Tuesday, January 09, 2007

HOW TO ENJOY GOD'S PRESENCE

HOW TO ENJOY GOD'S PRESENCE

A victorious Christian is a worshipping Christian. A worshipping
Christian doesn't just worship on Sunday mornings. A victorious
Christian worships throughout the day and knows how to enjoy the
presence of God. Here are four ways that you and I can enjoy God's
presence:

1. The most holy and necessary practice in our spiritual life is
the presence of God. That means finding constant pleasure in His divine
company, speaking humbly and lovingly with Him in all seasons, at every
moment, without limiting the conversation in any way. This is especially
important in times of temptation, sorrow, separation from God, and even
in times of unfaithfulness and sin.

2. We must try to converse with God in little ways while we do our
work; not in memorized prayer, not trying to recite previously formed
thoughts. Rather, we should purely and simply reveal our hearts as the
words come to us.

3. We must do everything with great care, avoiding impetuous
actions, which are evidence of a disordered spirit. God wishes us to
work gently, calmly, and lovingly with Him, asking Him to accept our
work. By this continual attention to God, we will 'resist the devil, he
will flee from you.' (James 4:7)

4. Whatever we do, even in the reading of God's Word or praying, we
should stop for a few minutes - as often as possible - to praise God
from the depths of our hearts, to enjoy Him there in secret. Since you
believe that God is always with you, no matter what you may be doing,
why shouldn't you stop for a while to adore Him, to praise Him, to
petition Him, to offer Him your heart, and to thank Him?

Adapted from THE PRACTICE OF THE PRESENCE OF GOD - Brother Lawrence

Are living victoriously today in your worship? Stop today and
enjoy His presence.

Great quote: It is a fact of Christian experience that life is a
series of troughs and peaks. In his efforts to get permanent possession
of a soul, God relies on the troughs more than the peaks. And some of
his special favorites have gone through longer and deeper troughs than
anyone else. --
Peter Marshall

Join us this Thursday evening as we enjoy a time of great food
and fellowship and a challenge from God's Word at our Men's Fellowship
Night. Pastor Joe Olachea will be sharing God's Word.
The evening begins at 6:15 PM in the Raws Dining Room. Call
today and make your reservation and bring a friend! 732-350-1187.

Monday, January 08, 2007

A VICTORIOUS CHRISTIAN IS A WORSHIPPING CHRISTIAN

A VICTORIOUS CHRISTIAN IS A WORSHIPPING CHRISTIAN

"At this, Job got up and tore his robe and shaved his head. Then he fell
to the ground and worshipped ..." Job 1:20

If you've never read through the book of Job, I commend it to you. It is
a tough book to work through, but one that will encourage you especially
if you are in the midst of suffering and pain in your life.

Job was considered by God to be "blameless and upright, a man who feared
God and shunned evil." Job 1:8 In other words, I believe that Job was a
man who walked and lived in victory. So much so that when Satan was
moving back and forth from earth to heaven and appears in the courtroom
of heaven, God suggested to Satan that he take a look at this man and
give permission for Satan to put him to the test.

I want to suggest to you this morning that Job was a worshipping
Christian. I believe that worship was a part of the fabric of his life.
In just the first chapter of this book, the drama unfolds by Satan
attacking Job's family. In a matter of hours four messengers come to Job
to tell him that that his oxen and donkeys had been taken, his sheep and
servants had been burned up, stole his camels, and then the worst of
all, his kids and their spouses were killed when their house collapsed
in on them.

I don't know about you, but he was having a
"no-good-very-horrible-bad-day." If anyone had the cause for a bad
attitude or a pity party, Job was a candidate. In fact, he could have
been depressed to the point of trying to take his life. In one day he
loses everything.

What amazes me every time I read this chapter is what he does at the end
of the day. He worships!
He falls down to his knees and declares: "Blessed be the name of the
Lord!" Wow! He declares God's sovereign control in facing one of the
darkest days of his life and is able to get on his face before God and
worship Him.

This guy is no casual worshipper. He just isn't a Sunday worshipper. He
is fully engaged as a worshipper every day of his life. That is why he
was able to face life victoriously even in the midst of horrible
circumstances.

How about you? Do you want to be a victorious Christian? Then I suggest
to you today that to THINK VICTORY - be a worshipper! Don't just worship
in the good times - worship Him even when your days are chaotic and
filled with hurt and pain. What are you facing today? Declare His
sovereign control in your life and say with Job - BLESSED BE THE NAME OF
THE LORD!

Join us Thursday evening for our Men's Fellowship Night with Pastor Joe
Olechea. Dinner begins at 6:15 PM followed by a time of worship and a
challenge from God's Word. Then join other men for fellowship and sports
in our Activity Center. Call today for a reservation! 732-350-1187.

Great quote: "Worship is the tryst of sacramental identification with
God; we deliberately give back to God the best he has given us that we
may be identified with Him in it." Oswald Chambers

Sunday, January 07, 2007

SPONTANEOUS WORSHIP

SPONTANEOUS WORSHIP

One of the delights of my ministry at America's KESWICK is rubbing
shoulders with the men who are in our 120-day residential program for
men, The Colony of Mercy. I have learned so much from them and enjoy
seeing the Lord transform their lives as they understand that victory
for a lifetime is possible through Christ.

On New Year's Eve we planned a Watch Night service for the men and
before the service we had a bonfire with cider and donuts for them. We
were sitting around the bonfire for about ten minutes talking and
laughing when one of the men started to share what the Lord had been
doing in his life. It wasn't planned to be a worship service, but we
knew it the men were singing and testifying and worshipping the Lord. It
was really cool.

A victorious Christian is a worshipping Christian. And worship for a
Christian who THINKS VICTORY is not just worshipping at 10:30 or 11:00
AM on Sunday morning. Worship for a victorious Christian is a part of
the fabric of their lives Monday through Saturday. It may take place
during their quiet time or when they are walking in the woods. For
Brother Lawrence it happened when he was washing pots and pans.

Several years ago on our trip to Alaska we were climbing up a path that
took us to a mountain peak in Juno. The setting was absolutely stunning.
One of our fellow travelers stood up on a picnic table and shouted,
"Lord, you done good. You done so good." Several people broke into
singing "How Great Thou Art." It was a special moment.

How about you this morning? Are you just a Sunday worshipper or a
spontaneous worshipper? I trust that today your worship comes from a
heart that has already been worshipping throughout the week. That's what
worship is all about.

Have a great Lord's day.

Join us on Thursday evening, January 11th for our monthly Men's Night.
Pastor Joe Olechea will be our speaker. Dinner begins at 6:15 PM. Call
today for a reservation and bring a friend.

Great quote: Holy Spirit of God, visit now this soul of mine, and tarry
within it until the eventide. Inspire all my thoughts. Pervade all my
imaginations. Suggest all my decisions. Lodge in my soul's most inward
citadel, and order all my doings. Be with me in silence and in my
speech, in my haste and in my leisure, in company and in solitude, in
the freshness of the morning and the weariness of the evening. Give me
grace at all times to rejoice in Thy mysterious companionship. John
Baillie

Saturday, January 06, 2007

SEEKING GOD'S GUIDANCE

SEEKING GOD'S GUIDANCE

"I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go; I will
guide you with My eye." Psalm 32:8

Dr. Charles Stanley shares some practical advice about God's leading and
guiding in our lives:

"In seeking the Lord's guidance, we must be careful to watch for
pitfalls along our paths. Strong fleshly desires, wrong counsel,
impatience, doubt, and pressures are all snares that will leave us with
less than God's best if we cave in to their temptation. These reasons
are why there are certain essentials to seeking God's guidance:

* Cleansing: Sin inhibits not your relationship with God, but your
fellowship. If you are a believer, your relationship is secure. But
constant sin will impede your fellowship with God, and He will not act
until you walk away from the sin.

* Surrendering: God loves you and wants your best. So why not
believe Him, let go of the worldly trappings you may hold so dear, and
step out in faith?

* Asking: James said that we don't have because we don't ask or
because our requests are made with wrong motives. Our heavenly Father is
often just waiting for us to simply ask with a pure heart.

* Meditating: How often do you make decisions intentionally
seeking God's promises in His Word and meditating over them?

* Believing: To believe is to trust and obey. His Word says that
whoever has His commands and obeys them is the one who loves Him.

* Waiting: This is difficult. But it is also when the Lord does
His best work as the sculptor of our souls.

>From PATHWAYS TO HIS PRESENCE by Dr. Charles F. Stanley and published by
Nelson Books

Seeking God's guidance for your life? Then hopefully these practical
insights will help you do so victoriously.

Great Quote: Afraid? Of what? To feel the spirit's glad release? To pass
from pain to perfect peace, the strife and strain of life to cease?
Afraid of what? --- Afraid? Of what? Afraid to see the Savior's face, to
hear His welcome, and to trace the Glory - Gleam from wounds of Grace?
Afraid of that?? Afraid? Of what? A flash - a crash - a pierced heart;
darkness - light - O Heaven's art! A wound of His counterpart! Afraid of
that? --- Afraid? Of what? To enter Heaven's Rest, and yet to serve the
Master blest, from service good to service best? Afraid of that??
Afraid? Of what? To do by death what life could not -- Baptize with
death a stony plot, till souls shall blossom from that spot? Afraid of
that??

E. H. Hamilton

Friday, January 05, 2007

ALL OF ME

ALL OF ME

"O Lord, you have searched me and you know me. You know when I sit and
when I rise; you perceive my thoughts from afar. You discern my going
out and my lying down; you are familiar with all my ways." - Psalm
139:1-3

"An old adage defines a friends as 'one who knows all about you - and
likes you anyway.' Few of us are secure enough to let our real selves
show except to those friends and relatives who are closer to us. We come
actors, learning at an early age to portray a different, more polished
role in public - in conversation, in play, and in work.

We may become so accustomed to this acting that we don't even realize we
are doing it. Yet God knows. He knows every part of us, every secret
role we play, every hidden thing we do. He's perfectly familiar with
that part of us we consider too playful and immature or too brassy and
dramatic. The part that, when it shows, causes us to shudder and hope no
one notices. But God sees. And he loves us anyway.

What freedom we find when we realize we can stand before our Creator
without dread, knowing he sees every intimate part of us and yet does
not despise those traits that we consider less than desirable. God knows
our ways because he wove together all our parts (see Psalm 139:13).

David completely understood that God made him, knew him, and loved him.
For only by knowing this could the king allow himself to dance 'with all
his might' before the procession that brought the ark back to town. When
someone criticized the young ruler for his rather undignified behavior,
David answered simply, 'It was before the Lord, who chose me ... I will
celebrate before the Lord.' (see 2 Samuel 6:14-21).

God saw it all ... every part of David's character: the courage and the
childlike joy, the honor and the humility. And he knew it would take all
of those ingredients for David to become the great king God wanted him
to be. In the same way, God has given to us diverse traits and
characteristics so that we can be the people he wants us to be." From
BETWEEN SUNDAYS ... A YEAR OF TRANSFORMING DEVOTIONS FOR THE TOUGHEST
DAYS OF YOUR WEEK, published by Howard.

Great Quote: "The best prayers have often more groans than words." John
Bunyan

Thursday, January 04, 2007

THE CHRISTIAN CALL TO SERVICE

THE CHRISTIAN CALL TO SERVICE

"No soldier when in service gets entangled in the enterprises of life;
his aim to is to satisfy and please the one who has enlisted him." 2
Timothy 2:4 (The Amplified Bible)

"The soldier is summoned to a life of active duty, and so is the
Christian. The very nature of your calling precludes a life of ease. If
you had thought to be a summer soldier, consider your commission
carefully. Your spiritual orders are rigorous. Like the apostle, I would
not have you be ignorant on this point and will therefore, list a few of
your directives.

Those sins which have lain nearest your heart must now be trampled under
your feet. And what courage and resolution this requires! You think
Abraham was tested to the limit when called upon to take Isaac, 'your
only son ... whom you love' (Genesis 22:2), and offer him up with his
own hands. Yet what was that to this: 'Soul, take the lust which is the
child dearest to your heart, your Isaac, the sin from which you intend
to gain the greatest pleasure. Lay hands on it and offer it up; pour out
its blood before Me; run the sacrificing knife into the very heart of it
- and do it joyfully!'

This is more than the human spirit can bear to hear. Our lust will not
lie so patiently on the altar as Isaac, nor as the lamb brought dumb to
the slaughter (Isaiah 53:7). Our flesh will roar and shriek, rending the
heart with its hideous cries. Indeed, who can express the conflict, the
wrestlings, the convulsions of the spirit we endure before we can put
our heart into such a command? Or who can fully recount the cleverness
with which such a lust will plead for itself?

When the Spirit convicts you of sin, Satan will try to convince you, 'It
is such a little one - spare it!' Or he will bribe the soul with a vow
of secrecy: 'You can keep me and your good reputation, too. I will not
be seen in your company to shame you among your neighbors. You may shut
me up in the attic of your heart, out of sight, if only you will let me
know and then have the wild embraces of your thoughts and affections in
secret.'

From the devotional writings of William Gurnall in his classic THE
CHRISTIAN IN COMPLETE ARMOUR - Daily Readings in Spiritual Warfare

Powerful stuff this morning. Is there an area that the Holy Spirit is
placing His finger on this morning? Are you willing to put that Isaac
closest to your heart to death?

Great quote: I prayed for faith, and thought that someday faith would
come down and strike me like lightning. But faith did not seem to come.
One day I read in the tenth chapter of Romans, "Now faith cometh by
hearing, and hearing by the Word of God". I had closed my Bible, and
prayed for faith. I now opened my Bible, and began to study, and faith
has been growing ever since.
Dwight L Moody

Wednesday, January 03, 2007

THE CALL TO REMEMBER

THE CALL TO REMEMBER

"Consider your own call, brothers and sisters; not many of you were wise
by human standards, not many powerful, not many of noble birth." 1
Corinthians 1:26

In my ten years of rubbing shoulders with men who have graduated from
the Colony of Mercy, our 120-day residential for men struggling with
life-dominating addictions, there have been men who have wanted to
forget "where they came from." While Paul instructs us to "forget those
things which are behind," it is good for us to REMEMBER where we have
come from. It is a good review and it helps us with our perspective on
life.

In his devotional, BETWEEN SUNDAYS, Shawn Craig writes: "I love the word
REMEMBER. It literally means to bring back the picture to your mind. To
relive it, to see it, to do it again. When a man set's a photograph of
his wife on his desk, he wants to call her image to mind. As he looks at
her photograph, he REMEMBERS her.

The Apostle Paul wanted the Corinthians to remember something as a way
of attaining the proper attitude of mind and spirit. In essence he was
saying, 'When you are tempted to boast and become prideful, recall your
humble beginnings. Bring back to your mind the picture of who you were
before Christ found you.

In the say way, Moses reminded the children of Israel, 'Remember that
you were slaves in Egypt and that the Lord your God brought you out of
there with a mighty hand and an outstretched arm.' (Deut 5:15)

Why does a superstar athlete go to the ghetto and reach out to the poor
and destitute? He wants to REMEMBER his humble beginnings. He looks at a
young boy and sees himself a few years earlier when someone reached out
to him with compassion and caused him to believe that he could escape
the tyranny of poverty.

REMEMBERING empowers us to move forward. Woodrow Wilson said, "A nation
which does not remember what it was yesterday does not know what it is
today, nor what it is trying to do. We are trying to do a futile thing
of we do not know where we came from or what we have been about."
Remembering our calling and who we were before Christ found us does two
things: It causes us to boast in the Lord instead of ourselves, and it
gives us faith in the mighty power of God. REMEMBERING, we can boldly
stand and say, 'Christ saves! Christ delivers!' because we are living
witnesses of His grace. We REMEMBER what he has done for us."

Take some time today to REMEMBER. It will be a good exercise at the
beginning of this new year.

Great quote: "Head knowledge of the things of Christ is not enough; this
following Christ is primarily a matter of the heart. If your heart is
not fixed on its purpose, your principles, as good as they may be, will
hang loose and be of no more use in the heat of the battle than an
ill-strung bow. Half-hearted resolve will not venture much nor far for
Christ." - William Gurnall

Please note: From time to time we hear that folks get bumped off the
daily THINK VICTORY! Freedom Fighter list. If you stop receiving Freedom
Fighters, you can sign up again by visiting our website:
www.americaskeswick.org.

Monday, January 01, 2007

CONQUERORS

January 1

CONQUERORS

"...we are more than conquerors ...."
(Romans 8:37)

We have in another place considered the "more" nature of God.
He is always "more." He always provides "more." He always does "more."
That is just the way He is. Now it is good for us to see and know how
His "more" affects us in a more personal way.
God's "more" is personal for US. He is not "more" just for
Himself. He is "more" on OUR behalf. He knows WE need His "more." We
see that in so many of His assurances. He manifested it in His
declaration that He had come in order that WE may have "life... more
abundantly." (John 10:10) We see it in the promise that His grace is
sufficient for US for his strength is made perfect in weakness. (2
Corinthians 12:9)
That is why our Bible tells us that "WE (emphasis added) are
more than conquerors...." We are not merely more than the ordinary. We
are not in the category of those who "barely make it" in our efforts to
overcome the problems of this life. We certainly are not those who are
held captive by desires and circumstances. Neither are we captive to the
pressures of peers. Corrupted culture holds no claim over us.
Neither are we the ones who merely study about the conquerors.
True, those stories of conquerors are exciting. They raise some hope
and excite some discipline in those who would like to join the ranks of
the victorious. They encourage other conquerors that share the victory.
But the promise to us is that WE are the conquerors. In fact WE are the
ones who are "more than conquerors." We are the ones who wear the crown,
occupy the throne and hold the victor's sword.
Are you now saying that such is not the case in your life? Are
you saying that your struggle for such victory continues? Are you
wondering why this victory has not replaced your defeat?
Why should we ask? The answer to victory is so obvious. For
"we are more than conquerors THROUGH HIM THAT LOVED US." Have you not
claimed your crown, your throne and your Victor's sword? Have you not
claimed your victory in Christ? Robert L. Alderman

Today's devotional was written by my mentor and friend, Pastor Bob
Alderman and is from our daily devotional, REAL VICTORY FOR REAL LIFE,
published by Christian Literature Crusade.

On behalf of the Board and staff of America's KESWICK -HAPPY NEW YEAR!