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No true message from God will flow through a person who is smug and self-confident. If you want to speak for Him, prepare to die!
I did it again. This past Sunday I stood in a pulpit, looked out over a congregation of mostly strangers, cleared the lump in my throat and preached a message that the Lord had laid on my heart from the Bible.
Thousands of men and women speak publicly like this every week. It's what preachers do. No big deal.
Make room for the
Holy Spirit's bulldozers. He wants to give you an extreme makeover.
Last spring
during a visit to Charlotte, N.C. I stopped by the Billy Graham Library to take
a tour of the evangelist's boyhood home and to see his ministry's offices. In a
shaded grove on the same property I stumbled upon the grave of his wife, Ruth
Bell Graham. Her tombstone bore an unusual inscription: "END OF CONSTRUCTION. THANK YOU FOR YOUR
PATIENCE."
Mrs. Graham (who
died in 2007) apparently saw these words on a highway sign, and she told
friends that she wanted them on her grave marker. Apparently the message from
the road construction crew reminded her of God's patient care in preparing her
for heaven.
Do you trust
God's timing? The path to spiritual maturity requires us to surrender our
selfish deadlines.
When Mary and
Martha sent news to Jesus that their brother, Lazarus, was about to die, Jesus
didn't respond the way his friends expected. He actually snubbed their request.
The Bible says when Jesus heard that Lazarus was sick, "He then stayed two days
longer in the place where He was" (John 11:6, NASB).
For Mary and
Martha, those were two very long days.
Instead of
denying or downplaying this misunderstood spiritual gift, we should have the
courage to embrace it.
Last week after I
taught a class on the Holy Spirit at a ministry school in Pennsylvania, a
22-year-old guy from Maryland asked if I could pray with him. He had heard me
share how I was baptized in the Holy Spirit at age 18, and he wanted the same
experience. He was especially intrigued by the idea of speaking in tongues—something
he had never done even though he was comfortable around other classmates who
had this spiritual gift.
This young man,
Eric, understood that he already had the Holy Spirit. (We can't be born again
without the Spirit entering our hearts and quickening Christ's life in us.) But
he knew that Jesus offers us more—that the baptism of the Holy Spirit is a
second experience in which the fullness of God's divine power saturates us and
anoints us for supernatural ministry.
When
discouragement tries to rob you of joy and hope, open your mouth and turn up
the volume.
Back in the old
days, if you saw a guy talking to himself while he walked down the street you
assumed (1) he had just walked out of a bar, (2) he was slightly on the loony
side or (3) he had misplaced some money and was retracing his steps—like when
absent-minded Uncle Billy lost his cash deposit in It's a Wonderful Life.
Today lots of
people talk to themselves and we know they're not drunk, crazy or confused.
They are wired to their phones, either with ear buds, headsets or Bluetooth
devices. (What do you call more than one Bluetooth? Blueteeth?) What's weird is when you go into a men's restroom in an
airport and guys are standing around talking to themselves—and closing business
deals—with the sound of toilets flushing in the background. Welcome to the
wireless generation!