimes and plead for mercy. For seven years, Kim Jung-wook had been providing food, clothing and sanctuary to North Korean refugees and job-seekers in the Chinese border city of Dandong. Kim was arrested in North Korea on 8 October 2013, a day after crossing into the state, although a source in China told South Korea's Chosun Ilbo that Kim was kidnapped by North Korean agents in Dandong. In the press conference, Kim confessed to conducting 'anti-State' crimes with funding and assistance from South Korea's intelligence agency. When arrested, Kim reportedly had Christian literature and DVDs that allegedly he was going to use to set up 500 underground churches to spy on and overthrow the regime.

When Hong Kong-based Australian missionary, John Short (75), was arrested in North Korea in mid-February, he confessed to his 'crimes', apologised and was expelled. As an Australian, Short was of little value to the regime in Pyongyang. The situation is more serious for Korean-American missionary Kenneth Bae. Arrested in late 2012 while leading a tour, Bae gave a similar press conference confession in April 2013 before being sentenced to 15 years' hard labour. In August 2013 Bae was transferred to a hospital due to his deteriorating health. However, on 20 January the regime returned Bae to the labour camp to protest American B-52 bomber flight drills around the Korean Peninsula. As an American, Bae is a pawn of great value.

There is no word yet as to what punishment Kim Jung-wook will face. According to Radio Free Asia, 'dozens' of people have been detained, accused of assisting Kim. Border guards who let Kim slip through security, North Korean believers, new converts and the families of the accused are amongst those banished to labour camps upon Kim's 'confession'. Now South Korean news agencies report that 33 of the accused have been sentenced to death, charged with conspiring with Kim to overthrow the regime. It is reported they will be executed in a secret cell at the State Security Department. Doubtless these 33 are predominantly Christians, probably significant Christians who may or may not ever have been in contact with Kim but whose ministry is deemed an existential threat to the regime. This will be a terrible and traumatising blow to North Korea's remnant Church.

As noted in RLPB 248 (18 Feb 2014), the regime's main concern is managing the state monopoly on information in the face of severe challenges posed by new communication technologies, while endeavouring to raise living standards so as to ward off revolt. In response to pressure, the regime is ramping up repression, spreading darkness and stoking fear. Security on roads has reportedly doubled, making it more difficult for North Koreans to travel around the country. Furthermore, North Korean security agents now have new signal detectors, enabling them to intercept mobile phone signals in real time. Now people using cellphones smuggled in from China can be arrested within minutes. The recent wave of arrests will ensure that people stop using their cellphones.

PLEASE PRAY SPECIFICALLY THAT GOD WILL -

* 'lift up his hand' to 'break the arm [instrument] of the wicked' and 'call his wickedness to account'. Pray Psalm 10 for North Korea.

* spare the lives of the 33 who are to be executed. However, if that is not to be, then sustain and comfort them so that instead of being overwhelmed with fear, they will know 'the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding' (Philippians 4:7 ESV) as God himself encompasses them. 'And he will become a sanctuary [Hebrew: miqdas, the place where God dwells] . . .' (from Isaiah 8:11-14a ESV).

[For more on this subject of the promised presence, see http://www.turnbackthebattle.com/pdf/Reflections-ThePromisedPresence.pdf ]

* comfort and encourage the North Korean remnant Church; may they know 'the peace of God, which surpasses all understanding' (Philippians 4:7 ESV). 'When the perishable puts on the imperishable, and the mortal puts on immortality, then shall come to pass the saying that is written: "Death is swallowed up in victory."' (See 1 Corinthians 15:50-58 ESV.)

* take this evil event of the executions and use it for his glory to effect the exact opposite of the regime's intent. May the news of these executions spread through all the country, establishing not terror, but the link between Christianity and freedom.

* cause interest in the transforming gospel of Jesus Christ and in his power and grace to spring up all across the nation. 'Truly, truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit.' (John 12:24 ESV)

'Lift up your heads, O gates! And be lifted up, O ancient doors, that the King of glory may come in.' (Psalm 24:7 & 9 ESV)


SUMMARY TO USE IN BULLETINS UNABLE TO RUN THE WHOLE ARTICLE


DOZENS DETAINED IN NORTH KOREA, 33 TO BE EXECUTED

On 27 February captured South Korean Baptist missionary Kim Jung-wook (50) fronted a North Korean press conference in Pyongyang to 'confess' to 'anti-State' crimes and plead for mercy. Dozens of people accused of assisting Kim were immediately arrested and banished with their families to labour camps. It now emerges that 33 of the accused have been sentenced to death and will be executed in a secret cell at the State Security Department. This will be a horrific and traumatising blow to North Korea's remnant Church. Furthermore, security agents now have new signal detectors that enable them to intercept mobile phone signals in real time and arrest mobile phone users within minutes, further isolating the State. Please pray that God will intervene in North Korea and pray for the remnant Church.


To view this RLPB with hyperlinks or to access RLPB and RLM archives, visit the Religious Liberty Prayer Bulletin blog at http://rlprayerbulletin.blogspot.com

We suggest that churches and fellowships using the Summary above might also provide a copy of the listed prayer points to be used in their worship by people who are leading in prayer.

This RLPB was written by Elizabeth Kendal, an international religious liberty analyst and advocate, and is issued as a ministry of the Evangelical Alliance in Australia.

Elizabeth Kendal is the author of 'Turn Back the Battle: Isaiah speaks to Christians today' (Deror Books, Dec. 2012) http://turnbackthebattle.com/thebook.html

Elizabeth is Adjunct Research Fellow in the Centre for the Study of Islam and Other Faiths at the Melbourne School of Theology. She is Director of Advocacy for Christian Faith & Freedom based in Canberra, Australia.

If this bulletin was forwarded to you, you may receive future weekly issues direct by sending a blank email

to join-rlpb@hub.xc.org

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When All Else Fails... ROUSE YOURSELF!

I hope you are doing well today. But if not, there’s a good chance you’ve found someone else to blame for your malaise. 

You know what I mean. You’re in a bad mood, so you blame it on the lack of affection you’re receiving from your spouse. Your bank account is empty, and you’re convinced it’s because your employer is too stingy to pay you enough. Your spiritual life is bone dry, so you claim it’s the result of your pastor’s uninspiring preaching. You don’t like your situation in life, and you say you’re waiting on God to fix it someday.

But perhaps you’re looking in the wrong direction for your spiritual, emotional, or financial revival. The person to blame may be a lot closer than you think…

One day the prophet Isaiah cried out to God in despair: “There is no one who calls on Your name, who arouses himself to take hold of You; for You have hidden Your face from us and have delivered us into the power of our iniquities” (Isaiah 64:7). Isaiah’s observation holds a vital key for whatever breakthrough we seek in our lives today: We must “arouse ourselves” to take hold of the Lord!

While the Bible also commands us to “stir up one another to love and good works” (Hebrews 10:24 ESV), this is not ordinarily where a spiritual awakening begins. You see, it’s not primarily the responsibility of other people—your spouse, your friends, your employer, or your pastor—to rouse you from your lethargy. Even God Himself won’t bring you to a place of renewal and restoration until you rouse yourself to take hold of Him.

Make no mistake about it: Rousing yourself isn’t a one-time proposition but something you must do on a regular basis. Paul told Timothy to kindle afresh the gift of God which is in you” (2 Timothy 1:6). Other translations say we must “stir up” or “fan into flame” the gifts and callings of God in our lives. 

Before the day is over, I encourage you to spend some time with the Lord to arouse yourself and take hold of Him in a fresh way. And once that happens, you’ll be in a position to also stir up others to a renewed passion for their calling in God. There’s no need to wait for someone else!

 

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Imagining life without God

Can you imagine life without God? With all the trouble in this old world - -including "wars and rumors of wars" -- how could we possibly find peace?

“I know not where His islands lift / Their fronded palms in air;

I only know I cannot drift / Beyond His love and care.”

John Greenleaf Whittier, “The Eternal Goodness”              

 

Can you imagine life – with all of its challenges, disappointments, pains, and problems – without God?

With all there is to be afraid of in this dangerous world, how could we possibly manage to stay calm?

Considering the trouble in this world – with “wars and rumors of wars” – how could we find peace?

 

Gladly, we do not have to stay in the subjunctive “what if” mood long to realize God is with us.

If our Creator and Savior did not accompany us every heartbeat, our life would be intolerable.

Gloriously, the Lord Jesus Christ is with us 24/7, so loneliness does not get the best of us

 

Because God Almighty is with us, we are guaranteed an unlimited liability clause—

Ferocious death, mysterious life, sinister demons, current fears, future worries,

hellish forces, precarious locations, and deep despair cannot overpower us.

 

We could not make it on our own—do-it-yourself does not work by itself.

It is a great blessing to trade the subjunctive mood for a praise song.

It is a good prayer, now and then, to thank God we are not alone.

 

If the God of my father, the God of Abraham and the Fear of Isaac, had not been with me…

Genesis 31:42 NIV

 

 

Johnny R. Almond

                Pastor, Colonial Beach Baptist Church, Virginia

Author, Gentle Whispers from Eternity—Scripture Personalized

Book available through local bookseller or preferred on-line retailer.

Author’s blog www.GentleWhispersFromEternity-ScripturePersonalized.com

[This devotion was based on/adapted from Day 21 of Gentle Whispers from Eternity]

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TEMPTATION TO EVIL

In The Lord's Prayer Jesus taught us to ask God to deliver us from evil. This request fills much of my prayers. Whether I have just seen a pretty girl at the Y, at the gas station, or at church, or I was just cut off in traffic. I find I need to cry out to the Lord, "Father, sin is at my door. Keep me from falling into it." It seems I am often in situations where I cannot keep from brooding on some wrong done to me. I have to pray something like, "Father, if you do not deliver me, I will say or do something sinful." In those times the enemy tells me I will not be able to resist temptation. But I am often surprised that God does indeed deliver me.

Sometimes I need to ask God to help me see the seriousness of sin so I will not cancel out His leadership when he warns me to avoid an entertaining TV show or some other tempting situation. I regularly need to ask God to deliver me from desiring to please people because of the multiplicity of temptations that leads me into.

“Lord, remind me to pray. You are the only protection I have from turning off into the path of temptation.”

”O Lord, deliver me from evil.”

http://daveswatch.com/

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Why Pray for your Grandchildren?

A family, with parents, children and grandparents, relaxing in a parkToday our nation is being attacked like never before educationally, socially, financially and spiritually. Christianity itself is under assault, and parents and grandparents are involved in a tug of war for the hearts and minds of their children.

Life for young parents has never been as difficult, overwhelming and confusing as it is today. Many of us thought it was hard raising children in the 70’s and 80’s but we didn’t have the technology overload distracting our children as we do today. Our children are being desensitized by the television, music, and other forms of media which they enjoy. As Christian grandparents, our challenge is to ask God to place a shield of protection around our grandchildren physically emotionally, and spiritually and their parents.

It is time for grandparents to join in prayer for their dear grandchildren and their parents who are raising them and the grandparents who are raising their grandchildren. As the the Prayer Coordinator for Christian Grandparenting Network I would encourage you to ask other grandparents to join you to pray for each others grandchildren. Many grandparents tell me how they enjoy having a safe place to share common concerns for their grandchildren. There are at least 30 groups of grandparents throughout the U.S. joining in prayer for their dear grandchildren.

I will be happy to send you guidelines to start a small group. Just email me at lpenner@christiangrandparenting.net. I hope to hear from you soon.

“The prayer of a righteous grandparent (man) is effective.” James 5:16b

- See more at: http://www.grandparentingwithapurpose.com/

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undefinedFree Ebook:

Unreached Peoples, Least Reached Places: An Untold Story of Lostness in America

by JD Payne

- March 3rd, 2014

I am delighted to share that Unreached Peoples, Least Reached Places: An Untold Story of Lostness in America is now available to download as a pdf.  It’s brief, about fifty pages. That is intentional.  You can read it quickly.

The pastors with The Church at Brook Hills are always asking how we can best equip our faith family for the work of the ministry (Eph 4:11-12).  Part of shepherding others to reach the nations requires painting a picture of the realities of lostness.  Therefore, I wrote this short ebook for our people.

Unreached Peoples, Least Reached Places is written to cast a vision of reality in the United States, and to offer some practical steps to move us along in disciple making and church multiplication.  We know much about lostness in other parts of the world; we know little about it in our backyard.

One of the convictions that we hold as a faith family is to give away many om advancement.  With this in mind, I am releasing this book to you.  I pray that it will be a blessing to you and your ministry.

So…

Download your copy.  

http://www.jdpayne.org/wp-content/uploads/2014/02/Unreached-Peoples-Least-Reached-Places-Payne.pdf

If you do, tell others to get a copy.  Spread the word, far and wide.

Take it. Give it away.  Use it for leading your church to the nations in this nation and beyond.  If you do, tell others to get a copy.  Spread the word, far and wide.

---------------------------------------

Join us in praying for America to understand LOSTNESS right here.

Persistently prevailing,

Linda Bemis

Director, Prayer

International Orality Network

Visit: http://Orality.net

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Prayer Discovers God’s Agenda

"Every time the Lord faced an important decision, He prayed. When He was being tempted to do things by the world's methods instead of the Father's, He prayed (Matthew 4). When it was time to choose His disciples, He prayed the entire night (Luke 6:12). If the Son of God required a night of prayer in order to determine the Father's mind, how long might it take us in prayer to clearly determine our Father's will?" Henry and Richard Blackaby

Let prayer set the agenda of your life. Many of us often worry about our lives. What should we do next year? Where should we live? What school should we go to? These are all good questions that need careful thought. But if most of us were honest, we would admit that we worry needlessly. It is right to get wise counsel and weigh out the options; however when concern turns into unnecessary anxiety, we are not trusting God, who knows exactly how to handle every situation we face. Life becomes simpler when we learn to seek God for every aspect of our plans. Our times spent in prayer will bring revelation of His agenda for us. We can be confident that in the final analysis, it is God who knows what is best for us and what will give Him the greatest glory.

Prioritizing prayer and letting God set your agenda brings great peace. We lived for five years in Asia and experienced the typhoons that are so common in the Indian Ocean. Primarily they move in circles instead of from east to west or north to south. Before navigators understood their movement, they would try to maneuver out of the storm and often suffered serious destruction in the process. With a better understanding of typhoons, navigators have learned to locate the center of the storm—
where it is totally calm—and go there. This is much like prayer and discovering God's agenda. As we pray, we are able to circle in on God's agenda and find the center of His will. In this place, we experience His peace. When we try to get out of His will, we find destruction and chaos. Through prayer and renewing our mind in God's will, we discover God's perfect and pleasing will (Romans 12:2).

We must learn to pray about everything and trust in God’s wisdom, which far surpasses ours.  At times we may sense His direction and feel the peace that comes from the Holy Spirit even though nothing may look logical according to our human perspective. I remember a time when my husband and I began to pray about lengthening our ministry time overseas because we felt God might want us to extend our visit to certain countries. We had already been traveling for two months, we were tired, we had much to do in the U.S., and my father was ill, so an extension needed prayerful consideration. There were other reasons why going home would have been the right choice from a human standpoint. The problem is, often God's viewpoint is different from ours. He sees things far in advance and from His perspective, which far surpasses ours. 

Through prayer, we discovered God's agenda. We sensed His peace in staying longer, even though going home would have been easier and seemed more logical. In this case, we felt we had to go with the leading and peace of the Holy Spirit. The real key for us was prayer and waiting upon God, listening and hearing His voice. 
 
We may not know the full picture of why we were to extend our time overseas, but we do know that we had to take that step of faith that was guided and empowered through prayer in order to do God's very best. We knew that we were in the right place and that when we did return home, we had completed what God had for us. 

God loves to hear us pray with fervency and then listen and step out in faith according to His leading. Perhaps there is something you need to pray over regarding God's plan and purpose in your present circumstances. Praying through every decision, listening to His voice, and leaning upon His wisdom will enable you to determine His agenda. Proverbs 3:5-6 says, “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make your paths straight.”

Guidelines to Hear God's Voice in Prayer

"But as for me, I will look to the Lord and confident in Him I will keep watch; I will wait with hope and expectancy for the God of my salvation; my God will hear me” (Micah 7:7, Amplified).

How can we hear God when we pray? Here are some guidelines to help you hear His voice as you seek Him in prayer:

  • Bathe your life in prayer - Pray about all the decisions in your life daily. Ask Him for direction so that you may fulfill His will for your life for that day. Continually bring major decisions to Him in prayer. Pray, listen, and wait with expectancy. 

  • Believe that God does speak to you - Accept the promise in John 10:27, "My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me." 

  • Find time to be alone with God - Take time to pray and listen. Most of life is very busy, but time with Him is of utmost importance so we can hear from Him. Often the Lord responds with a thought planted by His Spirit into the mind or heart.

  • Keep a journal of what God says - We can better evaluate guidance and see what God is saying when we journal on a regular basis. Journaling helps us to ponder our thoughts and impressions so we can clearly discern the path God wants us to take. 

  • Test what you hear - What we think is God’s voice may come from the Holy Spirit, the enemy, or from our own souls. Ask the Lord to confirm what you think He may be saying. First John 4:1 exhorts us to test the spirits. It's good to seek confirmation from at least two other Christians before taking action, especially on big decisions.

  • Carefully check all guidance with Scripture - God’s Word is truth. What we think God is speaking should line up with Scripture. This is why we should examine everything carefully with the Bible.  

  • Obey God - We must be willing to act on what God has told us. When we obey God, there is blessing. If we still doubt what we think God is saying, it is good to continue to ask Him for confirmation until we sense His peace.

Let's follow these guidelines and practice listening to God. Let's learn to eliminate the distractions in our life.

"Jesus knew that His mission was not to attract a crowd, but to remain obedient to His Father. It was prayer that set the agenda for Jesus' ministry (Luke 6:12). Prayer preceded the miracles (John 11:42-43); prayer brought Him encouragement at critical moments (Luke 9:28-31); prayer enabled Him to go to the cross (Luke 22:41-42); and prayer kept Him there despite excruciating pain (Luke 23:46). Follow the Savior's example, and let your time alone with God, in prayer, set the agenda for your life." Henry and Richard Blackaby


Intercessors Arise News

Debbie Przybylski
Intercessors Arise International
International House of Prayer (IHOP) KC Staff
deb@intercessorsarise.org
www.intercessorsarise.org

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2nd Mile Ministries

Many are willing to go a mile, but only a few are willing to go two. Can you imagine what our communities would be like if we were willing to invest 10 years? What would they be like if we were willing to go two miles instead of one? Where would they be, what could God do? Imagine! Ruth Arnold, the Executive Director of 2nd Mile Ministries, believes real transformation and change in a community takes a great deal of time, it takes perseverance, a willingness to remain, to endure. 
 

2nd Mile Ministries is a Christian community development organization working in the Brentwood neighborhood north of downtown Jacksonville, Florida. In their community overall life expectancy is four to nine years shorter than any other part of the city. For males, life expectancy is a five full years shorter than the next lowest community. Forty-three percent of children live below the poverty line. The unemployment rate (19.5%) is more than double that of most other parts of the city. Of those still in the school system, less than one out of four of local high school students reads proficiently (24%). Their community has its challenges but God is calling them to live life, to prepare for the long haul. Ms. Arnold said, "They are building a basilica not a circus tent."
 

God is calling his people to live in the city, to raise their families there, to share in the struggle of everyday life and to be a people that bring peace in a hostile environment. What I discovered during my recent visit to 2nd Mile Ministries is that “being there” can make all the difference.  They are making their presence known by living life to its fullest.

 Their mission at 2nd Mile Ministries reflects their call to transform Jacksonville together: “We are seeking to see the Gospel renew lives and communities so they are transformed in every way.” They want pursue comprehensive community transformation by planting their lives in the Brentwood neighborhood and focusing our energy directly towards that community. They want to do more than just share about Christ; they want to see lives truly transformed. They want develop future generations of leaders who will be leaders of transformation in this community and communities all around the nation.
 

Being present, praying, linking arms with and partnering together with others who care about some aspect of our community’s transformation, and persevering in “the hard, ‘dry’ life of the streets of our community” is not an easy task, but it “is the perfect place for God to use us as his light and move by the untamable power of his spirit to create a blaze. A blaze that consumes, multiplies, transforms and radiates his glory for miles around,” says Ms. Arnold.

 

 It is their goal to be the presence of Christ in ways that can be tangibly known and felt often by individuals and partners within their community. They live in their neighborhood, shop in their neighborhood, play in their neighborhood, and serve in their neighborhood. Through this they build meaningful, life-changing relationships. Through this people in their community feel their presences. Through these people in their community come to know and be transformed by Christ.
 

Be present! As Ruth Arnold and 2nd Mile Ministries have made their presence known—pursuing, serving, loving and supporting the Brentwood neighborhood on their turf, in their spaces, and under their leadership, make yours known in you neighborhood. You don’t have to go around shouting “ta-da I’m here!” but know your neighbors names, know who they are, where they work, what they do, be sure they know you and who you are.
 

Pray! Pray for others first. Pray that God’s peace may be realized in the city – in your neighborhood. Pray that others may experience the healing power and love of Christ and to experience the fullness that comes from being in relationship with Jesus.
 

Seek the peace – join with already existing leaders and organizations and the assets they possess in order to develop future generations of leaders who will be leaders of transformation in this community and communities all around the nation. Mentor a child, get involved in public schools, become a part of after school activities. Understand the complex web of city government, real estate, education, health care and finance. Be a part of your neighborhood. Be a part of a church and the outreach that they engage in on a regular basis.
 

Be willing to preserve. Remain committed and invested, because change takes time.

 Check out their website: 9651014687?profile=originalhttp://www.2ndmile-jax.com

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Religious Liberty Prayer Bulletin | RLPB 250 | Wed 05 Mar 2014

RAQQA, SYRIA: CHRISTIANS IN THE LIONS' DEN

by Elizabeth Kendal

Raqqa is a province in northern Syria, east of Aleppo. Its capital, Al Raqqa City is situated on the Euphrates River and is home to some 300,000 Syrians of whom around 3000 are Christian. In March 2013 Al Raqqa fell to rebel forces. During the latter part of 2013, tensions escalated in northern Syria between the Al-Nusra Front (loyal to Al-Qaeda chief Ayman al-Zawahiri) and the Islamic State of Iraq and al Sham/Syria (ISIS; loyal to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi). In January this year the ISIS ousted the Al-Nusra Front from Al Raqqa to take full control of the city. In February al-Nusra ordered ISIS out of Aleppo. Rather than fight, the ISIS opted to retreat from Aleppo and consolidate in Raqqa, which is 'a larger area than the state of Kuwait', as one ISIS jihadist boasts.

Al-Raqqa is the only provincial capital under rebel control. There, ISIS is enforcing Sharia Law and dhimmitude just as in the Middle Ages. Everyone must adhere to strict Islamic codes. Women must wear the niqab (a full black covering, with just a slit for eyes) and men and women must not mingle. Separate bakeries have been set up for males and females. 'Al-Khansa' and 'Um Riyan' brigades comprised of young female Islamists have been established to search women. Horrifically, young girls are being forcibly wed to ISIS fighters in marriages which are mostly temporary and routinely violent. One young girl recently suicided just to escape the perpetual sexual violence.

In late February ISIS took 20 Christian leaders captive and gave them three options: convert to Islam, submit to Islam as dhimmis, or 'face the sword'. Faced with this choice, the Christian leaders signed an agreement committing the Christian community to dhimmitude, a state of humiliation and subjugation under Islam. According to the agreement, while the Christians of Al Raqqa may remain Christian, they must always demonstrate respect for Islam and Muslims. Furthermore, they must abstain from all public expressions of Christianity and from renovating their churches and monasteries. The Christians must also pay the 'jizya' (protection money) as mandated by the Qur'an (Sura 9:29). Wealthy Christians must pay four golden dinars (currently worth about $US730), those of average wealth must pay two and the poor must pay one. Jizya will be collected from each adult Christian twice annually. While they abide by the agreement, the Christians will be permitted to live as 'protected' dhimmis, that is as subjugated, second-class citizens. However, the agreement reads, '. . . if they disobey any of the conditions, they are no longer protected and ISIS can treat them in a hostile and warlike fashion.' ISIS militants have ripped crosses and bells from churches and replaced them with black flags of Islam.

In reality, the State of Syria as known hitherto no longer exists. In June 2013 the Syrian Arab Army (SAA) won a highly strategic, pivotal victory when it liberated Al-Qusayr. Since then the SAA has been advancing and consolidating its hold over the Damascus to Aleppo north-west corridor and the coastal Alawite heartland of Latakia. However, the SAA cannot defend all of Syria. So the Kurd-dominated north-east province of Al-Hasekah, home to many Assyrian Christians and contiguous with Nineveh Province, northern Iraq, has been abandoned to the Kurds, who have been fighting the al-Nusra Front there. Meanwhile, the vast, sparsely populated rural Sunni east, contiguous with Anbar Province, Iraq, has been abandoned altogether and this is where ISIS is establishing its base. ISIS controls large tracts of territory east of Aleppo and along the Euphrates River through Raqqa and Deir ez-Zor in Syria, all the way to Fallujah in restive Anbar Province, Iraq. (ISIS controls Fallujah with local support and is fighting the Iraqi Army there.) On Friday 28 February ISIS live-Tweeted the public amputation of a man's hand in Maskanah, on the eastern edge of Aleppo Province, between the provincial capitals of Aleppo and Al-Raqqa. Lashings, beatings and public executions are also being reported in Al-Raqqa. This is a reign of megalomania, blood-lust and sheer terror.

So who will fight for the Christians of Upper Mesopotamia? Not Iran, not Saudi Arabia, not Turkey, not the SAA and not the West (so it seems). Who will save them? Who will help them? Who will care for them? Who will raise their voices for them?

'I lift up my eyes to the hills. From where does my help come? My help comes from the LORD, who made heaven and earth.' (Psalm 121:1-2 ESV)

[RLPrayerBulletin blog has photographs and links to reports and video testimony.]

PLEASE PRAY SPECIFICALLY THAT GOD WILL -

* restrain the jihadis so they do not harm the Lord's faithful ones.

'The king declared to Daniel, "O Daniel, servant of the living God, has your God, whom you serve continually, been able to deliver you from the lions?" Then Daniel said to the king, "O king, live forever!My God sent his angel and shut the lions' mouths, and they have not harmed me . . . "' (from Daniel 6)

* intervene in Syria's abandoned, rebel-controlled regions: to facilitate the escape of those who must flee; to provide security and supplies for those who must stay; to comfort, encourage and strengthen his loved ones and to confound and shatter his enemies.

* facilitate radical change for the sake of his Church, for the benefit of all peoples, and so everyone might tremble before our amazing God.

'. . . people are to tremble and fear before the God of Daniel, for he is the living God, enduring forever; his kingdom shall never be destroyed, and his dominion shall be to the end. He delivers and rescues; he works signs and wonders in heaven and on earth, he who has saved Daniel from the power of the lions.' The decree of King Darius in Daniel 6.


SUMMARY TO USE IN BULLETINS UNABLE TO RUN THE WHOLE ARTICLE

CHRISTIANS SUBJUGATED IN RAQQA, SYRIA

Since January 2014 the terror group ISIS has ruled the northern city of Al Raqqa. Sharia is enforced and the whole community lives in terror of ISIS's extreme violence. Recently 20 Christian leaders were taken captive and given three options: convert to Islam, submit to Islam as dhimmis (humiliated and subjugated under Islam) or 'face the sword'. The Christian leaders signed an agreement committing the Christian community to submission. Just as in the Middle Ages, Christians must now pay protection money (jizya) as mandated by the Qur'an (Sura 9:29). They must demonstrate respect for Islam and Muslims and abstain from all public expressions of Christianity and from renovating churches and monasteries. If they breach the agreement, ISIS will resume war against them. Please pray for Syria and its Christians.


To view this RLPB with hyperlinks or to access RLPB and RLM archives, visit the Religious Liberty Prayer Bulletin blog at http://rlprayerbulletin.blogspot.com

We suggest that churches and fellowships using the Summary above might also provide a copy of the listed prayer points to be used in their worship by people who are leading in prayer.

This RLPB was written by Elizabeth Kendal, an international religious liberty analyst and advocate, and is issued as a ministry of the Evangelical Alliance in Australia.

Elizabeth Kendal is the author of 'Turn Back the Battle: Isaiah speaks to Christians today' (Deror Books, Dec. 2012) http://turnbackthebattle.com/thebook.html

Elizabeth is Adjunct Research Fellow in the Centre for the Study of Islam and Other Faiths at the Melbourne School of Theology. She is Director of Advocacy for Christian Faith & Freedom based in Canberra, Australia.

If this bulletin was forwarded to you, you may receive future weekly issues direct by sending a blank email

to join-rlpb@hub.xc.org

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The Great Divide

A great controversy exists in the church at large today over how we “do” church. Should our worship cater to culture, or do we have a responsibility to remain counter-cultural? Is it acceptable to serve Starbucks and Krispy Kremes during a service or are we drinking disrespectfully? Are live worship bands and drums too noisy? Does God prefer doctrine-rich hymns? Before you pick a side, let’s agree (at least for the length of this article) not to judge, and to take a look at the real issues behind the controversy.

As a longtime Christian and more than an occasional worship leader, I have worshiped and served in denominations on both sides of the fence. I was raised a Presbyterian and worshiped God in a cathedral-style building. The choir numbered hundreds of voices, reverently singing hymns and anthems accompanied by a massive pipe organ. I have sung Negro spirituals with families in fundamental churches. I have had the pleasure of being part of a modern, up-and-coming worship team (yes, with drums!) in what is called, in popular leader Billy Hornsby’s terms, an “attractional” church. And I have taught schoolchildren in Africa to sing simple songs of praise to a God they were just getting to know. 

So who’s right? The answer is: nobody. We’re all got it wrong, and we will continue to have controversies until we find out what it is that God wants. Impossible? No, and it’s actually easier than we think!

The truth is that churches, like individuals, have callings, visions, and purposes in the Kingdom of God. A church in an inner-city slum area is going to have a different mission than the church on suburbia’s main street. Transient campus outreaches will worship differently from wealthy cathedrals. God’s mandate to go and make disciples didn’t include a “style” requirement; it did stress the importance of preaching the Word. We know from the Bible what God wants: He wants His Word to be preached to the ends of the earth through every available voice, instrument, church, and method. The “how” is largely up to us. The elements of a service, while controversial, are largely non-essential. When we focus on the things we don’t like, we sabotage the efforts of the community we are in to do the job they are called to do: preach the Gospel to this community, in this way, with these resources, at this time.

The real question is: where has God called you to be? Not whom has He called you to be, (you should of course know what your own gifts and callings are and be using them), but where has He called you to be spiritually? Discontent, if not discerned, leads to disagreement. When we find ourselves judging others’ methods, there are really only two possible causes: unforgiveness or vision. Both have to do with where we are, or our position in Christ. Let’s look at each of these separately.

Unforgiveness ultimately leads us into making judgments. The most important place God calls us to be is at peace with Him and others. But it’s not easy to stay there! When our superb vocal abilities have been pushed aside to make room for the hip, young worship leader the church just hired, we get offended. And if left to fester, this offense will take root and become bitterness. Once bitterness takes hold, the vine of discontent begins weaving its way out of our heart and mouth and into the congregation, where it poisons and divides. This division is of the enemy, and can only be stopped through the power of forgiveness, which is not just a decision of the heart, but also a spiritual location. Forgiving moves us from a place of opposition back to a place of right-standing with God and man. As the Christian band Point of Grace sings, “there’s a cross to bridge the great divide.”

Vision: We also know that our spiritual life is a journey, and there are times when God is making us discontent on purpose, like a mother bird trying to cause her baby to fly. It is rare that God will call us to leave a church (although if you are in a place that is abusive or not preaching the Gospel, then by all means get out quickly!). But as we mature, God often calls us to enter new seasons of growth with different visions and possibly a change of position or location. This change might be to something within your current church or to a different location altogether. If you are feeling discontent, take the time to pray and ask whether God is calling you to make a change.

Change doesn’t come easily; in fact, one of our funny expressions (“Get behind me or get out of my way!”) greatly resembles Jesus’ words in Matthew 16:23. Just before Gethsemane, Jesus began casting a new vision for his disciples: one that included violent suffering, death and resurrection. Peter disagreed and rebuked Jesus. This did not match his idea of what a new religious order should look like! Jesus, in effect, said to Peter, “Either get behind Me (My vision) or get out of the way.” Peter was in danger of yielding himself to Satan’s strategy. Thankfully, he repented and was restored to Christ’s purposes in the end. But this would not be the only time he struggled to follow his leader. We need to learn from Peter’s example and get into agreement with our leaders or get out of the way!

For Peter, it was a heart issue that kept him from serving God’s greater vision. We need to check regularly to be sure that we are truly on board with the church’s mission. If we are sowing discontent, God could be calling us to repentance, or He could be asking us to enter into a new season. This is the great thing about God: He’s not upset about the drums being too loud! But He is upset when we disagree with each other. And His heart is for each of us to serve Him to our full potential, not always in areas where we are most gifted or comfortable, but surely with His clear direction and support.

Is this the community you are called to serve at this time in this way? If so, cater to your church’s culture by extending mercy and forgiveness when things upset you. If not, then be counter-cultural! Find out what’s on God’s agenda and ask Him to lead you a place where you can serve wholeheartedly. It’s time to bridge the great divide.

 

Copyright: Deborah Perkins 2014. You can follow Deborah on Facebook at His Inscriptions for more related articles.

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9651013466?profile=original

 

Recently we had a Prayer Conference with Mark Batterson.  I have been pondering three thoughts that personally challenged me from the conference and thought they were worth sharing. 

First, Mark emphatically stated, “That everything begins with prayer.”   This is important to me because I have to confess that even though I am the Prayer Pastor and pray a good deal, not everything I do starts in prayer.  I sometimes run ahead of God, and those times are easy to pick out because they are flat and not very useful.   I don’t think I am alone in my struggle.  You may need to hear this concept also.  I think he is right. Prayer is to be where we get inspiration to move forward with a project or the wisdom to deal with a tough situation.  Prayer is where the compassion comes from to walk with another through a trial and the fortitude to be the only one left standing when that is necessary.  Prayer is indeed where everything starts, at least anything of any value.  For Bible support you could look to Acts chapter 10 and the opening of the church to the gentiles that came out of Cornelius prayers or Acts chapter 13 and the sending out of the first missionaries that was formulated after fasting and prayer in a prayer meeting of the early church.

Mark’s approach to personal consecration was very powerful also.   He asks the Lord to forgive any human strategy he has pursued that was not conceived in prayer.   I have never heard anything like this before… talk about setting a high standard.  I wonder how my life and ministry would be different if I asked the Lord to forgive me for everything I do that was not birthed in prayer.  I have a feeling this would be revolutionary.  I intend to see!  

Would you be willing to stop striving and pursue God for your marching orders?   This sounds like an incredible step of faith but I bet it would be worth it. 

Jesus reminded us in Matthew 7:21- 23,  “Not everyone who says to me, ‘Lord, Lord,’ will enter the kingdom of heaven, but only the one who does the will of my Father who is in heaven.  22 Many will say to me on that day, ‘Lord, Lord, did we not prophesy in your name and in your name drive out demons and in your name perform many miracles?’  23 Then I will tell them plainly, ‘I never knew you.  Away from me, you evildoers!’

There are lots of ways to view this passage.  Some would deal with salvation and others hypocrisy.  Another view might be in the last times there will be lots of people running around doing this “for the Lord” or that for “for the Lord”.  But few of these actions will have been birthed in prayer.  Those plans and initiatives (the ones conceived in prayer) will be most valued. 

The third point Mark made was most practical.  Mark believes that the Bible was meant to be prayed.  As you read the Bible, God will speaks to you about something from His word.  That thought is where you should start your prayer time for the day.  We have been taught that prayer and Bible reading are two different things.  But Batterson puts a whole new light on these disciplines.  Although I have been working on this for a while, Mark has fired me up to grow in this area. The more I practice this principle, the more I like it. 

Paul Cover is the Prayer Pastor at Central Christian Church a mega church in Mesa AZ and the author of Threshold: Transformational Prayer; Transformational Prayer Leadership.  His book is available at Amazon.

 

 

 

 

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THE FOCUS OF PRAYER

I am not the only one who has had this experience. I was praying through a prayer list today and something distracted me. I continued to go down the list without my full attention. I regularly pray through a number of prayer lists. I have a list of movie people. I have a list of authors I ask God to work through. I pray for lost people God has brought into my life. I pray daily for a list of missionaries around the world. And it can be difficult to pray through these lists without distraction. I had gone some ways down the list today before I realized I was not focusing on my prayer.

Of course sometimes when I am distracted I need to pray about what is distracting me, changing the subject of the conversation, if you will. And I need to focus my mind on that until I pick back up where I was on the list. I also pray daily through several extended passages of scripture that I have memorized. I regularly find myself going through these without my mind fully focused on a passage. Prayer demands focus. You must focus on God and on the concerns you are lifting up to Him. I find I need to regularly stop and bring my prayers back into focus. I also regularly ask God to help me focus on what I am praying about.

http://daveswatch.com/

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9651013662?profile=originalMany grandparents want ideas of how to be involved in their grandkids lives. Today I want to share a guest blog that I found on the 1 Corinthians 13 Parenting blog." The link is http://www.1corinthians13parenting.com.

Christian grandparents have a deep desire, if not a burden, to make sure their grandchildren know the Lord Jesus Christ as Savior. But often family obstacles stand in the way. For some, grandchildren live a long distance away. For others, the “distance” is less in miles than in faith when your grandchildren’s parents are not walking with God. Others must negotiate the challenges of single-parent, divorced, or blended families with visitation rights or children in differing ages groups or from different cultures.

No matter what challenges you face, the God of all knows a way through the obstacles.

Let these ideas inspire you to find ways to influence your grandchildren toward Christ:

Newer technologies like a free account with Skype can bridge long distances giving you “face time” with grandchildren or allowing you to “drop in” during special events such as opening Christmas or birthday presents or hearing a child play her piano recital piece.

Start an open blog with your grandchildren where you can not only carry on a conversation about Jesus but can allow others to take part in the conversation. Free blogs are available on Blogspot.com and WordPress.com.

Make plans to host your own Christian camp when your grandkids come for a day, a weekend, or a week. Pick a theme then find matching resources, including Bible stories, crafts, games, activities, and children’s or young adult books. Add an outing to a planetarium, zoo, botanical garden, or other fun spot and talk about the God who created it all and knows each grandchild by name.

Plan a Christ-centered vacation. Take your grandchildren on a special trip to a destination such as the Creation Museum in Petersburg, Kentucky, The Holy Land Experience in Orlando, Florida, or the coming Ark Encounter in Williamsburg, Kentucky.

Remember that above all, prayer bridges any gap—whether distance in miles or in faith.

No matter your budget, time factor, or number of miles separating you, there are many ways grandparents can influence grandchildren toward Christ. If you’re the parent, imagine how you might involve your children’s grandparents in their lives.

The spiritual legacy you leave will last for eternity.

Diane E. Butts is  co-author of Grandparenting Through Obstacles: Overcoming Family challenges to Reach Your Grandchildren for Christ. (Available in print from Amazon.com and other outlets as well as on Kindle and Nook.) Her other books include Deliver Me: Hope, Help, & Healing through True Stories of Unplanned Pregnancy and Prophecies Fulfilled in the Birth of Jesus.

 For more information visit www.DianneEButts.com  or www.DeliverMeBook.blogspot.com

- See more at: http://www.1corinthians13parenting.com/five-ways-christian-grandparents-can-impact-grandkids/#sthash.ISKyEq37.dpuf

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Love that lasts

"In this modern world we live in, love is ended before it's begun."  Commitment--an old-fashioned word--is still the key to lasting marriages and enduring relationships. God's love is the ultimate example.

“Thrice blest whose lives are faithful prayers, Whose loves in higher love endure;

What souls possess themselves so pure, or is there blessedness like theirs?”

- Alfred, Lord Tennyson

 

Waterfalls of time cannot extinguish love’s eternal flame.

Rivers of catastrophe cannot drown its commitment.

Love is stronger than death—love endures forever.

 

Love hangs on through hours, days, weeks, and years.

Love perseveres through glacial passage of time.

Love  is infinitely  patient—it never gives up.

 

In life’s waiting room, we calmly anticipate God’s tomorrow.

The trial of our faith will determine if we truly believe God.

God is being patient with us—let’s be patient with Him.

 

At Calvary, He crossed His heart to express His undying love.

Our Savior Jesus paid for His bride with His lifeblood.

We can prove our love for Him by obedience.

 

God has planned a marriage feast to honor the Bridegroom.

Engagement gives time to get ready for the wedding.

Before we know it, the great day will arrive.

 

Jacob spent the next seven years working to pay for Rachel.

But his love for her was so strong that it seemed to him but a few days.

Genesis 29:20 NLT

 

Johnny R. Almond

                Pastor, Colonial Beach Baptist Church, Virginia

Author, Gentle Whispers from Eternity—Scripture Personalized

Book available through local bookseller or preferred on-line retailer.

Author’s blog www.GentleWhispersFromEternity-ScripturePersonalized.com

[This devotion was based on/adapted from Day 20 of Gentle Whispers from Eternity]

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How to Embrace a Pray-Care-Share Lifestyle in Your Workplace

 

Kip Miller, CEO and President, Eastern Industrial spoke at The Marketplace Luncheon and The Jacksonville Business Fellowship. Mr. Miller uses his business to promote compassionate business practices and a work environment in which employees are recognized and encouraged for the unique, creative capabilities they contribute to the team characterize it. Interwoven in this metamorphosis is the fundamental knowing that all individuals–regardless of position, are deserving of respect; that respect is a given, not an added benefit. I wanted to share excerpts from an interview that Mr. Miller did with a national trade magazine.

 

Why are you in business? It’s not a bad idea for all business owners to ask that soul-searching question of themselves. Many no doubt would concede that making money is the name of the game. Some might cite with varying degrees of truthfulness a commitment to their employees and customers. Others might emphasize that they simply love their work.

 

Then there is Kip Miller, president and CEO of Greenville, SC-based Eastern Industrial Supplies Inc., a PVF supply house commonly known by most insiders and customers simply as “Eastern.” To Miller, business is a means to put into action his deep-seated Christian convictions, which revolve around caring for people.

 

Folks of a secular mindset tend to roll their eyes when faith and business get mentioned in the same breath. I count myself among the secular ranks and going into this story was more interested in how Eastern handled PVF distribution than its faith-based involvement.

 

It didn’t take long to understand that it’s impossible to separate the business of Eastern from the principled Christianity that is its bedrock. The cynic within me came away disarmed by the realization that Eastern’s melding of business and faith has helped improve the lives of thousands of individuals ranging from Eastern employees and extending outward all the way to Africa. That’s where the company has been instrumental in founding the Daily Bread Life Children’s Home in rural Tanzania, which provides sustenance and education for dozens of orphans or youngsters whose parents are otherwise unable to care for them. In between the near and far are dozens of local and national charities that have benefited from the largesse of Eastern personnel and the vision of its leaders.

 

Sermonizing is not part of their agenda. Not once during my visit did Miller or any other Eastern associate try to proselytize, and I don’t even know what denominations any of them subscribe to. I never asked and nobody bothered to volunteer that information. “Life is about more than pipe, valves and fittings to me, but we don’t beat anyone over the head with our beliefs,” Miller told me. “We try to live our beliefs.” The result is an astounding breadth of charitable commitments funneled through a subsidiary organization called Eastern Cares (www.easterncares.org).

 

Eastern Cares was established in 2002 to promote a vision of a caring company reaching out to what it identifies as the four “C’s” – Company, Community, Country and Cultures. These correspond to charitable works on behalf of fellow employees, local communities, national causes and worldwide charitable endeavors. Key elements include:

 

• Emergency Fund. This is fully funded through voluntary contributions by Eastern employees for the benefit of fellow employees in need of financial assistance, along with special disbursements following natural disasters such as Hurricane Katrina ($10,000 donated), Haiti’s earthquake ($2,500) and last spring’s tornado outbreak throughout the Southeast ($1,250). Eastern’s associates have raised more than $90,000 since the fund’s inception in 2004, averaging about $100 a year per employee. About $50,000 of that total has gone to benefit fellow associates. A committee of Eastern associates governs dispersal.

 

• Cares Fund. The Cares Fund is funded by Eastern associates with, in some instances, a company match. Since its inception in 2006, the Cares Fund has raised more than $47,000 in total contributions, including a special donation of $1,000 by Apollo/Conbraco. This fund targets external charitable causes spanning community, country and cultures. Globally, it supports the Children’s Home in Tanzania and the building of a church in Mumbai, India. The Cares Fund also contributes to national and community-based groups such as the March of Dimes, Meals on Wheels and American Cancer Society, as well as faith-based organizations such as the Campus Crusade for Christ and Fellowship of Christian Athletes. In the name of country, the Cares Fund has supported packages for our troops in Iraq, flood aid to Tennessee, Helping Hands Ministry and numerous other worthy causes.

 

• Missional Program. Eastern grants associates up to five days per year of paid leave, exclusive of vacation or other paid time off, to participate in mission-oriented work sponsored by a civic, religious or other nonprofit organization. Since the program’s inception in 2006, Eastern associates have devoted more than 1,000 hours to missionary work both close to home and in places as far-flung as Peru, West Indies, Kenya and Tanzania. In early 2012 about a dozen associates are expected to travel to Tanzania to assist with projects at the Children’s Home they sponsor. This is hardly a vacation excursion. After landing at the airport in the country’s capital of Dar es Salaam, they face a grueling journey by vehicle that can take as long as 10 hours via primitive rural roads.

 

• Workplace Chaplains. Eastern provides chaplain service for associates in need of various forms of personal assistance. The chaplains are ordained ministers recruited from the communities where their local branches operate. They preside over weddings and funerals, offer premarital and marital counseling, financial counseling and, on a few occasions, legal counseling.

 

• Scholarships/Educational Assistance. Eastern provides scholarship assistance to the children or grandchildren of associates, as well as assisting associates with continuing education funds to advance their career-based training and goals.

 

• Adoption Assistance. Eastern offers financial support to associates seeking to grow their families through adoption.

 

• Emergency Health Care. Eastern also supports training of associates in CPR, first aid and defibrillator operation. “I don’t want to take credit for all of the ideas,” Miller insisted. “I’ve learned a lot from going to different conferences about God in the workplace and how to be a Christian businessman in deeds rather than words.”

 

Eastern Cares About Business, Too - Money has to be generated before it can be given away. To that end Eastern has built an impressive PVF business serving mechanical contractors and industrial customers from 10 operating locations in the Carolinas, Georgia, Alabama and Florida. Corporate headquarters in Greenville occupies a separate building, giving Eastern 11 locations altogether. Six years ago they started a commercial plumbing division that now accounts for around 20% of revenues.

 

Kip Miller did not grow up in the business like most PVF veterans. He started with Eastern in 1980 after nine months of searching for work as a young college graduate in that recession-wracked year. George Bagwell, Eastern’s owner, was impressed with the young man and by 1985 promoted Miller to vice president and put him in charge of sales. Around that time Bagwell also created a succession plan aimed at having Miller acquire ownership of the company through a buy-sell agreement.

 

Eastern was a small company at the time with only 13 employees and about $3 million in revenues. News spread of Miller’s talent and he was on the cusp of accepting a job offer from one of the industry’s giants when word came on New Year’s Eve of 1986 that Eastern’s owner had died suddenly of a heart attack. Miller was faced with a momentous decision. “I didn’t really have aspirations to own the company,” he told me. On the other hand, Miller said that he felt a sense of obligation to the other employees and to fulfill Bagwell’s faith in him. “It just didn’t feel right to leave.”

 

The Eastern he inherited was a company with a good reputation for customer service but operationally backward. Vendors were slow to get paid. The company was still using a Kardex inventory control system long after most competitors had computerized. Miller spent the ensuing years modernizing operations via Eclipse’s distribution management system and then turned attention to growth. In 1995 the company opened its first new branch in Anderson, SC. Then came eight more branch openings or acquisitions between 1998 and 2008, with revenues climbing in excess of $60 million.

 

Core Values - The Company defines its core values as honesty, integrity, caring, self-responsibility and being positive. These values came into focus around the time Eastern Cares was formed in 2002. That coincided with an epidemic of corporate sleaze in which business news was dominated by scandals associated with Enron, WorldCom and other perpetrators. “Corporate America wasn’t trusted anymore,” Miller said. “They all seemed to lose sight of the God-given values we grew up with, but which sometimes get lost in the business world.”

 

“Honesty is paramount,” he continued. “Sometimes it seems that in the supply business, if you’re honest, you’re an exception.” Miller clarified that statement to make sure everyone understands he’s not accusing competitors of cheating or illegal behavior, but of the little white lies that casually get told day after day in the business world – “I can get that by tomorrow … The check’s in the mail.” Eastern core values require associates to level with customers, vendors and one another about what can and cannot be achieved.

 

What began as a movement toward a pray-care-share lifestyle in the workplace has morphed into multiple understandings of what this phrase might mean. Whatever name you choose to call this revolutionary way of business, and whatever tradition, secular or spiritual, might inspire it, compassionate business practices begin within each individual’s core and spread throughout the company through their thoughts, actions, and words. When an organization recognizes the importance of humanizing the workplace and its leaders begin to implement compassionate practices, the climate and the culture of the organization is transformed

 

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There are times when a friend, family member, or sometimes even a stranger, presents a prayer need or concern that is shocking or dismaying in the moment.  It might revolve around a great injustice, a sudden terminal or difficult health diagnosis, traffic accident, loss of something or someone significant, or another matter altogether.

For many of us, the first thing we often pray is, "Lord, heal this person or fix this matter!"  Others pray, "Lord, be with this/that person."  It's not wrong to pray like this, but have you considered that there are times when God may desire you to pray a little differently than how you pray out of your natural mind or emotions?

Knee-jerk response prayers can emanate from our emotions responding to the shock, surprise, or feeling of being overwhelmed that can come from learning about a serious or life-changing experience or event. 

But one thing we can forget to pray is, "Lord, please help quiet my heart so that I can accurately hear from You."  Then after He does, ask, "How would You have me pray in this moment, for this person/people, or situation?"  It can make a significant difference in both how you pray, and how you see God answer your prayer(s)!

Knee-Jerk, Stop-Gap, Reactionary Prayers

Knee-jerk, or stop-gap reactionary prayers may serve to help us immediately offer something in the form of prayer while we're attempting to figure out what happened or is happening.  They're also sometimes offered as a quick prayer of comfort or encouragement for the person who's shared the shocking request or is personally requesting prayer.

Many Christians (including me) have offered such prayers, sometimes with an expectation that God will respond in one particular way or another, only to later be disappointed when the condition worsens, the person prayed for passes away, or God doesn't answer in the way we've specifically requested or hoped.  Sometimes the disappointment wounds the Christian's faith in God or makes them question if they can effectively pray again if faced with a similar situation.

The Emotion Factor

God has given all of us emotions.  Happiness, sadness, anger, amazement, wonder, awe, frustration, tiredness, and many more.  Emotions are a gift from God to enhance and embellish our lives.  Without them, our lives, our interactions with God and each other would be very flat, dull, and expressionless.  We can, and should, thank and praise God for giving us emotions- they're a gift He's given us out of His perfect wisdom, love, and affection!

What's Driving You?

While emotions enhance and embellish our interactions with God and each other, it's possible for emotions to become the driver of our responses, reactions, and even how we pray. 

For example, if the emotion of anger is allowed to become one's driver (no longer kept under personal control or more importantly, yielded completely under control of the Holy Spirit), rage and out-of-control behavior can likely result, bringing physical and/or emotional wounds to self or others around.  A person emotionally driven by anger won't likely pray, or if they do, their prayer will be anger-driven and likely judgmental and condemning toward whatever person or matter they're angry toward.  God sees, hears, and knows the anger-filled person's heart, and hears the person's prayer; but He'll answer that person and their prayer out of His divine wisdom (knowing all of the past, present, and future- all seen and known by Him in that moment).

Different emotions, if driving instead of embellishing us, can steer us to pray and behave differently, depending on the emotion.

Heart-Check

When we begin by asking God to help us pray beyond our emotions, we're not asking Him to cancel or negate our emotions as we pray.  What we're asking Him to do is help us balance the emotion(s) that's dominating or attempting to dominate us as we pray and seek God to intervene somewhere.  It's a request to help us see clearly; see the matter, circumstance, or person we're about to pray for through His eyes and understanding.  It's a spiritual and emotional heart check.  If we take time to allow God to align our hearts, minds, and emotions with His, we'll hear more clearly from Him about how He'd have us pray.  When we pray as He instructs (He instructs us in alignment with His Word and Spirit), we can be confident He'll answer our prayer(s) in the ways He's instructed us to pray.  It's also possible He may grow, strengthen, and deepen our faith in Him as a result!  That's a double-blessing (answered prayer and personal growth together)!

What if You're Prayerfully Stuck?

When faced with a shocking or stunning prayer request, and you can't seem to come up with words to pray, yield to the Holy Spirit to give you words or ideas/impressions about how He'd have you pray.  Although He personally intercedes for us, He will also give us His impressions as a way of guiding us how to pray and respond in the moment.  God invites our prayerful involvement in every moment of every day- and He'll help instruct us how to pray (especially when we feel inadequate or unable to pray- if we press into Him).

26 In the same way, the Spirit helps us in our weakness. We do not know what we ought to pray for, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us through wordless groans. 27 And he who searches our hearts knows the mind of the Spirit, because the Spirit intercedes for God’s people in accordance with the will of God.

28 And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose. 29 For those God foreknew he also predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son, that he might be the firstborn among many brothers and sisters. 30 And those he predestined, he also called; those he called, he also justified; those he justified, he also glorified. – Romans 8:26-30

Blog also found at:  http://www.prayonsite.org/blog/handling-significant-and-shocking-prayer-requests

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Decision Making: Faith or Sight?

Two specialist surgeons in my county accept my type of medical insurance. I used Dr. X on my first surgery and despite the fact that he was very highly rated and recommended by my physician assistant, I was not pleased. It was not just him, but his entire staff that made me uneasy with their attitude and comments. So, on surgery #2, I went with a prayed-up, faith-based decision rather than the prevailing logic, and chose the lesser rated, and not-recommended-by-my-physician-assistant, Dr. Y. On the day that I was awaiting surgery #2, I discovered that Dr. X had suspended his practice and all his patients were being referred to Dr. Y. Is there a lesson here? Absolutely! Sometimes the rightness of faith-based decisions are known before the fact; other times, after. But we have two choices when making decisions – we can walk by faith or by sight. In the case of surgery #2 I walked by faith and it turned out to be the right decision. Come to think of it, that’s biblical. “For we walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Cor. 5:7).

For more of Dr. Dan Crawford, go to www.discipleallnations.org/blog.

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