Yesterday I wrote about Absalom's betrayal of his father King David and how he sat at the city gates looking out for those seeking council with the king. It was at these moments that Absalom planted seeds of betrayal and doubt of the king in his listeners.
As I pondered and prayed this morning, the Holy Spirit spoke to me about James chapter three and how we are to tame our tongues. That from the tongue comes both life and death and from our tongues we can speak both blessings and curses.
As we examine the scriptures in James, we notice there should be no difference in how we are to speak to any person. In fact scripture tells us there is equality in God. All men are equal in God's eyes! And yes though we might hold different positions of power and influence, our tongues are called to speak life.
At one of our School of the Spirit meetings last week, one of the ladies whilst praying for her family heard from the Holy Spirit to begin to proclaim life over one of her daughters and without realises what was happening began to do just that. A few hours later she received a phone call from a doctor explaining that her daughter was gravely ill and could possibly die. Immediately this lady proclaimed to the doctor that she would not die but surely live from Psalm 118:17. After getting off the phone she began making her way to the hospital, the whole way she proclaimed this verse over her daughter and upon arriving at the hospital was told by the doctors that she had recovered and would be fine.
What an amazing testimony from this lady of both how the tongue has ability to build up, especially when we obey the voice of the Holy Spirit, and breath new life and hope where all has been lost.
I am just as guilty as the next person, as I explained in my previous blog, how easy it is to speak negative and defamatory words upon others. To fall into the pit of speaking curses, which are usually out of our own hurt and pain, upon others. Yet it is the opposite that God calls each of us to as followers of Christ.
At a time as needy as ours, when there seems to be so much hatred being spoken about one another, imagine the impact we as believers may have in building up each other, especially those within the church, as a witness to all those around us.
I challenge you today to do just that, to speak life and hope and liberty to those you know who especially need to hear it today and see the change it can bring to peoples lives.
God Bless
James Kenny is my name, I was saved and was a pastor at Penrith Christian Fellowship Centre now known as Imaginations Church. I had the privilege to work with the late Pastor Gordon Gibbs, Steve Kelly and other great godly men and woman who impacted my life tremendously. For the past 30 years I have engaged in church planting, started a couple of not for profit organisations including Youth Hotline and Penrith Bible College. I currently serve at Sanctuary Church Blue Mountains.
Wednesday, 16 September 2015
Tuesday, 15 September 2015
Absalom's Betrayal - 2 Samuel
After reading of King David's incredible honour towards his predecessor King Saul, it is almost shameful to see how King David was betrayed by his own flesh and blood. Yet anyone who has been in leadership for any length of time knows how this feels.
There are always two sides to the story and there is no doubt in my mind Absalom felt justified in his actions in seeking revenge for his sister after she was raped by her half brother. No doubt Absalom knew the laws relating to this crime and felt his father, King David, should have done what was right. Yet when we look at David's response to his son Amnon and the shameful act of raping his half sister Tamar, we see David do what most probably all of us would do and try to maintain the status quo for the sake of the family.
It is at this moment that I believe Absalom felt betrayed by his father King David and it was at this point Absalom takes things into his own hands. As time tells, Absalom's act of vengeance upon his half brother began the down fall and eventually death to him and his household, but not before he was able to reach havoc on the King.
Absalom's betrayal and undermining of his father's name I find very interesting at this point. When we look at 2 Samuel 15 and how Absalom would position himself at the city gates and show compassion to those who came to seek the King's council. Claiming "if he were judge in Israel" and though these words sound so innocent they in effect were undermining the judgement and therefore authority of the king.
How easy it is when our leaders seem to disappoint that we speak words which undermine their authority, I know how easy it is to question a leaders authority as I have done this myself. By chance in Australia right now this has been done to our prime minister who has as a result been replaced by Malcolm Turnbull. Whilst this new prime minister might make a great leader, in my opinion how he came to this position will forever mark him and his authority.
In light of Psalm 75:7 and 1Peter 5:6-7 we see it is God who judges and it is God who promotes in His time! Yet so many of us, like Absalom, take things into our hands by some selfish act & try to promote themselves. I have been guilty of this and I am only by the grace of God am here today to see how wrong this is.
As discussed in my previous blog, it is our honour for God's anointed leaders and trust in our heavenly Father who knows the beginning from the end that allows us to see the increase and God's hand upon our lives. And whilst there is great injustice in the world and I believe it is our responsibility to be a voice against injustice we must also honour those whom God has appointed and believe that God also has an answer.
Let us always judge ourselves less we be judged and pray for those in authority that God is graciously at work in their lives as much as He is in ours.
There are always two sides to the story and there is no doubt in my mind Absalom felt justified in his actions in seeking revenge for his sister after she was raped by her half brother. No doubt Absalom knew the laws relating to this crime and felt his father, King David, should have done what was right. Yet when we look at David's response to his son Amnon and the shameful act of raping his half sister Tamar, we see David do what most probably all of us would do and try to maintain the status quo for the sake of the family.
It is at this moment that I believe Absalom felt betrayed by his father King David and it was at this point Absalom takes things into his own hands. As time tells, Absalom's act of vengeance upon his half brother began the down fall and eventually death to him and his household, but not before he was able to reach havoc on the King.
Absalom's betrayal of King David at the City Gates |
How easy it is when our leaders seem to disappoint that we speak words which undermine their authority, I know how easy it is to question a leaders authority as I have done this myself. By chance in Australia right now this has been done to our prime minister who has as a result been replaced by Malcolm Turnbull. Whilst this new prime minister might make a great leader, in my opinion how he came to this position will forever mark him and his authority.
In light of Psalm 75:7 and 1Peter 5:6-7 we see it is God who judges and it is God who promotes in His time! Yet so many of us, like Absalom, take things into our hands by some selfish act & try to promote themselves. I have been guilty of this and I am only by the grace of God am here today to see how wrong this is.
As discussed in my previous blog, it is our honour for God's anointed leaders and trust in our heavenly Father who knows the beginning from the end that allows us to see the increase and God's hand upon our lives. And whilst there is great injustice in the world and I believe it is our responsibility to be a voice against injustice we must also honour those whom God has appointed and believe that God also has an answer.
Let us always judge ourselves less we be judged and pray for those in authority that God is graciously at work in their lives as much as He is in ours.
Thursday, 10 September 2015
Honour & Respect - 1Samuel 26:9-10
I have been reading the books of Samuel in recent days and am amazed by the incredible honour and respect that David (King) had for his predecessor King Saul. On at least two occasions, one when Saul was sleeping in the same cave as David and two when Saul was sleeping around the camp fire with his soldiers encircling him, David had opportunity to take the life of the King but decided to spare it.
On both these occasions David says to "touch not God's anointed" showing the shear honour he felt for the person whom God had chosen as King even though he had fallen from grace. This is a real lesson for all those in ministry today.
David had already been anointed as the coming King of Israel by Samuel, he had known how because of sin, Saul had been rejected by the Lord, yet David in his wisdom chooses to honour and respect the man God had anointed. I believe it is because of this respect that God honours David by vowing to forever have a King on David's throne.
Yes, I know what you are thinking, the King to eternally sit on David's throne is none other than the King of Glory himself, our Lord Jesus! And yes, when you have the foresight as the great I Am has it is easy to promise such things. But David himself was a type of the Messiah and therefore foreshadowed things to come. Yet it was still "a man after my own heart" as the Lord described David, that the Lord was honouring because of the respect he held for those in office.
This then begs a question for us today, how far should we go in honouring men and women of God that have gone before us? I recently heard a fellow speak on the "Y" generation and how they wish to pull down all the structures and organisations that their parents and grandparents before them have created. Whilst it is easy to see this as a negative thing, which I think most of us who have children in the Y generation do, I choose to see the creative and ownership aspects of this.
I believe the Y generation have these desires as they themselves wish to do good things like their parents and grandparents before them. Whilst we who are in transition would simply prefer they carry on doing what we did, I believe they wish to do even greater things than what we ever did. Which sounds similar to the expectations Christ had for us. See John 14:12
But David reveals in 1Samuel 26:9-10 8Then Abishai said to David, "Today God has delivered your enemy into your hand; now therefore, please let me strike him with the spear to the ground with one stroke, and I will not strike him the second time." 9But David said to Abishai, "Do not destroy him, for who can stretch out his hand against the LORD'S anointed and be without guilt?" 10David also said, "As the LORD lives, surely the LORD will strike him, or his day will come that he dies, or he will go down into battle and perish.…
Though David knew of his own future was established by the Lord he also knew that Saul's downfall would also come from the Lord's hand. David was able to honour Saul because he was secure in his own relationship with the Lord. Whether we are the Y generation or the previous ones it is imperative we understand who we are in Christ! When we understand who we are in Christ then man can do us no harm and it gives us the liberty to be a blessing to those around us, as was David in honouring Saul.
On both these occasions David says to "touch not God's anointed" showing the shear honour he felt for the person whom God had chosen as King even though he had fallen from grace. This is a real lesson for all those in ministry today.
David had already been anointed as the coming King of Israel by Samuel, he had known how because of sin, Saul had been rejected by the Lord, yet David in his wisdom chooses to honour and respect the man God had anointed. I believe it is because of this respect that God honours David by vowing to forever have a King on David's throne.
Yes, I know what you are thinking, the King to eternally sit on David's throne is none other than the King of Glory himself, our Lord Jesus! And yes, when you have the foresight as the great I Am has it is easy to promise such things. But David himself was a type of the Messiah and therefore foreshadowed things to come. Yet it was still "a man after my own heart" as the Lord described David, that the Lord was honouring because of the respect he held for those in office.
This then begs a question for us today, how far should we go in honouring men and women of God that have gone before us? I recently heard a fellow speak on the "Y" generation and how they wish to pull down all the structures and organisations that their parents and grandparents before them have created. Whilst it is easy to see this as a negative thing, which I think most of us who have children in the Y generation do, I choose to see the creative and ownership aspects of this.
I believe the Y generation have these desires as they themselves wish to do good things like their parents and grandparents before them. Whilst we who are in transition would simply prefer they carry on doing what we did, I believe they wish to do even greater things than what we ever did. Which sounds similar to the expectations Christ had for us. See John 14:12
But David reveals in 1Samuel 26:9-10 8Then Abishai said to David, "Today God has delivered your enemy into your hand; now therefore, please let me strike him with the spear to the ground with one stroke, and I will not strike him the second time." 9But David said to Abishai, "Do not destroy him, for who can stretch out his hand against the LORD'S anointed and be without guilt?" 10David also said, "As the LORD lives, surely the LORD will strike him, or his day will come that he dies, or he will go down into battle and perish.…
Though David knew of his own future was established by the Lord he also knew that Saul's downfall would also come from the Lord's hand. David was able to honour Saul because he was secure in his own relationship with the Lord. Whether we are the Y generation or the previous ones it is imperative we understand who we are in Christ! When we understand who we are in Christ then man can do us no harm and it gives us the liberty to be a blessing to those around us, as was David in honouring Saul.
Friday, 4 September 2015
1 Samuel 10:6 - The anointing
Often when we think about the anointing we see it in turn speaks of a symbolic act that is to represent our choosing of a servant for a specific role. Yet when we read 1 Samuel 10 we soon realise even when we anoint servants in the natural there is also a spiritual change that takes place in the person.
When we read the story of Saul's anointing in it's entirety we soon learn that Saul himself shied away from the ceremony when Samuel called the tribes of Israel to Mizpah to select and anoint him as King. When they went to anoint Saul he was nowhere to be found and Samuel had to enquire of the Lord if there was another who was to be anointed in his stead. The Lord later revealing that Saul was hiding...
Though Saul stood a head taller than his rivals on the inside he was just as insecure and timid as the next person. Yet when the Spirit of the Lord came upon him scripture says that he was into a different person. It was this different man that went on to prophecy with the other prophets having those that knew him asked whether he too was a prophet. Again in his defeat of the Philistines it was a different Saul that was at work in his early days as King.
And yet even though we see this change was temporal, when he operated in the anointing it was obvious that God was with him and gave him great success in defeating the enemy. In the same way, we can operate out of the anointing at times and other times out of our flesh or weakness. Yet it is obvious with Saul and should therefore be obvious with all that when we operate out of our own strength rather than the strength of the Spirit then there is no guarantee of success.
Indeed it was Saul sin, namely initiating the burnt offering himself rather than through the prophet that we see Saul's weakness and sin at work. It was following his times of weakness that he failed to achieve the things that he was initially anointed to do.
We in the same way, when in the weakness of our sin neglect to be obedient and therefore miss out on the success of operating in the power of the Spirit as we should.
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