Saturday, June 15, 2013

Prophecy is the Main Gift of the Spirit by Which the Church is Built - Zac Poonen

When God is present in our midst, we will hear Him speaking to us powerfully in the meetings. That is the meaning of prophecy.
In old-covenant times, prophecy was meant for foretelling the future and for guiding people as to what they should do. But now, in the new covenant, prophecy is for exhortation (challenging, rebuking and correcting people), consolation (comforting and encouraging people) and edification (building up the church) (1 Cor.14:3).
Prophecy is the main gift of the Spirit by which the church is built. The prophetic word is “a lamp shining in a dark place” (2 Pet.1:19). Without this light constantly burning in the church, it will be impossible to escape the wiles of the prince of darkness. The church itself will sink into darkness. The main reason why many Christian groups that started out well degenerated over a period of time was because the gift of prophecy gradually disappeared.
Whenever God’s presence departed from Israel in Old Testament times, one mark of His forsaking them was that “there was no longer any prophet” among them (Psa.74:1,9). Israel always degenerated whenever they did not have a prophet, as in the days of Eli (See 1 Sam.3:1). But Israel rose into a place of eminence when they had a prophet, as in the days of Samuel (1 Sam.3:20). It was through Samuel that David was anointed as the king of Israel. And that began a glorious new era in Israel’s history.  When Samuel prophesied, “the Lord did not allow any of his words to fall to the ground” (1 Sam.3:19 - KJV).
We too must pray earnestly for such a powerful ministry of prophecy in the church that every word we speak goes straight home to people’s hearts like an arrow to its mark.  Through the gift of prophecy, “the secrets of people’s hearts are disclosed” (1 Cor.14:25). Thus everyone in the church will get light on the deceitfulness of sin.
We are commanded to “exhort one another daily (in the church), lest we be hardened through the DECEITFULNESS of sin” (Heb.3:13). There are sins that are obvious and there are sins that are subtle and hidden. But the spirit of prophecy will expose both the deceitfulness of sin as well as the schemes of Satan, so that we are protected.
We see an illustration of this in the Old Testament. When the king of Aram was warring against Israel, every time he and his generals planned in secret to attack Israel at a certain point, his plans were revealed to the king of Israel by Elisha through prophecy (2 Kings 6:8-12). Thus the king of Israel knew exactly where to place his army to defend the country and saved his nation again and again.
That is how the Lord, through prophecy in the church-meetings, warns us in advance of the areas where Satan is going to attack us in the coming days. So we can be on our guard in those areas.
Paul exhorted Timothy to fight the good fight (against Satan) by paying attention to the prophecies made concerning him (1 Tim.1:18).
Again and again, we have found in the church in Bangalore, that the spirit of prophecy in our meetings has warned many brothers and sisters in advance of the points at which they were going to face the enemy’s attacks in the days that followed. Through the prophetic word, God has given wisdom to everyone of us in the church - wisdom for our personal life, for our family life, and for our church life. Proverbs 24:3,4 says, “By WISDOM a house is built, and by KNOWLEDGE the rooms are filled with pleasant and precious riches.”  There is a place for knowledge in the church - God’s Word taught by anointed teachers. But knowledge is like the furniture with which a house is furnished after it has been built by WISDOM.
So if we only have Bible-knowledge in our churches, we will be like a family living on an empty plot of ground with a lot of expensive furniture around us but with no house - no walls, no roof and not even a floor!! That’s why we are exhorted in the New Testament to pursue after WISDOM first of all. “If anyone lacks wisdom let him ask God who gives liberally to all” (Jas.1:5). It is through wisdom that the church is built. And God’s wisdom comes to the church through the gift of prophecy.
That is why we must “earnestly seek to prophesy” (1 Cor.14:1, 5) in every meeting of the church. Meetings for Bible-study and evangelism are good. But if we are to build the church as a pure testimony for Christ, then the gift of prophecy must be given the FIRST place.

Friday, June 14, 2013

What is the power of the Holy Spirit, and how can I know I have that power? - Sandeep Poonen

One of my constant prayers has been for God to continuously fill me with the Holy Spirit.  I have known that God is a loving Father who longs to pour out His Holy Spirit onto me far, far more than all my deepest desire for the Holy Spirit.  If I being evil would never dream of withholding bread and meat from my children when they ask for it, God would even more never withhold the Holy Spirit from me when I seek for Him with the same longing.

But as I have been meditating on being filled again and again with the Holy Spirit, God showed me a clear proof that I truly yearn for the Holy Spirit.  An increasing yearning for the Holy Spirit will correspond with an increasing yearning for the holiness of God to be reflected in my life.
So I cannot say that I long for the Holy Spirit if I am not ruthless to all other “spirits” that I find residing in myself (the spirit to hold grudges, the spirit to return evil with evil, the spirit to lust, the spirit to lose my temper, etc).  And the secret enjoyment that I find from these other spirits prove to me (and God and the devil) that all my cries for the Holy Spirit are blind repetitions and mere lip-service to a theological truth.
A thirsty person longs for water, and a hungry person longs for food.  But whether a person is really thirsty and hungry can be easily proved by how this person responds to oil, grease, sugar syrup, sand, dirt, and rocks.  If people who claim to be hungry and thirsty constantly satisfy themselves with things that are NOT food/drink that satisfies them and quenches their thirst, this proves that they are not really thirsty and hungry.  Those who are hungry and thirsty will grow in rejecting everything else that does not satisfy.
In the same way, when a person who claims to be thirsty/hungry for the Holy Spirit does not embody a clear and committed preference for holiness over the sordid pleasures of this world, it proves that their desires for the Holy Spirit is really a desire for the Feel-Good Spirit, the Power-to-have-an-easy-life Spirit, the Ability-to-heal-people Spirit, etc.
Acts 1:8 tells me that I will receive power when the Holy Spirit is given to me – so that I can be a witness of Jesus.  But I must be crystal clear of what this POWER looks like, otherwise I can run after and look for the wrong things as proof of having the Holy Spirit.
So what does the power of the Holy Spirit look like?  Is it the heart to give up all my possessions or the ability to work miracles or speak in other tongues or move mountains?  No, 1 Corinthians 13 makes it clear that all these are meaningless without love.
The power of the Holy Spirit is the power of love.  And let’s right away get ALL influences of Bollywood, Hollywood, and worldly-romantic novels thoroughly out of our concept of love.  The power of love that I speak of is this:  The power to be rooted and grounded in God’s everlasting love for us, and the power to love God with all of ourselves, and the power to love others even as Jesus loved us.  This is the power that is available to me and that the eyes of my heart need to be opened to (Eph 1:18-19).  So the growing love of the Father in us and a partaking of His divine nature as we experience and hold onto His magnificent promises (2 Peter 1:3-4) – that is this power of love.  This is the TRUE power of the Holy Spirit.
But let me be clear right away:  Even with all of this power available to me, there is still a cross that I must endure and surrender to.  The cross on which my flesh and the world must die is something that is never promised to be pleasurable.  Jesus Himself endured the cross, and that was not just the physical cross at age 33, but rather the cross on which is own will had to be crucified daily (Luke 9:23; John 6:38).
But it is the powerful love that the Holy Spirit brings which is the power that makes that cross bearable.  The Holy Spirit will make that cross bearable because He puts the love of God in us, and our eyes are opened to the immense joy that is set before us as we choose to be with God.
This is a marvelous truth that we should grab a hold of:  The immense joy that we is set before us is the same joy that Jesus had set before Him and that gave Him power to endure the cross.
And what was that joy?  Fellowship with the Father and with one another.
Look, fellowship with the Father is primary.  In the Father’s presence is the fullness of joy.  So we know that the primary joy Jesus experienced as a result of enduring the cross every day of His earthly life was fellowship with the Father.
But we should remember that Jesus had that joy of fellowship with the Father even BEFORE He left the Father’s presence in the first place.  So the joy set before Jesus while He was on earth was more than just regaining fellowship with the Father.  It was also a fellowship with US that was on the other side of His life here on earth!  He knew that if He would endure the cross of dying to His self-will every day (Mark 9:23), and then finally the one cross that none of us have to bear (separation from fellowship with the Father), He would pave a way for US TOO to have fellowship with Him and His Father.  THIS made His joy full (John 15:11).
Jesus came down to this earth not just to save us from hell, but so that we too could share in the fellowship that He had with the Father.  All who have the heart of Jesus Christ are co-workers in this ministry, and finds their joy in the same place.  They too find their joy in their own personal fellowship with the Father and the Son, as well as in drawing others to share the fellowship that they themselves have.


http://jeevamozhikal.org/howcaniknowihavethatpowerofholyspirit-sandeep-poonen-2/

©Copyright-SandeepPoonen

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

GET TO KNOW JESUS by David Wilkerson

After meeting the ten lepers (see Luke 17:11-19), Jesus and the apostles probably had something to eat and were far up the road beyond the village.

Suddenly they heard a racket behind them and when they looked back, they saw a man running toward them, shouting and waving his arms! One of the disciples said, "It's one of those ten lepers from the village." As he neared, they heard him shouting, "Glory to Jesus! Praise You!"

It was the Samaritan leper! When he came up to Jesus, he fell prostrate at His feet and broke out in praise and thanksgiving! Out of his innermost being poured adoration for the Son of the living God: "You're the Son of God! Glory!"

Jesus looked down at him and said, "Were there not ten cleansed? But where are the nine?" (Luke 17:17). He was asking, "Why only you? Where are your friends, the others I healed?"

Beloved, that is the question Jesus is still asking today! Of the many multitudes He has cleansed and made whole, only a remnant are drawn back to Him! So where are all the others? They are in the same place the nine healed lepers ended up: lost in the church, swallowed up by religion.

I believe in the Bible's statistics. And if the statistic from this story in Luke's gospel is accurate, ninety percent of those who are touched by Jesus end up going back to some dead, dry church. They never get into Jesus—because they get lost in religion.

The nine lepers were anxious to get on with their lives, back to their families. They said, "I want my self-respect back. I want to go to the synagogue again and study about the coming Messiah!"

You may say, "What's wrong with all that? Isn't a man commanded to provide for his household? And doesn't David speak of meditating on the deep things of God? Aren't Christians supposed to be motivated to work diligently, to do exactly what the nine lepers did? And didn't Jesus tell them to go directly to the priest?"

Yes, that is all true—but it all becomes meaningless if you do not first get to know Jesus!

Tuesday, June 4, 2013

Marks Of True Faith - by Zac Poonen

Marks Of True Faith - (1 of 3) by Zac Poonen





Marks Of True Faith - (2 of 3) by Zac Poonen




Marks Of True Faith - (3 of 3) by Zac Poonen


MP3 -