The Meaning

"And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak with other tongues, as the Spirit was giving them utterance." Acts 2:4

When the church was birthed at Pentecost, three different streams of thought collided, creating a powerful patch of white water of confusion, comedy and clarity. People who experienced the same thing responded very differently to it.

This should not surprise us. Two people involved in the same car wreck always have have different versions of exactly happened. The police take down their stories, and let the insurance companies sort it out. Life goes on.

When The Promise descended upon each of the 120 disciples, in the Upper Room, they experienced The Filling. Others who heard the sounds of the violent wind entering the room, and their native tongue coming out of the filled disciples, sought The Meaning of The Filling. Still others, hearing the same joyful sounds, responded with The Mocking of both. Their descendants are still with us.

These same three responses to Pentecost are repeated to this day. Some things never change. Two thousand years later, these three groups continue to keep the 'rivers of living water" foaming, frothing and fomenting with debate, disagreement, and disrespect.

People who need to hear the message of The Spirit's, "still, small voice" often have it drowned out by the cacophony of sounds spewing from strident saints, shouting at one another, "Die heretic!"

"When this sound occurred, the crowd came together, and were bewildered because each one of them was hearing them speak in his own language...'we each hear them in our own language to which we were born...we hear them in our own tongues speaking of the mighty deeds of God.' " Acts 2:6-11

The Filling was evident to all, then. The question remains with us, now.

"What does this mean?" v. 12

To the disciples who heard The Great Commission of Jesus, it sounded something like this. "You shall be My witnesses, to the Jews who are in Jerusalem, to the Jews who are in Judea, and to the Jews who are in the uttermost parts of the earth." They were products of their previous experiences. They had been raised to believe The Jews were The Chosen people, and the rest of the world was frozen out of any hope of receiving The Father's love.

Part of the meaning of what happened at Pentecost is clearer to us, than it was to those who were there. Some times the rear-view mirror is an aid in understanding the work of God. This was an explosion of God's love that would not be contained in Jerusalem, or in one racial group. The repercussions would be felt all around the world. When these devout Jews returned to their native lands, the message of God's love would go with them.

"But others were mocking." v. 13

People mocking and defaming what we hold most dear should not cause believers shock and dismay. God's greatest work was revealed to the people in Jerusalem, on the Day of Pentecost. Some disrespected His work then, and their contemporary cousins still do it today. It is offensive.

Not taking offense at something that is offensive doesn't mean it is not offensive. It is. It just means you don't pull out your "Shock Face" and your version of the hip hop head bob, and run around screaming, "OH NO, HE DI' ENT." Stop it. It's silly.

Don't act like it doesn't matter. It does, but screaming obscenities at someone who doesn't agree with you will not change their mind. Remember, mocking someone until they are a mess of mush is not exonerated by closing your remarks with, "Bless their heart."

Note to self: The hallmark of Christian character is turning the other cheek. This doesn't mean hiding in the tall grass or being afraid of your own shadow. When Jesus came into your heart, your brains didn't fall out. His Spirit came in. More on that later. Peter was transformed by his experience with the Spirit. You were too. Act like it. But I digress.

No matter what team you play for, The Fillings, The Meanings, or The Mockings, remember God is the ultimate umpire. The Father means for His message of love, purchased by His Son, to be delivered by His children, to His creation. When people who are focused on The Filling forget The Meaning, they are closer to The Mocking crowd than they want to admit. Neither one of them delivers the message. What does that mean? They are full of themselves, not full of The Spirit.

Prayer is the air of Pentecost, and prayer gives meaning to life, like oxygen gives life to those who breathe. Unless you live in L.A., air is invisible. You breathe what you can't see, and life goes on. Prayerless people build prayerless churches that end up gasping through life, wondering why people won't follow their lead or join their band of breathless wonders.

Prayer is the language of the Spirit. He hears, and He responds to the prayers of people looking for meaning and purpose in life. Some people spend their lives seeking the perfect prayer language, as if the Spirit is waiting for them to discover an unknown tongue, before He will respond to the cries of their broken heart. The meaning of Pentecost reveals The Spirit already knows the language brokenhearted people know best. He responds to prayer spoken in any language. The meaning of Pentecost? Pick one!

TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Addition

"And they drew lots for them, and the lot fell to Matthias and he was added to the eleven apostles." Acts 1:26

During the heyday of the church growth movement, hardly a church newsletter was complete, until the section was added that reported, WEEKLY ADDITIONS. Here the scalps were hung on the wall. BY BAPTISM. BY STATEMENT. BY LETTER. TOTAL ADDITIONS. These were considered to be the vital signs of the church.

The church growth movement was the foster child of the Jesus Revolution and the Deeper Life Movement. After the Holy Spirit was kicked to the curb, by those claiming credit for what He had been doing, since the late Sixties, something had to be done to keep the momentum going. The Church Growth Movement gurus stepped up to the plate. Formulas, surveys, demographic studies, interviews with unchurched Sally and unchurched Steve, and a host of other aids, were introduced to pastors passionate to make a name for themselves.

During the Eighties, all kinds of "How to" books were produced, and seminars spawned to empower churches to breakthrough to the next level of church growth. The continuing momentum of the previous spiritual movement, The Jesus Revolution, made everyone look like an expert.

Of course the fastest way to grow a Southern Baptist Church in the Eighties and Nineties was to escape a decaying, transitional neighborhood, and relocate deeper into The Burbs. Southern Baptists wrote the book on this. It was called "White Flight." Apparently, the Holy Spirit went into a period of self-doubt, unable to communicate cross-culturally, or across generational lines.

I was encouraged this week, by the attendance at the North American Board sponsored Send 2013 Conference. Close to 4,000 pastors and church planters met in Dallas, Texas at Prestonwood Baptist Church to make serious course corrections to the previous mentioned strategy. I pray that this is the beginning of a new day. We need it. God send it!

Additions are what man can do. Multiplication is what God does. The power of the Holy Spirit is rarely needed to put out a few lures, to see if unchurched people will bite on them. Moving unchurched people into the church without a life-changing encounter with God's Holy Spirit has not proven to be a winning strategy. It never will be.

Drawing a crowd is all about additions. Making disciples requires the Holy Spirit's power and Presence. The Spirit must multiply Himself in the lives of those who are weary of being full of themselves, and ready to be filled with Him. Filling the church with people who are full of themselves adds up to mob, not a movement of God. Big difference.

In the 1970's "discipleship" became a buzz word that made its way into the program dominated bureaucracy of the church. It eventually became homogenized into series of 12 week studies, the completion of a spiral notebook, participation in a student weekend, or attendance at a Sunday night study group held at the church. Remember DT? Discipleship Training. I didn't think so. As the spiral notebooks increased, genuine discipleship remained elusive. It still is.

The Acts account clarifies why. Matthias "was added to the eleven apostles." The disciples interrupted a prayer meeting with a business meeting, and rolled the dice. They bet the farm on Matthias being the missing component needed to complete the task assigned to them. They added up all the facts, and came up with good man. They settled for a good man and missed God's best. How did that happen? They strayed instead of prayed. To stay the course, God's people must pray the course.

In the late 1990's I served on an Evangelism Task Force that was charged with producing the North American Mission Board's answer to the Great Commission. We came up with "The NET." I wrote the devotional guides that were part of a training module churches could order, and use to train people to share their faith. Never heard of it? I didn't think so. It was a good idea. Apparently, it wasn't God's idea. It happens to the best of us.

The Bible doesn't record much, if anything, about Matthias after he was added to the apostles. He is the poster boy for Church Additions. Most churches don't hear much from those they add to their church rolls either. Mathias Members are a huge part of the religious landscape.

For eight years, I served as pastor of a church that bragged about having 5,000 members. We couldn't find half of them, but we weren't about to admit it. At one time in their lives, they had identified with our church. In most cases, "once saved always saved" didn't translate into, "I was lost, but now I'm found." You couldn't find these people with a team of FBI detectives.

I fantasized that at least half of our people, at the point of membership, must have immediately entered into a Witness Protection Program. We knew their names, and their last address, but they were either AWOL or MIA. We only heard from them if they wanted to get married or buried in the church. Why? They claimed their rights. Members got a discount on the fees, for use of the auditorium and the fellowship hall. Membership does have its privileges.

Acts 1 is a picture of a man-made church. Prayer is initiated, but it is easily interrupted by a business meeting. Logic is applied to an impossible situation, and a man-made solution is agreed upon. These people in the Upper Room were bright, busy, and totally impotent. They were in charge of the agenda, but not filled with the Holy Spirit. This never ends well.

Jesus had "commanded them not to leave Jerusalem, but to wait for what the Father had promised, 'Which you heard from Me;...you will be baptized with the Holy Spirit not many days from now.' " Acts 1:5

These straying saints were like "Brylcreem Baptists." You remember the Brylcreem slogan? "A little dab will do yah!" They started out praying, and ended up straying. It didn't take them long to get tired of praying. There was work to be done. Ron Dunn wrote a book, "Don't Just Stand There. Pray Something." Great advice. Too many times people are tempted to quit on prayer, before they are equipped for the task.

When they started saying what they had been thinking, instead of being obedient to the last thing that Jesus had said to them to do, they settled for what man could do, and missed what only The Holy Spirit can do. This only happens...EVERY TIME.

Acts 2 reveals what Jesus had in mind for His Church. "And they were all filled with the Holy Spirit." (Acts 2:1-4) When we settle for what man can do, we are limited to our own resources to sustain and maintain what we initiate. When we pray for something only God can get credit for, then God furnishes all we need to complete what He initiates. Big difference.

Prayer is the climate that prepares us for a fresh movement of The Spirit of God, in our lives. Spiritual Awakening takes place, when what is The Spirit is doing in our lives, flows into the church and out into the streets. People are not impressed with how well we mop the floors of the church, but they can't ignore a flood The Spirit of God moving through their city.

Put up the mop. Pray for rain. Lord, let Your Spirit rain into the parched areas of my heart, and overflow to thirsty people ready to be filled by Him. May His reign on earth, bring glory to Your Son, seated by Your side in Heaven.

TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Mission

"Follow Me!" - Jesus - John 21:19

The way you come on, is the way you continue on, in the Kingdom of God. Citizenship is enriched by fellowship, but it is initiated by "followship."

Note to self: From God's lips to my ears, from His Spirit to my heart, from His Word to my eyes are the only time lapses between hear and obey, that God allows between me and my next act of obedience. Just do it!

Obedience is the key to initiating and sustaining long-term, life-changing, life-giving Spiritual Awakening. The paralysis of analysis, or waiting for someone else to make the first move are not game changing strategies. They feed on delay, and doubt, and in the process miss the God-given opportunities always delivered in strangely wrapped packages, at inconvenient times.

Peter had just delivered three affirmations of His love for Jesus; one for every denial he made of Jesus, on the night before He was crucified. When commanded to return to his mission in life, following Jesus, the first words out of his mouth were, "What about him?" Jesus was very clear.

"If I want him to remain until I come, what is that to you? You follow Me!" - Jesus - John 21:22

Note to self: Responding to a command from God, with a question mark is rarely a high water mark of your obedience. If God says, "Jump!", then "Just do it!" Don't ask, "How high?" What are you saving yourself for? Life is not a dress rehearsal. Live it! You will have eternity for God to explain His reasons and His timing. It won't matter then. If it doesn't matter then. It doesn't matter now. Pray & Obey!

Peter is such an easy target. Big men always are. They have big flaws. Little men have them too, but they hide in the tall grass, far from the fight, and usually become critics or talk show radio hosts. I have recently been reminded of the similarities of political talk radio and sports talk radio hosts. They fill the air with their own commentary and critiques of men and women who are in the arena. When they have more air time than breath, they call on others to join them, to fill the void.

Most critics have never been national champions or held national office. From their Krispy Kreme stained hands they hold a copy of the latest gaffe or the most recent error of a politician or athlete and hold them up for examination and dissection. Their tongues are sharp, glib, and articulate. There is only one thing missing. The courage to step into the floor of the arena and expose themselves to the danger of the fight. They confuse talking about the fight, with being in it. They are wrong. In a culture that glorifies the critic above the champion, don't be surprised if there are more critics than champions.

Following Jesus doesn't give anyone the privilege of sitting in a safe room and making fun of someone else who is taking one for the team. Jesus said, "Follow Me!" It is a lonely road, and prayer is the only way to keep the lines of communication open with The One who can give direction, protection, and correction, during the course of the journey or the duration of the battle.

Prayers is not a sign of infallibility. It is an admission of inability. When Peter asked if John was coming on this mission with him, Jesus made it clear to him that it was none of his business. It was not a rude remark, but it was a rebuke. Jesus was letting Peter know, "I am all you need." He still is.

TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Love

"Do you love Me more than these?" Jesus - John 21:15

When Jesus had finished breakfast, He focused on the hole in Peter's heart. The empty stomach of men who had been toiling all night long, at the oars and net of a fishing boat, must have left them with man-sized hunger and thirst. Jesus knew there was more that they needed. He had taught them, at the Sermon on The Mount.

“Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they shall be satisfied." Matthew 5:6

Jesus knew the best way to fill a man was to empty him. Prayerless people are full of themselves, and incapable of being filled with anything or anyone else. Peter was the poster boy of the self-medicated person who tries to quench their thirst by reaching for salt water, or attempts to satisfy their hunger by devouring themselves.

At the home of the high priest, Peter had denied Jesus three times. Like a wolf with his leg caught in the trap, Peter gnawed it off, and limped into the night. Every time he heard a rooster crow, he was reminded of his shame.

18th Century scientist, Blaise Paschal described man's spiritual condition as a God-shaped vacuum that only Jesus could fill. Jesus had fed Peter, but after breakfast, He started to fill him. Jesus began with a question. He often does.

The filling process was not so much painful, as it was draining. Peter was confronted with the one thing that can never be faked, in the eyes of Jesus. He knows. The conversation between Jesus and Peter, is not an easy read. It is not just the obvious signs of discomfort that it brings to Peter. It reminds me of the many times Jesus has invaded my space, and commissioned His Spirit to get in my face, with the same question.

"Do you love Me more than these?" Jesus

Being called to preach was a heady experience for an eight year old boy, growing up in Dallas, Texas. I clearly heard the call to preach. I just couldn't bring myself to adhere to it. The distance between Dallas and Fort Worth is approximately 30 miles. I took the long way to get there. Sixteen years after hearing God's call to ministry, I enrolled in seminary in Fort Worth, Texas. It had been a painful journey. Never underestimate the capacity of a man, full of himself, to find a detour, when the straight path is right in front of him. Prayerlessness prolongs the process. People with "I" trouble can xpect a lot of U-turns.

Growing up in Dallas, we were taught to love God, and hate Fort Worth. As a loyal, native son, I had done my fair share of cursing "Cowtown." God has a great sense of humor. In 1974, He pointed me to Fort Worth, Texas to rediscover my First Love, Jesus, and to meet the love of my life, Dana. She often asks me, "Am I still #2?" In 35 years of marriage, that is as close as it can ever get for us. Jesus is our First Love. He plays second banana to no one.

Peter's love for Jesus was no small emotion, but his denial of Jesus, remained a major matter. This was more than a bone in his throat, and a rock in his shoe. His denial of Jesus was a gorilla on his back. Jesus knew Peter needed to be set free from his shame, so He restored God's calling on Peter's life.

Jesus took Peter back to the place where it all began, and at the point of his departure. Those who are called to follow Jesus, often allow the system to overshadow the Savior. Peter was no exception. His track record of following Jesus ran the gamut, from the profound to the profane. Peter once grandly proclaimed, "You are the Christ the Son of the Living God!" Jesus honored him for it.

As the self-appointed spokesman for The Twelve, Peter became comfortable with his role as team leader. He was a natural. This is a dangerous place to be. When men become comfortable in their ability to perform what they have been called to do, they lean on their own talents, and abilities, and become less available to The One who called them. Prayerless people may rush in where angels fear to tread, but this doesn't mean they are fearless, just reckless.

Peter's reckless behavior led him to deny Jesus three times, escalating his fear and anger, with every step in the wrong direction. Matthew's Gospel records,

"Then he began to curse and swear, “I do not know the man!” And immediately a rooster crowed." Matthew 26:74

Words mean things. The word used to translate what Jesus said to Peter was the highest form of love the Greeks could conceive. It went beyond brotherly affection, and erotic attraction. It was an act of the will, not a flight of fancy.

Peter heard Jesus say, "Do you love Me with an unconquerable benevolence, and an undefeatable goodwill? Is your love for Me, selfless or selfish? Do you love me because of what I can do for you? Does your love for Me rise and fall with every whim of your emotions? Is your love a deliberate, daily act of your will, or a periodic, spasmodic spell of nostalgia? Does your love cause you to talk about Me, more than you talk to Me? Do you find your satisfaction in doing something for Me, or spending time with Me?" DO YOU LOVE ME, or do you love the position, title, and prominence that has come to you, by My love for you? Are you wrapped up, in the trappings of your office, and the prestige it affords you? Are you willing to set "these things" aside, and once again, embrace Me?"

Peter had promised more than He could deliver. He had leaned on own supports, and ended up falling on his own sword. He was a man in need of a First Love Awakening. Jesus stirred his heart, and it stung him. When the blood flow is restricted to any part of the body, it "falls asleep." The numbness is relieved by moving it, and stirring it once again, but the price of restored movement is a stinging experience that is as inevitable, as it is painful. Peter was stung by the words of Jesus, but the blood was beginning to flow. There would be life, but it would not be painless.

"Yes, Lord; You know that I love You." John 21:16

"Revival is 'the sovereign act of God, in which He restores His own backsliding people to repentance, faith and obedience.' " Stephen Olford

Peter's anguish reminds me of The Renewal that each of us needs in our lives every day. If you can remember a time in your life when you loved Jesus more than you love Him today, you are in a back-slidden condition, and in need of a First Love Awakening.

Question: Do you love Jesus too much? Yeah. Me neither. It matters very little, how much I loved Jesus yesterday. My love for Him today is renewed by prayer. Prayer is that the restoration of the conversation with Jesus that leads me to intimacy with Him. Through prayer, He guides me away from MY will to THY will. Prayer moves me from MINE to THINE, and to His Father's direction, protection and correction.

TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Blessing

"Blessed are they that did not see, and yet believed." John 20:29

Since I was a child, we were taught to, "Say the blessing." In our home, it was an honor to be called upon to do it. Dad would often be the one who said it, before we sat down to eat, but all four of us kids knew we better be ready to do it. One of Dad's favorite tricks was to wait until one of us tried to sneak a bite of food before he prayed, and with a bit of righteous rebuke, he would assign the duty to pray to the wayward child with the full mouth. He wasn't above adding the dig, "Including what is already in your mouth." We couldn't ever get anything past Dad. Good times.

Blessing comes from finding the sweet spot in life. The Greek concept of life involved feeling happy, content, self-contained, in need of nothing else to be satisfied. The Duck Dynasty boys may have hit the nail on the head. HAPPY! HAPPY! HAPPY!, indeed.

To believe was to place, continued active trust or confidence in another person or cause. A person's cause for belief has always been based on their confidence in the person asking them to believe in them. For the Christian it means to trust in Jesus or God as able to aid either in obtaining or in doing something. In this case, it means saving faith. When a person activates their faith, they draw on God's resources, not their own.

The blessing Jesus gave, after revealing Himself to His disciples, could be considered a command performance. He honored the request of doubting Thomas, by inviting him to feel his way to belief in Him, as The Resurrected Christ. Still, Jesus was not above adding a hefty dose of rebuke with it. Thomas had said, he would never believe what he couldn't see and feel. After Jesus jumped through his hoop, He asked Thomas,

"Because you had seen Me have you believed?" v. 29a

Jesus was not placing a vote of confidence, in the kind of belief Thomas had just placed in Him. He was questioning it. The Kingdom Jesus came to establish wasn't built with the same materials demanded by the world. In the material world, seeing is believing. In the His world, believing is seeing. There is a big difference between the material and the spiritual worlds. Never confuse them.

Blessing and believing are two sides of the same coin. One does not arrive without the other. Running on parallel tracks, imperceptible to anyone but God, blessing and believing arrive simultaneously, at the junction of faith. Trust in The Resurrected Christ creates a celebration in the heart of anyone who puts their confidence in what they hear The Spirit of Christ reveal, from God's Word, about Jesus.

"Receive The Holy Spirit." Jesus - (John 20:22)

Faith in Jesus is birthed by the Holy Spirit revealing to a person what God's word says about The Son of God. Faith is the confidence one places, or trusts in the facts, The Spirit of Christ reveals about Jesus, in God's Word.

"Consequently, faith comes from what is heard, and what is heard comes through the preached word of Christ." Romans 10:17

Jesus came into this world to become a personal Savior and Lord to the citizens of The Kingdom of God. Believing in Him, involves relying on Him to be Who the Holy Spirit reveals Him to be when they read God's Word, or hear it preached.

This belief or trust means that Jesus is no longer an historical figure, a religious icon, or a dusty doctrinal position. The living, breathing, Resurrected Christ takes up residence in the heart of every believer, through the work of The Person of The Holy Spirit.

"Blessed are they who did not see, and yet believed." John 20:29b

Remember, believing is seeing. Believing in the finished work of The Crucified Christ should never be minimized, but it becomes a blessing through the Presence of The Resurrected Christ. Receiving the Holy Spirit's good word about Jesus is more than just a single leap of faith. Walking out of the darkness of unbelief and into the light of God's love at Calvary is no small step, but it is the start of a great journey.

The life of faith is a life of leaps. Faith is belief in action, not just one action followed by prolonged paralysis of analysis. It continuously collides at each point in time, and every place where, a believing person is tempted to doubt what The Holy Spirit says about Jesus. Faith obeys. Doubt delays.

Faith begins as a breath, but just as life is sustained, by breathing, the faith life is sustained by believing. No breath, no life. No breathing, no believing. The material world seeks to conform the believer to its way of life. The blessing for every believer is to be transformed into a citizen of The Kingdom.

The blessing of Jesus cannot be passed down, from generation to generation, only the message of about Jesus can be passed on. Daddy can't believe for you. Momma can't put trust in Jesus for you. Belief is a very personal choice. Actually to be pro-choice is to be pro-life. The world has turned that concept upside down.

People immigrating across the border from the darkness, and into the light are only granted citizenship in Christ's Kingdom, when they place their trust in Jesus. There is no general amnesty available that can release the blessing of citizenship. Each immigrant must place their trust in Jesus, to be their personal Savior and Lord, in the Kingdom of Christ.

Believing leads to blessing when seekers look at the cross and say, "Jesus did this for me!" They look at the empty tomb, and say, "Jesus conquered death for me." They admit their sin and say, "Jesus, forgive me." They open their hearts and say, "Jesus, fill me!" They crucify their pride, and say, "Jesus, lead me!"

Citizens of The Kingdom of Christ believe life in this new Kingdom is all about Jesus. It is not about them. Jesus said, "I came that they might have life." (John 10:10) He is still the only path to citizenship. "I am the way, the truth and the life." Jesus - John 14:6

Through their believing, believers find His blessing. The blessing of Jesus is as close as your next breath. Jesus is never any farther away from you, than your next prayer to Him. Prayer puts your faith in action. Believing is seeing, and prayer provides the vision to see what God is up to in the dark. Pray and obey. Don't doubt and delay.

TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Finish

"It is finished!" Jesus - John 19:30

My athletic career reads like a Greek tragedy. In my youth, I was a sprinter in high school and college. "I can't put in what God left out," so said the old coach, in the movie, "Chariots of Fire." Sad, but so true. Still, I did learn that no race lasts forever. There is always a finish line. Good to know.

As I have aged, my races have moved from dashes to marathons. The swift completion of a race is rarely my goal. My mission is to finish. In my mature years, I have traded fast and furious for alive and well.

Don't get me wrong. I have only run one marathon. Well, in a way, I ran two in one day. It was my first and my last. Sorry, runners joke. Since that time I have limited myself to half-marathons, and turned my idea of running into a form of power walking. Somewhere around five miles, I am looking for a finish line. What I once could run in one day, I walk in a week. BUT I finish. Remember? My mission is to finish, alive and well.

Most of us remember the two racers in Aesop's fable, the turtle and the rabbit. The rabbit was considered a safe bet to win the race between the two. He was obviously faster, and the turtle was obviously outmatched. The turtle crosses the finish line first, by just pacing himself and staying in the race to the very end. The point of the story? Great potential, ability or time can be squandered and wasted. Those who make the best use of their talents and time will finish ahead of those who don't. This only happens...EVERY TIME.

Still, the words of Jesus say so much more. His statement, though profound in a spiritual sense, was not an unusual one in the Greek influenced culture of his day. This very same phrase was found on a piece of parchment, in the desert sands of that region. Across the face of a scrap of paper that had once been a bill handed to a an ancient customer, was the Greek phrase, "tetelstai", or "PAID IN FULL."

Jesus was saying the debt had been paid. There is nothing left to be done. Nothing more is owed. He has finished His work, and completed the transaction He was sent to accomplish on earth.

Years ago there was a simple chorus that put it in word and song for a generation of young believers. It never gets old to me.

"He paid a debt, He did not owe.
I owed a debt, I could not pay.
I needed Someone, to wash my sins away.
And now I sing a brand new song,
Amazing Grace, all day long,
Christ Jesus paid a debt
That I could never pay."

What Jesus did on Calvary has been debated in schools of theology, placed on greeting cards, and paraded in pageants across the stages of churches and movie screens every year, between Christmas and Easter. Many times Christ's message and His mission get lost in all the theological minutiae, and the pancake makeup and imagery. He died on a cross for you and your sins.

Sin separated you from God. There is really nothing original about sin. It is really, well, just stupid. There isn't much originality in it. Every generation thinks they invented it, just because they discovered their love for it.

God sent Jesus into this world, to die on a cross, before there was a threat of same-sex marriage amendments, SCOTUS dismissals of DOMA, and a host of other culturally corrosive expressions of sin. There is nothing new under the sun, and certainly, there has never been anything done in the dark that God hasn't seen. Dim light doesn't dim His vision.

Faced with the unbridled license of a morally unrestrained culture, prayerless people run around with their shock face in freeze position, breathlessly shouting, "I can't believe it!" Prayer enables you to see the face of God, through the eyes of Jesus. God isn't shocked. He's angry, but He isn't surprised. Prayerless people are always surprised at what they are capable of doing. God isn't. He knows you better than you know yourself, and He loves you anyway. Don't stay away from that kind of love. Pray your way towards it.

God isn't some benevolent, benign dispenser of blessings to wayward nations being run into the ground by wandering sheep. In our culture, "God Bless America" usually follows, a stirring rendition of "I'm Proud to Be an American." If you listen carefully you can almost hear angels gagging in Heaven, as they say to each other, "You have got to be kidding."

God takes sin seriously. Take another look at this passage in John. If it doesn't give you a picture of God's view of the depravity and the consequences of sin, not many things ever will.

For visual imagery, you might try watching Mel Gibson's movie portrayal of the crucifixion of Jesus, "The Passion of the Christ." Even then, you can't catch the aroma of death. Idea. Take your I-Pad to a slaughter house and watch it there, or to one of Planned Parenthood's abortion mills. Dr. Gosnell's "House of Horrors" has been closed, but others like it are still open for business, and running at top speed. Oops. There's that shock face again.

The message of Jesus in the face of a culture riding a fast horse to hell is, "I died for you. Now. Dismount." There is no Plan B. There is no more compassionate alternative available to rid your life of the debt of sin that separates you from right standing with God. Ignoring your debt doesn't make it go away. It only increases the distance between you and God.

Don't get me wrong. The greatness of the distance is not the issue. The slightest separation from the perfection of Holy God is calamitous to a person's right standing with Him. To be forgiven a debt must be based upon a willingness to admit one is owed. Confession of sin, as small as it may be, is the act of a repentant person that opens the doors to Heaven, through the blood of Jesus Christ.

These last words of Jesus on the cross, opened up a new life for those who believed. Don't take my word for it. Read what John said,

"These have been written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God; and that believing you may have life in His name." John 20:31

Prayer is the key that opens up the door of Heaven, by accepting Christ's finished work on the cross. Prayer was an essential part of the life of Jesus, and it should hold similar significance in the lives of those who say they believe in Him. It was the indelible mark of His intimacy with His Father.

By praying, Jesus never let anything come between Him and His Father's will for His life. Prayer empowered Jesus to transform MY will into THY will. It will do the same for you. The work of Jesus is finished on the cross, but He isn't finished with you yet. Are you so close to God that prayer couldn't get you any closer? Yeah. Me neither.

TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Truth

"Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice." Jesus - John 18:37

When Jesus completed His prayer of intercession, He led His disciples to a garden where He often spent time in prayer. There He was arrested by a party of Roman soldiers and Jewish officers, accompanied by Judas. They took Him to the home of the Jewish high priest for questioning. It was there that Peter denied Him. After the rooster crowed, they dragged Jesus before the Roman governor for sentencing.

Pilate, the Roman governor, posed one of the most profound question ever asked, "What is truth?" With The Answer to his question standing right in front of him, Pilate was unable to see and hear The Truth. He was so close, and yet so far away from "The Way, The Truth and The Life." (John 14:6)

Pilate offered to release a prisoner to the people, and they chose a notorious bandit named Barabbas. He was in prison for leading a riot in the city, and the people called for him to be freed. Jesus was not surprised by the decision of either, Pilate or the people. He was the only one who truly knew what was going on, then. He is still the only one who knows what is going on, now.

Prayer is how we allow the voice of Jesus to guide us through the crisis. This is powerfully important to remember. When chaos, confusion, and calamity are the ruling forces of the current crisis in your life, Jesus is still the only one who knows what is truly going on around you. The truth remains. "Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice." (John 18:17)

Our tendency, in reading this passage of Scripture is to judge Pilate and the people harshly for not listening to the voice of Jesus, when He stood face to face with them. Hindsight is 20/20 especially when we are pointing out where someone else missed the mark.

In spite of the promises Jesus made to send us The Helper, and His promise to never leaves us or forsake us, we often sound more like Thelma and Louise flying off a cliff, than Paul and Silas praying in prison. Sad, but true.

The over-riding demeanor of Jesus in John 18 is calm in the midst of the storm. Jesus is never surprised by what people do or the events that unfold around them. He has never had to pull out His shock-face, and make a made dash in a panic search for truth. He is the truth, and He always knows how the crisis is going to end.

Those who hear His voice, do not always follow Him. Jesus said, "Follow Me!" Some did. Some didn't. Some will. Some won't. The problem is not with His voice. He still speaks. Some people just never listen.

Those of of who claim to be followers of "The Way, The Truth and The Life" should make a practice of listening to the voice of Jesus, during the calm and in the crises of life. The more we talk, the more cliffs we find, and the louder we squeal. The more we pray, the clearer the path becomes, and calmer we become.

The crises of life do not overwhelm us because Jesus has stopped speaking to us. They throw us into confusion because we have stopped listening to Him, and taken refuge in our own advice. This never ends well. What is our choice? Remember...

"Everyone who is of the truth hears My voice." Jesus

Prayer is how we take take our crisis and put it in the hands of Jesus. Only He can make sense out of all the lies and deception thrown in our faces, by the enemy. When you are intimidated by the immediate crisis, bullied by the chaos around you, and deafened by the accusations of the enemy, listen to the voice of Jesus.

When Roman generals returned from a great victory, The Senate would vote to give them a Triumph. It was a parade of honor through the streets of Rome. The troops would march in front of the conquering general, as adoring crowds would shower the victor's chariot with flowers and gifts. Walking along side of the general, a slave would repeat over and over again in the ear of the hero, "This too shall pass." It was an eery reminder that flame was fleeting.

On the other hand, when we pray, we turn defeat into a triumph. The Spirit of Jesus Christ, who dwells within us, brings His comfort, and courage, at the point of our greatest defeat or deepest shame. When what we fear the most is staring us in the face, The Spirit says to us, "This too shall pass." Stop chasing fame, and fearing shame.

TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Hour

"Father, the hour has come; glorify You Son, that the Son may glorify You, even as You gave Him authority over all flesh, that to all whom You have given Him, He may give eternal life." John 17:1-2

Magnifying requires focusing one's passion upon something or someone, with an intensity that goes beyond a passing interest. Focusing a powerful telephoto lens on an object must be done with a steady hand and a willingness to discard widening the focus to include anything or anyone else. For the object of the photographer to be magnified, some things must be excluded from the frame of the picture. The more powerful the lens, the steadier the hand must be. The tighter the focus, the clearer the picture will be.

Glorifying, on the other hands, is what happens to a person, cause or object when it comes into the circle of influence of a greater person, cause or object. Glory comes from a close association, with someone or something greater, and gives off a reflection that leaves a mark or an afterglow on those who are touched by it. Glory seekers are driven by a passion to be well known. They desire to shine brighter, by turning the light of glory, that belongs to someone else, on their own name.

"Stolen valor" is a term applied to those who claim medals that don't belong to them, in order to be thought more highly of than they deserve. It is against the law, and it is pathetic. Seeking glory and stealing glory are not same thing as reflecting glory.

Reflecting glory and seeking glory are two different things. Reflectors on a bicycle give off an appearance of light, but it is an illusion. They are not the source of light. They just reflect in the dark, the light that comes from another source. This is the mission of a reflector, and it provides a life-saving service.

Jesus was a reflector of God's light to a dark world. He asserted He was The Light, but He held no delusions that He was The Source. Satan robbed glory from God and was expelled from Heaven, and remains on mission to send people to hell. Jesus gave glory to God, and He was sent to earth to draw people to Heaven. Glory seekers eventually get confused about the true source of The Light. By stealing glory from The Source, they end up reflecting very little glory on God, and taking credit for what little bit He has done through them.

Celebrity stalkers seek to have their picture taken with someone whose popular image is more highly regarded than their own. Their expectation is that close association with popular people will raise their popularity in the eyes of others. This is like drinking salt water to quench a raging thirst.

A person who climbs a great mountain has their picture taken on the pinnacle of the highest peak. There is no value added to their life, by having a snapshot taken of them making camp at the base of the mountain.

A person who has no sense of direction in life often ties themselves to a cause that gives their life meaning and purpose. What they do not find within themselves, they seek to have provided by joining in on something that will add value to their lives or notoriety to their name.

Jesus reflected the love of God to those who were living in the dark and in need of a way out of it. When He said He was The Light, He knew His Father was The Source of The Light of The Gospel, and He was The Reflector. Jesus didn't invent God's love. He reflected God's love. God is love, and those who fall under the influence of His love will reflect The Source, not a pale version of what they have to offer in and of themselves.

"This is eternal life, that they may know You, the only true God, and Jesus Christ that you have sent." v. 3

Eternal life is in knowing God, not as a doctrinal concept, but as a constant companion. Jesus is the point of connection with The Source. Praying is how Jesus maintained his position as a reflector of God's glory and avoided the trap of becoming merely a glory seeker. Reflecting the glory of God was His mission. Those who follow Him are wise to do the same.

Prayerless people reflect very little glory on God. Prayerlessness feeds the gnawing hunger for self-glorification that hounds those who are called to be on mission for God's glory. They get close enough to Him to make a name for themselves, but they fail to get close enough to Him make a difference in the world. Jesus knew the difference. His followers should follow His lead.

"I glorified You on the earth, having accomplished the work which You have given Me to do." v. 4

How did He do that? There were so many things left undone, and so many places He had never been. How could Jesus make such a statement? The answer is found in His understanding of His mission. With every breath He took and every step He made, Jesus reflected God's glory. He never sought to take credit for what God did through Him.

Every word of praise Jesus received, He reflected to God. Every word of criticism Jesus received, He directed to God. He took offense at what people said about God, not that it was said to Him. His heart was not worn on his sleeve. He refused to confuse His preferences with His mission. Remember how He prayed, "Not My will, but Thy will be done." His mission was not about Him. It was about God. Prayer kept Him in the right position with God, as a reflector. When the hour came, He was empowered Him to accomplish His mission for God. His disciples would be wise to do the same. The hour is late.

TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Joy

"If you ask The Father for anything in My name, He will give it to you. Until now you have asked nothing in My name; ask and you will receive, so that your joy may be made full." John 16:26

Prayerless people miss out on the joy of the journey. Life is filled with many twists and turns, and ups and downs. The pace ranges from fast and furious to slow as molasses. The locations are at times exotic, and others times just plain exhausting. There is nothing like a mind-numbing delay in a waiting room to give you an appreciation for the thrill of being chased through a dimly lit tunnel, by forces of darkness.

The terror and the terrain come and go, but the one thing a praying person can count on, through it all, is the availability of the consistent companionship of The Spirit of Christ. The Spirit provides joy for the journey. This joy is the infusion of courage to hand on in the dark, and to walk towards The Light. Prayer breathes in fresh air for the courage to take the next step, and blows out the air of despair that leaves a believer gasping for life and grasping at straws.

Note to self: Come what may. Don't delay! PRAY!

Jesus told His disciples that God loves them so much, for loving His Son, that they were given the privilege of taking any request they had to The Father, in the name of His Son. Prayer, at its most profound and purest form, is access to God. Just because this amazing access can be abused by others, doesn't excuse a believer's from letting it go unused.

Believing prayer moves a person from face to face with their crisis, to face to face with God. Prayer takes the eyes of a believer off of the cause of the problem to The Source of the solution. Talking keeps a person preoccupied with, "What's the matter?" Praying seeks to occupy oneself with The One who matters. Big difference.

One of the most repeated, and promise filled challenges Jesus gave to His disciples was, "Ask anything in My name."
It sounds like an abuse waiting to happen. It seems to fall into the trap of Murphy's Law, "If anything can go wrong, it will."

What could possibly go wrong with this kind of open-ended promise from The Son of God? Said with serious sarcasm and sanctified shock face. Surely people would never try to use the name of Jesus to achieve selfish ambition or satisfy personal greed." OK. I know. That wasn't very convincing.

I don't have to point out the preponderance of evidence provided by TV preachers and radio gurus calling on people to ask God for a blessing, but to make their checks out to them. All I have to do is read my own prayer journals to see my tenacious tendency to minimize the majesty of this powerful promise. It's embarrassing. Let's move on.

Jesus offered prayer to His disciples, as fresh air for their lungs, when they found themselves suffocating in the midst of a crisis of faith. His disciples didn't have a clue what they were about to face. We don't either, but Jesus did then, and He knows now. He prepared His disciples, then and now, to pray. No one really knows what each day will bring. What is known is how to prepare for and process whatever the day brings. Jesus did it. Jesus said it. His disciples will obey Him and PRAY, in His name.

Asking God for His direction, protection and correction is not going to guarantee a life of health and wealth. It doesn't even keep a person from making the wrong decision or taking the wrong path. Prayer is not fool proof. Fools pray for what they want. In His wisdom, God often gives it to them.

Wisdom comes from learning that often what we want is not what we need. Wise people pray their way through the dark, and into the light, until they see that what they want still falls short of God's best for their lives. The wise learn to pray for what God knows is best for them, not what they think is good for them. Satan is not the enemy of the good as much as he is the enemy of the best.

A fool becomes wise by admitting to God what He already knows, and refusing to accept foolishness as the final verdict on his life. In short, a fool becomes a wise by choosing consistent companionship with God.

Prayer involves walking through life in constant conversation with God. This trip begins with and continues down the avenue of prayer. The joy comes from the change of heart that takes place from praying. Prayer produces courage that comes from knowing God is as close as the next breath. Courage is the breath for the soul that only prayer can provide. Remember, the joy is in the journey, and Jesus is walking with you. Come what may today...TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

"In the world you have tribulation, but take courage; I have overcome the world." - Jesus (John 16:33)

The Advantage

"It is to your advantage that I go away; for if I do not go away, the Helper will not come to you; but if I go, I will send Him to you." John 16:7

Three years ago, on Independence Day, Dana and I launched out on another step of faith, in our adventure of a lifetime. We have learned to find the joy in the journey of trusting God to make a way when there seems to be no way.
There is nothing like it.

Dana and I met in Fort Worth, Texas on September 9, 1974. For almost 40 years, we have prayed our way together through the stages of life, beginning with roller-coaster dating, an exciting engagement, an amazing marriage, and challenging ministry.

We have been blessed by two beautiful daughters, and one son-in-law. We knew enough about God to lead us in the baby steps that led us to our marriage, but in June of 1980 we took our marriage to another level. Agreeing to pray together, has proven to be the greatest decision we have ever made in our lives.

For some time, we had been praying and preparing for the final years of our ministry together. In July 2009, Dana began sensing an increased urgency to roll out a prayer ministry to encourage husbands and wives to pray together. This had done so much for us, we felt compelled to challenge others to do it. In January 2010, God began to open up doors for us to share what He had put on our hearts. Thank you, Pastor Don Andrews of Haven Baptist Church, Kansas City, Kansas, for being the first church to invite us to present our prayer emphasis, "TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!."

In his book, "Turnaround Churches," George Barna challenged the church (pastors and people- emphasis mine) to "utilize prayer as the world class weapon in the battle against evil." I share Barna's belief that God's chosen weapon of warfare, in the battle against an enemy who seeks to steal, kill and destroy, is prayer.

With all the armor available to us, we have precious little power to use the arsenal of faith until we "Pray at all times in The Spirit." (Ephesians 6: 18) This is the advantage of prayer. It calls for The Spirit of The Champion to come alongside an intimidated soldier in the ranks of God's army.

"Praying in The Spirit" is how we take up The Armor of God. To make a stand against the world forces of darkness, we must take our eyes off of the enemy and place them on The Champion. Jesus promised His disciples, and us, that it was to our advantage that He go, and He send The Helper. His very name means, called along side to help.

When any trutprayer partners, but especially husbands and wives, parents and children, pray together, they call out to God, in the name of Jesus, for The Spirit to come along side of them. The Spirit's Presence and power gives them an advantage over the enemy seeking to intimidate and annihilate them.

The truth is this. The enemy fears the return of The Champion. When God's people pray, they take their stand against the enemy, in the name of Jesus. Calling out for The Spirit of Christ, in the very name of Jesus, strikes fear in the enemy camp. Hearing His name weakens the knees of those forces of darkness standing in the ranks, shouting insults in the battle line.

Being well equipped and prayerless does not deter the enemy. Prayerless people put a welcome mat out for an enemy occupation that leaves nothing but scorched earth in its path. On this 4th of July, take a good hard look at a nation founded on Christian principles, and ask yourself if you feel like the church is gaining ground or giving it up.

This is not a tough call to make. Just listen to the voices gathered in Austin, Texas this week, supporting a bill to abort children who have spent 20+ weeks in their mother's womb. Did you hear them shouting, "Hail, Satan!" The response of Christians standing against them was a song, "Amazing Grace." Amazing indeed.

Anything that drives you to your knees to pray, God can use to your advantage. How? Prayer is an admission that you have come to the end of yourself, and in need of The Spirit of Christ to come alongside of you to help you. How does He help. First The Spirit confuses the enemy, and then He infuses you.

E.P. Hovey, a great Presbyterian preacher and pastor to the Northwest USA, during the first half of the 20th Century, described The Spirit of Christ as "a blood transfusion for courageous living." He does this in the present tense. He doesn't offer a nostalgic whiff of mothballed battle flags of days gone by. In the stench and clamor of battle, He blows away the fog of war with a blast of a trumpet and reveals the weakness of the enemy.

The forces of darkness don't fear us, but they fear Jesus. The old Gospel song hit the right note. "WE HAVE HEARD THE JOYFUL SOUND! JESUS SAVES! JESUS SAVES!" When the enemy hears the trumpet sound and the mention of His name, they take their eyes off of you. They look up to see if Jesus is on His way back. They believe Jesus is coming again, more than the contemporary church does. Use it against them.

Can you see it now? You are not alone. Jesus has given you a distinct advantage over your enemy by sending you The Spirit. After three years of walking through the roll out of a new ministry, Dana and I have never been more confident of this truth. Every time we have called on The Spirit to come alongside of us, in the name of Jesus, we have experienced the reality of God's direction, protection and correction. There is nothing like the confidence of knowing that praying in the name of Jesus confuses the enemy and infuses us. Join us on the journey.

TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!