Thursday, April 9, 2015

Without fuel the fire goes out....

During my studies this morning, I read this quote in one of the commentaries and it really impressed me as so true: “It is the nature of a fire to go out; you must keep it stirred and fed and the ashes removed.” I often pray that the Lord will keep my heart on fire with love and devotion for Him and His Word, and pray that for you guys as well, and that's what I was thinking of when I read this quotation. A fire can't burn without fuel and our fuel of course is His Word.

To me, the worst thing in the whole world that could ever happen to me would be to lose my passion for the Lord and His Word. I know that I can't possibly maintain it by myself, so that's why I always pray that He will keep it going for me, and because it's His Will, I know I can trust Him to do so. But I also know that I have to do my part too and stay in His Word every day. Some people make sure they take vitamins every day to stay healthy. For me, I make sure I take my spiritual vitamins every day to stay healthy. It may not have done much for my physical body, but it's certainly strengthened my spiritual one! That always reminds me of what Paul said about it to Timothy:
1 Timothy 4:8 —For physical training is of some value, but godliness has value for all things, holding promise for both the present life and the life to come. *

“It is the nature of a fire to go out; you must keep it stirred and fed and the ashes removed.” So we feed our fire with God's Word, but then how do we keep it stirred? We stir it with fellowship with other believers. Fellowship is very important for many reasons. Remember when Jesus sent out His disciples to preach, He never sent them alone, but always two together.

Finally, we remove the ashes by worshiping God and praising Him. This refreshes our spirits and strengthens us too. Remember that the Joy of the Lord is our strength, and also that we're told repeatedly to both give thanks in all things and to always rejoice.

All three are needed- God's word, fellowship, and praise and worship. We really can't just pick one and leave out the rest or our fire won't burn well or long.
I know I didn't do these in the same order as the quotation goes. I just wrote what I thought as I thought it and apparently my mind doesn't always put things in the proper order. That's ok though. I just wanted to share that quotation with you and a few of my thoughts about it. Just a refection to start the day off thinking about the Lord and all He does for us.

We are breaking the Lord's heart

I've been wanting to write about this (again) but haven't been sure "how" to do it. So many Christians don't bother to study God's Word and yet still call themselves Christians, and will even tell themselves and others that they obey Christ. Yet all they know about it is what they've heard in sermons or read in other people's books, especially fiction ones--and many don't even do that. What they don't realize is that they cannot be obeying Him, and cannot be living according to His Will because they don't have a clue what His Will is! They're still in the dark, wandering around lost and pretending they know what they're doing. I don't mean that they're not saved...they are...but they're living as though they're lost because they don't know or understand God's Word. Those are the ones who will only escape this earth and the Bema Judgment with their salvation and nothing else. Those are also the ones that just read their bibles and don't study it with Him, reflect on it and then apply it. They may attempt to apply some things they read, but most often they really don't understand it, although of course they think they do.

When people hear that though, they immediately come back with: "well I don't care about rewards, or status, I'll be happy if I get to heaven by the skin of my teeth".
Or they'll try to come off sounding "holy" and say that they're "not interested in rewards, they just want to please the Lord." And they have no idea how foolish they sound, because if we don't earn the rewards, we are not pleasing the Lord or living according to His Will.If we only just barely make it into heaven, we're not pleasing the Lord or living according to His Will. When the Lord tells the parable about the talents, He is also talking about rewards. The servant who did not earn any rewards...who did nothing with the talent he was given, did not please the Lord at all and He had some very harsh words for Him. (Matthew 25:26–30) I can't speak for others, but I certainly do not want the Lord to be displeased with me when I finally get to heaven!

Jesus plainly taught about rewards and He desires us to have them. It is His Will that we earn these rewards, and earning them pleases Him. So those people who say they aren't interested are basically slapping Him in the face and cannot be living according to His will.

Jesus made things very clear for the people who showed any interest in following Him. He let them know that it would not be easy because they would have many trials in this life and told them (us) to count the cost before making their decision. He let them know that this wasn't a light decision to make. But after telling them (and us) what the cost would be for following Him, He'd tell them what the rewards would be
.

Matthew 10:37–42“Anyone who loves his father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; anyone who loves his son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me; and anyone who does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. “He who receives you receives me, and he who receives me receives the one who sent me. Anyone who receives a prophet because he is a prophet will receive a prophet’s reward, and anyone who receives a righteous man because he is a righteous man will receive a righteous man’s reward. And if anyone gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones because he is my disciple, I tell you the truth, he will certainly not lose his reward.”

Most Christians today however have no idea what their reward will be or even if they have one coming. It's really a shame too because in the old days, not that long ago really, when people spoke of dying, they called it "going to my reward" and they weren't just talking about going to Heaven. They actually knew they'd have rewards waiting for them! Today, most don't know anything about rewards except for the few who are into the end times and have learned about the crowns. And even they will say they don't care if they earn one or not, that "just going to heaven to be with Jesus will be reward enough for them".
Yes, that sounds nice and holy to most people, but to those who've studied His Word, they know it's really not holy, it's sin and ignorance talking.
The people who say that think they're being grateful for God's gift of salvation, but really they're just making excuses for not doing His Will.


When we accept the gift of salvation, we agree to make Jesus the Lord of our lives, which means obeying Him and the first thing He commands is that we know and understand His Word, because we cannot do His Will if we don't know what His Will is. The word that's used for "know" when the Bible is talking about that is a word that means "to fully know; or to personally and intimately know", the same word that's used to "know Jesus" in an intimate, personal way. We are to know His Word intimately; it's to be deeply ingrained in us, a part of us; preferably the major part of us.

That's why I seem to harp on this so much. I know there are many Christians who truly love the Lord, but who don't know His Word and don't study it, who are going to be truly devastated when they discover that they let the Lord down--not just a little, but in a major way, and that He is displeased with them. It will break their hearts and I don't want to see that happen because that breaks my heart. And I know it breaks His heart too to see His children living their lives here and not fully trusting Him because they don't fully know Him.

Our Lord will give us these rewards because we have done His Will here-in this life, so if we receive no reward, then we have not done His Will. People seem to think that the rewards are "extras", for going above and beyond the call of duty so to speak. That's simply not true. Jesus is not telling us to be greedy and to seek the rewards He offers, but He does use the rewards to give us even more hope for our future, and He expects us to want them. After all, how would you feel if you went out and got some really neat gifts for a loved one and they turned their nose up at them and said they weren't interested? In some ways it's similar to when we as parents reward our children for their good behavior. I'm not talking about parents who bribe their children to be good, but rather those who at times give their children a reward because they've shown that they know how to behave correctly. With our Lord, it's even clearer then that, because for Him it's all about our hearts attitude and not our actions/works even though it's our actions He's rewarding. That's why we're told that it's what's behind our works--what's in our hearts, that will determine if we receive a reward or not. (1 Corinthians 4:5; 1 Corinthians 3:12–15) We need to realize that there's no possible way we could ever earn our salvation or that we could ever do enough to "be good" because when we're doing His Will, we're simply doing what He commanded us to do in the first place. In order to completely fulfill His Will, we would have to be perfect like He said in Matthew 5:48. He knows that won't happen in this life but it is a goal we're to work toward here. Like most loving parents though, our Lord loves to give us gifts and so He will honor us with rewards for those things we do abiding in Him. Just like the parent who gives their child an occasional reward to honor them for their good behavior.

The child who does get rewarded for that good behavior doesn't behave so that they'll get the reward, they behave because they love their parents and want to please them. However, the child does appreciate the reward and even at times dreams of what their next reward might be. There is pleasure for the child both in pleasing their parents because they love them and in looking forward to and receiving the reward. The child knows that they're being rewarded because their parents are pleased with them and that makes them feel good.

Our Lord has gone to great extents to create the rewards He has for each of us. He loves us and He loves to give us good gifts. We're told that the things He has for us are so amazing and so wonderful that we can't even begin to imagine them, and they were created especially for us because He loves us. To turn our nose up at them, to act like it's no big deal if we don't get them, or worse, to say we're not interested in them, is just terrible! How can we say in one breath that we love Him but that we don't want His gifts? Gifts that He Himself felt were important enough to be included in His Word. These rewards are all part of our blessed Hope and He wants us to long for that day! On that day we will receive our new bodies and our salvation will be complete; and we will receive the rewards and see all the treasure in heaven that we have accumulated in heaven during this life --treasure and rewards that will last through all eternity.

I hope and pray that many will commit themselves now to studying His Word with Him so that they really can discover His Will for their lives and be obedient to Him and please Him. I pray that He will grant to each person a heart of love and passion for Him and His Word so that we may each live up to our calling in Christ and so no one can malign Him or His Word because of us. Let me leave you with some of the scriptures that speak about this.

2 John 8–9Watch out that you do not lose what you have worked for, but that you may be rewarded fully. Anyone who runs ahead and does not continue in the teaching of Christ does not have God; whoever continues in the teaching has both the Father and the Son.

Hebrews 10:36–38 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.”

Philippians 3:8–11 What is more, I consider everything a loss compared to the surpassing greatness of knowing Christ Jesus my Lord, for whose sake I have lost all things. I consider them rubbish, that I may gain Christ and be found in him, not having a righteousness of my own that comes from the law, but that which is through faith in Christ—the righteousness that comes from God and is by faith. I want to know Christ and the power of his resurrection and the fellowship of sharing in his sufferings, becoming like him in his death, and so, somehow, to attain to the resurrection from the dead.

Philippians 3:12–16 Not that I have already obtained all this, or have already been made perfect, but I press on to take hold of that for which Christ Jesus took hold of me. Brothers, I do not consider myself yet to have taken hold of it. But one thing I do: Forgetting what is behind and straining toward what is ahead, I press on toward the goal to win the prize for which God has called me heavenward in Christ Jesus. All of us who are mature should take such a view of things. And if on some point you think differently, that too God will make clear to you. Only let us live up to what we have already attained.

Luke 17:7–10“Suppose one of you had a servant plowing or looking after the sheep. Would he say to the servant when he comes in from the field, ‘Come along now and sit down to eat’? Would he not rather say, ‘Prepare my supper, get yourself ready and wait on me while I eat and drink; after that you may eat and drink’? Would he thank the servant because he did what he was told to do? So you also, when you have done everything you were told to do, should say, ‘We are unworthy servants; we have only done our duty.’ ”

Luke 12:47–48“That servant who knows his master’s will and does not get ready or does not do what his master wants will be beaten with many blows. But the one who does not know and does things deserving punishment will be beaten with few blows. From everyone who has been given much, much will be demanded; and from the one who has been entrusted with much, much more will be asked.

Matthew 25:23“His master replied, ‘Well done, good and faithful servant! You have been faithful with a few things; I will put you in charge of many things. Come and share your master’s happiness!’

Matthew 25:26–30“His master replied, ‘You wicked, lazy servant! So you knew that I harvest where I have not sown and gather where I have not scattered seed? Well then, you should have put my money on deposit with the bankers, so that when I returned I would have received it back with interest. “ ‘Take the talent from him and give it to the one who has the ten talents. For everyone who has will be given more, and he will have an abundance. Whoever does not have, even what he has will be taken from him. And throw that worthless servant outside, into the darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth.

Matthew 10:37–42“Anyone who loves his father or mother more than me is not worthy of me; anyone who loves his son or daughter more than me is not worthy of me; and anyone who does not take his cross and follow me is not worthy of me. Whoever finds his life will lose it, and whoever loses his life for my sake will find it. “He who receives you receives me, and he who receives me receives the one who sent me. Anyone who receives a prophet because he is a prophet will receive a prophet’s reward, and anyone who receives a righteous man because he is a righteous man will receive a righteous man’s reward. And if anyone gives even a cup of cold water to one of these little ones because he is my disciple, I tell you the truth, he will certainly not lose his reward.”

Matthew 6:19–21“Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break in and steal. But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do not break in and steal. For where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.

2 Corinthians 5:9–10So we make it our goal to please him, whether we are at home in the body or away from it. For we must all appear before the judgment seat of Christ, that each one may receive what is due him for the things done while in the body, whether good or bad.

Psalm 138:2 I will bow down toward your holy temple and will praise your name for your love and your faithfulness, for you have exalted above all things your name and your word.

James 1:22Do not merely listen to the word, and so deceive yourselves. Do what it says.

John 8:31So Jesus said to the Jews who had believed him, “If you abide in my word, you are truly my disciples,

John 15:7–11If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you.By this my Father is glorified, that you bear much fruit and so prove to be my disciples.As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love.If you keep my commandments, you will abide in my love, just as I have kept my Father’s commandments and abide in his love.These things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.

John 17:17Sanctify them by the truth; your word is truth.

Women's Liberation or Bondage?

My mother wasn't a Christian in any sense of the word and was very much into woman's lib. So I was raised with all their thoughts and reasoning. After I was saved the Lord began to "deprogram" me from the various worldly points of view I held at the time, like evolution, the world's view of psychology,and finally of woman's lib too. I have to say that I was consistently shocked by how deeply the roots of all these things as well as some others were inside me and how much they affected my view of the world, other people and even of God. It took the Lord years to deprogram me from all these various world views and teach me what His way was. Anyway I wanted to share with others about the woman's lib movement because as I said it's way of thinking has deeply pervaded our thoughts and views mostly without us even being aware of it.

Now before anyone jumps all over me saying how wonderful woman's lib is, please read this information that I'll be posting and see what it says. Like most things people think up to go against God's Ways, it's going to have some "good" things in it, otherwise no one would ever fall for it. (at least I hope not) But as the bible tells us, Satan masquerades as an angel of light and so do his messengers. Nothing could be more true of this statement then the woman's lib movement.

Women's Liberation or Bondage?

The greatest single force of evil today is perpetuated under the guise of "women's rights," or the women's liberation movement as it is commonly known. Actually, those who really believe wholeheartedly in all the concepts of women's lib are a minority of women with very loud mouths. It is the silent majority who need to speak out quickly before women as a gender become lost in the unisex manifesto of the NOW gang.

There is a much older "bill of rights" for women, one that if followed provides for everything any real woman could ever want or need in her life. It's called the Bible - the true Word of God, and its precepts and statutes are timeless. If women would study the scriptures and listen to those who preach the true gospel they could not help but realize that God, in His magnificent love and mercy, has ordained a truly special place for women. Not as the doormats that the feminists would have you believe, but as a very necessary and important part of the Body of Christ. In creating Adam first and creating Eve out of Adam's rib, God removed a burden that no woman in her right mind would willingly want to bear, and in doing so, provided for her protection and security for her entire life.

Actually, the feminist movement is nothing new, for indeed the scriptures say there is nothing new under the sun. It began shortly after creation, in the Garden of Eden, when Eve determined in her heart to take control and disobey God. She had it all already but she could not be content. She had to have the "brass ring" too. All that was good, all that was pure, all that was necessary for a complete and perfect life, Eve was given by God, yet the one thing that would destroy it all, this she had to have. That single act of disobedience started a landslide of misery that would affect all women for the rest of time. Take a few minutes and really look at it. Before her forbidden fruit tasting she and Adam lived in Paradise!

They had everything they needed to live a blissful life with no pain, no bills to pay, and no misery. She gave it all up because she had to have the one thing God had said "no" to. And this He did out of love, knowing the results of such an act. Foolish woman! Ever since that fateful day women have proven their ability to do foolish, rebellious things constantly.

It is my belief that somewhere at the heart of it all is a thing called vanity - the need to be noticed, to be recognized, to be the center of attention. Vanity comes in many forms but all of them have their roots firmly entrenched in pride. Vanity is nothing new either. Since the creation of the world there have been those women who have never been content to take the role which God has given them. If they truly understood the gift the gracious Father had given them there would never have been this problem with vanity, with pride. But as a very wise man is fond of saying, "the Devil is evil, not stupid." He knew the one area of weakness that could and has brought down the whole female gender.

Now we must fight for what is rightfully ours in Christ, and in doing so, we are constantly persecuted by those women who are against all that Jesus died to give them. Rather than speak out against these feminists, of whom God says are of unnatural affection, we complain about them quietly. Rather than cry out loudly against what they would take away from us, we pray against them silently. But the Word of God says that faith without actions is dead. It is not enough to pray, not enough to complain. We must be as vocal, indeed more vocal than they are. We must demonstrate. We must resist their doctrines of demons and boldly bring forth the truth from the Word of God. What began as an innocent statement of what seemed to be so right, "equal pay for equal work," it has spiraled out of control into an entire movement against being feminine, against being a real woman.

As this article is the first of many (prayerfully), let us continue this line of thought by beginning with the cardinal sin of the feminist movement. What they consider to be the lowest form of life on earth, lower even than being a man (gasp!), is to be a housewife and mother. The champions of feminism, (not to be confused in any way whatsoever with femininity), those who would promote women's liberation as the only fulfilling lifestyle, have bullied and buffaloed the general public and insecure uninformed women in particular into believing that to simply settle for being a wife and mother is to degrade your sex and cheat yourself out of greatness.

The Bible tells us just the opposite. God says that to be a wife and mother is the highest, most noble position a woman can reach. It is a place of glory for her. She is to be commended and praised, not condemned and scorned. Ladies - wake up! Look into the Word of God. Study to show yourselves approved. Know and understand your place in Christ. Nothing that the NOW gang or any other so called woman's movement can offer you will even begin to compare with the wonderful, fulfilling, abundant life that the Lord has ordained for you.

People have been so assaulted with feminism propaganda that it has ceased to be a novelty and become the accepted norm. But at what cost? Men today no longer treat women with the gentle respect their mothers were treated with. They are afraid to open a door for a woman, or offer to carry her packages, or even to help an elderly woman across a busy street for fear of being called a sexist or of being slapped with a discrimination suit. Women no longer find any joy in doing the genteel, feminine things their mothers did, such as baking, sewing and raising their children. Instead they strive for careers, executive positions, seats on the board of directors, political appointments and offices. No longer are women content to enjoy the pleasures of being a wife and mother. Women have grown foolish and complacent and eventually will pay a terrible price for their willingness to be led into hell by a bunch of "wanna-be-men" feminists, who want every woman to lose her femininity, her gender and her very creation.

more:
http://www.intothelight.org/liberation-bondage.asp

The History of Feminism

By Wayne Wells


The "First Wave" of Feminism

The feminist movement of the nineteenth century effectively began July 19-20,1848, at a woman’s convention that was held in the Wesleyan Methodist Chapel in Seneca Falls, New York. About 300 attended.

Elizabeth Stanton wrote the "Declaration on Women’s Rights," and it was signed by 68 women and 32 men. The Declaration began as a parody of the Declaration of Independence and said,

"We hold these truths to be self-evident: that all men and women are created equal."

1. Two weeks later, a second convention was held in Rochester, New York, during which the movement began to be more formally organized.

2. The third meeting was in 1850 at Worcester, Massachusetts. It was the first to claim to be a national woman’s rights convention, having delegates from nine states.

3. Except for 1857, conventions were held each year up to 1860.

4. In 1852, Elizabeth Stanton and Susan B. Anthony joined forces. They remained a team for nearly fifty years, with Anthony managing the business affairs and Stanton doing most of the writing.

The Early Feminist Leaders and the Bible


The early feminists viewed the Bible to be degrading to women because of what it teaches concerning the sin of Eve and the role assigned to women in both the Old and New Testaments. In their response to the Bible, three different views developed.

1. The Moderate View: The moderate view did not consider the problem to be the Bible itself, but rather the acceptance of perverted and sexist interpretations of the Bible. Once the Bible is properly interpreted, it can be seen as not being hostile to women. Many who took this view were adherents of metaphysical or "New Thought"(such as Mary Baker Eddy’s Christian Science.) religions , which believed that the Bible must be interpreted symbolically or mystically. These agreed that the Bible is harmful to women if taken literally, but when understood according to its inner or mystical meaning it affirms the equality of women with men.

2. The Liberal View: The liberal view accepted the theory of evolution to be the answer of culture and religion. It viewed the Bible as a purely human book which records the history of one of the world’s many religious traditions, and which has no special divine authority and no more relevance for today than scores of other such books. As such the Bible should just be ignored.

3. The Radical View: The radical view agreed with the liberal understanding of the nature of the Bible as a purely human book with no divine authority, but it did not agree that it could simply be ignored. As long as the Bible is being distributed in mass quantities, and large numbers of people still believe that it is God’s inspired Word, they will believe that provides a divinely given mandate to keep women in subjection. Thus some positive action with regard to the Bible must be taken. Whether it is just a matter of wrong interpretation or a false view of its nature, either way the influence of the Bible must be neutralized. This was Elizabeth Stanton’s view. She believed that the Bible must be destroyed if women were to be free.

In order to neutralize the influence of the Bible, Elizabeth Stanton and other women wrote "The Woman’s Bible" to show the world what the Bible is really like.

While Stanton allowed the moderate members of the project to express their ideas and to present the "correct" interpretations of various Bible passages as they saw them, she repudiated the moderate approach. She wrote,

"In plain English, the Bible itself is simply degrading to women. No mystical symbolism can enable one to twist out of the Old or New Testaments a message of justice, liberty or equality from God to the women of the nineteenth century." Elizabeth Stanton, The Woman’s Bible, I:61, II:66

The Woman ‘s Bible is actually a commentary rather than a translation. It is not a commentary on the whole Bible, but only on texts referring to women

Excerpts From "The Woman’s Bible"

"The Bible, with its fables, allegories and endless contradictions, has been the great block in the way of civilization." Elizabeth Stanton, The Woman’s Bible, II:9

"From the inauguration of the movement for woman’s emancipation the Bible has been used to hold her in the ‘divinely ordained sphere,’ prescribed in the Old and New Testaments.
The wonder is that women . . . make a fetich [sic] of the very book which is responsible for their civil and social degradation."
Elizabeth Stanton, The Woman’s Bible, pg. 7, II:12

"The Bible has been of service in some respects; but the time has come for us to point out the evil of many of its teachings." Clara Neyman, The Woman’s Bible, II:17

"The Bible always has been, and is at present, one of the greatest obstacles in the way of the emancipation and the advancement of the sex... This book has been of more injury to [woman] than has any other which has ever been written in the history of the world." E.M., The Woman’s Bible, II:201, 203

"No institution in modern civilization is so tyrannical and so unjust to woman as is the Christian Church." Josephine Henry, The Woman’s Bible, II:205

"All the religions on the face of the earth [including Christianity] degrade women; and so long as woman accepts the position that they assign her, her emancipation is impossible." Elizabeth Stanton, The Woman’s Bible, I:12

Writing about the account of the widow’s mite in Mark 12:41-44, Stanton criticizes the church for promoting self-sacrifice instead of self-development on the part of women.

"But when women learn the higher duty of self-development, they will not so readily expend all their forces in serving others.... ‘Self-development is a higher duty than self-sacrifice,’ should be woman’s motto henceforward." Elizabeth Stanton, The Woman’s Bible, II:131

"I do not believe that any man ever saw or talked with God, I do not believe that God inspired the Mosaic code, or told the historians what they say he did about woman." Elizabeth Stanton, The Woman’s Bible, I:12

"Does any one at this stage of civilization think the Bible was written by the finger of God, that the Old and New Testaments emanated from the highest divine thought in the universe? Do they think that all the men who wrote the different books were specially inspired?...
It is full of contradictions, absurdities and impossibilities, and bears the strongest evidence in every line of its human origin...
We have made a fetich [sic] of the Bible long enough. The time has come to read it as we do all other books, accepting the good and rejecting the evil it teaches."
Elizabeth Stanton, The Woman’s Bible, I:61, II:213, 8

The final statement in the Woman’s Bible:

"The real difficulty in woman’s case is that the whole foundation of the Christian religion rests on her temptation and man’s fall, hence the necessity of a Redeemer and a plan of salvation. As the chief cause of this dire calamity, woman’s degradation and subordination were made a necessity. If, however, we accept the Darwinian theory, that the race has been a gradual growth from the lower to a higher form of life, and that the story of the fall is a myth, we can exonerate the snake, emancipate the woman, and reconstruct a more rational religion for the nineteenth century, and thus escape all the perplexities of the Jewish mythology as of no more importance than those of the Greek, Persian and Egyptian." Elizabeth Stanton, The Woman’s Bible, II:214

(The Bible does not hold Eve responsible . In Adam all die 1Cor. 15:22.
As the head, the man is held responsible)

Not all of the early feminists accepted the views taught in the Woman’s Bible. There was open debate over it at the convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association in of 1896. During this debate, Susan B. Anthony was one of Stanton’s strongest supporters.

The first wave of feminism ended in 1920 with the ratification of the 19th amendment to the U.S. Constitution, which recognized the right of women to vote. This right had already been won on the state level in nearly 20 states, beginning with Wyoming in 1890. An amendment on the federal level, called the "Anthony Amendment," had been submitted since 1878 but was defeated by both the House and the Senate up through World War I. The active role of women in the war effort turned the tide in their favor, and the renewed influence of the National American Woman Suffrage Alliance (with over two million members in 1917) made a difference.

The amendment was passed by the House in January 1918 and by the Senate in June 1919.

In August 1920 Tennessee became the 36th state to ratify it, making it a part of the Constitution.

Once the vote was won, the original feminist movement fragmented and lost momentum.

The "Second Wave" of Feminism

The next push for feminism began in 1960’s and continues strong into the 1990’s

Two of the most influential leaders of this new movement are Betty Friedan and Gloria Steinem.

Betty Friedan has been called the "Mother Superior to Women’s Lib."

1. She is credited with launching the women’s liberation movement with the publication of her book, "The Feminine Mystique", in 1963.

2. She also founded the National Organization for Women (NOW), on June 29, 1966. She was one of its chief organizers and its first president.

3. She also initiated the Women’s March for Equality in August 1970 and the National Women’s Political Caucus in March 1971.

4. She was also a signer of the Humanist Manifesto II in 1973.

Excerpts From The Humanist Manifesto II

Religion

"We believe, however, that traditional dogmatic or authoritarian religions that place revelation, God, ritual, or creed above human needs and experience do a disservice to the human species... But we can discover no divine purpose or providence for the human species. While there is much that we do not know, humans are responsible for what we are or will become. No deity will save us; we must save ourselves.

Promises of immortal salvation or fear of eternal damnation are both illusory and harmful. They distract humans from present concerns, from self-actualization, and from rectifying social injustices."


Ethics

"We affirm that moral values derive their source from human experience. Ethics is autonomous and situational, needing no theological or ideological sanction."

The Individual

"In the area of sexuality, we believe that intolerant attitudes, often cultivated by orthodox religions and puritanical cultures, unduly repress sexual conduct. The right to birth control, abortion, and divorce should be recognized."

World Community

"We deplore the division of humankind on nationalistic grounds. We have reached a turning point in human history where the best option is to transcend the limits of national sovereignty and to move toward the building of a world community in which all sectors of the human family can participate. Thus we look to the development of a system of world law and a world order based upon transnational federal government."

1. Gloria Steinem is also recognized as one of the leaders of the feminist movement in America. She was on the cover of the August 16, 1971, issue of Newsweek as, "the personification of women’s liberation."

2. In January 1972, McCall’s named her, "Woman of the Year."

3. She started Ms. magazine in 1971 and remained its editor until 1987. Through it, the message of feminism was made available on a monthly basis at newsstands everywhere.

"By the year 2000 we will, I hope, raise our children to believe in human potential, not God." -Gloria Steinem, in Saturday Review of Education, cited in the pamphlet, "Do These Women Speak For You?"

The woman’s liberation movement, is almost altogether the product of women who reject the divine origin and absolute authority of the Bible, and usually the very existence of the God who reveals Himself in the Bible.

Not all feminists follow the extreme ideas as many of the leaders. Some have tried to blend the goals of feminism (elimination of the roles of the sexes) with the Bible. This will not work. Just as the general theory of evolution and the Bible cannot be blended together.

It is true that there is special evolution, that is, there is change within kinds. The Bible even gives example of this type of evolution taking place. But the general theory of evolution, that is, the gradual development of all life form rising out of simple organisms completely contradicts what Genesis teaches and these two views cannot be harmonized.

In the same way, there is some truth recognized by feminists. The Bible teaches that God made men and women equal. As long as we recognize that both are in the image of God, both have dominion over the earth, and both share in the inheritance in Christ, there is no conflict. But, when feminists want to eliminate all roles the Bible give for men and women, there can be no harmonizing of feminism and the Bible. Many who claim to believe in the Bible have tried to make the Bible fit the teachings of the feminists. This cannot be harmonized with the teaching of the Bible, just as the general theory of evolution cannot be harmonized with the Bible.

1 Timothy 2:11–15, A woman should learn in quietness and full submission. I do not permit a woman to teach or to have authority over a man; she must be silent. For Adam was formed first, then Eve. And Adam was not the one deceived; it was the woman who was deceived and became a sinner. But women will be saved through childbearing—if they continue in faith, love and holiness with propriety.
1 Corinthians 14:34–35, women should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the Law says. If they want to inquire about something, they should ask their own husbands at home; for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in the church.

Posted with permission:

http://www.jesus-is-savior.com/Evils%20in%20America/Feminism/history.htm

A Great Lesson from the Book of 1 Samuel

I wanted to share what I learned today from 1 Samuel 27. First some background is needed though. In previous chapters, including the last one, we see that Saul is King in Israel, but God has rejected him and chosen David to be King. Strangely though, God didn't make Saul step down immediately. He let him continue to rule. David wound up serving in the palace playing music to rid Saul of an evil spirit the Lord had sent to harass him. David also served in the army and was an excellent officer and fighting man. Because Saul was sinful and didn't live for God, he became more and more jealous of David and kept trying to kill him. Over and over in the last few chapters we see Saul attempting to kill David (16 times!) and God miraculously intervening to save David (and generally making Saul look foolish). We also see constant prophecies that David will be King and rule with God's blessing and even see God Himself telling David that more then once. That's where the previous chapter ends.

At the beginning of chapter 27, we're given quite a shock. You'd expect David to be praising God still for all the ways He'd saved him and all the great things He'd given him and done for him during this time. After all, he'd just been blessed by Saul, the very person who'd been trying to kill him! Instead though, David was depressed! I couldn't believe it when I read that, and then realized that's often how it happens though. After we've been through a stressful time, even though we came out on top, if we don't take our thoughts captive, we'll often become depressed.
Look at how this chapter begins:

1 Samuel 27:1 —But David thought to himself, “One of these days I will be destroyed by the hand of Saul. The best thing I can do is to escape to the land of the Philistines. Then Saul will give up searching for me anywhere in Israel, and I will slip out of his hand.” *


David knew better than that! I kept wanting to yell at him to wake up and smell the coffee.  On top of that, God had told him to stay in Judah! So after all this time of being obedient to the Lord, of always asking the Lord before he did anything, he lets his feelings rule him and as usual, that leads him into sin. The very next verse tells us that he goes right ahead and carries out his plan. He doesn't talk to the Lord about it or ask any of his trusted advisers either. When he gets there, of course, he has to lie, otherwise the philistine king would have killed him. And he has to continue to lie to him the whole time he's there.

What happened to our hero? To our man who loves the Lord? First, he listened to his feelings and didn't check to see if those feelings agreed with what God had told him. Second, he didn't pray and tell the Lord what he was feeling and ask Him what he should do. Before he'd been in constant communication with the lord and now all of a sudden (or so it seems to us) that stops. That's generally true of us too when we get depressed. We stop reading His Word, studying it and we stop talking to Him too.

Third, he stopped serving God and began to serve himself. Again just like we do when we start feeling sorry for ourselves, isn't it? Fourth, he didn't take his thoughts, feelings and imagination captive and replace them with the Truth. He also focused on "what might have happened in the past" and "what could happen" instead of "what was true right then.

Fifth, when he looked at the past, he focused on only the bad things, he didn't look at the great many good things that had happened, or at any of the great or miraculous things God had done for him. Really, both this and the "fourth" thing both go along with serving ourselves rather then God. When we serve God, our focus is on Him. We see His Hand in everything and know that everything is working for our good. When we serve ourselves though, the focus changes to us and we become self-centered, and often either full of self pity or selfishness. When it gets really bad, we'll even often blame God for the bad and conveniently forget the good or else act like we deserved the good for some reason -as though we'd earned it.

(please know, that when I say "we", I'm really thinking about myself and how I act and have acted in the past. I use "we" only because I know others often have the same problems I've had or have.)

Next, David did something else we shouldn't do when we're in that kind of frame of mind....he made an important decision, and worse, he made it without God. I can't begin to count the times I've done that as well in my life, and looking back, I can see all the previous steps were there as well. This particular episode of David's life, lasted for about 16 months, so it was a significant chapter in his life. I'm so grateful the Lord included this in His Word to teach us. I always learn so much about myself when studying with Him.

When this chapter ends, David is still in this frame of mind and still not communicating with God. We'll discover later that David pays for his sins when the city he's living in with all his men and all his and their wives and children are attacked when they're away and their families are taken captive. Thankfully, instead of becomming yet more depressed, this finally gets David's attention and he turns back to the Lord and he immediately begins talking to Him and asking for help again. I won't give away what all happens as that's for another time. I just wanted to share what I'd learned about how our feelings can betray us and mislead us if we heed them without checking to see if they're in agreement with God's Word.

Our trials with other people and our future

I wanted to share with you something the Lord reminded me about during my study time today. I was studying in 1 Samuel 21 and continuing about David and all the troubles and trials he went through.

We know that the Lord has plans for our future - both our future here in this world as well as for our eternal future. God doesn't decide, "this person's going to do this, and that person's going to do that". He chooses our futures based on the talents and desires He gives us and then He prepares us for that future. Nothing happens in our lives that is an "accident". God knows in advance what's going to happen, what choices people are going to make, both good and bad that will affect us. So He uses those things to prepare us for the wonderful future He has planned for us.
This includes everything that happens to us even before we're saved, for God knows who belongs to Him and doesn't waste time waiting on us to finally make our decision. (Thank You Lord!)

We can be absolutely sure then that no matter what is happening to us, that the Lord is using it to prepare us for that wonderful future. That's partly what His Word is talking about when it says that all things will work together for our good. We can also know that everything is also being used to help us become more and more like Christ.

Then why aren't people more like Christ as they get older and go through more in their lives? Simply because most people don't realize this and they fight against it.
Obviously, the unsaved don't know about it and they're not going to actively try to cooperate with what God is using the situation for. Instead they'll fight against it. Of course God know this too and will use that as well. If they are one of His children, they'll eventually be saved and will begin to grow more like Christ. They'll also develop their talents and gain desires that will lead them in the direction the Lord has planned for them.

What is amazing to me is that even though most of us fight God and refuse to cooperate with Him, even so, His Will is done and we will still eventually develop those talents, desires and characteristics needed for the future the Lord's planned for us. I imagine it takes a lot longer then it would if we had cooperated with Him, but either way, it happens.

One of the biggest things He has to teach us is of course to trust Him. That's a lesson He works with us on all our lives, over and over again in many different ways and situations, to grow our faith and trust.

What does this have to do with trials and problems in our lives? Well one of the things we tend to do constantly is to trust other people instead of God or at least in addition to God. So He is constantly having to show us and remind us that other people are going to constantly let us down, or even purposely mislead us -even those we love and those who love us.
They can't help it any more then we can help letting other people down sometimes. It's all that nasty sin nature which makes it "normal" for us to do that. It's only because of God's Grace and help that we who are saved can overcome that ourselves.

Often when our problems or trials are being caused because other people have hurt us somehow, it's because the Lord is teaching us or reminding us that we can only trust Him, not ourselves and not other people. Think about it. When something "bad" happens, what's our first reaction usually? Is it to immediately go to prayer and ask the Lord how to handle it and what to do? Or is to to "figure things out for ourselves" or to ask a friend or a "professional" for advice? I have to admit that for me it's often to figure it out myself or ask someone else for advice.

But, I'm getting better! It's only taken the Lord 57 years to get me to come to Him first sometimes.  My prayer is that before I turn 58, it will be ALL the time!

Hezekiah is a wonderful example of this! The story is in 2 Kings 18 and 19 for those who'd like to read it. Hezekiah was only 29 when this trial I'm speaking of began - the King of Assyria attacked them and was very good at psychological warfare. He knew all the right things to say to cause the people and King Hezekiah to doubt God, but Hezekiah held firm to his faith. He even had one of his commanders stand up after they had Judah under siege and announce to them that God wouldn't save them and that God had even told them to come and capture them!  He sent Hezekiah a letter basically telling him the same thing and telling him what awful things would happen to him and the people if they didn't surrender right away.

What did Hezekiah do? At 29 years old, he was more spiritually mature then I am at 57! He didn't hesitate even for a second. After reading the letter, he immediately went to the Temple and spread the letter out before the Lord and prayed to Him about it, asking Him to deliver them and what he should do! Can you believe it???? What a fantastic role model for us! (In answer, the Lord sent Isaiah to him to tell him what would happen and how He would deliver them) I've got to share with you how the Lord did it too, check this out:
2 Kings 19:35 —That night the angel of the Lord went out and put to death a hundred and eighty-five thousand men in the Assyrian camp. When the people got up the next morning—there were all the dead bodies! * The Lord rewarded Hezekiah for his faith and for coming to Him instead of trying to figure things out for himself or getting advice from others first.

Hezekiah didn't react to any of the verbal threats or to the letter. If you read the story, He even told the people not to react to them, to literally "say nothing" when they were taunted. He went to the Lord for directions and help and received them. The Lord absolutely loves it when we ask Him for help and He loves it even more when we trust Him to deliver us and to use the situation for our good. When we cooperate with Him, then we can move toward that wonderful future He has for us much more quickly, as we become the people He created us to be.

It's difficult for us because we tend to live by sight rather then by faith, so when we see and hear someone or many people lying about us or a loved one, or saying things that hurt us in some way, or cheating us, or whatever the situation is, we forget all about the Lord and just strike back. We "stand up for our rights", not realizing that often in the process we're negating all that the Lord is trying to teach us and show us. Forgetting that He told us to "love them" unconditionally, and sacrificially; forgetting that He tells us to put their needs before our own. Or, perhaps I should say "I do things like that" and not "we". Like I said though, little by little I'm learning and I really am getting better. While it's often still my first instinct to react in those ways, I'm now often able to prevent myself from going beyond the first thought and turn and do things God's way instead. Someday I hope to be able to always react to people who I feel are hurting me or attacking me somehow, the way He wants me to. I know from His Word that's one of the things He tries to develop in each of us so that we will become more like Jesus and be ready to fulfill the role He has for our future.

Jeremiah 29:11–13 —For I know the plans I have for you,” declares the Lord, “plans to prosper you and not to harm you, plans to give you hope and a future. *Then you will call upon me and come and pray to me, and I will listen to you. *You will seek me and find me when you seek me with all your heart. *

God showed me something incredible about us!

I've been studying in Exodus lately and had gotten to the part where they're making the tabernacle or basically their traveling temple lol This morning, I commented to the Lord that while I'd enjoyed the study and did learn some interesting things, I felt as though I hadn't really learned anything that was really important to me. In earlier chapters I'd seen tons of things that applied to us and that was important, but in these, well, I just really didn't.... know what I mean? I"m talking about Exodus 35-40 mainly. I asked Him if I was missing something and of course I was and of course, He then began to show me. He first told me to go back to when it starts which is when Moses has to go back up the mountain for another 40 days to get another copy of the 10 commandments and hear the rest of the instructions. (chapter 32)

So I went back and the first thing that caught my attention was again how Moses was upset that the Lord had told him that because of Israel's idolatry with the calf, that He would no longer go with them, He'd just send an angel instead. I'm sure we're all quite familiar with these verses but I'll post them so we're all on the same page:

Exodus 33:15–16 —Then Moses said to him, “If your Presence does not go with us, do not send us up from here. *How will anyone know that you are pleased with me and with your people unless you go with us? What else will distinguish me and your people from all the other people on the face of the earth?”

Remember, up till then the Lord had been leading them in a way that everyone could see ever since they left Egypt.

Exodus 13:21–22 —By day the Lord went ahead of them in a pillar of cloud to guide them on their way and by night in a pillar of fire to give them light, so that they could travel by day or night. *Neither the pillar of cloud by day nor the pillar of fire by night left its place in front of the people.
This was the "cloud" that sat atop Mt Sinai now, that Moses walked into to speak with the Lord and that the Lord told the people that no one else could come on the mountain while He was there. And the glory of God surrounding him like that is what caused Moses' face to glow so that he had to wear a veil to cover it.

OK, so Moses is wanting God to continue to lead them in such a way that the rest of the world will know without a doubt that they've been chosen by Him; that they're different, special and set apart by God. Moses was saying to God that if He didn't go with them like this, the rest of the world would have no way of telling that they were different and because of that, God wouldn't receive the glory He should from all He'd done for them. They might as well be children making up fanciful tales otherwise. Because God was pleased with Moses, He agreed to continue to go with them which was a great relief to all!

The Lord reminded me that just as His presence went with them, it also goes with us all the time from the moment we're saved! This is what sets us apart from the rest of the world too! It's what makes us special, and different from the rest of the world.

Of course I had to say, "but Your Presence with us isn't visible like it was with them!" He reminded me though, that His visible presence wasn't always with them either, but had only been there during that critical beginning. After that, they had His laws, the way He'd told them to worship Him, etc well established in their lives which set them apart from the rest of the world just as much as His visible presence had before. Plus of course they had their prophets, judges, miracles etc which helped as well. God had also commanded them to tell the children of each generation all about this so they would know it so well it would be as though they'd seen it themselves. So their very lifestyle, attitudes, worldview, set them far apart from the rest of the world and made them quite different. (and still does!)

Unfortunately, they got an important part of it wrong. Instead of all they were taught causing them to realize their sinfulness and need of a Savior, they got caught up in the outward actions of obeying laws and rituals becoming proud, forgetting that there was a living God behind it all. They became snobs and instead of being a light to the rest of the world, they wanted nothing to do with anyone else and purposely isolated themselves. Because of that, the nation as a whole rejected Jesus when He came and the rest of the world was given the opportunity to Know the Lord and take over the job that had originally been given to Israel - to be His representative and a light to all.

OK, so what's so great about all this? At the exact second that we were saved, the Presence of God came to dwell within us! I know, we hear that all the time; no big deal. But wait, it really IS a big deal and I'd like to share some reason why it is that relates to all the above. Remember how Moses' face glowed after he'd been with the Lord? Do you know why it did? Was it just because He'd been in God's presence? Well, yes, and no. If we examine the life of Moses from birth to now, we see that he very obviously had grown spiritually a great deal during all this time. By the time they got to Sinai, Moses already had established a very close personal relationship with God. The bible calls Moses, "God's friend" and that's amazing! Because he loved God and was so close to Him, God's glory shined out of him too. See, Moses didn't have to go up into the cloud to talk to the Lord. He talked to God all the time anyway! God had already told Moses, “My Presence will go with you, and I will give you rest.” (Exodus 33:14) back when Moses asked him to continue to lead them all. So the glow was simply the spirit of God kind of "leaking" through for all to see. (sorry, lol, couldn't think of a better way to say that)

Now, the words "My Presence" in that verse is the word that's used for "Spirit" or "Holy Spirit" or "Spirit of the Lord" or "Spirit of God" etc. in other verses in both the old and new testament. At salvation, God's Presence, His Spirit, comes to dwell in us as He will never leave us! Jesus told us that the reason for this was so He could teach us, guide us, protect us, comfort us, etc. Jesus told His disciples that they need not feel bereft when He left, because when He left the earth physically, they would have something even better! Up till then, He Himself had taught them, guided them, protected them, and comforted them etc. but then they would have His Spirit dwelling within them who would continue to do all that for them! What is the purpose of the Spirit dwelling in us though, besides doing all the things just mentioned of course? Yes, He is our guarantee of eternal life, but there's still more. He sets us apart from the rest of the world just as God's presence set Israel apart from the rest of the world!

As we grow in our faith, God's presence in our lives become more and more obvious to the people around us. The more obvious it becomes, the more it sets us apart from others who don't have Him in their lives. The closer we get to the Lord, the more we quite literally reflect His glory to the rest of the world. We are transformed into the likeness of Jesus - not so we look like He did physically, but so that our lives reflect His life, His glory, just as Moses's life reflected God's glory so much so his face actually glowed. Eventually, we will be given our new bodies which will shine with glory just as Jesus's did at the Transfiguration. Remember who was with Jesus then? Moses and Elijah! The two men who had such close relationships with God that they were like His friends...they "walked" with Him. What a wonderful way to be!

Have you ever had someone tell you that you "glowed" somehow? Or that they could see Jesus in you? I'm sure many of you have heard that! What wonderful compliments, but oh how I'd love to hear that from the Lord Himself! I want to truly be so close to Him, that I really will glow from within!

We have the spirit of God in us right now and He's not in us just to go along for the ride. The more active we allow Him to be in our lives, the more it's going to show in our lives and possibly, eventually even in our bodies themselves. The more it shows, the more it sets us apart from the rest of the world, announcing to everyone that we are different; we're set apart from everyone else by God; we're special. We have to be careful not to fall into the sin of pride like Israel did because of that though and remember that part of the purpose of setting us apart is so that we can invite others to join us! 

His presence goes with us in an even more personal and special way then it did with them, for He literally dwells within us. That is just so amazing and yet we rarely think about the ramifications of it and what all it means. God teaches us in the OT when He's teaching about clean and unclean, that if something holy touches something that's unclean, His Holiness makes the unclean thing (or person) clean. It changes it completely and forever. For example, in the story about when the ark was returned to Israel after being captured, they couldn't use the cows that pulled the cart that had the ark on it for anything else. The ark touched the cart making it holy, which touched the cows making them holy. They then couldn't allow the cows to be seen as ordinary anymore or let them touch anything else and make yet more things holy, so they used the cows as sacrifices to God.

You see, God not only taught them that if His holiness touched something it made that thing clean and Holy, but that anything that was considered holy, could no longer be used or considered as "normal" or "regular".
Instead it had to be cared for in very specific ways which included a great deal of respect and awe, and could never be used again as it had been.

Back then the Holy Spirit never stayed or dwelled within in a person. He simply would touch a person to inspire them to do the task before them and leave. But now, He actually dwells within us. God Himself dwells within each one of us! How amazing is that????

Yet, we treat ourselves and each other as though nothing is different then it was before we were saved. As though we're not really any different then we were before. Oh sure, we'll say we've been born again and all that, but we don't treat ourselves or each other differently because of it. We don't, because we can't physically see the change that happened with the Holy Spirit came into us. Nor can we actually see Him. But the Lord teaches in the OT that there was no outward change in things that were made Holy when His holiness touched them. They didn't suddenly start to glow, (well at least most didn't lol) get bigger, or more beautiful, etc. Those cows, and that cart, didn't look any different then they did when they were hauling hay the day before. But boy were they treated differently because the Israelites knew that there had in fact been a change in them, whether or not it could be seen.

This is the glorious Truth of what's happened to each of us who've been saved, and yet for the most part, we seem oblivious to it. For the most part we continue to use these bodies in which God Himself is dwelling with us, the same way we did before! Isn't it amazing? That's why Paul urges us to offer our bodies as living sacrifices to God. It's really absolutely amazing when you spend time and reflect on it all with Him.
 
Here's some verses you can check out if you'd like:
1 Cor 6:19 —Do you not know that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit, who is in you, whom you have received from God? You are not your own;

2 Cor 13:14 —May the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, and the love of God, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be with you all.

2 Cor 3:18 —And we, who with unveiled faces all reflect the Lord’s glory, are being transformed into his likeness with ever-increasing glory, which comes from the Lord, who is the Spirit.

1 Peter 2:4–5 —As you come to him, the living Stone—rejected by men but chosen by God and precious to him— *you also, like living stones, are being built into a spiritual house to be a holy priesthood, offering spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God through Jesus Christ. *

2 Corinthians 6:16 —What agreement is there between the temple of God and idols? For we are the temple of the living God. As God has said: “I will live with them and walk among them, and I will be their God, and they will be my people.” *
Luke 9:29–32 —As he was praying, the appearance of his face changed, and his clothes became as bright as a flash of lightning. *Two men, Moses and Elijah, *appeared in glorious splendor, talking with Jesus. They spoke about his departure, which he was about to bring to fulfillment at Jerusalem. *Peter and his companions were very sleepy, but when they became fully awake, they saw his glory and the two men standing with him. *
Exodus 33:11 —The Lord would speak to Moses face to face, as a man speaks with his friend. Then Moses would return to the camp, but his young aide Joshua son of Nun did not leave the tent. *

Exodus 34:29–30 —When Moses came down from Mount Sinai with the two tablets of the Testimony in his hands, he was not aware that his face was radiant because he had spoken with the Lord. *When Aaron and all the Israelites saw Moses, his face was radiant, and they were afraid to come near him. *

Genesis 5:22–24 —And after he became the father of Methuselah, Enoch walked with God 300 years and had other sons and daughters. *Altogether, Enoch lived 365 years. *Enoch walked with God; then he was no more, because God took him away. *

How God broke into my day yesterday

I wanted to share something with you all really quickly that I thought was really neat. My friend Laura and I had been talking about the different ways God uses us. We'd talked about how when someone gets older or becomes disabled they often feel that God can't use them anymore. (She and I both worked with the elderly and disabled) We talked about how we both have felt pretty useless to God at times and the ways we'd discovered that God could still use people no matter how sick or disabled people got. (Such as no matter how sick someone is, they can still be a prayer warrior etc)

Anyway, last night, Bruce and I went out to vote and met a friend of his that he used to work with a few years ago. He'd told me a lot about this guy as he really liked him, but I'd never met him, so Bruce introduced us. What really took me by surprised was what the man said after the introduction. He said, "I remember, you assured us that your wife always prayed for our protection every day!"
  You could have knocked me over with a feather Seriously though, I felt very humbled as this young man was clearly appreciative of my prayers, and I hadn't even been aware that anyone other then Bruce was aware of them!

I realize this may not sound strange to some, but my husband works construction, and in that kind of environment, God is normally only mentioned when the guys are cursing. And the way this came across in the conversation made it pretty obvious that when this was said, they guys were talking about God and how He's reflected in their lives. The memory probably surfaced because their old boss was also there and they'd both been talking to him previously. He's a strong Christian man and not at all ashamed of it, praise God!

Back to the point though. It really made me realize how even things that we consider "little things" like praying for others, can actually have a pretty big impact on other people's lives. It also made me even more determined to increase or better my prayer life, which is something I've been working on for quite awhile anyway. So for me this was confirmation from the Lord that I was doing His will, that He was making use of me and had been for quite awhile, and I was very appreciative of it.

Has the Lord shown you something like this? I'd love to hear other people's stories about things like this too!

Having coffee with the Lord

Each morning I wake up and have my coffee with the Lord and it's the very best part of my day. He always brings up something interesting and relevant to think on and talk to Him about. Invariably, when I'm actually awake and studying His word a little later, no matter where my reading plan takes me that day, He finds a way to include His subject in what I'm studying. It's kind of funny now because I almost expect it and it's like a race to see if I can finish my study without Him finding a way to sneak it in, or if He can sneak it in when I've finally put it out of my mind.

Today it was about giving. He knows this is a subject dear to my heart as I've told Him that I want to be like David who "gave willingly, rejoicing with great joy at the privilege." But that wasn't exactly what He had on His mind. Instead, He showed me in Nehemiah how the stronger people are in their faith, the more they give and that they give feeling joyful for the opportunity. And of course the opposite was also shown there, that the more carnal, or worldly the people became, the less they gave and the less joy and willingness they felt to do so.

When I'd been thinking on the subject this morning, it made sense to me because the first thing that came to mind was
“For where your treasure is, there will your heart be also” (Matt. 6:21). When we start to decline spiritually, pulling away from the Lord and the church (the body of Christ), our main interest, desire, or treasure, is no longer the Lord and His kingdom, instead it's us. I guess we could use our giving like a spiritual thermometer of our walk with the Lord. It can be a measure of our spiritual temperature, and knowing it can help us get it or keep it where it belongs.

I saw a great quote about this today too (of course lol)
Giving to others is one secret of staying alive and fresh in the Christian life. If all we do is receive, then we become reservoirs; and the water can become stale and polluted. But if we both receive and give, we become like channels; and in blessing others, we bless ourselves.
Whenever we talk about giving, the first thing we all generally think of is money, and money is certainly a big part of it. But it's not the only thing we give. Giving also involves giving of our time to others in the body of Christ. It could be visiting with others who don't get out much. I'm not speaking of making a duty call, but of actually giving of yourself to them. Becoming their friend and spending time with them regularly. In that way you're giving two things really, yourself and your time. Giving could also be giving time and abilities to the body of Christ; perhaps if you can paint it would mean spending time painting a room or the sanctuary, or the whole building, or perhaps, another members home. You could provide yourself, your time, and possibly even the paint. What a tremendous gift that would be!

There's many, many ways we can give to the Lord. Everything we have, and everything we are comes from Him, so really we're only giving it back to Him, when we give money, time, talent, abilities, etc. to help the Church, or any member of the body of Christ. We know the Lord tells us that when one member is hurting, that it effects all of us and that we're to care for each other like the family He has made us into. (
1 Cor 12:26; Rom 12:15; Gal 6:2; etc)

As far as money goes though, I'd asked the Lord who I should give to. Who He wanted me to give to. When I originally asked Him this question, He brought me to
Gal 6:6 which tells us that we're to share with the pastor/teacher/person who instructs us in His Word. But how much are we to give? Personally, I prefer to ask the Lord what He wants me to give each time, instead of just automatically pulling out 10% like the OT Jew's did. We're told in 2 Cor 8 that God wants us to give according to our means, and according to what we have, not what we don't have or wish we had. Again in 1 Cor 16 He tells us that it should be in keeping with our income. Mark 12:41–44 tells us of a widow that only gave what amounted to less then a penny, but it was all she had, and she gave it not because the law demanded it, but because she wanted to give it, and she did so with joy. God isn't interested in how much we give, He's interested in what's in our hearts when we give it.

Obviously if we give to the person who instructs us in God's Word, for most of us that means giving to our local church. But is that all we're supposed to do? Is that the only place we're supposed to give? I don't think so. I think the Lord calls us to give whenever the opportunity presents itself. It might be to someone we see on the street or in a store, or to a need we've been made aware of about someone at our church or in our community. It doesn't even have to be to another Christian, for the Lord calls us to be kind and giving to unbelievers as well to show them His love for them. If we ask the Lord to give us opportunities to give, or to make us aware of the opportunities around us, He will, and we will find many opportunities to show the Love of the Lord to others and give back to the Lord some of what He's given us so generously. I've got to share one last quote the Lord surprised me with today. I thought it was great and it made me laugh too:
“The world is full of two kinds of people, the givers and the takers. The takers eat well—but the givers sleep well.”


The Lord continued to teaching me about this the last few days too and really got right to the heart of the issue I've been having concerning giving. Since Bruce got laid off, I've felt that I needed to first pay my fills before I gave to an organization to spread His Word. I told myself that God tells us that we're to pay our bills and not to let debts remain outstanding so that's what I've tried to do. I desperately wanted to give for the Kingdom, and frequently asked the Lord about it but felt I wasn't getting an answer beyond what I'd just said. I got frustrated with articles and sermons that spoke about it because none of them seemed to address the issue of what to do when you either barely made enough to pay the basic survival bills or didn't quite have enough to pay them. They all seemed to assume that everyone had enough to do that. But I have the answer now and it all revolves around one verse, a verse we're all very familiar with. Matthew 6:33But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well. * The light bulb finally went off in my mind and I realized that I'd been seeking my home above His Kingdom! I thought I was doing right by paying my bills first, even though I knew that He would provide the money we needed. I thought I was being a good steward of what He gave me. Those were all just excuses though. Excuses to hide behind so I wouldn't have to face the fear that if I gave to further His Kingdom that I wouldn't be able to pay my bills, since we barely have enough to do that, and sometimes don't have enough to do so. I've often told Him that I sincerely don't want to be rich, but would just like enough money to pay our bills in full and on time each month and be able to give back to Him. I had it backwards. I needed to give to Him for the Kingdom first and then pay my bills! Thank You Lord!  

Today's coffee with the Lord

This morning as I was spending time with the Lord, I was thinking about all that He does for us, and remembering that even every breath we take is a gift from Him. When I think of that, it always makes me remember that He gives that gift even to unbelievers, for no one in the world would ever take another breath if He didn't will it so. And that's pretty amazing to me.

I mean think about it. Everyone who doesn't believe in Him is His enemy. Many of them today are quite obvious about hating Him and being His enemy so it's easy to see with them. I mean those who are always putting us down saying God doesn't exist etc. and blaspheming His Name. Aside from them though, even those who don't make a big deal about it, and possibly don't think much about it, are, according to the bible, His enemies. And yet, He loves them enough to continue to give them the breath of life now and every moment until they die. And along with that breath, He also gives them the chance to come to know Him and be His child, just as He did for us.

The bible actually says quite a bit of what our God does for his enemies. Sometimes we get jealous of unbelievers because it often seems like good things happen to them and the bad things happen to us. Many psalms are about that very thing. But our God is wooing them. He knows that we know He loves us and that we're now going to live for eternity with Him, but that they only have this one life to live if they don't choose Him.

That made me think of the difference between how He treats His enemies and how we treat ours. Of course we know that He tells us to love them, pray for them and help them, but we don't usually do that, except to sometimes pray for them. (and then we often pray that they'll realize how wrong they were).

Instead we talk about them to others and tell others about how horrid they are and what awful things they've done to us. (I say "we", but mean I myself do this. I just assume that since I do it, that others do as well... at least some times) We do things to hurt them if we can, either physically, materially, or emotionally. A lot of times we just do things that will aggravate or inconvenience them. And on and on it goes.

Not at all the way our God treated us before we were saved, which really hurts my heart and makes me ashamed of myself. It makes me feel very petty too because I know that many of the things I've said and done in the past were very mean and petty things. If the tables had been turned and someone had done those things to me, I'd have been terribly hurt, yet I had no problem doing those things to someone who'd hurt me. Kind of like "an eye for an eye" type of thinking I guess.

I was really surprised when I was studying in the Old Testament about the laws and discovered that "an eye for an eye" didn't mean anything like what we generally consider it to mean. At least I always thought it meant quite literally that if someone did something to you, then you should do the same kind of thing back to them. But that wasn't at all what God was telling them when He made that statement. When taken in context, such as in Exodus 21, God was trying to make sure that judgements passed on criminals were fair. He wasn't telling them that they had to do the same thing to someone who'd committed a crime, but rather was telling them that
the severity of a legal punishment shouldn't exceed the severity of an offense. Not at all what I'd thought it meant, which just made me feel all the more guilty of my past actions.

It seems our God has constantly tried to teach us and help us grow up to be the kind of loving person He created us to be, instead of the self centered person our sin nature makes us. I thought of all the sins He's forgiven and simply covered with His love; and all the times when others have hurt me that instead of covering their sins with love, I've been mean and done what I could to hurt them back. Even if all I could do was make a rude gesture or ignore them. How it must hurt His heart when He sees me act in such a way.

It's hard though, because we live in a world where God's kind of love is practically unknown and is rarely modeled for us. It's very hard to be the person modeling that love especially if we've rarely or never seen it modeled to us by another person. Yet that's exactly what the Lord calls us each to do. That's what He meant when He said they would know us by our love. It's what drew so many people to the first Christians to find out what made them so different, because we obviously can't love this way unless God has first poured His love out into our hearts. I'm afraid that the world hasn't seen very much of that in recent generations anyway. It makes me long for the Millennial Kingdom so I can see what it would look like for people to behave that way regularly, and makes me yet more determined to try harder to behave that way now. I know I'll fail many times, but the more I practice, the closer I'll get to showing the kind of love the Lord has shown me. (I can imagine myself in the middle of a rant and realizing what I'm doing and having to apologize to the person I'm angry at and ask their forgiveness instead of demanding that they do the right thing) It's going to be a real challenge, but I'll do my best to practice and try to act in a way that honors and pleases Him.

Our default mind set

I feel so much like Paul talked about in Romans 7:21-25 ... hating this sin nature and what it does to us, and am so thankful that it's only temporary for those of us who are saved! I can't wait till I have my new body and no sin nature and am really and truly just like my Lord! I bet we all feel pretty much the same way too.

As I've been studying this, I've come to think of the way we tend to think and act as our default mind set, because in many ways, our minds are very much like computers. All our feelings and actions are brought about by our thoughts...thoughts we've had since we were born and the vast majority of them are not godly, not scriptural, but instead are from what the world has taught and shown us. So we badly need to replace all that programming with God's programming from His Word. That's what He's talking about when He tells us to take our thoughts captive and make them obedient to Christ (by replacing them with the Truth from His Word. (
2 Corinthians 10:5)

I've been working on this for a long time, but as Paul knew, it's something we have to do from the time we're saved until the day we finally see Him in Heaven. I made a list of the many default mind sets from before we were saved. Actually I copied them from scripture , and then made another of the ones that should replace them, again, from scripture. Check it out:

Default
attitudes: bitterness, rage, anger, malice, unforgiveness, hatred, jealously, deceit, slander, gossip, grudges, selfishness, self pity, self-righteousness, self centeredness, pride, and conceit.

Christ like attitudes:
sacrificial love, forgiveness, humility.

I thought it was pretty neat that all those sinful attitudes could be overcome and replaced with only 3 godly ones, and really, only 1, because sacrificial love includes forgiveness and humility!

I purposely called it "sacrificial love" instead of just love, because the world's definition of love is so different from God's definition...like everything else is, really and wanted to remind myself of the correct kind of love. God's definition means always putting others before ourselves, where as in the world, love is really very selfish. Just as importantly, in God's definition, love isn't a feeling, it's a decision, a commitment, whereas the world views it as a feeling that can come and go.

More and more I'm seeing the truth of the Lord's words when He tells us that if we obey the 1st two commandments, we will actually obey all God's law and walk in His Will. When we're able to do it, live a life of love like that, it's like a breath of fresh air after smelling something particularly obnoxious. Usually though we get caught up in the world's ways and react to people and situations out of habit instead of out of our new nature.

And that's just so upsetting to me. That's why I can so easily relate to what Paul says. I want with all my heart to live according to my new nature, and yet every time I turn around, I've slipped back into my old ways out of habit. All we can do of course is get back up, brush ourselves off, and try again, asking the Lord to forgive us once again and help us not to react next time, but instead to purposely act out of our new nature. It sure does help though to know that there's an end to this, and that one day we'll really be like Jesus and won't have to struggle to love and obey. It helps too if we can remember that the more we practice the better we'll get at it, and our failures will come fewer and further between.

In the mean time, I keep asking the Lord to remove those nasty attitudes from my heart and fill me with His love, forgiveness and humility. I can't help thinking of what a wonderful world this could be if everyone loved the way He does all the time. Then I get excited though because one day we'll actually see what this world could be like if people loved that way...during the Millennium! I can't wait!