Month: February 2013
Where Are You In The Process?
I have been asking God to give me a glimpse of where I am and where He is taking me, and yesterday He showed me something amazing. It may not be just for me so I wanted to share it. I pray it will be helpful to you.
In Ezekial 36 from verse 16 to 20 we hear about the nation of Israel acting badly. I don’t want to draw any conclusions as they apply to me or to us. I merely want to make the observation that Israel was not repenting or crying out to God. They were behaving badly.
God says in verse 22 when people see you they know you are my people and because I have concern for my holy name I will do this:
- I will take you from the nations and bring you into your own land.
- I will sprinkle you with clean water and cleanse you from your filthiness.
- I will give you a new heart and a new spirit.
- I will cause you to walk in My statutes and keep my judgments.
Then:
- You will dwell in the land you will be my people and I will be your God
- I will deliver you from all your uncleanness
- I will call for the grain and multiply it and bring no famine on you.
- I will multiply the fruit of your trees and the increase of your fields, so that you need never again bear the reproach of famine among the nations.
There are several observations and applications I could make but I just want to make four:
- The nation of Israel was not being good, spiritual, repentant, or anything else worthy of God’s favor. He did it merely because they were His people and He wanted the nations all around them to know “that I, the Lord, have rebuilt the ruined places and planted what was desolate” vs 36
- Everything happened because God did it. Israel did nothing. (don’t take this too far)
- When you read; commandment, covenant, statutes, judgments etc. insert faith. We are under the new covenant. (again, don’t take this too far. keep it simple)
- Once He has done these things and caused us to live by faith. Then we will inherit the land and be blessed.
In order for this to be a theological piece it would have taken many more words than this and I’ve already abused the boundaries of a blog post. So please take some time to read Ezekial 36 and consider where you are in the process and thank God for the coming multiplication of grain and fruit. Then thank Him for His mercy, His long-suffering, His loving-kindness, and His grace. Submit to the process, He is good.
Selah.
Raising Up The Next Generation?
I believe this statement comes from a completely sincere heart and is completely wrong.
We most definitely have the responsibility to pass our faith and our heritage onto the next generation but nowhere, that I can find, in Scripture are we exhorted to “raise up” the next generation.
What Scripture does exhort us to do is raise up those entrusted to us regardless the generation. Certainly if an 18-year-old is called, gifted, and faithful they should be promoted but not just because they are 18. The same is true for a 48-year-old.
When we focus on one specific demographic whatever it may be we by definition create other very big problems. This is part of the problem of blended worship, or a multigenerational focus. These approaches create a market based, consumer driven culture and that’s definitely not what we want.
If we will cultivate a culture of change while equipping and empowering Gods people to do what God has called and created them to do many of the problems we’re trying to fix by being “blended” or “multigenerational” will fix themselves.
I’m not naive and I’m not trying to be overly simplistic just hear my foundational premise.
The bottom line:
God has called leaders to first be equippers. Leaders are those who can recognize, call out, equip, and release gifting back into the body. Being a high-capacity doer of anything does not alone qualify a leader, and the reality is high-capacity doers are seldom the best leaders.
If we will focus our ministry on equipping the saints, as defined above, and promote calling and faithfulness over gifting and drive. We will have a very vibrant, change oriented, and multigenerational ministry by default. Because those entrusted to us are the culture and when we empower them they will represent and reflect that culture.
What are your thoughts?
A Question
It’s been a little over a week since my last post.
Posting weekly is the goal and would love to have something new at least twice a week. There are several ideas rattling around in my head but all of them take time to research and I’ve had precious little time for that this week. So in lieu of a post I’m asking a question.
Essentially I’m asking you to help, (how lazy is that?)
Here’s the question, which is really more of a challenge.
Can you make a scriptural case for
“Raising up the next generation”?
Not commentary, though your certainly welcome to comment on your facts. I want scriptural stories, scriptural principles, or out-and-out commands from God. I won’t let the cat out of the bag on my thoughts just yet. That will come next week.
I look forward to your thoughts.
And thanks for the help.