"When WE meet needs, we never
learn to depend on God. Depend on Him!"
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Good morning!
Exactly how real is our walk with God? Have you ever made a major
request of God at a church alter only to stand to your feet and wonder
how to make it happen in your own power or how to do without that
request, if you are unable to get it done?
Oh how often have I "given it
all" to the Lord, only to "grab it all" back within hours in order to
put my best foot forward that I might gain the satisfaction of solving
my situation. This is not depending on God. This is depending on
Steve! At best, it's giving God a "heads up" on what I am getting ready
to attempt to orchestrate and claim or blame "in His name".
In other words, as long as we
don't have to sit idly by and wait for God to get us what we really
need, we will more than gladly help others obtain or increase our own
gain; giving Him the glory for the great things WE have done. This is
not God's wish for our wants.
If we were to go about it
differently, cooperating with His plan for giving and receiving, I think
we would be surprised to see how many of our temporal wants God would
answer. As well, He has promised to answer a unanimous portion of our
needs. But He has His rules for giving and getting. Those rules
require that we must first be challenged in our faith. This allows our
walk with him to be strengthened while we release our need to Him. This
process leads to our own personal development as He eventually
cooperates by meeting that need in His time.
In Ephesians 3:12, 13 Paul is
speaking of Jesus when he indicates "In whom [Jesus] we have boldness
and access with confidence by the faith of him. Wherefore I desire that
ye faint not at my tribulations for you, which is your glory.
We are invited by God to come to
Christ with our every want and most sincere needs. And we should do so,
boldly! But to be bold enough to gain the proper access we must be
dependant, not independent; arriving in His presence with the confidence
of His faith.
Notice it doesn't say the faith of me, or my faith IN Him? Rather,
it is His faith; the faith OF Christ. When I yield to His faith IN me
(one of the nine fruits of the Spirit) I have exercised the confidence
that comes from His Spirit dwelling within my spirit.
But
what does HIS faith gain us? Answered prayer? No, at least not at
first! It gains us designer tribulations. He desired that we "faint not
at my tribulations FOR you". That is to say tribulations designed
directly for you and tribulations designed specifically for me. But
those tribulations are intended to make us look good. To bring us
glory.
It is
responding properly to those designer devastations that indicate our
true measure of faith. I trust and truly believe that when I WANT
something from God, (not need something but when I really want
something) that if I am asking for it in HIS faith; God will answer it.
However, in
the duration of time between my asking and His granting, I may be given
any number of "frustrations through tribulations" to prove my faith is
yielding to His faith. If I will make him look good, by being
personally glorified through proper responses to those designer
tribulations, I believe I am given the favor necessary to get my wants
determined by God and my legitimate needs unequivocally met. Why?
Because He said so! "And this is the confidence that we have IN him,
that, if we ask any thing according to his will, he heareth us: And if
we know that he hear us, whatsoever we ask, we know that we have the
petitions that we desired of him." (I John 5:14, 15)
But I lose
all of my petitions when in self righteous doubt I "choose to use" my
own personal effort to manipulate circumstances for the sake of my own
personal agenda. If I do not learn to ask Him and wait upon Him, I will
not be challenged to exercise His faith. If I am exercising my faith
in me rather than exercising His faith, then I will be "so fortunate" as
to avoid some God designed tribulations for me. But, if I am not
experiencing tribulations, then I lose valuable opportunities to look
good in the face of adversity. And if I am not looking good in the face
of difficult circumstances then I am incapable of lifting up Christ. I
am an ineffective Christian.
I conclude
that effective Christianity is not finding out how to get some of my
wants and all of my needs met in my own power. Effective Christianity
is letting Christ flow through me with bold confidence in the face of
difficult circumstances.
Thus, and
only then, will we have our righteous wants realized and our many needs
met. A difficult circumstance destroys faith in ourselves and develops
faith in His. When we respond right in our circumstances its evidence
of His faith being exercised. I hereby dub it: "circumstantial
evidence".
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