Tag Archives: Prayer

EMBERS AND FLAMES

This was one priced asset in my secondary school days. Many people born in this generation will never know the joy of using this. It was an essential asset in the boarding house, but only a few privileged people had this charcoal iron as students. Because we had to look sharp in our school uniforms, we usually had long lists of people waiting to take their turns to iron their clothes with the few that were available to us. It requires a special skill not to burn your clothes because it does not come with a temperature regulator or thermostat. We also had to deal with the risk of hot ash creating holes in our clothes as it was intermittently let out through the bottom vents.

The heat for the iron came from bits of charcoal placed in the box of the iron and left to burn for a while. It had to burn for a sufficient time so that when the flame was put out the coal still glowed red hot. However, after a while, the glow would wane and the temperature on the contact surface of the iron would drop. In order to increase the temperature again, you have to fan the embers into flame and the cycle repeats. One cycle of fanning is never enough. It has to be continuous, otherwise, the charcoal iron will eventually become like every other cold piece of steel.

The gifts that God has placed in us as believers are like the bits of charcoal in the iron. If we do not fan them into flame, no matter how gifted we may be, we will pass through the earth and those gifts will remain completely dormant. They will be useless to both us and the people that God intended us to reach with those gifts. It will be like the case of the servant who got one talent and buried it in the ground, waiting for the return of the master.

The gifts of God upon our lives cannot develop themselves. We have to take personal responsibility to nurture them with the help of the Holy Spirit to the extent that the gifts produce fruits thirty-fold, sixty-fold, and a hundred-fold. Personal responsibility comes with personal sacrifice. We start from the personal acknowledgment that we are not empty, but endowed with different gifts that need to be nurtured – and we will give account to God on how the gifts were used while we were here.

Just like the charcoal in the iron needs continuous fanning, these gifts need to be continuously nurtured. It is not a one-off activity. Diligence in nurturing the gifts births excellence and enhances productivity. It places us in a place where God can trust us with more responsibility and in the earthly realms, we will stand before kings.

We cannot get to the point where we say that we have reached the zenith of those gifts. There will always be new unconquered mountains before us. If we do not hone these gifts and talents, we are effectively denying God the opportunity to be glorified from the investment He has made in us…and that is not where we want to be.

Introspect. Discover those gifts. Nurture them. Bless people. Glorify God. This is the will of the Father for us.

4 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

JUST LIKE A LION

One of my favourite TV channels is National Geographic because I love watching animal documentaries. It’s especially interesting to watch big carnivores like lions hunting down their prey. Most times, these deft hunters start from a crouching position, hiding from the view of their target and camouflaged by surrounding vegetation. They do this hoping that they can identify and isolate the easiest target from the group unnoticed. Once they are satisfied that the chance of getting the target is high enough. They spring out from hiding. Amid the chaos, they don’t run after all the animals in the pack that are startled and frightened by their sudden appearance. If they chase multiple targets, they will go home empty-handed. They instead lock their focus onto the one that they have identified as the target and try to isolate them from the rest of the group.

No matter how long the lion has been hunting, it still has to go out each time it is hungry to look for food because that is how it was designed. If no animal strays into its territory and makes itself vulnerable, it will go hungry for that day. This is the same with the devil when he goes about looking for prey. We are not at the mercy of the devil, he has to seek for his prey and if we are in Christ, we are not in his territory.

Be on your guard and stay awake. Your enemy, the devil, is like a roaring lion, sneaking around to find someone to attack. 1 Peter 5:8

He does not have the power to attack someone who does not walk into his territory. That is why he must go about sneaking around and hoping to catch someone off guard. He is not as powerful as we often make him up to be. The death and resurrection of Jesus made it so for believers. We cannot live our lives in dread of him. Instead, we should live in the reality of the victory that Jesus obtained on our behalf and delivered to us.

Like a bird that wanders from her nest, So is a man who wanders from his place. Proverbs 27:8

Our place of safety is in Christ. If we do not break our hedge of protection by toying with different shades of sin. We are beyond the reach of the enemy. Yes, we are untouchable! It is so liberating to live and work in the reality of this knowledge and revelation.

Those who live in the shelter of the Most High will find rest in the shadow of the Almighty. This I declare about the LORD: He alone is my refuge, my place of safety; he is my God, and I trust him. Psalms 91:1-2

God is our refuge, our fortress, and our place of safety. In battles, the refuge is usually impregnable unless someone opens the door from within. That is what it is like to have God as our refuge and place of safety. As long as we live in Him, move in Him, and have our being in Him, we remain untouchable. No matter how hard the devil seeks like a roaring lion, we will never be in his path nor within his reach. So if we want to live in perpetual victory over the darts of the enemy, then we need to latch on to the grace of God and live a life of dominion over sin.

For sin will have no dominion over you, since you are not under law but under grace. Romans 6:14

There are so many more verses of the Bible that reinforce this point concerning the victory that we have in Christ. As we dig into them and meditate on them, our faith will indeed be founded on solid ground. The solidity of the foundation depends on us and how we esteem the Word of God. May God’s grace be multiplied to us.

picture credit: pixels.com

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

JUST DRIFTING

Imagine for a moment that you have been given a task that includes walking in a straight line blindfolded. There’s almost a zero chance that you will get to the other end of the line. You won’t immediately set off in the wrong direction. The first few steps will likely be correct, then gradually you’ll start moving away from the line. The more steps you take, the more you move away from the line. That is what drifting feels like. The departure from the course starts slowly until we get completely off the course.

It’s the same with pot belly. It doesn’t appear instantaneously. It increases precept upon precept until it gets to maturity and becomes evident to all. I had a first-hand experience of this during the COVID-enforced lockdown. I didn’t realize how far my stomach had drifted from the original size until some clothes could no longer fit at the end of the lockdown. It did not happen overnight. It just drifted.

When people stray away from the truth of God’s word, it does not happen overnight. We gradually blur the boundary lines drawn by the word of God until the lines are no more. Most times, we don’t set out to wipe out the lines, but tolerating pseudo-truths does the wiping on our behalf. The lines gradually drift into oblivion. Sometimes, the alternative truth may not be a bad thing, but if it is not the truth, it is not the truth. It may even be a popular teaching in the church, coming from teachers that we respect.

That was what happened to the Galatians until Paul had to rebuke them. They heard the truth, they believed the truth, and they set out to live by the truth but…it happened and they drifted.

No matter how long an incorrect teaching has been going on, it does not make it to become the truth. God’s word is settled in heaven and does not evolve with modernization.

The fact that we read and understand something from the Bible or hear an awesome message from a preacher does not mean that we will always walk in the light of the truth that we receive. If we do not pay close attention and treat the truth like a precious treasure, the colour of that truth will eventually begin to appear like 50 shades of grey from which we choose different options depending on our mood. Staying in the line of the truth of God’s word is a personal responsibility, and we must take it seriously.

We need to watch over the word that we have received from God. We must guard against the emotional interpretation of the scriptures; our sentiments and personal inclinations should not be the filter through which we pass the word of God. Also, we don’t have to align with the crowd like a herd of sheep. We need to stick to the truth that makes us eternally free. No matter how old we may become, there will never be a substitute for reading our Bibles and praying every day. The Holy Spirit is ever available to teach us till the end, we just need to ask Him and listen to Him.

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

ACTIVITY ≠ PRODUCTIVITY

I love watching football, especially the English Premier League. I support Arsenal. YES, I do. They are as unstable as unstable can be, but I am not a fair-weather supporter. I’m stuck with them for the long run. When they are in their best form, you can expect possession football, sleek passing, and beautiful goals. At other times, all you get from them will be possession football, sleek passing, and no goals. At the end of 90 minutes, it’s all about the goals and not the possession. There are no extra points for keeping the ball within your team throughout the game. If you don’t score any goals, the possession is a waste of time and energy. Activity is not the same as productivity.

When Jesus visited Mary and Martha at Bethany, Martha was seemingly very active, while Mary sat to hear Jesus teach. There was nothing morally or ethically wrong with what Martha was doing, but it was being done at the wrong time. She was active but not exactly productive in the things that really mattered. Mary appeared inactive but was judged as being 100% productive by the Ultimate Judge because activity is not the same as productivity.

There is a story in the closing verses of 1 Kings 20, where a servant was given ONE assignment to guard a prisoner of war with his life. One task only, but he got busy with many other things and the prisoner disappeared and a judgment was pronounced. This story was a parable but a perfect presentation of the fact that activity is not the same as productivity.

Now, bearing in mind that activity is not the same as productivity, it will be instructive to take some steps back and assess all that we are busy with, in the light of what really matters after all is said and done. Most of the things that distract us from productivity are not necessarily bad things, they are usually good things being done at the wrong time. At other times, they could be good things that other people should be doing, and we have taken them upon ourselves – keeping ourselves pretty occupied. If you are busy in another man’s field while your own field lies fallow, you will get nothing from your field at the time of harvest because activity is not the same as productivity.

Are you doing what really matters in the church service unit? Are you being productive or just active doing so many things? At work, are you being productive or just busy here and there? What are you doing at home?

Another verse from the Bible that emphasizes that activity is not productivity is Mathew 7:21-23

Nothing listed in the verse above is inherently wrong, but the active people were adjudged as unproductive. We should pray to find our own fields and to be active and productive in those fields. We should also pray that God will help us to identify the subtle distractions that strive to keep us active and stay away from them because activity is not the same as productivity.

picture credit: entrepreneur.com, expandable.com

4 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

IN THOUGHTS, WORDS, AND DEEDS

We saw Nephilim there. (The descendants of Anak are Nephilim.) We felt as small as grasshoppers, and that’s how we must have looked to them.” Numbers 13:33 [GW]

This started as a thought, they turned it into words, which ultimately framed their destiny. 10 of the spies imagined themselves as grasshoppers in their own eyes when compared with the giants of Anak. Also, without speaking with those giants, they assumed that the giants considered them in the same way. They thought that the giants were thinking the same thoughts with them. This is all because they allowed the wrong thoughts to roost in their hearts. Joshua and Caleb saw the same thing, thought differently, and ended up differently.

Our words are not just words, they have sources, just like the great rivers and oceans that cover about 71% of our earth. The mighty rivers look nothing like their sources. Most rivers grow into massive water bodies, stretching thousands of kilometres in length. Their sources would never have imagined how far they would travel and the impact that they would have on the world. This is how it is with words that start in the recesses of our hearts as thoughts. Death and life are in the power of the tongue, but it starts from thoughts.

Words kill, words give life; they’re either poison or fruit—you choose. Proverbs 18:21 [MSG]

Similarly, our actions especially when it comes to relationships with other people have the same origin. As long as we are still on this part of the divide, there will be people that will leave us with good memories and there will be people that will leave us negative stains. This is beyond our control. However, what is firmly within our control is what we do with the memories of both sets of people.

When we dwell on offence, it has an effect similar to what meditating on the word of God should produce in us, just that it is on the negative side. When we meditate on the word of God, our understanding is increased as the Holy Spirit enlightens us, our faith grows, and God is magnified in our eyes. When we dwell on offence, the depth of the hurt is increased, the pain is magnified, and we feel worse and worse. This eventually affects the way we see the people and relate to them. Bitterness and resentment get rooted in our lives.

Make sure that everyone has kindness from God so that bitterness doesn’t take root and grow up to cause trouble that corrupts many of you. Hebrews 12:15 [GW]

If we do not err in thoughts, we will most likely not err in words and deeds. It is therefore imperative that we have to guard our hearts to ensure that wrong thoughts do not grow therein. We have the power to control what goes into our hearts.

Summing it all up, friends, I’d say you’ll do best by filling your minds and meditating on things true, noble, reputable, authentic, compelling, gracious – the best, not the worst; the beautiful, not the ugly; things to praise, not things to curse. Philippians 4:8[MSG]

There will definitely be reasons for us to err in these areas. Offence will always be with us; we may face different shades of difficulties that will test our faith like 10 of the 12 spies. We will always have a choice of what we think, say, or do. God’s grace abounds for us to think like Philippians 4:8 suggests and to speak life with our words.

picture credit: https://gettingunstuckllc.com

1 Comment

Filed under Uncategorized

SENT AS I WAS SENT

Jesus told them again, “Peace be with you. Just as the Father has sent me, SO I AM SENDING YOU.” John 20:21

Many of us must have heard different versions of the story where a father told his kid to tell his friend that was visiting that he was not at home, just because he did not want to see the friend at that time. Kids will be kids and the young one did what kids will do by saying exactly what the father told him to say, while emphasizing that the message was from the father. Well…we could berate the kid for betraying the father, but this was a display of complete obedience :).

In a way, this is similar to how Jesus walked the earth in His days. He always alluded to the fact that He was fully in contact with the Father and transmitting the messages He got from the Father to those that came to listen to Him. He also let them know that whatever He did was because He was in consonance with God.

I have not spoken on my own. Instead, the Father who sent me told me what I should say and how I should say it. John 12:49[GW]

So Jesus explained himself at length. “I’m telling you this straight. The Son can’t independently do a thing, only what he sees the Father doing. What the Father does, the Son does. John 5:19[MSG]

And on one of those days, when Philip asked Jesus to show them the Father, this was Jesus’s answer to him in the presence if the other disciples:

Jesus replied, “I have been with all of you for a long time. Don’t you know me yet, Philip? The person who has seen me has seen the Father. So how can you say, ‘Show us the Father’? John 14:9[GW]

So essentially, Jesus was sent to deliver the word of God to everyone and also to live in such a way that everyone that saw Him should be left with no doubt as to who the Father was and what the Father’s character was.

Therefore, if Jesus sent us the same way He was sent by the Father, it means that the totality of our lives should reflect Jesus. When people hear us, they should understand what Jesus sounded like and the messages that He brought with Him from the Father. When they interact with us, they should imagine exactly what Jesus would have been like if they were born in His days. We should be the image of Jesus that people see in our generation.

If we spend some time in introspection, what would we see in comparison to the expectation of Jesus in sending us out? We should be bold enough to say like Paul: Follow my example, just like I follow Christ’s. 1 Corinthians 11:1 [CEB]

I will end with the words of this hymn by Albert W. T. Orsborn

Let the beauty of Jesus be seen in me,

All his wonderful passion and purity,

O thou Spirit divine, all my nature refine,

Till the beauty of Jesus be seen in me.

Picture credit: https://fpcparagould.org/

Leave a comment

Filed under Lifestyle

THE DOOR AND THE KEY

Imagine for one moment that someone got priceless gifts for you. Your name is on all the gifts and they are perfectly wrapped and preserved in a house that is locked. The person that bought the gifts tells you everything that is in the house and you get all excited and start celebrating but you don’t enter the house to unwrap the gifts. There are a few windows around the house and you admire the gifts from the different windows and you still don’t go in to take possession of the gifts. The gifts will remain of no benefit until they are unwrapped, no matter their value.

The Bible is packed with so much words for our reproof, correction and instruction in righteousness. It also contains loads of promises that Christ has bought and prepared for us. Sadly, many of these promises go unclaimed because we don’t know that they exist. In some cases, when we know that they exist, we do not take enough steps to do all that we need to do to claim them. We often stop at talking about them, and most of what we say are based on what we heard others say about the promises. We do not take the pain to dig in and discover these treasures by ourselves.

God conceals the revelation of his word in the hiding place of his glory. But the honour of kings is revealed by how they thoroughly search out the deeper meaning of all that God says. Proverbs 25:2 [TPT]

If we cast our minds back to when Daniel and his countrymen were confined in captivity to a country that was not theirs. Jeremiah had prophesied that this ordeal would last 70 years (Jeremiah 29:10). It was only after Daniel sought out and understood this prophecy from the scriptures that he went to God in prayer to start asking for an end to their bondage.

In that first year of his reign, I, Daniel, learned from the book of Jeremiah the prophet that Jerusalem must lie desolate for seventy years. So I earnestly pleaded with the Lord God to end our captivity and send us back to our own land. Daniel 9: 2 – 3 [TLB]

Because Daniel had seen and understood this promise, he was able to go to God and pray aright in faith. He had solid grounds on which to stand and petition God. At that time, his faith could not have been weakened by their continued bondage because he knew what he had seen in the scriptures. This is the same with us – when we study the scriptures and the eyes of our understanding are opened to anything written therein, our faith in that area becomes unshakeable.

When our prayers and confessions are based solely on other people’s revelations our raison d’etre for approaching God with confidence may not always be sure and steadfast. When we have seen it with our eyes and we know that we know that we know, opposing circumstances will mean nothing to us when we approach God with the promises He made to us. We will stand our ground, no matter how long it takes.

We want to tell you about the Word that gives life—the one who existed before the world began. This is the one we have heard and have seen with our own eyes. We saw what he did, and our hands touched him. 1 John 1:1 [ERV]

After this experience, there was no way the disciples could entertain any doubt about the incarnation, crucifixion, resurrection and glorification of Jesus. Similarly, when we encounter revelation into God’s word, our faith in His promises will become unwavering no matter what we experience with our 5 senses. God’s grace is available for us to study and discover. Let’s get digging.

I will end with Paul’s prayer for the Ephesians

I have not stopped thanking God for you. I pray for you constantly, asking God, the glorious Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, to give you spiritual wisdom and insight so that you might grow in your knowledge of God. I pray that your hearts will be flooded with light so that you can understand the confident hope he has given to those he called—his holy people who are his rich and glorious inheritance. I also pray that you will understand the incredible greatness of God’s power for us who believe him. This is the same mighty power that raised Christ from the dead and seated him in the place of honour at God’s right hand in the heavenly realms. Ephesians 1: 16 – 20[NLT]

Leave a comment

Filed under Uncategorized

ANANIAS & Co.

I was on the cast of a stage play in my secondary school days. I did not have to memorize any scripts. I was a soldier in the play and all I had to do was to appear on stage at the right time with the other soldiers and fight. We disappeared backstage as the curtains were drawn on our scene. There was also another one in which I was just one of the stagehands and only got on to the stage when the curtains were drawn and away from the sight of the cheering audience.

On these two occasions, I definitely did not get any accolades from the audience because I did not do anything remarkable in their sight. However, without the fight scene in the play, it would not have been complete and of course, no stage play is smooth without the work of the invisible team that rearranges the stage between the scenes.

Celebration of those that are in our faces is a natural reaction for us and should not come as a surprise to anyone. However, some people do a lot of heavy lifting behind the scenes and never make it to the stage in their entire careers. Yet without these people, the A-list actors that we celebrate will not be where they are today.

There are quite a few people in the Bible that did some heavy lifting in the background, they are not mentioned many times in the scriptures. Yet without their exploits, the story would be far from complete. I have chosen to call Ananias the Chief of this group of people. After he prayed for Paul and baptized him, his name was mentioned only once again in the Bible and that was by Paul himself during a speech. Under the prevailing circumstances in his days, getting up to seek out and pray for Paul was a great act of faith and obedience and definitely went a long way to shape the story of the New Testament scriptures as we have it today.

Another person that did not get much screen time but played a significant role was Hur, who helped to hold up the hands of Moses with Aaron in the battle against the Amalekites. This act secured victory for the Israelites at that time.

Others are Elisheba, the wife of Aaron and matriarch of a great lineage of priests that include Nadab, Abihu, Eleazar, and Ithamar; Joanna, the wife of Chuza, one of the women that supplied the physical needs of Jesus while He walked the earth; Gilalai, one of the priests that participated as a musician in the procession led by Ezra; Hassenaah, a man whose sons built the Fish Gate during the reconstruction of the walls of Jerusalem under the repair programme led by Nehemiah; Jehiah, one of the gatekeepers for the Ark of the Covenant in the time of king David. There are so many more. These people may not have had a great mention, but their exploits are by no means meager and the scriptures will not be complete without them. What is important is that they played their part in God’s “play”.

Now we are on that stage, and we have to play our parts. That natural desire to be seen and applauded will always be there. So, if the acts and scenes we regularly appear in do not attract many accolades, the tendency to want to trade places will often tug at us. However, we must consciously remind ourselves that the applause of men is not our purpose and God’s scale of success and prominence is different from the scale that we use and it is His own that really matters.

Whatever you do [whatever your task may be], work from the soul [that is, put in your very best effort], as [something done] for the Lord and not for men. Colossians 3:23 [AMP]

Whatever it is that you are doing, God sees, God knows and God gives the best accolades. Let us not grow weary or become discouraged in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap if we do not give in. Galatians 6:9 [AMP]

1 Comment

Filed under Lifestyle, Ministry, Uncategorized

FLYING THROUGH THE CLOUDS

One of the most beautiful and peaceful sights I can never stop enjoying is what you see when you look out of an aircraft window as you fly above the clouds. No matter how many times I catch this view, I will always be enthralled the next time.  It’s so breathtaking. It just appears perfectly at ease, void of any disorder or chaos. The thicker the clouds, the prettier the appearance because nothing from beneath the clouds can peek through.

In spite of the magnificence of this view, the essence of flying is to move from place to place and not just to take in the view. So, at some point, the aircraft has to leave this view behind to descend through the clouds in order to land at the designated airport. Going through the clouds can be quite uncomfortable and bumpy. Sometimes it feels like a free fall through the skies and could be quite scary. In complete contrast with the view, the thicker the clouds, the bumpier the ride. When it starts, all you just want is for it to be all over. I had a nasty and embarrassing experience with this that I would rather forget.

The pilot cannot decide not to land the aircraft because the passengers love the view up there so much or if he does not want the passengers to feel the temporary discomfort of descending through the clouds. Some of the passengers may be distraught but his objective will always be to get the passengers to their destination.  

Life will throw different things at us. Sometimes, our experiences will feel as if we are gliding peacefully above the clouds and at other times, it appears as if we are stuck in the thick clouds. Life gets as bumpy as bumpy could be. In all things, God sees and God is in perfect control like a great pilot. We have his promises to reassure us that He will be with us, no matter the kind of clouds we find ourselves in.

When you’re in over your head, I’ll be there with you. When you’re in rough waters, you will not go down. When you’re between a rock and a hard place, it won’t be a dead end— Because I am GOD, your personal God, The Holy of Israel, your Saviour. I paid a huge price for you: all of Egypt, with rich Cush and Seba thrown in! That’s how much you mean to me! Isaiah 43: 2- 3 (MSG)

‘Do not fear [anything], for I am with you; Do not be afraid, for I am your God. I will strengthen you, be assured I will help you; I will certainly take hold of you with My righteous right hand [a hand of justice, of power, of victory, of salvation].’ Isaiah 41:10 (AMP)

God is our refuge and strength, a help always near in times of great trouble. That’s why we won’t be afraid when the world falls apart when the mountains crumble into the centre of the sea, when its waters roar and rage when the mountains shake because of its surging waves. Psalm 46: 1 – 5 (CEB)

You are my hiding place; you will protect me from trouble and surround me with songs of deliverance. Psalm 32:7 (NIV)

But the Lord can be trusted to make you strong and protect you from harm. 2 Thessalonians 3:3

Because we have these promises, we cannot turn around or yield to adversity. Like the pilot who keeps the end in mind, we can look through the issues with the filter of God’s limitless abilities and know that the Lord that keeps us neither sleeps nor slumbers. Even when you can’t see it or feel it, He never stops working.

4 Comments

Filed under Uncategorized

REMAIN SEATED

“Remain seated until the seat belt sign is turned off”

                                                                                  Every pilot

I have been travelling quite a lot recently and each time the aircraft lands, the pilot or the cabin crew lead always makes this announcement: “Remain seated with your seat belt fastened until the aircraft comes to a complete stop and the seat belt sign is turned off”. 9 times out of 10, people just ignore the instruction and jump out of their seats as if the instructions were to the birds of the air. I have observed this with different nationalities, so it’s not the specialty of any particular set of people.

When you don’t get up like everyone else, there is a strong pull to conform and do the wrong thing with the crowd because everyone is doing it and everyone seems to accept it. This is worse if you are in an aisle seat and the passengers you have blocked in are giving you that quizzical look. The force of the stare could almost lift you off your seat. It takes a deliberate decision not to join the crowd on those occasions.

As we navigate our multifaceted courses in life, we will come face to face with opportunities to follow the crowd in the wrong direction. The decision may be seemingly innocuous or in some cases, quite significant. At those times, “The end justifies the means” appears to be a wise counsel. When we find ourselves at those points, our focus should be the internal satisfaction that comes from a good conscience and not external satisfaction.

The Bible is filled with examples of those that tilted to either side of the balance in following the crowd and we can learn from all of them:

Aaron buckled under the pressure of the crowd and made the golden calf as a god for the people of Israel. 10 out of 12 spies chose to see themselves as grasshoppers, while Joshua and Caleb saw things differently. Noah endured the mocking of the crowd for a very long time to build the ark. Daniel, Shadrach, Meshach and Abednego chose to stand alone and not flow with the crowd, even when faced with the lion’s den and the fiery furnace. We know how the story ended for each group.

In these days when many people are under so much pressure from the strains of the global economy, the temptation to make little compromises for gain may appear so strong. When we can’t see any way out of the pit we find ourselves in, joining the crowd may appear logical, especially if the compromise seems insignificant. Wrong is wrong and the number of people doing wrong does not make the definition of wrong to change. We can find encouragement and direction from the following scriptures and more:

You must not follow a crowd in wrongdoing. Do not testify in a lawsuit and go along with a crowd to pervert justice. Exodus 23:2

Don’t copy the behaviour and customs of this world, but let God transform you into a new person by changing the way you think. Then you will learn to know God’s will for you, which is good and pleasing and perfect. Romans 12:2

My child, if sinners entice you, turn your back on them! Proverbs 1:10

Don’t look for shortcuts to God. The market is flooded with surefire, easygoing formulas for a successful life that can be practiced in your spare time. Don’t fall for that stuff, even though crowds of people do. The way to life—to God!—is vigorous and requires total attention. Mathew 7: 13 – 14

God knows, God sees and His grace is sufficient. Stay the course and don’t join the crowd. God is able to do it, but even if He doesn’t do it the way expect or when you expect it. He is still faithful.

2 Comments

Filed under Lifestyle, Ministry, Uncategorized