Archive for August, 2009 // All the posts in this month

The Fullness of Peace

Originaly Posted on August 30, 2009

The end of Numbers chapter 6 records very specific words that God gave to Aaron and his sons to speak over the children of Israel. These words were not instructions but rather, they were words of confirmation, words of affirmation, words of love and words of peace. God said that these words would “put His name on the children of Israel.” This was God’s promise to provide peace. Isaiah 26:3 says “You will keep him in perfect peace, whose mind is stayed on You, because he trusts You.” The key to peace is trust; it is not the absence of trouble or the fulfillment of our wildest dreams. Peace is very simply being sure that God is in control, that I am His sheep in His pasture, being led, fed, protected and loved by God Almighty. As Israel departed from “The Mountain of God”, God wanted them to be sure that no matter what they faced He would be present, that no matter how they feared, He would be active and no matter what they endured He would fulfill His promises to Him. God’s peace has not changed, it is complete, it is active, it is present and it is available; it’s only cost is that we trust God to be good, to be kind, to be love and to be present.

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Thursday Night Prayer Walk at Elias Boudinot Elementary School

Originaly Posted on August 26, 2009

For the next five weeks we will be prayer walking every Thursday night at a different school in Burlington City. The children’s ministry will continue as usual at 325 Fernwood Ave.

August 6th Samuel Smith School

August 13th Wilbur Watts Intermediate School

August 20th Captain James Lawrence School

August 27th Elias Boudinot School; Pearl & Ellis Streets

September 3rd Burlington City Junior and High Schools

We will be tearing down the banners of the enemy and raising up the banners of God. Prayer guides will be available each week.

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Content With Sovereignty

Originaly Posted on August 25, 2009

I think that we sometimes underscore the difficulty of Moses’ early life. He was spared by the grace of God and the courage of his family. Taken as a grandson of Pharoah but also taught that he was a Hebrew, a child of God.  It seems as if Moses had no real place of fitting in. The Egyptians rejected him because he was a Hebrew and the Hebrews rejected him because they saw him as an Egyptian. After fleeing because of murdering an Egyptian guard we find a strange statement in Exodus chapter 2. It says that Moses was “content” in Midian. It was in Midian that God was able to mold and shape Moses, was able to prepare him for his future and finally was able to speak to Him and build a relationship of intimacy with Him. I believe strongly in the Sovereignty of God. I believe that God “orders the steps of the righteous”. I also believe that “His ways are higher than mine” and that there are many steps that I take in life that do not fit with my understanding but are perfectly planned by God. It is interesting to me that when Moses became content that God was able to begin a work in his life. I want to learn to be content with God’s sovereignty, to trust Him to be in control, to trust Him to love me and to trust Him to “do all things well.” In that place I will learn God’s love, I will learn to be faithful and God will begin to fulfill all of His plans for me, plans to give me a hope and a future.

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Day of Prayer for National Leaders

Originaly Posted on August 25, 2009

We have set aside every Tuesday as a day of prayer for our National leaders: President Obama, the Senate and the Congress. Each week we present a specific focus, birthed from Scripture, that we can agree and pray together. This week we pray that:

Father I pray that our National Leaders will walk in truth, integrity and faithfulness and that they will humble themselves and diligently seek Your will and Your ways.

When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice; but when a wicked man rules the people groan. Proverbs 29:2

Therefore, I will exhort that first of all supplication, prayers, intercessions, and giving thanks be made for all men, for kings and all who are in authority, that we may live quiet and peaceable lives in all godliness and reverence. For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior.  I Timothy 2:1-3

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Thursday Night Prayer Walk at Captain James Lawrence School

Originaly Posted on August 18, 2009

For the next five weeks we will be prayer walking every Thursday night at a different school in Burlington City. The children’s ministry will continue as usual at 325 Fernwood Ave.

August 6th Samuel Smith School

August 13th Wilbur Watts Intermediate School

August 20th Captain James Lawrence School

August 27th Elias Boudinot School

September 3rd Burlington City Junior and High Schools

We will be tearing down the banners of the enemy and raising up the banners of God. Prayer guides will be available each week.

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Obstacles or Opportunities?

Originaly Posted on August 18, 2009

One of my favorite verses is the second half of Psalm 23:3, “He leads me in paths of righteousness for His name’s sake.” I have used this verse as a prayer thousands of times. I find great comfort in knowing that there is a “path” that has been set out for me; that I am not merely walking along in life doing the best I can with my circumstances but that my steps are ordered, my path is established and that it is wrapped in righteousness. Where this verse becomes truly powerful is when we see what was written immediately after it, “Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no evil; For You are with me;”. These two statements must be read together: “He leads me in paths of righteousness . . . I walk through the valley of the shadow of death”. Our hearts would lead us to believe that a difficult path must be a wrong one, but David, through the anointing and leading of the Holy Spirit is trying to encourage and strengthen us in the truth that paths of righteousness may be difficult, but they will never be lonely. In most of our situations we are not slowed by obstacles nearly as much as we are slowed by our reaction to them. We have the opportunity to be so sure that God has set our path that we meet each obstacle and stumbling block as an opportunity for faith rather than a possibility for failure.

I am terribly afraid of snakes, always have been. I don’t ever remember a time in which I thought they were interesting in any way. Once when I six or seven years old I remember my Mom telling my Dad that there was a large snake behind our garage. Because of this I decided that the back of the garage was no place for me to be, possibly ever again. I remember my Dad telling me, “It was just a black snake, it won’t hurt you, but if you are afraid of it, it can make you hurt yourself.” His point was that the snake was not poisonous, it could not really harm you, but your reaction to it could make you hurt yourself. There are obstacles and oppositions in our lives that are exactly the same, they can’t truly harm us, but in our reaction to them we can harm ourselves.

Nehemiah had received a specific assignment from God, to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem. This task was pretty far fetched. Nehemiah was just a cup bearer to the king, he had no wall building experience. He was a captive, not even in his home of Judah, certainly there were many others more qualified or even with just a better opportunity to accomplish this task. And yet this was the “path of righteousness” that was chosen for Nehemiah. At each point where obstacles seemed to be ready to appear God moved. Nehemiah prayed and fasted and faith replaced his fear and he presented himself to God for the task. God moved the heart of the king freeing Nehemiah to return to Jerusalem and even providing the resources necessary for the journey and the assignment. When he arrived in Jerusalem, the task was even greater than he had expected, but rather than submit to disappointment he prayed his way to faith and all of Jerusalem joined in with faith for the task. Nehemiah could have used any of these things as a reason to stop, a reason to decide that he was wrong, that God had not spoken or that someone else should do the work. At each obstacle he chose to pray and let God increase his faith rather than worry, complain and let anxiety steal it. How we face obstacles will often determine the power that they have in our lives. If we face difficulty with fear, with worry, with doubt and selfishness then we will often reap our own thoughts, we will often reap the weakness of our imaginations. We have the ability to believe that obstacles in life are opportunities for faith. They are opportunities for God to be glorified and for me to become more than I have ever been before.

I believe that how we face obstacles and difficulties teaches us a lot about what we truly believe about God. David was able to say that he was sure that even if he walked through the “valley of the shadow of death” that God was with him. What do we believe? Do obstacles make you question God’s presence or depend upon it? Do difficulties make you trust Him more or look for another route? When Nehemiah announced the plan to rebuild the walls he was immediately met with taunts of opposition. There was a group of men that questioned, doubted, even mocked and teased him. Nehemiah prayed immediately and stayed on course. As they started the work, the opposition became greater, now it went from simple taunting to blasphemy and contempt. Again, Nehemiah prayed and continued with the assignment at hand. When the wall was half built the opposition escalated, multiple regions joined together and planned to attack Jerusalem to stop the building of the walls. Nehemiah could have decided that this was too much, that they needed to stop working, to protect themselves, to wait until the opposition passed, but that was not what he was called to do, Instead, he prayed, again. From his prayers he made a plan that would provide protection from the enemy and the work to continue, even to increase. The amazing thing is that the threats never came to pass but the task was completed. The walls of Jerusalem had been reduced to a pile of “rubbish” for nearly 140 years and in 52 days of working, praying and believing they were rebuilt. The truth is, how we respond to obstacles and opposition will determine whether or not we ever fulfill our purpose.

Those that opposed Nehemiah and Jerusalem never had the power to defeat them! God was their protector, God was their provider and God was their watchman. Your enemy, your flesh, your obstacles and your opposition only have the power that you give them. I am not saying that they are not real, they are real and they are present. My belief is that these things can not stop the plan of God in our lives, but we can. We can give in to temptation, we can run in fear, we can quit in disappointment, we can choose bitterness, we can embrace pride but those are not about the obstacles and opposition; they are our reactions to them. I hope I can encourage you today to press forward, to let prayer become your chief reaction and the Word of God to be your weapon when facing difficulty. Jesus told His disciples, “In this world you will have trouble, but take heart, I have overcome the world.” You will face no difficulty that Jesus has not overcome. You will face no opposition that God has not endured and defeated. You will face no circumstance that God did not know of and prepare to win victory through. The “path of righteousness” is not where we go when we finally have faith, it is the road that creates it. Dark valleys produce the greatest mountain top experiences. Loud opposition creates the most wonderful concerts of praise. Large obstacles give way to the most joyful accomplishments. These things are not unknown chinks in the armor, they are planned battles to produce greater victories than we could have ever imagined.

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Day of Prayer for National Leaders

Originaly Posted on August 17, 2009

We have set aside every Tuesday as a day of prayer for our National leaders: President Obama, the Senate and the Congress. Each week we present a specific focus, birthed from Scripture, that we can agree and pray together. This week we pray that:

Father remove from our National Leaders the way of falsehood and unfaithfulness to You, and graciously impart Your law to them. And I pray they will choose the way of truth and faithfulness. Psalm 119:29-30

When the righteous are in authority, the people rejoice; but when a wicked man rules the people groan. Proverbs 29:2

Therefore, I will exhort that first of all supplication, prayers, intercessions, and giving thanks be made for all men, for kings and all who are in authority, that we may live quiet and peaceable lives in all godliness and reverence. For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Savior.  I Timothy 2:1-3

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Water Baptism Service Sunday September 6th

Originaly Posted on August 17, 2009

Immediately following the morning service on Sunday, September 6th City of Refuge Fellowship will be having a water baptism service. The service will be held at the home of Joe and Anna Pennise at 532 Wood Street. If you would like to be baptized please see Abie or Melissa this week.

Please join us for a time of worship as we celebrate this step of faith in the lives of those being baptized.

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Pray to Build

Originaly Posted on August 17, 2009

Nehemiah was given an awesome task, to rebuild the walls of Jerusalem. At every turn he was met with difficulty, with doubt and with opposition. Nehemiah teaches us a very valuable lesson; he met every difficulty with prayer. Before he went to the king with the burden of his heart he prayed. Before he proposed the plan for rebuilding the walls to the people of Judah he prayed. Each time he was met with threats and opposition he prayed. His prayers strengthened his resolve, strengthened the workers and increased the faith of all who were involved. Ultimately it was the prayers of Nehemiah and the goodness of God that produced the miraculous rebuiding of the walls. The walls of Jerusalem had been in ruins for some 140 years, but in 52 days of prayer, faith and work they were restored. There is restoration waiting in each of our lives today; it will come about with prayer, with faith and with “a mind to work”.

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Transitions

Originaly Posted on August 11, 2009

Transitions are often difficult. We spend time praying and even dreaming about the next open door but we often give little thought to the closed door that will precede it. In Revelation 3 Jesus declared that He holds the “key of David” which has all power not merely in the opening of doors but the closing of them as well. Elijah’s first open door led to Ahab’s presence where he declared a long drought. That door closed as quickly as it opened as Elijah was sent to hide by the Brook Cherith. That open door also ended quickly as the Brook dried up and he was sent to a widow that would feed him not with her abundance but with her lack. God is always leading us and our times of transition are new opportunities to trust Him, to have our faith increased and to be used to show God’s goodness to those around us. Don’t fear closed doors, celebrate them and let the Holy Spirit lead you to the next transition of His glory.

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