Category Archives: About Faith

The Need for Precaution

“Conies [rock-badgers] are creatures of little power, yet they make their home in the crags.”1

While the ants teach us many lessons, including the importance of being prepared as much as possible for whatever lies ahead, the conies or rock badgers show us the need for precaution and being responsible for taking care of ourselves.

These small animals hide behind the rocky crags jutting up in the mountains where no eagle can get to them. They also hide close to the rocks where they remain unseen by prowling lions. Away from the safety of the rocks they would be dead meat.

Too many people today are over-dependent, expecting somebody else or the government to take care of them. God’s goal for each of us is that we mature and grow up, not be independent nor over-dependent, but interdependent. If we don’t take care of ourselves and accept responsibility for getting our needs met in healthy ways, nobody else is going to do it for us. Rock-badgers, if they didn’t exercise precaution and take care of themselves, would either starve or be eaten. If we don’t learn to do the same, we will, in the long run, “be eaten up!” And when we expect others, including for some the government, to do for us what we can and need to do for ourselves, we remain immature, over-dependent and irresponsible.

Furthermore, in life, the reality is that we can’t trust everybody. Jesus didn’t trust himself to everybody either. And like him, the more we know and understand ourselves, the more we will be able to sense whether we can trust somebody else or not. And we certainly can’t trust our arch enemy, the devil. As Peter put it, “Be self-controlled and alert. Your enemy the devil prowls around like a roaring lion looking for someone to devour.”2

We don’t want to become cynics, but we do need to be careful, take necessary precautions against all forms of moral ineptitude, wrong-doing and evil, and accept full responsibility for every area of our life. Above all we need to daily trust our life and way to God as did David who said, “The Lord is my rock, my fortress and my deliverer; my God is my rock, in whom I take refuge … He is my stronghold.”3

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, in the words of the hymn writer, ‘Rock of Ages cleft for me, Let me hide myself in thee.’ Help me never to stray from you, and always be responsible for every area of life. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Proverbs 30:26 (NIV).

2. 1 Peter 5:8 (NIV).

3. 2 Samuel 22:2-3 (NIV).

<:))))><

Be Prepared

“Ants are creatures of little strength, yet they store up their food in the summer.”1

Sometimes the seemingly simple things in life can teach us some of the most important lessons. Take ants for example. Even though their “brain” (central ganglion or nerve) is less than one-tenth the size of a pinhead, ants live in highly organized social colonies. Some collect food, others build the nest and keep it clean, and some look after the queen ants. Nurse ants clean and feed the larvae. Soldier ants guard and protect the food-collecting ants. No wonder the Bible says, “Go to the ant …consider her ways and be wise.”2

Among other lessons, the ants “who store up their food in the summer” teach us the importance of being prepared ahead of time for whatever might come our way. The Chinese proverb, “Dig your well before you’re thirsty” makes the same point. Children and teenagers need to be prepared for life, for entering the work force, and for taking care of themselves. Those who are planning to be married should be prepared ahead for it; unfortunately too many aren’t. And among taking care of various responsibilities, adults need to be prepared ahead for retirement and old age.

And most important of all, we need to be prepared for life after death when we will meet our Maker face to face. As God’s Word says, “Prepare to meet your God,”3 and as Jesus taught about his return to earth, “Be ready; for when you least expect it, I will come.”4 How tragic beyond all measure for those who aren’t prepared for life after death. Whatever you do, don’t let this happen to you. For help see “To Know God and be sure you’re a real Christian” on line at: www.actsweb.org/christian.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please help me to learn well from the ants and always be prepared for whatever lays ahead—especially my eternal well-being. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Proverbs 30:25 (NIV).

2. Proverbs 6:6.

3. Amos 4:12.

4. Matthew 24:44.

<:))))><

Obsession With Confession

“Don’t recite the same prayer over and over as the heathen do, who think prayers are answered only by repeating them again and again.”1

Confession of all sins and wrongdoing is not only essential for receiving God’s forgiveness, but also for achieving physical, emotional and spiritual healing and total well-being. However, a word of warning: Confession without repentance is a game.

Repentance means to turn around and go a different way; that is, turning from negative to positive behavior. To confess and not genuinely seek to discover and resolve the causes behind our negative behavior/s means that we don’t want to face the real issues and are using confession as a salve to soothe our conscience. When we keep repeating this pattern, our confession may have become an “obsession with confession” and nothing but a smoke screen behind which to hide our real selves.

As Jesus said, “When you pray, do not keep on babbling like pagans, for they think they will be heard because of their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.”2

The bottom line for effective prayer and genuine confession is the motive behind the prayer; that is, being honest with ourselves and with God with a genuine desire to overcome the sins and faults we are confessing.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please help me never to use confession or any religious ritual as a means of hiding from my true self. Help me to always be honest with myself and with you. And may my confessions always be genuine; and grant that, with your help, I will overcome my sins and faults. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully in Jesus name, amen.”

1. Mathew 6:7 (TLB)(NLT).

2. Mathew 6:7-8 (NIV).

<:))))<><

Urgent National Need

“Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a disgrace to any people.”1

When Arnold Toynbee, the renowned British historian, was 83, he made the following observations about Western society:

1. “There’s a decline in honesty, and absence of common purpose in the Western world.”

2. “Material success and gross national product are aims of Western peoples and governments.”

3. “Nations rise or fall in relation to the moral unity of the family and the moral purpose of the state—both in decline in the West.”

Even though Toynbee was pessimistic about the West he believed if leaders of government would appeal to the ideals of the people and not just to their pocketbooks, there could be hope for an ethical revolution.

True, we need an ethical revolution but even more we need a spiritual revolution. But unless we turn to God and acknowledge his rightful place in our hearts and as the One who made our nation possible, and rebuild our nation’s moral foundation based on his directives as found in his Word, the Bible, neither an ethical nor a spiritual revolution is likely to happen.

This needs to begin with each one of us and together we need to pray that God will turn our nation back to him.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please send a spiritual revolution to my country and let your work begin in me. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Proverbs 14:34 (NIV).

<:))))><

Forgiveness: The Power That Heals

“Confess your sins to each other and pray for each other so that you may be healed. The earnest prayer of a righteous person has great power and wonderful results.”1

In response to a recent Daily Encounter on the relation between confession and healing I received the following email from a man I will call John:

“Dear Dick, I am a pastor of 39 years of age and have found what you said about confession and physical healing to be absolutely true. It has happened to me.

“This occurred after I confessed guilt regarding holding onto bitterness against a person who hurt me when I was a child. Even though I had often said that I had let the hurt and the bitterness go, I hadn’t.

“But God showed me I needed to confess and repent of my bitterness and I heeded His voice this time. And so I told this person’s marriage partner, who is a dear friend of mine, that I needed forgiveness for having borne that grudge for so many years. I received it—with love and affirmation—and since I confessed my guilt I have lost a severe backache which had afflicted me for 17 years (and for which I had many medical sessions of manipulation, etc). You see, the root of my problem had actually been a spiritual [as well as an emotional] issue and not merely a medical/physical one.

“So, thank you for your insightful and thoroughly Biblical spiritual ministry.”

God has given us directives and/or principles that cover every area of life and death. The smartest thing we can do is to adhere to and follow these.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, thank you for your Word that contains directives and principles for healing, wholeness and happiness. Give me the hunger to learn these, the wisdom to understand them, and the good sense to apply and follow them. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

See online article on Forgiveness:The Power That Heals at http://tinyurl.com/btwy7

1. James 5:16 (NLT).

<:))))><

Dark Night of the Soul

“The eternal God is your refuge, and underneath are the everlasting arms.”1

A few years ago I snapped an Achilles tendon and was only out of the cast a few weeks when I snapped it again! I was not a happy camper. Altogether I was hobbling around on crutches for much of a six-month period.

Other things were a lot worse at the same time and for quite a while I felt like God had forgotten me.

Times like these have been called “the dark night of the soul.” Most of us go through such periods. Sometimes it’s just life’s circumstances that get us down such as having an accident, getting sick, being betrayed by a friend, or experiencing the loss of a loved one or a job, or because of an unresolved relational conflict. And sometimes we have no idea why we feel so down.

Whatever the reason, the difficulties we are experiencing may be God’s wake-up call for us to put something right in our life, to help us grow, or to motivate us to get into a recovery or counseling program to overcome a depression that has lasted too long or to help us overcome an addiction—or even motivate us to change the direction of our life.

If you are going through “a dark night of the soul” be assured that God wants to use this time to help you grow and become a better and wiser person or to change some direction in your life. For me personally, I don’t think I have ever made a major change in my life or work without it having been preceded by a “dark night of the soul” period. I mean, who wants to change anything when everything is going great? Not me! The “dark night” times leave me open to change and to God’s direction.

However, no matter what we are going through, if our lives are committed to God, of one thing we can be certain, “The eternal God is our refuge and underneath are the everlasting arms.”

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, in any dark night of my soul and anguish of heart, please help me to learn what you are seeking to teach me, to hear what you are saying to me, and/or to know what you want me to do. And give me the good sense and courage to follow your bidding. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Deuteronomy 33:27 (NIV).

<:))))><

Unexpected Strangers

“Do not forget to entertain strangers, for by so doing some people have entertained angels without knowing it.”1

Imagine you were an expert mechanic working on your car and along comes a stranger and tells you what you should do to fix it. What would you think and how would you feel? At the very least I’d question the stranger’s reliability.

Maybe that’s the way Peter, James and John felt after they had been fishing all night and caught nothing when Jesus told them to take their boats out and try again. They were experienced fisherman so what would Jesus know about fishing that they didn’t know? They didn’t know who he really was. Nevertheless, they did what he suggested and caught so many fish they had to get help to bring in the nets.

Then there were the religious leaders of Christ’s day who had no idea who Jesus was either, but they were jealous of him and had him crucified.

Unfortunately, it is true that we can’t trust everybody and we need to be on our guard against deceptive and dishonest people. At the same time we never know who the stranger is that has crossed our path. He/she may be an angel unawares. Or he/she may be a person in need of a helping hand, an encouraging word, or just “a cup of cold water.” Jesus said, “I tell you the truth, whatever you did for one of the least of these brothers of mine, you did for me.”2

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please give me eyes to see, ears to hear, and a heart to sense so that I will know when you have sent a ‘stranger’ to minister to me in my hour of need, or if you have brought into my life a person in need of a helping hand or a touch from you—please help me to be as Jesus to him or her. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. Hebrews 13:2 (NIV).

2. Matthew 25:40 (NIV).

<:))))><

The Gift of an Untroubled Mind

“Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you. I do not give to you as the world gives. Do not let your hearts be troubled and do not be afraid.”1

In his book, Peace of Mind, Joshua Liebman writes of an experience he had when he was still a boy. “I made a list of the supreme goods in life,” Liebman said. “I went to a wise mentor and I showed him the list expecting to be praised for my precocity. The list went something like this … health, love, talent, riches, beauty, and faith. As I shared the list with the old wise man, he reached for a stub of a pencil, and carefully scratched through all of the things that I had listed. He said, “Young man, you may have all of these—health, love, faith, riches, beauty—but they will all turn out to be enemies instead of friends unless you have the one thing you missed.” Then he wrote on the paper, “The gift of an untroubled mind.”2

From what I read and hear it appears that so many people (at least in our modern society) are plagued by depression, heartbreak, worry, anxiety, fear, and impaired relationships. And (compared to most of the world) we have just about every material benefit and human comfort we want, except so many don’t have peace of mind.

There are two kinds of peace we all need in order to fully live. First, and most important of all, is spiritual peace or peace with God knowing that our sins are forgiven, our guilt is gone, and we have God’s promise of a home in heaven for all eternity. This gift from God is absolutely free and comes from admitting our sinfulness and accepting Jesus as our Savior. For help see No.4 below: “Finding Peace with God.”

The other kind of peace we could call emotional or relational peace. This comes from resolving any and all impaired relationships, forgiving any and all who have ever hurt us, and resolving any and all negative emotions—especially super-charged repressed negative emotions which are destroyers of both emotional and physical wellbeing and extremely destructive of personal relationships. The Bible also instructs us to get rid of (not bury or deny) all feelings of hatred and all negative emotions.3

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please help me to see and resolve anything in my life that is causing me to have a troubled mind. Please fill me with your love and help me to know and experience your eternal peace in the very center of my being. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. John 14:27 (NIV).

2. Cited in Receive the Gift of an Untroubled Mind by Robert H. Schuller.

3. See 1 Peter 2:1-3 and James 5:16.

4. “Finding Peace With God” at: http://tinyurl.com/find-peace.

<:))))><

Scratch ‘Em Where They Itch

“The Samaritan woman said to him [Jesus], ‘You are a Jew and I am a Samaritan woman. How can you ask me for a drink?’ (For Jews do not associate with Samaritans).”1

On one occasion Jesus and his disciples left Judea for Galilee. Jesus wanted to go through Samaria as he had some “business” to take care of there. About midday Jesus was tired so he sat down and rested at Jacob’s well. He sent all twelve disciples off to get some lunch and, while they were gone, a Samaritan woman came to draw water from the well.

Without doubt this woman was the reason for Jesus coming this way. But how could he approach her? For one thing she was a Samaritan and Jesus was a Jew. In those times it wasn’t socially acceptable for a Jew to speak to a Samaritan. She also had some personal issues that would make it look rather suspicious for Jesus to be talking to her alone. She had lived a colorful life and had had a few men in her day. Because of this she wasn’t accepted by the other town women, so she came to the well alone in the middle of the day. The other women came in the cool of the evening to draw their water.

Imagine the outcome had Jesus approached this woman by asking a question like this: “Excuse me, lady, my name is Jesus. May I ask you a personal question?” And then, without giving her a choice, he asked, “If you should die tonight, where would you spend eternity?”

There are times when it is right to ask such a question, but this wasn’t one of them. Had Jesus done that, she probably wouldn’t have had the faintest idea what Jesus was talking about and dismissed him as being some kind of a religious nut.

But Jesus didn’t approach her with a pat question. Being sensitive to people’s needs he knew that this woman had issues. The fact that she came to the well alone in the heat of the day was saying that. Jesus knew the kind of woman she was and that she was lonely—and had been searching for love and acceptance in all the wrong ways and places. He knew that her pressing need was for loving acceptance. And that’s what Jesus gave her before ever speaking of spiritual things.

Psychologists say that with the lives we touch we either build a bridge to that person or a wall between us. And Jesus, being a great bridge builder, bridged the great social gap between her and this stranger by simply asking, “Will you please give me a drink of water.”

This was the beginning of an interesting conversation. Following a brief discussion about living water, Jesus put his finger on both the need and problem area of her life. Without judging her in any way Jesus told her that he knew she was living with a man who wasn’t her husband and that she had already gone through five husbands.

“You have to be a prophet,” she exclaimed and then turned the conversation to spiritual things herself. She then got so excited that she left her water-pot behind, rushed back to the town and, in essence, said to the men in her life, “Come with me. I want you to meet a man who told me all about myself with all my weaknesses and he accepted me just as I am. He didn’t judge or criticize me. He must be the Christ.”2

Jesus knew this woman’s deepest need—her need for acceptance—and when he met it, she believed in him and automatically became a most enthusiastic witness.

That’s the kind of witness we who call ourselves Christians also need to be. In other words, on most occasions before speaking of spiritual things to people, we need to be sensitive to their personal needs and “scratch ‘em where they itch” just as Jesus did—and minister to their deepest need whatever it may be.3

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, please help me to be sensitive to people’s needs, and be ‘as Jesus’ to them by meeting them at their point of felt need. And grant that they, seeing Jesus in me, will want you for themselves. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer. Gratefully, in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. John 4:9 (NIV).

2. See John 4:1-30.

3. Adapted from I Hate Witnessing by Dick Innes which can be purchased online at http://actscom.com/store.

<:))))><

Mindset Matters

The Apostle Paul at the end of his life confidently said, “I have fought the good fight, I have finished the race, I have kept the faith.”1

There’s an old parable that explains how three men were working hard cutting stone from large blocks of granite. When asked what they were doing, the first man said, “I’m making bricks.” The Second man said, “I’m cutting stones for the foundation of a large building,” while the third man said, “I’m building a cathedral.”

All three men were equally capable and doing the same work, so which man’s work do you think would have been the most fulfilling? What mattered was each man’s thinking about the purpose of the work he was doing. It wasn’t his aptitude that made the difference—it was his attitude—his mindset!

One’s attitude will determine the direction and purpose of one’s life. The purpose of one man might be to make lots of money, while the purpose of another might be to help build the lives of the people he is serving. One woman may see housework as a burdensome chore while another does it joyfully because she is doing it for the ones she loves. It’s their mindset that makes the difference.

The reason the Apostle Paul ended his life victoriously was because he had a noble God-given life-purpose and had dedicated his entire life to fulfilling that purpose. He had a mindset that mattered.

If we want to end our life with a sense of fulfillment, it will be our mindset now that will determine how we end.

Suggested prayer: “Dear God, Please help me to discover my God-given life purpose and dedicate my life to serving you by loving and serving people. Help me to live in harmony with your will and, with your help, to fulfill my God-given life purpose by living a life that matters—not only for time but also for eternity. Thank you for hearing and answering my prayer, gratefully in Jesus’ name, amen.”

1. 2 Timothy 4:7 (NKJV).

<:))))><