Friday 28 December 2012

PRAYER OF CONSECRATION FOR 2013



Our Father in Heaven, we once again come to Your  Throne through the powerful Name of Jesus, our Saviour. We thank You for the blessing of another year, but the reality is that we are sustained by You moment by moment. We don’t know what our future holds, but we know that You hold all things together and, being outside the boundaries of time, You know our future.

You have assured us in Your Word that Your Plans for us are good and You desire to prosper us and give us a good future. Help us to trust in You and not to be anxious; it is easier said than done most times.

Lord, we thank You for the many doors of opportunity You have already opened to Your children, and to those who are still seeking,  we know You have the perfect answer to their petitions.  Grant us the privilege and ability to be  channels of blessing to those around us. Give those who are seeking work a good employment, that they may not remain idle, for in idleness is greater temptation to sin.

Thank You for the blessing of Your continual Protection over us. May the wisdom of Your Word lead us like a lamp through the unknown challenges that await us this year.  Help us to remember that we will not be alone, for  You have promised to be with us always. Help us to keep close to You, that we may not be led astray by the many distractions of this world that clamour for our daily affections. Help us to set our hearts on You, the Root, the Branch, the reason for our very existence.

May Your Holy Spirit dwell within the hearts of all who profess Your Name this year. Make us more compassionate and less judgmental, more generous and less selfish, more like You. Consecrate us to Your service this year, and help us to truly be  ambassadors of Your Kingdom. Let this be our primary mission and may everything else pale in comparison.  Help us to discover the treasury of talents and gifts which You have bestowed upon every person, and help us to use them not for vainglory, but in Your service.  May Your Perfect Will unfold in every life this year, as we trust in Your unfailing Love. Your plans are always the best plans! In You, may  we experience Life, Liberty and Happiness.  Amen.


Saturday 15 December 2012

END OF THE YEAR OR END OF THE WORLD?



I have to laugh when I think that my last day at my current office, 21st December, has been hailed as the end of the world by some.

2012 has been a year of monumental change and transition. For many, it has been a year of anxiety as the Mayan long count calendar winds down. Will 21st December be just another day in the countdown to the end of another year, or will it mark the end of the world as we know it?

It is in times like these that we must turn to the Scriptures, the Living Word of God that never changes yet always remains relevant. The Bible is like a bulwark against the ravages of time and the uncertainty brought about by change. Like a star of gladness in a sea of uncertainty, it’s prophecies and history teach and instruct us in the ways and plans of God. Some are understandable, while others are shrouded in mystery. Like lanterns and torches in the hands of a lonely traveller, the Word of God lights the path-one step at a time-to the glorious Day.

What does the Bible say about the end of the world? In Matt 24, we find information about the signs leading up to the Coming of the Lord, which will mark the end of this present world. Many of these signs, we already see unfolding around us. Matt 24:36,42 contain the test of the faithful, making it clear that no one knows the exact time that Jesus will return so it is imperative that every Christian be in a state of perpetual readiness, awaiting the return of the King.

21st December will in all likelihood be just another day in the countdown to the end of just another year. The evening will mark the start of another Sabbath and we will close this Sabbath with the last church social of 2012, while the rest of the world finds itself all partied out, after the “end of the world” that never came…

I leave you with the words of Christ in Matt 28:20 -

“I AM with you always, even unto the end of the world…”
 This message was written on 15th December 2012.

Saturday 6 October 2012

Exodus-The Sign of the covenant



In Exodus 4:1-13, Moses debated with God over his suitability for the appointed task of leading Israel out of Egypt. Even after all the wonderful signs God gave him, Moses asked God to send someone else (v13).

The book of Exodus reveals the Lord as a compassionate God,  slow to anger and abundant in mercy, yet not to be taken advantage of  for He is also a consuming fire. The anger of  the Lord was kindled against Moses, yet God did not strike him dead. Instead He assigned Aaron, Moses’ brother to be a helper to him and a spokesman to the nation of Israel (v14-17).

From the time Moses was attracted to the burning bush, God spoke directly to him in a very personal way. It seems confusing then, that the very God who had so mightily commissioned him a little while before would seek to take his life as he made the arduous journey to  Egypt with his family (Ex 4:20-24).

Ex 4:25-26 reveals that it was Zipporah’s quick thinking in circumcising her son that saved  Moses, and appeased the Lord’s anger against him. Moses had been appointed to lead the nation of Israel out of Egypt. As a young boy born to Hebrew parents, he had no doubt been circumcised on the eighth day as was customary. However, being raised in the palace as Pharoah’s adopted son had caused him to be estranged to his own people and he had neglected to circumcise his own son.

Genesis 17:9-14 reveals the significance of the rite of circumcision. It was a sign of the everlasting covenant which God had made with Abraham. Verse 14 reveals that the uncircumcised man-child would be cut off  from his people for not carrying the sign of the covenant. God knew that  the nation of Israel would not accept a leader who would not circumcise his own son, so He made provision for Moses’ son to be circumcised. Moses would have no doubt in his mind regarding his place among the nation of Israel after the circumcision of his son. He no longer had a double identity; he could  no longer play “double-agent.” He  had a singular purpose to surrender to God’s Will and, by the power of  the Almighty, to lead the nation of Israel out of Egyptian slavery.

Circumcision was just the sign of the covenant, a means to an end and not the end in itself. It was an important sign to the nation of Israel, indicating their position as the people of God. It was not circumcision that made  them God’s people, but rather they were circumcised because God had chosen them for His very own. In the same way, God’s people  in this age must have their hearts “circumcised”, always  pliable to His commands. Although salvation is not obtained by obedience, but by acceptance of Christ’s atoning sacrifice, obedience to God’s commands reflects our love for the God who first loved us. Jesus said in John 14:15, “If you love me, keep my commandments.” Satan is against the people of God who keep God’s commandments and have the testimony of Jesus Christ.

Scripture refs: Ex 4:1-26, Rev 12:17, John 14:15, 1 John 5:1-3, James 2:17-26

Sunday 2 September 2012

Exodus-The Reluctant Leader


Exodus 2 ended with Moses  in exile in the Midianite desert. By his show of sympathy to his enslaved nation, he had traded his lofty place in the palace of Pharoah with  its attendant pomp and privileges to become a lowly shepherd in the deserts of Midian. He could have chosen to live a sheltered life of ease in the palace of Pharoah, but he chose instead to remain loyal to his people. God honoured Moses’ loyalty by choosing to use him as an important agent in His plan of deliverance for the embattled nation of Israel.

With his detailed knowledge of the harsh desert terrain, Moses would be the ideal candidate for God to use to lead His people out of the land of Egypt. God sought to attract his attention by appearing in a flame of fire in the midst of a bush. The bush burned, but was not consumed and Moses, with great curiosity, turned aside to examine it. (Ex 3:1-3)

The Lord conversed with Moses from the burning bush, ordering him to remove his shoes for he was standing on holy ground. It was God’s Presence that made the ground holy for only God has the ability to sanctify and make anything holy.  God introduced Himself as the “God of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob”, divulging to Moses His great plan of deliverance for the Israelites which He had aforetime shown in vision to Abraham in Gen 15. He then commanded Moses to go to Pharoah to speak on behalf of His beloved people.

Moses was a shepherd in the desert. He had no desire to be a leader. The responsibility seemed too great and he counted himself  unworthy to be chosen by God for such a task. Little did he realize that it was God, the omniscient and all-powerful One, who was choosing him and God does not make mistakes. God comforted Moses with a promise that both he and the people he would lead would know that he was sent by God once they were out of Egypt worshiping God on Mt Horeb. Moses was not content to believe, despite God disclosing to him the entire plan of deliverance, including its victorious culmination. “What will the people say?”, he asked God. “They will not believe me.” God demonstrated to Moses the signs that He would use to cause the Israelites to believe his words. At the Lord’s command, Moses threw down his rod and it became a serpent and when he picked it up, it became a rod again. At God ‘s command, Moses’  hand became white with leprosy and then whole again. Moses was still afraid.

He complained to God, citing his speech impediment as a problem which would render this a “mission impossible”. Little did he realize that he was talking with the Supreme Creator of the Universe, the one who knew him intimately before he had even been born. God knew Moses’ limitations and still called him into His service despite them. Is God calling you into His service today? Remember, he does not call the equipped but he always equips those He calls!

Scripture refs: Exodus 3:1-22, Exodus 4:1-13

Sunday 26 August 2012

Exodus-The Cry for Deliverance and the Ark of Salvation


Exodus 1 ended with the defiance of the two Hebrew midwives who refused to kill the Hebrew boys at birth. Pharoah, enraged by their defiance and the continuing strength of the Israelite nation despite his best efforts to subjugate them, ordered that all Hebrew boys should be cast into the Nile river.

During these troublous times, a young woman from the tribe of Levi gave birth to a son. Seeing that he was a handsome child, she hid him three months and when she could no longer hide him, she put him in an ark of bulrushes lined with pitch and left him in the bulrushes along the river. The young boy’s older sister watched protectively over him from afar off to see what would become of her beloved brother. (Ex 2:1-4)

It wasn’t long before Pharoah’s daughter came to bathe along the river Nile and on finding the young child, she had compassion on him. His sister seized the opportunity to ask if she see should find him a nurse and his mother was brought to him. Not knowing that the “nurse” was his own mother, Pharoah’s daughter offered her wages to care for him and he was adopted into the palace as her own son. She called him Moses, which means “to draw out.” (Ex 2:5-10)

During the time of great tribulation among the Israelites, God was working His Plan of deliverance. Just as He did with Noah, He used an “ark” in his plan. It is not coincidental that the little ark was dabbed with pitch, which in the Hebrew language means “atonement.”  You will remember that the Ark in the Genesis flood account was also dabbed with pitch! (Gen 6:14)

God made provision for Moses to be raised in the palace of Pharoah, in the very house of the man who sought to destroy Israel. He received the best international education of the times, as Egypt was the greatest superpower of the time. This education would stand him in good stead when he would be chosen by God to lead Israel out of Egypt.

However, it was not long before Moses was expelled from the palace after showing sympathy to the Israelite nation by killing an Egyptian who strove with an Israelite. He sought refuge by fleeing to the desert of Midian where he settled, marrying a priest’s daughter who gave birth to his first son. (Ex 2:11-22)

Moses did not know it, but God’s Plan was slowly coming to pass. Moses was an educated, intelligent man. Now God sought to teach this future leader humility by making him a shepherd in the desert. God first entrusted him to the keeping of his father-in-law’s flocks before He would entrust to him the keeping of His people, Israel. (Ex 2:23-Ex 3:1)

God heard the cry of the Israelites and raised up a deliverer to lead them out of slavery in Egypt. In like manner, He gave us Jesus Christ to lead us out of the slave-house of sin. The Ark of our salvation is  sealed not with pitch, but with the blood of Christ Himself. Our salvation is sure!

Sunday 5 August 2012

In God's Country


Looking through the window of a plane one day,
I dreamed of a country far, far away
Where there’s no more sorrow and pain…

In God’s Country, beyond the bright blue
In the third Heaven
Where I’ll be going soon…

In God’s Country, where His children will abide
The streets are paved with gold that no one desires!
A rainbow encircles the throne of the Most High
In God’s Country, where there’s no more crying…

In God’s Country, where His children will abide
They will picnic with Jesus under the Tree of Life;
There are mansions fair, glorious and bright
In God’s Country, where there’s no more night!

No more sea of separation, or lonely isles;
No more silent tears or wistful goodbyes;
No more death and dying, sickness or pain
All because of Jesus, the Lamb that was slain!

The beauty of God’s Country is its Saviour  and King
Who died to ensure that His children get in;
We will see His hands, the scars  will testify
Of a love that never, ever will die!

Until that time I arrive at that place,
The blessed city with it’s pearly gates
A piece of it remains within my heart;
A hope that won’t die until I see it at last!

In God ‘s country far, far away
For a thousand years, the redeemed will remain!
And then God’s Country will come down to earth
Like a bride adorned, there will be joy and mirth…

In God’s Country, where His children abide
Blessed Sabbaths together, songs at eventide;
The lion and lamb, they will lie down in peace
In God’s Country, where my home will be…

I can see it afar, but I’m not there yet!
Over the horizon’s line, is the Promised Land
My faith can taste the goodness of the Land afar
That flows with milk and honey, it’s golden doors ajar
God’s Country is mine, for I am His
It’s His Promise to me, it’s my heritage!

Scripture refs: Rev 21, 22

Thursday 12 July 2012

Exodus: The Beginnings of a Nation


The book of Genesis closes with the  record of Joseph and his family in Egypt due to the famine in Canaan (Ex 1:5). The book of  Exodus opens, not with a family but a nation. God  had already fulfilled the first part of His Promise to Abraham.   God promised Abraham that He would make him a great nation and make his name exceedingly great (Gen 12:2). When faced with doubt and despair concerning who would be his heir, Abraham was commanded by God to look at the stars and try to number them. “So shall your seed be”, God promised (Gen 15:5). Ex 1:7 records the extent of their greatness. The family of 70 had grown into a nation numbering millions because God fulfilled His Promise to Abraham.

However, trouble was on the horizon. Joseph, his father and brothers and all that generation passed away and there came a time when a new king rose to power in Egypt, one who had no remembrance of Joseph. The Bible does not record the length of time that passed before this new Pharoah came to power or the reasons surrounding the Egyptian royal dynasty’s forgetfulness of Joseph’s benevolent rule.  Perhaps, it was because the nation of Israel at its zenith had themselves forgotten how they came to be in Egypt. Maybe they got too comfortable in Egypt, forgetting that their inheritance was not to be in that land, but rather in Canaan. They were a powerful, blessed and great nation but God’s entire Promise was not yet fulfilled. God desired that they should have their own land and that He would be their King, not a Pharoah. Sometimes, God’s Plan for us is different from our own. He  has a better plan and will intervene in mysterious ways to accomplish His Will. Joseph understood that the destiny of his people was not to be in Egypt, favourable though the conditions may have been. In a prophetic utterance before his death, he asked that his bones be carried to Canaan when God visited His people to fulfil the next portion of His Promise to Abraham i.e. their own land! (Gen 50:25-26).

The new Pharoah sought to subjugate the nation of Israel. He saw them not as a great ally, but a potential enemy. He made them slaves in Egypt, building the store cities of Raamses and Pithom. It was Joseph who through God’s wisdom had invented store cities! Pharoah also requested the Israelite midwives, Shiphrah and Puah, to kill all infant Hebrew boys and only let the girls live. He sought to weaken Israel, hoping all the older men would die under the harsh conditions of slavery and they would be a nation of women! The midwives however, chose to obey God instead of Pharoah and God honoured them by rewarding them with families and households of their own. Pharoah was on a collision course with God’s Promise and God’s Will for His people and he was fighting a losing battle. Despite the affliction of slavery and the command to kill the infant sons of Israel, Israel blossomed and multiplied under the hand of a gracious God. How ironical that the Bible makes mention of the lowly, God-fearing Hebrew midwives by name but fails to mention the reigning monarch by his name! The lowliest of God’s servants are honoured by Him more than kings (Ex 1:8, 15-21)

Scripture refs: Exodus 1

Sunday 24 June 2012

Where is that Church today?


Last week, I went to the residential children’s home to visit the nine year old child I am mentoring. I was shocked to discover that she is unable to read. She tries to mask her illiteracy with her eloquent speech, but it is obvious that the child cannot read!

Ephesians 6 starts off with instruction to various groups of people. Children are instructed to obey their parents in the Lord. Parents are encouraged to teach their children godly discipline without provoking them to anger. Slaves are instructed to obey their masters , and masters to treat their slaves with dignity for all are servants of Christ the Judge.

Ephesians 6:12 then states: “For we do not wrestle against flesh and blood , but against the rulers, against the authorities, against the cosmic powers over this present darkness, against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places.” The Bible makes it very clear that we are not to squabble amongst ourselves. Our enemy is not the people around us, Christian or not. The prince of darkness and his host are our enemy.  We do nothing but weaken our resolve when we fight among ourselves. When we let disharmony and discord infiltrate our ranks, the enemy rejoices. (1 Pet 5:8)

As much as the battle is a spiritual one, it also affects the physical realm in which we find our current existence. The enemy has thrown poverty against us. He afflicts the minds of our youth with boredom, violence and the scourge of illiteracy. It is our duty to extend compassion to those who find themselves his captives. Christ’s mission did not keep Him in the synagogue. His mission extended to all the world. He mingled among the people as one who desired their highest good, extending to them the right arm of fellowship and compassion. His ministry was a practical one.  The Bible tells us that He went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed of the devil for God was with Him.  (Acts 10:38)

Christ has given us the same mission. What have we done with His command to go into all the world? We are living in the time of the end. We say it over and over, yet our actions and the way we live does not reflect this reality. Time is of the essence, yet we find ourselves unable to re-group and strategise an effective onslaught against the enemy. We are like King David who, in the time when kings were meant to go to war, was sitting in his palace daydreaming, thus giving the enemy the foothold in his life (2 Sam 11:1-4). Outreach is not about singing beautiful songs about Christ to people ravaged by poverty, alcohol and abuse. A song does nothing for them except perplex them more. Where is the God who supposedly loves them when they suffer day and night? How can you show them His love?

While Satan is on a rampage because his time is running out, while he threatens to destroy our children and families, the Church slumbers on and has potluck. Spiritual warfare is about the Church reclaiming territory. This is the Church of whom Christ spoke when He said that the gates of hell would not prevail against it. Where is that Church today? 

Main Scripture refs:  Eph 6:1-12, Matt 16:18-19, Rev 12:12