Tag Archives: revival

Gospel-Oriented Prayer

I hear the words echoing in my mind: Prayer is asking and receiving. Though that statement contains truth, I can’t help asking if it paints a very full picture.

Both Tim Keller & Jack Miller talk about the difference between “maintenance prayer” and “frontline” prayer meetings.

If I understand them correctly, maintenance prayer meetings are characteristically mechanical, primarily focused on physical needs, and relatively short. But frontline prayer meetings have three basic traits:

  • People ask God for grace to confess sins and humble themselves
  • There is an expression of compassion and zeal for the church’s advancement
  • There is a tangible yearning to know God, to see his face, and to see his glory.

So just to recap, people get real, get filled with hope, and get focused on God’s glory!

Why is the distinction between “maintenance” & “frontline” prayer so important? Because these authors believe that frontline prayer is always connected to real revival.

Keller says:

Biblically and historically, the one non-negotiable, universal ingredient in times of spiritual renewal (read revival) is corporate, prevailing, intensive and kingdom-centered prayer. 

He sites Acts 4, Exodus 33, and Nehemiah 1 as examples. Our attention is drawn to the disciples in Acts 4 who don’t pray for safety in a time of peril but only asked God for the courage to keep preaching.

I would say that these types of prayer gatherings are a right and natural response to the gospel itself. When we begin to grasp God’s grace, we become focused on Jesus and find freedom from building our own image in the eyes of other broken men. Honesty and repentance are enabled and we can begin to get real. This will be reflected in the way we pray with others.

Are you overly concerned with how much your brothers may find out about you as you pray with them? Take another look at the gospel.

Do you “hedge your bets” when you pray, or do you find yourself asking God to show up in God-sized ways? If you pray small prayers, take another look at what God has already done for you in the gospel.

Do you find yourself coming up dry or pretending when you know you should be praising, worshiping, and seeing God’s glory? Take another look at the gospel. Look at Jesus—in Him we will find & see the fullness of the Godhead!

What do our prayer meetings look like? Maintenance or frontline? Defense or offense? Dead orthodoxy or passionate spiritual renewal?

So is prayer asking and receiving? Yeah, but one of the gospel’s effects in our lives should be to change what we ask for!

Article by Brian Norris

@BrianNorris

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rebel

To the question: Am I really a rebel?  I answer a condescending: No.  But in order to answer the question: Who are you?  I answer: I don’t know. I find no other option other than rebellion.  I’ve always been a good follower, not a resister.  It’s hard to see myself breaking out of the mold.  I’ve always been a ‘Yes Man.’  I’m not trying to start a new cause or lead anyone else in this – this is just a personal journey away from fearing men andtoward fearing God.  It’s crazy, but in order to be true to myself, I find a little rebellion necessary.  It’s more than a phase, it’s an essential stage for my growth.  Rebellion, for me, is nothing more than a means to an end: finding myself.  I admit that I’m a little scared, but I cannot continue to accept all the assumptions and presumptions handed down to me. Up to this point, my identity has been defined by peer pressure and fear, so I must rebel for the sake of my own integrity or I must deny God’s design in me.  My calling is unique to me; this is not my grandfather’s world, so I rebel for the sake of impacting my generation with the Gospel.  In many ways, I am sad to have to take such a stand.  Why have others thought it so important to establish the unnecessary as the norm?  Why has the world (and the church for that matter) gotten so programmed, so conforming, so systematized, so average?  How has the sloth of bureaucracy crept into so many areas of my life?

Our culture is full of individuals just like me seeking their identity and purpose; this world is ripe for revolt!

Therefore, I revolt. I represent. I rebel. I must buck the system…  Against status-quo. Against the norm. Against the daily grind. Against average. Against mediocrity. Against socialistic society.  Against out-of-control special rights for favored groups. Against racism and feminism. Against big-brother control.  Against bailouts. Against worldliness.  Against 1950’s traditionalism in religion.  Against anything that is against God.But I’m not just against certain things.  The real reason I rebel is because I am forso many more-important things…  I’m for truth, real truth, absolute truth.  For right. For liberty and freedom. For capitalism. For creativity. For people thinking for themselves.  For justice.  For blood, sweat, and tears.  For family. For the little guys. For the good news and for the gospel. For grace.  For purity and abstinence.  For God.

I’m an underdog and I’m for the underdog. I root for the challenger. Could there be a new champ? Yes, and when there is, there will be a new underdog, a new challenger.  For too long the wrong things are reigning king of my hill.  I am tired of complacency… in my life, at home, at work, at church, and in my community. It’s time for an uprising, an insurgence, a revolution!

Before we go any further, you should know what I’m really thinking.  The term rebellion has a much more negative connotation than revolution.  Although I feel that these terms are nearly synonymous, I tend to believe that rebellion implies a fearful, violent reaction, while, revolutionary implies pro-active, courageous leadership.  Even still, since they are so similar, I will blend the two words and use them interchangeably – but please understand that I lean on the side of revolt and not rebellion.  I’m not promoting insubordination – quite the contrary! I whole-heartily believe in submission.  The only reason that rebellion or revolution is necessary is when lower authorities attempt to contradict, undermine, and usurp higher authorities. True authorities are not based on shifting morals or men’s standards; they are absolute principles found within the pages of the Bible.  In our current age of entitlement and expectation, you don’t have to look far to see how causes can twist and misrepresent truths in their favor to instigate less-than-questionable rebellions (i.e. – the Occupy movement). In addition, one could apply the idea of revolution into the church and call it revival.  Although the context of the two are completely different, many of the principles are very similar.

the good of rebellion

Why you should consider rebelling.  What good has rebellion ever done?
I know that some might quote the 12+ Bible references that forbid rebellion and show that ‘rebellion is like witchcraft.’  But if we look closely at those passages, we find that it speaks only of rebellion against God’s authority (including the authorities delegated to parents, government, & spiritual bodies).  In fact, when some authority contradicts / usurps God’s authorities in our lives, we must rebel.  These 12+ Old Testament passages dictate that we rebel all lesser authorities so that we might obey God’s.  You can only listen to that voice so long before you realize that it’s more of the same … the status-quo trying to thwart the birthing of excellence.

When wrong is right, then right is wrong.  When right is wrong, then wrong is right.

In other words, when our culture has confused truth to the point of calling good evil and evil good, then we are obliged to do what many would think is evil because it is really good. For example, it is evil in our day to speak the truth about sexual sins: fornication, homosexuality, and adultery.  It has been twisted that if you say anything about sin then you are judgmental and intolerant.  Our world would censure anything they disagree with according to their changing morals.  This is exactly why a rebellion is a good thing.  Anyone who knows me knows that I’m the furthest thing from a moral relativist.  I’m an absolute absolutist. Right is always right and wrong is always wrong!  In his book, The Good Rebel, Louis Groarke wrote: “Good rebels supply us with a paradigmatic example of heroic human achievement.” He’s right!  Good rebellion is a chief element of greatness, it is one of the highest moral achievements that man can aspire to.
From the Bible and the Early Church:
Jesusmight not have been a rebel but He was, at the very least, a revolutionary.   When He preached the Sermon on the Mount, He turned the Judaizer’s spiritual system of religion upside down.  When He angrily flipped over the tables in the Temple, He pushed back against materialism in the church.  And in order to fulfill His mission in obedience to His Father, He stood up to the Sanhedrin and the Pharisees, defying the governmental and spiritual authority of His day (Matthew 5-7; 21:12; 26).
True Prophets & Heroesare easy to find while reading the Old Testament.  It doesn’t take long to read of Noah, Abraham, Joseph, Moses, Samson, Gideon, Ruth, Josiah, Elijah, David, Jonah, and so many others who stood out because their faith.  They stood out from the average, they rose up above the ordinary, they overcame conventional behavior and gave rise to revival and revolution.
The Apostles, Martyrs, & Church Fathersweren’t important because they were popular but because they caused a stir.  Many even died for their rebellious cause.  They left everything behind and went into foreign lands taking a ‘rebellious truth’ that would eventually turn the entire world upside down (Acts 17:6).  We study and quote Luther, Spurgeon, Wycliffe, and Augustine because of their genius, revolutionary ideas.

Faith, Hope, & Love are all three rebellions of sorts.  Faith is a rebellion against the mental dictates of your own logic and fear. Hope rebels against power of your current circumstances and situations.  Love rebels against the choking hold of revenge and bitterness in your relationships (1 Corinthians 13:13).

From History:
I hold that a little rebellion now and then is a good thing, and as necessary in the political world as storms in the physical. -Thomas Jefferson to James Madison (1787)
Wouldn’t you agree that great leaders, difference-makers & world-changers don’t arrive at greatness by being status-quo and mediocre?  They didn’t arrive at the top by playing by the rules.  They accomplished so much by resisting the conventional and living by a higher calling.  They are rebels and they inspire rebellion of thought, of emotion, and of action.
Considering the ‘goodness’ of revolutions, where would we be without the Commercial revolution (16-18th centuries), the Scientific revolution (16th century), the Industrial revolution (18-19th centuries), the Second Great Agricultural revolution (1940’s), the Modern Digital revolution (1950’s-present)? What’s next?  Will you be a part of it?  Why not?

Time prevents me from expounding on the thousands of great historical rebellions that have affected this world for good, but quickly review a few with me… The Revolutionary War (of the colonies for representation), the Civil War (of the South for states’ rights), the Civil Rights Movement in America (for equals rights of minorities and women), the Anti-Communist Revolution (in Europe and Asia during the 1980’s), and the recent Arab Pro-Democracy Movement (in Tunisia and Egypt during 2011).

Where would be without Bacon’s Rebellion (1676), the Boxer Rebellion (1901), or the French Revolution (1789-1799)?  How different would your life be without Gettysburg, Tienanmen Square, or Boston’s Tea Party?

how to rebel

Five practical ways to start your rebellion:
Question everything. “But why?” To figure out what’s up for grabs & what’s not.  There ARE absolutes in this world – there are some things that are non-negotiable, but how will you know which are? Will you take their word for it? Don’t stop short – find out for yourself.  Questions don’t intimidate the truth.  Ask and ask again.  Like putting together a puzzle: find the hard, straight edges first, then fill in the rest.  (Acts 17:11)
Rethink the model / method. There are three main stages of production: foundation (the originating principles / the core message), method (the means / the ‘how-to’), and results (the bottom line / the end).  In most cases, the foundation and the results are not negotiable.  For example, a business does not allow its employees to determine their purpose or bottom line.  Christ didn’t survey his disciples before establishing the church’s message and mission.  But both would find their work more productive if they are willing to rethink the methodology.  I’m sure you agree to a point or else you would be Amish … living without electricity, cell phones, and gasoline-powered vehicles.  Build your life from the foundation up, not the roof down.  There are many right ways to do something good, just as there are many wrong ways, too.  Just avoid the wrong ways and find out which right way works for you!
Ask yourself ‘What if…?’ Break out of the cage of what’s possible and away from doubts of what could have been. Have faith – trust God for the reality of what you can only hope for and claim the proof of what doesn’t yet exist for His glory and your good (Heb. 11:1-3, 6). We spend far too little time daydreaming and too much time caged by routined reality.  We would have never sent astronauts to the moon without rebels of reality.  We would have never gotten Apollo 13 back without some true out-of-the-box thinkers. So take a little NASA time each day.  Take your thinking cap into your prayer closet and get God into your think-tank… He’ll blow it apart and you’ll find yourself happier than ever.  Let God take you outside, under the stars (like He did with Abraham), to give an impossible vision of what He can do – in you, then through you and your offspring!
Don’t be afraid of change. Complacency is stagnation. We should fear not-changing!  Some brag about not changing – never changing.  Unless you’re God, that’s not a good thing!  I hope that what I have to say now is different from a decade ago. If you’re sitting on your laurels, then you’re wearing them in the wrong place!  I have found that change is more often viewed as negative (compromise / deterioration) than positive (sanctification / progress). Some never want to loose from the dock in fear of aimless drifting, so they go through the motions of accomplishment and ‘setting sail’ while never leaving the harbor.  You must set sail! You must brave the ups and downs of the deep, blue vastness.  Watch the safety of the port fade from view as you go forward, just never abandon the final authority of God and His Word, or else you’ll be lost at sea without your Captain and your compass.

Do the right thing, the right way!  Always, always, always rebel as peaceably as possible.  This world doesn’t need you going postal (figuratively or literally).  If you can rebel alone – do it.  There’s nothing worse than a causeless cause.  Remember, it’s a marathon not a sprint.  Change doesn’t happen overnight, so take it slow.  Be purposed.  Be intentional.  Be legitimate and credible.  Live your vision before you share it with others.

rebel with caution

A rubber-meets-the-road word of warning to all would-be rebels:
Schools produce fact-learners, not true thinkers.
Parents need obedient children, not good challengers.
Factories employ compliant doers, not imaginariams.
Big governments need party-voting, cooperative citizens, not free-thinking independents.
Most churches would prefer team players to independent rebels.
And who would want a insurgent? Really? Can you blame them?
So you might have to ask yourself the tough questions:
IDENTITY: Can you be yourself and still fit in?  Do you really want to fit in?  Who are you trying to impress?  Are you willing to deal with the loneliness associated with leadership?  (Prov. 29:25, 2 Timothy 4:16)
MOTIVE: Is your rebellion self-motivated or for a higher calling?  Is it motivated by truth or by negativity?  By hope or by angst?  (Philippians 3:7-14)
IMPORTANCE: Is it absolutely necessary?  Is it worthy of dying for? Will your rebellion give God glory? If not, consider hanging it up now.  Better not to start than to waste time and money on something you’ll not finish anyway.  (Acts 20:24)
Article by Patrick Nix

@patchnix

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Why I Took a Sabbatical…

The problem of sin has brought the consequences of the curse – one of which is that the ‘new’ never lasts (or costs too much to keep new).  New houses lose their magic after a mortgage payment or two.  The new car smell generally wears off after about two weeks.  Honeymoons don’t last forever.  Even in the spiritual realm, the newness of conversion and church wears off all-too-soon!  The only exception is what God does in the lives of His children. 2 Corinthians 5 speaks about how God seeks to renew us, if we will allow Him. During my sabbatical, I made this a serious matter of prayer…

Lord, Renew My View of this World (v1-8)

The old view of life: get all you can, can all you get, and sit on the can!  The old view of life is one where stability and success is measured by wealth, possessions, and things.  But God has called us to walk by faith and not by sight.  We need shift our focus and trust God. Our new perspective will seek heavenly treasures.  Lord, please renew the way I see life, death, and everything in between.  Help me to see things like you see them.

Lord, Renew My Desires & Motivations (v9-15)

The old motives will only take you so far.  There are several wrong ways to keep yourself going… Works: I’m doing good to earn something important.  Fear: I’m afraid not to do what’s right.  Pride: I want to do right for right’s sake (and for mine too).  Duty: I’m supposed to do what’s right, so that’s what I’ll do.  Insecurity: If I don’t do what’s right, people won’t accept me.  But the new motive is simple: LOVE.  His love moves me to love like He loved.  His sacrifice, His grace, His forgiveness.  Christ didn’t endure the cross because He needed the salvation, He did it for our salvation and to glorify the Father.  Lord, please renew my ‘want-to’ when I lose my healthy ambition and motivation.

Lord, Renew My Attitude toward Others (v16-17)

The old way to approach relationships is usually selfish in nature. Skeptical, doubtful, judgmental, critical, and  fearful.  As a Christian, my new mindset gives others (especially Christians) the benefit of the doubt. I must understand that Christians deserve a clean slate – worthy of love and of trust.  Lord, please remove my prejudices and renew my appreciation for your image-bearers.

Lord, Renew My Perception of Self (v17-21)

The old perspective is usually out of balance in one of two ways: either I saw myself as a worthless human being or I felt too highly of myself.  Both views are too extreme to be new because they either lead to ‘self-esteem’ issues (self-pity or pride).  My old perception begins with ‘who I am without God,’ but my new perception of myself begins in God.  I am what God says I am and I have what God says I have.  I am forgiven.  I am an ambassador.  I have been reconciled to God and have been called to reconcile others to God.  Lord, please renew my understanding of who I am in you.

A salesman once had a difficult time selling an old, rundown warehouse.  As he showed a prospective buyer the property, the agent took pains to talk about all he planned to do in renovating the broken windows and cleaning up the garbage.  ”Forget about the repairs, said the buyer, “I’m not interested in the building.  I just want the site.”   … God isn’t interested in the repairs that we can make to ourselves, He wants to totally renew (restore / rebuild) us from the inside out!   Give up the rights to your site and see what God will build on it.

 

Article by Patrick Nix

@patchnix

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