Monday 30 April 2018

Leaping barriers to listening prayer

Barriers often pop up when we try to listen to God.

Rusty Rustenbach, author of A Guide for Listening and Inner Healing Prayer, says he takes a number of steps to prepare for hearing what God wants to tell him.

One is to "exercise the authority of Christ over all the other voices that seek to speak to you".

Satan is active in trying to distract us.  But the apostle James tells us in James 4:7 that we are to submit ourselves to God and "resist the devil and he will flee from you".

Rustenbach prays out loud: "In the name of Jesus Christ, I command any voice other than God from speaking or interfering with this time."  This speaks to Satan because, unlike God, he cannot read our minds.

Another step is to "ask Jesus to come in a very special way and manifest his presence".

As Rustenbach says, the Bible is filled with requests to God to make his presence known.  God is ready to manifest his presence in special ways when we ask.

Rustenbach prays: "Come, Lord Jesus, come. Come Father God, come.  Come, Holy Spirit, come. Transform me into your likeness."

A further step is to "ask Jesus to search your heart and bring up anything that needs his healing touch".

Rustenbach prays along these lines: "Father God . . . would you search below the surface of my life to bring up any hurtful way that might be hidden there?  Would you also take me to the root of things?  Only bring up what would be beneficial for my healing and appropriate for this time."

Then, says Rustenbach, ask Jesus to communicate with you.

He suggests words like this: "Jesus would you be pleased to communicate with me during this time? I am listening to you and you alone."

Finally, listen and write down the thoughts that God gives you.

"After you have prayed through the preceding steps, the thoughts that come to you are usually God's communication to you," writes Rustenbach.

This approach seems to me like cleaning out a clogged drain that is blocking the flow of water - or, in this case, the words of God.

It makes sense to me.

Monday 23 April 2018

Expectancy

Susie Larson says "we set ourselves up for disappointment" if we pray to God expecting him to respond exactly as we plan.

"This puts undue pressure on the relationship in a way that's unfair and unsustainable," she writes in her book Your Powerful Prayers: Reaching the Heart of God with a Bold and Humble Faith.

Instead, we should pray with "expectancy" - something quite different from demanding that God meet our expectations precisely as we wish.

"When we dictate to God and then we're surprised when he doesn't jump through our hoops, we eventually lose heart," Larson says.

 But, if we pray with "expectancy that something divine just might happen", we may well see God surpass our expectations.

"To live with expectancy is to live with an ear bent toward heaven.  It's to repeatedly look above our circumstances, knowing that God is involved in our everyday lives."

She adds: "The expectant heart passionately believes that any day now, God just might break through."

As we pray, we should "give God time and space to work out his plans for us with the understanding that there's always a mystery to following God".

"He's a miracle-working God," she says, "and he often breaks through in ways that we couldn't have imagined and at a time we least expect him to."

It's not that we expect too much from God - in fact, we often expect too little.  "Our idea of what breakthrough looks like frequently falls short of what God has in mind for us."

"His breakthroughs always bear fruit, always bless others (not just us) and always accomplish his purposes on earth."

To pray expectantly, she says we must believe that God is at work on earth; that he keeps his promises; that he's the same yesterday, today and forever; that he's not a respecter of people, but of faith; that he draws near to those who are humble and worship him; that nothing is too difficult for him; and that it's impossible for him to fail us.

In my mind, the prophet Daniel is a man who prayed expectantly. 

As a Jewish captive in the Babylonian court, he was selected for execution with other Babylonian wise men for being unable to figure out the nightmare dreamed by the Babylonian king.  He took the problem to God who let him know what the dream was about and he and the other wise men were saved.

This was one of a string of amazing answers to prayer that Daniel received from God in his lifetime.  He trusted God to answer his questions without trying impose his own wishes.  He expected to receive an answer and God responded.

I like that thought - pray expectantly!

Monday 16 April 2018

The value of journaling

One way to hear God is to ask him questions and write out what you believe he is telling you in your mind.

Mark Virkler, co-author with his wife Patti of 4 Keys to Hearing God's Voice, says it has profoundly changed his prayer time and his life.

He acknowledges that there are risks involved.  You can allow wishful thinking to intrude.  Or, you can attribute to God things that are clearly wrong according to the Bible.

Virkler is careful to check what he believes he hears from God with other mature Christians and the Bible.  This is especially important where major life decisions are involved.

I have been following the Virklers' approach for almost a decade.  For me, it has been a great help.

Mark Virkler says that years ago he was inspired by reading Habakkuk 2:1-3 to try this form of journaling.

Habakkuk says: "I will keep watch to see what (he) God will speak to me, and how I may reply when I am reproved."  Then God tells him to record the vision he receives and "inscribe it on tablets" so that others may read it.

Out of this, Virkler developed this method:

  • Stillness: Quiet yourself so you can hear God's voice;
  • Vision: Look for vision as you pray;
  • Spontaneity: Recognize God's thoughts that light upon your mind; and
  • Journaling: Write down the flow of thoughts and pictures that light upon your mind.
When Virkler refers to "vision", he means keeping your eyes on Jesus to see what he is telling you.

"Focusing the eyes of our hearts upon God causes us to become inwardly still, raises our level of faith and expectancy, and makes us fully open to receive from God."

Virkler says that "these elements have transformed my devotional life".  He adds: "Now I find that I can enjoy dialoguing with God by the hour and leave fully charged with his life and love."

Listening to God in this way has highlighted some of his weaknesses as well as the Lord's love for him.  Virkler says God pointed out to him that he was obsessed with rules and a legalistic approach and urged him to adopt a life of mercy and love towards others.

As for me, it has helped me to look at others the way God sees them rather than through my own petty feelings.  Sometimes that means God gently reproving me.

A benefit for everyone is to realize how forgiving and loving and encouraging God is.


Tuesday 10 April 2018

Joy in the darkness

Habakkuk, a prophet of God, found joy in the midst of darkness.

His prayer encounter with God tells me something about hope in troubled times.

His story in the Old Testament book of Habakkuk is mostly filled with gloom.

The book is only three chapters long and most of it is about God's coming judgement on his people Israel.  But the book concludes with a song of hope.

The book opens with Habakkuk's complaint to God about the lawlessness of the society he is living in.  He accuses the Lord of not listening to his cries for help and justice.

I find this refreshing.  The prophet is human and he expresses his human anxieties and frustrations.  As praying people, we are to be authentic, too.  God knows how we feel.

God's answer shocks Habakkuk.  The Lord tells the prophet that he is raising up the Babylonians to punish the wayward Israelites.  They will invade and conquer and destroy.

Habakkuk protests - but carefully.  He recognizes that God cannot stand wickedness - "your eyes are too pure to contemplate evil".

But,  he adds: "Why are you silent while the wicked swallow up those more righteous than themselves?"

Is Babylon going to be allowed to destroy nations without mercy?

There are times when we, too, question why unjust people are permitted to exploit others - especially, if they are exploiting us.  We can't understand why we are suffering while bad people thrive.

Then, the Lord replies with a powerful message.

In effect, God says the unjust will not get away with murder.  In time, they will face their comeuppance.  They will be judged.

Far more important, "the earth will be filled with the knowledge of the glory of the Lord as the waters cover the sea".

God is telling Habakkuk - and me - that whatever troubles we are going through, a time is coming when God's glory will flood the world around us.  All things will become new.

The prophet responds with a song that I love:

"Though the fig tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vines, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the pen and no cattle in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God my Saviour.  The Sovereign Lord is my strength; he makes my feet like the feet of a deer, he enables me to tread on the heights."

Habakkuk's words suggest that he is looking beyond the horrors of the day to what God has in store for all people who believe in him. 

Above all, he trusts in - and loves - his great God.  God will carry him through the coming trials.

As Christians, our hope is in God who loves us and cares for us and who will celebrate when we join him in heaven some day.

Monday 2 April 2018

A bigger vision

Followers of Christ need a bigger vision of what church is all about, says Dutch Sheets.

Sheets, author of Authority in Prayer: Praying with Power and Purpose, says the Bible views the church as more than a collection of individuals, caring for each other.

He declares that the church has been given authority to spread God's kingdom throughout the world and in every aspect of life.  And prayer is a key instrument in achieving this goal.

Most believers recall Jesus' words in Matthew 28: 18-20: "I have been given all authority in heaven and on earth.  Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.  Teach these new disciples to obey all the commands I have given you."

But most of us - myself included - have put this "Great Commission" on the back burner.  Mentally, we have turned this over to a few gifted evangelists or missionaries.

Instead, we have focused on ourselves, trying to build strong communities of local believers.  That is indeed a vital part of being the church.  However, that is only one aspect of what God wants.

Sheets says that in the original Greek of the New Testament, the word "ekklesia" which has been translated "church" is an "assembly of people set apart to govern the affairs of a state or nation - in essence a parliament or congress".

"When Jesus said he would build his church, he was without question speaking of a body of people that would legislate spiritually for him, extending his kingdom government (rule) over the earth," writes Sheets.

As prayer warriors, followers of Christ work with God to extend the kingdom in all areas of life.

Sheets tells of a World Vision development project near Addis Ababa, Ethiopia in 1989 where they noticed the villagers worshiped a huge tree which they believed housed demon spirits.  The World Vision team recognized this stood in the way of the love of God bringing local people into his kingdom.

They recalled Jesus' comment in the Luke 17:6 that if his disciples had faith as small as a mustard seed, they could tell a nearby tree to be uprooted and thrown into the sea.  So, they prayed along those lines as the villagers watched in the coming weeks.

Six months later, the tree's leaves dried up and finally it collapsed into the river.  The villagers were astonished, declaring that the team's God did it and 100 villagers became believers.

Sheets mentions other striking stories to support his contention.

He says Christians are not to force their faith on others.  But they can pray and be open to sharing their faith.

"We are not merely human," writes Sheets.  "We are supernatural sons and daughters of the Most High God, filled with his Spirit and anointed to rule."

He states emphatically: "If a society or culture remains the same after Christ's church shows up, then the church is not being the church."

That is quite a challenge to us as followers of Jesus.