Browsing articles from "February, 2011"

Music From Last Week | 2.23.11

Feb 26, 2011   //   by admin   //   Blog, Music from Last Week  //  No Comments

 

 

Your Love Never Fails | Jesus Culture

Album: “Your Love Never Fails”

 

 

Beautiful Exchange | Hillsong Live

Album: “A Beautiful Exchange”

 

 

Revelation Song | Gateway Worship

Album: “Living For You”

 

 

Music From Last Week | 2.16.11

Feb 21, 2011   //   by admin   //   Blog, Music from Last Week  //  No Comments

 

 

Come and Let Your Presence | Merchant Band

Album: “The World Can Wait”

 

 

Revelation Song | Gateway Worship

Album: “Living For You”

 

 

Fire Burns (Arise) | Jon Owens

Album: “ARIZE LIVE”

 

Laying on of Hands

Feb 15, 2011   //   by admin   //   Blog, Thoughts from Wednesday Night  //  No Comments

Last week Pastor Taylor from King’s Park International Church spoke on the Laying on of Hands. This is the fourth of the six foundation doctrines of the Christian faith listed in Hebrews chapter 6. At first glance the ”laying on of hands” struck me as unusual because, while I’d heard a lot about the first three foundation doctrines (repentance, faith and baptisms), I had heard very little about this one. If you were unfamiliar like I was about the laying on of hands I hope last Wednesday changed that.

To briefly recap, the laying on of hands is used throughout the scripture to: transmit blessings or spiritual gifts, release healing, commission, fill with the Holy Spirit, set people in leadership and to send people out.

We see it in Genesis 48:13-22 when Jacob blesses Joseph’s sons by placing his hands on their heads and in the ministry of Jesus when he blessed the little children (Luke.10:13-16) and gave sight to the blind (Matt. 20:29-34). With a little bit of searching it’s clear to see that this practice is found throughout the scripture. However, along with the clear Biblical precedent, another reason why I believe the laying on of hands is important is simply because we are human.

As humans physical touch is one of the ways we communicate. With our hands we not only greet one another but also comfort, congratulate and encourage each other. Our hands play an important role in relationships of all sorts and it seems very natural that the One who created us would also have a purpose for them as well. He does!

This is God’s encouragement to us through the Apostle Paul:

“Do not offer the parts of your body to sin, as instruments of wickedness, but rather offer yourselves to God, as those who have been brought from death to life; and offer the parts of your body to him as instruments of righteousness.”  Romans 6:13

“I want men everywhere to lift up holy hands in prayer, without anger or disputing.” 1 Timothy 2:8

With this in mind let us commit our hands daily to the LORD as His holy instruments of righteousness. Let us exercise wisdom as we use our hands not only to comfort, congratulate and encourage but also to bless one another for God’s glory and trust that He will breathe His supernatural life and power into them.

- Felix

Music From Last Week | 2.9.11

Feb 10, 2011   //   by admin   //   Blog, Music from Last Week  //  1 Comment

 

 

Emmanuel | Jon Owens

Album: “ARIZE LIVE”

 

 

Isaiah 6 | Jon Owens

Album: “ARIZE LIVE”

 

 

Fire Fall Down | Hillsong United

Album: “United We Stand”

 

 

The Law of Faith

Feb 5, 2011   //   by admin   //   Blog, Thoughts from Wednesday Night  //  No Comments

Last week I spoke at ENCM on “The Law of Faith,” and I wanted to clarify two of the central themes of what we were studying.

We started our journey in Romans 1 and explored alternatives to living by faith in God, namely living by instinct and common sense.  From there we briefly reasoned that people must also not attempt to be righteous by keeping all the “laws” of our religion. Law can only prick the conscience, bring awareness of wrong doing, but it can never liberate you. On the contrary, it actually condemns you for being a law-breaker.

Consequently, God established a new kind of righteousness, apart from the law, to which the Law testifies.

God sent Jesus to live a righteous life, then die as a substitution for us, an atoning sacrifice. He took the written code that was against us and nailed it to the cross. By trusting in Jesus’ sacrifice, we can believe that God’s anger and judgement have been satisfied and God will wipe our old sins away as we come under Christ’s salvation and leadership.

Two clarifying points:

1. Paul says in Romans 3 that “there is no difference” between Jews and Gentiles.  ”Everyone has sinned and falls short of God’s glory”. So he poses the question, “Where then is boasting?”  Who can brag about their spiritual maturity or “knowledge”? No one.  Boasting is excluded, Paul says, based on “the law of faith.” (Romans 3:27)

The New International Version translators do not include the words “law of faith” in verse 27 for some reason, but the original Greek text clearly uses the word “nomos” and should read “the law of faith.”

You see, the law of faith existed before the Law of Moses. People have always had to trust in God. Abraham was righteous because he believed. Noah was righteous because he believed. Even Abel, who was slaughtered by his brother, was righteous because he trusted God. Abel’s parents used fig leaves to cover themselves, but God said it wasn’t good enough. God killed an animal and used the skin to cover them. Later, Abel would come to God with the kind of blood sacrifice God wanted, even though no human had ever done that before. Years later, Noah would also offer animal sacrifices, though he was “a man of the soil”. (Genesis 8:20, 9:20).

When people leave their natural/cultural tendencies, and come to God through the way he has prescribed through faith, he counts us as righteous.

2. As we truly believe, we also correspondingly repent (turn from things we know are wrong). There is no believing without repenting. If you are not willing to change, you don’t really understand the message.

 

I hope you are encouraged and growing strong in your faith.  There is no other way to live, for “the righteous will live by faith.”

- Charles Kiefer

Music From Last Week | 2.2.11

Feb 3, 2011   //   by admin   //   Blog, Music from Last Week  //  No Comments

 

 

Emmanuel | Jon Owens

Album: “ARIZE LIVE”

 

 

My Soul Longs for You | Misty Edwards

Album: “Relentless”

 

 

Love Came Down | Brian Johnson

Album: “Love Came Down – Live Acoustic Worship In the Studio”

 

 

Repentance is a Good Gift

Feb 1, 2011   //   by admin   //   Blog, Thoughts from Wednesday Night  //  No Comments

Two weeks ago Jason spoke out of Hebrews 6 on the foundation stone of repentance from dead works. Repentance is a changed way of thinking leading to changed actions.  Towards the end he shared a thought that stuck with me: repentance is a good gift that originates from God.

“Opponents must be gently instructed, in the hope that God will grant them repentance leading them to a knowledge of the truth.”  -2 Timothy 2:25

“Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of the heavenly lights, who does not change like shifting shadows.”  -James 1:17

Most of my Christian experience I have seen repentance not as a gift given by God, but as a battle to try as hard as possible to make myself stop doing things the bible told me I shouldn’t, but that I still secretly liked on the inside. At the end of challenging messages, repentance from sin is a dreaded but necessary moment; God wanting me to stop doing things I like in order to start doing things I don’t like (so I thought). Deep down I often believe God to be unpleasant, hard, and scary.  I realized that before I could have faith in a good, pleasing, and perfect God (Romans 12:2) I need Him to grant me freedom from lies I believe (see 2 Timothy 2:26).  My first need is not more faith but true repentance. Repentance leads to freedom. I had never been so excited to ask God for repentance. The next morning I wrote the following prayer:

 

“Father, grant me repentance leading to the knowledge of the truth.  Truth sets free (John 8:31).  …Thank you for granting me a renewal of mind leading to freedom.”

Later that day, I had a conversation with Jason in which he challenged me to rethink a situation Grace (my girl friend) and I were facing. She later told me that my new approach to that situation was an answer to her prayers. God granted me repentance (through Jason’s counsel) that led to greater freedom in our relationship.

 

Repentance is a good gift! I ask for it daily now as part of building a strong foundation in the Lord.

– Michael