God’s Recruitment Strategy for Leaders
TGIF Today God Is First Volume 1 by Os Hillman
Wednesday, August 24 2011
“Saul got up from the ground, but when he opened his eyes he could see nothing.” Acts 9:8a
When God calls one of His servants into service, there is often much travail. There are many examples where God makes His presence known through circumstances that tax the individual to his very soul.
Consider Paul, who was stricken blind on the Damascus road.
Consider Peter; when he denied Jesus after the crucifixion, he was in total despair.
Consider Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego, who were thrown into the fiery furnace.
Consider Daniel, who was thrown into the lions’ den.
Consider David, who was forced to flee his former employer for many years and lived as a fugitive.
It may seem strange to us that God uses such incredible adversity to prepare His servants for greater service, but this is God’s way. God knows that the human heart is incapable of voluntarily stepping into situations that take us beyond our comfort zone. He intentionally brings us into hard places to prove us and to drive us deeper into the soil of His grace.
In arid regions of the world, trees cannot survive unless their roots grow deeper to where the water table can be found. Once they reach the water, these trees become stronger than any tree that can be found in tropical climates. Their root systems ensure that they can withstand any storm. In the same way, God brings us into extremely difficult situations in order to prove His power and drive our spiritual roots deeper.
Friend, God may take you through times when you will question His love for you. In such times, you must cling to His coattail so that you see His purposes in it. Do not throw away your confidence; it will be richly rewarded.
“You need to persevere so that when you have done the will of God, you will receive what He has promised. For in just a very little while, ‘He who is coming will come and will not delay. But My righteous one will live by faith. And if he shrinks back, I will not be pleased with him’” (Hebrews 10:36-38).
Wednesday, August 24, 2011
Friday, August 12, 2011
Crucify Yourself or Crucify Your Relationships
How can we be led by the truth and not our feelings?
The first is that,one way or the other, we will have to be broken. We will either be broken by a lie or by the truth. Jesus could have walked away from his sacrifice, but in doing so He would have actually ended up being alienated from His Father's will and heart. He had a choice - to resist the cross and leave the world a broken place, or else to be broken Himself so that the world might be drawn near and live.
The second is to unwittingly affirm the underlying message of the cross that even in the most evil expressions of life, God must be somewhere within reach. As we look around at the feeling-less atrocities we wonder, Where is God? And the answer comes: He is right in the middle -at the receiving end of our atrocities. When we come face to face with the cross, we have to make a choice: We either recognize the implications and bring ourselves, our passions and all that we are, to be crucified with Christ so that we might live within the sound of His voice and feel of His heart, or we walk away from the cross feeling alienated from God and others. We hear so much about coming to Christ but not enough about being crucified with him.
Something has to die, either the lie to which the feelings are subject, the truth to which those feelings must conform. Do we trust God and His truths, or do we trust our feelings and this worlds promises for the moment. Where do you go? The apostle Paul made a very simple statement to Timothy: "I know whom I have believed, and am convinced that he is able to guard what I have entrusted to him for that day." 2 Tim 1:12
The first is that,one way or the other, we will have to be broken. We will either be broken by a lie or by the truth. Jesus could have walked away from his sacrifice, but in doing so He would have actually ended up being alienated from His Father's will and heart. He had a choice - to resist the cross and leave the world a broken place, or else to be broken Himself so that the world might be drawn near and live.
The second is to unwittingly affirm the underlying message of the cross that even in the most evil expressions of life, God must be somewhere within reach. As we look around at the feeling-less atrocities we wonder, Where is God? And the answer comes: He is right in the middle -at the receiving end of our atrocities. When we come face to face with the cross, we have to make a choice: We either recognize the implications and bring ourselves, our passions and all that we are, to be crucified with Christ so that we might live within the sound of His voice and feel of His heart, or we walk away from the cross feeling alienated from God and others. We hear so much about coming to Christ but not enough about being crucified with him.
Something has to die, either the lie to which the feelings are subject, the truth to which those feelings must conform. Do we trust God and His truths, or do we trust our feelings and this worlds promises for the moment. Where do you go? The apostle Paul made a very simple statement to Timothy: "I know whom I have believed, and am convinced that he is able to guard what I have entrusted to him for that day." 2 Tim 1:12
Tuesday, August 9, 2011
Language of Obedience
Obedience builds and strengthens faith. We see this several times in the Scriptures. Moses,Ezekiel, Hosea and Jonah did not fell like doing what God had asked them to do. In fact, every heartbeat within them was impelling them do do otherwise. Yet God said they were to obey. The remedy was not to do God's will becuase they felt like doing it, but just to do it and their faith would be strengthened.
When Moses demanded proof that God has indeed called him, God said, "I will be with you. And this will be the sign to you that it is I who have sent you: When you have brought the people out of Egypt, you will worship God on this mountain" (Ex 3:12) The proof of God's call was after the obedience, not before.
This language of Obedience may be the most difficult of all the languages we speak, one that rises above our feelings but utters volumes of faith. There are times when a difference arises between my wife and me. I have watched her stand tall at those times, and I have seen triumph of her love vanquish any dark and petty inclination. She is never afraid to reach out and resist the ugly trap of stubbornness.We do, we obey, we yield, we submit to God, even when our natural inclination wants to drag us in the opposite direction.
Under the threat of death Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego stood their ground and were sure God would deliver them. "But even if he does not," they said "we want you to know, O king, that we will not serve your gods and worship the image of gold you have set up" (Dan 3:18) I suggest that our secular society has lost its ability to feel God because it has lost its ability to obey Him.
Psalm 119:33-34
33 Teach me, LORD, the way of your decrees,
that I may follow it to the end.[a]
34 Give me understanding, so that I may keep your law
and obey it with all my heart.
From "Masterwork" week of July 24th, Cries of the Heart
When Moses demanded proof that God has indeed called him, God said, "I will be with you. And this will be the sign to you that it is I who have sent you: When you have brought the people out of Egypt, you will worship God on this mountain" (Ex 3:12) The proof of God's call was after the obedience, not before.
This language of Obedience may be the most difficult of all the languages we speak, one that rises above our feelings but utters volumes of faith. There are times when a difference arises between my wife and me. I have watched her stand tall at those times, and I have seen triumph of her love vanquish any dark and petty inclination. She is never afraid to reach out and resist the ugly trap of stubbornness.We do, we obey, we yield, we submit to God, even when our natural inclination wants to drag us in the opposite direction.
Under the threat of death Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego stood their ground and were sure God would deliver them. "But even if he does not," they said "we want you to know, O king, that we will not serve your gods and worship the image of gold you have set up" (Dan 3:18) I suggest that our secular society has lost its ability to feel God because it has lost its ability to obey Him.
Psalm 119:33-34
33 Teach me, LORD, the way of your decrees,
that I may follow it to the end.[a]
34 Give me understanding, so that I may keep your law
and obey it with all my heart.
From "Masterwork" week of July 24th, Cries of the Heart
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