The "I"

“‘Therefore, come now, and I will send you to Pharaoh, so that you may bring My people, the sons of Israel out of Egypt.’ But Moses said to God, ‘Who am I, that I should go to Pharaoh, and that I should bring the sons of Israel out of Egypt? And He said, ‘Certainly I will be with you, and this shall be the sign to you that it is I who have sent you.” Exodus 3:10-12

One of the warning signs of a self-made man with a self-destructive sense of direction is his overuse of the letter “I” to tell his story. Moses was a man with “I” trouble and in danger of missing God. When He heard God’s new direction for his life, he evaluated his prospects based upon his past experiences, not God’s personal Presence.

The wise man is a humble man who understands that his story is actually a part of HIS story. He obeys God  and gives the glory to Him for any and everything he accomplishes, without taking credit for any of it.  

Moses was a broken man, when God called him to the greatest mission of his life. He responded with a question for God, not immediate obedience to Him.  He revealed a heart filled with the fear of man and the fear of failure, not the fear of God.

“Who am I?”  ~ Moses

Moses had been looking down on himself without looking up to God. Intimidated by past failures, Moses lost sight of God in the present tense, and counted himself worthless in the future tense. Suffering from “I” trouble, Moses focused on how little he had to bring to the table, not on God’s Presence at the table.

Instead of contradicting Moses, or bucking up his spirits, God offered Moses His Presence. He told him,  “I will be with you.” The Presence of God is always the remedy for “I” trouble.

When contemporary preaching focuses on building up the self-esteem of selfish children rather than focusing the eyes of people on God, it is time for vision correction. Vision will not be restored, by examining the lint in your own navel

NOTE TO SELF: Lift up your eyes, and focus on God.

When “I” dominates your praying it becomes prideful posturing. When it is used in your preaching, you become the subject of the message. “I” focuses the message on the messenger not The Master. When you insert “I” in your parenting, it invites the proverbial “Eye” roll of your children. Prayer practices The Presence of The Father in the name of Jesus. Believe it when He tells you, “I will be with you.”

TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Help

“And the sons of Israel sighed because of the bondage, and they cried out, and their cry for help because of their bondage rose up to God.” Exodus 2:23

Recently on Fox News, Mr. Bill O’Reilly asked Evangelist Franklin Graham what the church should do to help the persecuted Christians around the world. Graham’s response was, “We must pray for them.” In exasperation, O’Reilly blurted out that something more powerful must be done. He just didn’t know how much he revealed about his ignorance of the power of prayer.

Exodus is the story of God’s people led by a man who had come to the end of his rope. When Moses led the Children of Israel out of Egypt, it looked like a victory march. Actually, it was the beginning of a prayer walk that would last the next 40 years.

Bondage prepared God’s people to be led. Exile prepared the leader. Prayer would bring them together. It was not always a happy marriage, but it was a powerful one.

Prayer is not answered because it flows from the heart with great emotion. Nor is prayer answered because of the decibel level it reaches. Prayer is answered when The Help arrives, not when the cry is made.

Answered prayer is a result of sending cries to the right Person. Tears alone are not the key to answered prayer. There will be no hope of relief if prayer is not pointed to the only One who can provide The Help.

In Exodus Moses became known as The Law Giver.  A closer look at his track record reveals he was The Intercessor. The Law was a gift from God, but the book of James provides insight into the greatest legacy Moses would leave to The Kingdom.

“The effective prayer of a righteous man can accomplish much.” James 5:16

Moses was a great leader because he was a great intercessor. This means he was always the man in the middle, never at the top. He stood between God and the children of Israel and prayed for God to help them, even when they didn’t deserve it.

Moses would entreat God to help His children not on the basis of their need, but in light of His character. This is the essence of hope and the key to answered prayer.

God is only waiting for intercessors to cry out to him for the needs of others. Still, He is waiting. He moves towards the sounds of His children crying to Him. The Father kneels down towards them, when they cry out to Him. The Psalmist understood this.

“Let my prayer come before You; incline Your ear to hear my cry!” Psalms 88:2

NOTE TO SELF: Your cries for help are not answered because you have the stamina to shout loud and long. Your prayers are answered because you are asking the right Person for help. You no longer lean on your own resources.  You are no longer the man with the plan. You are the man with the pain in your heart. When you feel the pain of others, and bring it to God, you become an intercessor. You know you can do nothing on your own to help them. Turn to God as your first choice, not your last resort. TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!  

The Blessing

“He blessed them, everyone with the blessing appropriate to him.” Genesis 49:28

 Jacob’s life got off to a rocky start, but as Israel, he finished strong. When he encountered God, he experienced more than a name change. He had a change of direction, and he stayed on course. 

The older I get the idea of finishing strong becomes more important with every passing day. Regret or resentment are thieves that rob you of the opportunity to make the most of the lessons learned when life doesn’t go according to your plans. Israel didn’t die a bitter old man. He died a blessed man, and he passed the blessing on to his sons, and their families. 

 “Jacob’s final hours show us how to die – blessing and praying!”  Herbert Lockyer

 When Israel faced death, he didn’t run from it. He embraced it. He died the way he lived, turning to God in prayer, and seeking a blessing for his family. This may be his greatest legacy.

 Tribe after tribe received a blessing and a charge from the patriarch of the family. When he had finished The Blessing, Israel died.  Perfect timing. 

 “When Jacob finished charging his sons, he drew his feet into the bed and breathed his last…”Genesis 49:33

Jacob’ last years were spent listening to God, and hearing God’s plan for his children. Wise parents will take a page out of Jacob’s parenting manual and spend more time praying for their children as adults than they ever did praying over them as infants. 

The consequences of decisions made by a six year old can be disturbing, but the impact of unwise choices made by a sixty-six year old can be catastrophic. The foolish parent believes they get all their raising in before a child leaves their home. Wise parents add prayer for their adult children to their daily routine. 

Jacob revealed keen insight into the unique character of his sons. Some had more, and some had less, but they were not all the same. See Genesis 49:3-27

NOTE TO SELF: Learn the key to understanding the blessing God has in store for you children, and pass it on to them. What blesses one child may be a curse to the other. Perhaps the most revealing words of a prayerless parent are found in the statement, “I don’t know what happened to my kids. I treated them all the same.” This is a recipe for disaster.  Your children are a gift from God. He knows them better than you do. Prayer turns you to Him for operating instructions. Instead of giving your children a piece of your mind, pray for them to know the peace of God, at any age. They never outgrow the need for God’s direction, protection and correction. TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Wrestling

“Then Jacob was left alone, and a man wrestled with him until daybreak. 25 When he saw that he had not prevailed against him, he touched the socket of his thigh; so the socket of Jacob’s thigh was dislocated while he wrestled with him. 26 Then he said, “Let me go, for the dawn is breaking.” But he said, “I will not let you go unless you bless me.” 27 So he said to him, “What is your name?” And he said, “Jacob.” 28 He said, “Your name shall no longer be Jacob, but Israel; for you have striven with God and with men and have prevailed.” 29 Then Jacob asked him and said, “Please tell me your name.” But he said, “Why is it that you ask my name?” And he blessed him there.” Genesis 32:24-29

Praying and wrestling with God are not mutually exclusive activities. Together they form the process God uses to conform you to His will. The conforming process is also a transforming one. For Jacob it resulted in a bad hip and a new name. If you choose to prevail in prayer your transformation will be no less painful, and just as permanent.

Coming to the end of yourself requires you to bring yourself to a wrestling match with God. Remember this. God wins. This only happens…EVERY TIME.

Jacob prayed, “Deliver me, I pray.” He didn’t’ know what he was saying, but he was praying. This is a huge step in the right direction. God knew what Jacob needed, before he asked for it. He always does. Answered prayer does not depend on asking the right question. It depends of asking the right Person.

Jacob prayed to be delivered from the wrath of his brother, Esau. God intended for him to be delivered from his real enemy, himself. Jacob’s confidence in his capacity to connive his way out of trouble had to be crushed forever, not temporarily.

Any parent knows that rescuing a child from a bad situation is no guarantee they won’t have to do it again. What needs to be changed is the poor decision-making process their child uses that leads them to repeating the same mistake. A bad habit becomes a way of life if a parent removes the consequences without improving their child’s character. But I digress.

With all his character flaws, and his dismal track record of tricks and deceit, Jacob did the one thing that put him on the right path. He prayed. When he prayed he received God’s direction, protection and correction, not for a moment, but forever. In spite of his weak foundation, Jacob was a firm believer in prayer. God can always build something on that.

Scripture records Jacob wrestled all night. As the dawn was breaking, he was desperate for what he needed most. He pleaded for it with his last gasp of hope.

“I will not let you go until you bless me.”

God intended to transform the trickster and deceiver into a prince of His people. This had always been His plan. Jacob’s wrestling with God did not change God’s mind, or twist His arm. He desired to give Jacob a blessing. He was not withholding it. Jacob was resisting it. The wrestling was a prolonged, painful process, but it changed Jacob’s heart to receive a blessing from God.

The blessing Jacob was seeking was not the one God was intending. He blessed him anyway. The dislocated hip changed the way he walked, and his new name widened his responsibilities. Every painful step he took for the rest of his life, and every time his name was called, would be a reminder Israel was a changed man.

NOTE TO SELF: This is the process of prayer. Prayer prepares you to get on board with God’s plan for your life. Prayer is not your invitation to instruct God about your plan. When God answers your prayer expect to be changed before He changes anything or anyone else. You may not have asked for His plan, but you need it. Prayer puts you in a position to receive it. Assume the position. TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Evidence

“Husbands, love your wives, just as Christ also loved the church and gave Himself up for her,” Ephesians 5:25

“Love your wives” was one of the first pieces of advice given to husbands of the early church. This kind of love comes at a very high price, “Just as Christ loved the church.” Just in case they didn’t’ get the point, it ends with the clarification, “and gave Himself up for her.” Love is not marked by a red heart on a Valentine’s Day card, and limited to one day a year. It requires a husband’s life-blood, and measured over a lifetime.

Ignoring this wise counsel exacts a heavy cost on the marriages of the church. When obeyed it is the source of happy marriages and healthy churches.  Take it to heart.

Recently, the former Mayor of New York City challenged the level of love the current President of the United States has in his heart for his country. It has caused a media uproar.

The President’s love language has been marked by tele-prompted, tortured use of the English language, and word-smithed, political correctnesss. The mayor got into trouble not by questioning the President’s eloquence, but his evidence. This is proving to be a hot topic, during the current news cycle. “The Oscars” Show should push it off center stage very soon.

The Word of God continues to call loving husbands to lead out in love. They were charged in the First Century to remember that love is something to do, not just something to say. Nothing has changed in the 21st Century. The standard is the same.

To measure any leader’s level of love, it must be observed over a long period of time. Don’t just listen to what the leader says. Watch what the leader does. Following the leaders doesn’t mean you have to believe everything he says, or drive over a cliff when he says it.

Most marriages begin with the words, “Til death do us part,” and most divorces are granted on the basis of “irreconcilable differences.” The evidence is abundant. People do not always say what they mean, or mean what they say.

People who lose respect for one another often continue to live under the same roof with each other. Ignoring his wife, not beating her, is the first step a man takes in disrespecting her. Ignoring his wife is expressed, when he no longer listens to her, spends time with her, or responds to her pain when she hurts. A calloused husband is numb where it counts the most, not on his hands but in his heart.

Domestic abuse, whether it be physical, verbal or emotional is often carried out by high profile NFL players, rock stars and NASCAR drivers. When they are caught in the act, their behavior brings relentless negative publicity and huge consequences. Battered wives and beat up girlfriends are no longer acceptable trophies and eye candy for today’s role models. This is good news, and a step in the right direction.

Not all marriages end in divorce when husbands take their wives for granted.  Remaining in a loveless marriage is a tough prison sentence. Long before a man begins to allow his eye to wander, his heart has strayed. The path taken by a wandering eye is a very slippery slope. Turning to any level of promiscuity or pornography to rekindle passion doesn’t fan the flames of genuine love. It sows salt in the soul. Nothing good ever comes of it. Don’t stray into any shade of gray. Be warned. There are more than fifty. Run to The Light.

Thirty-eight years of marriage have taught me two things. It is the little things that really matter, and it is the little things that count the most. For example, holding a car door for my wife may never make it into a poem in a Hallmark Card. It is still one of the simplest signs indicating to me if my heart is remaining tender to the one I love. I don’t hold a door for my wife because she can’t do it herself. I hold it for her to get over myself.

Just in case he is listening. Mr. President, it should bother you that your love for your country is open to question. When the country is recoiling from the deaths of those they love, or the beheading of martyrs they honor, it is time to show the love. Giving a well-crafted speech and racing out to play golf communicates a callousness of heart that you never want your citizens to ever believe you have. 

When you go overseas and talk disparagingly of your country, it isn’t inspiring or endearing. Don’t make light of the sacrifices your nation has made to protect this world. Pointing out their failures to their enemies is insulting. With respect, please stop.

I appreciate the fact that you never speak disparagingly of your wife in public. If you did there would be consequences at home. When a man does this, it reveals more about the husband than it does about his wife. Your behavior is equally revealing, when you belittle your nation before others.

Mr. President, when you treat your nation like an abused wife, mocking her efforts, and criticizing her in front of her enemies, you may not hate her, but you don’t give evidence that you love her with all your heart. The next two years is unlikely to lead to a divorce, but this marriage will end. Until then, show the love. I am praying you will.

NOTE TO SELF: If you have breath in your lungs, you have not loved your wife more than Christ loved the church. Save your breath. Show the love. TALK LESS! PRAY MORE! 

The 21

“I saw underneath the altar the souls of men who had been slain because of the word of God, and because of this testimony which they had maintained; and they cried out with a loud voice saying, ‘How long, O Lord, holy and true, will You refrain from judging and avenging our blood on those who dwell on the earth?” Revelation 6:9-10

Tertullian stated in 200 A.D., “The blood of the martyrs is the seed of the church.” He had witnessed the ultimate investment of Christian faith poured into a bankrupt Roman culture. When he saw the blood of Christian witnesses saturating the sands of the arena, or the public square, he did not see it being wasted. He saw it being planted. The harvest always follows the planting. This only happens…EVERY TIME.

“The 21” Egyptian Christians recently beheaded for their faith in Christ are 21st Century martyrs. They were not Crusading Christian warriors riding on their high horses to conquer Islam. They were workers seeking jobs to provide for their families.

“The 21” weren’t murdered by impoverished, Muslims job seekers. They were selected for extermination because devoted Muslims wanted their heads, not their jobs.

There is a special place in Heaven for those who have been beheaded for their faith. Of all those who have died a martyr’s death, those who have experienced the sword of persecution are elevated to a unique level of prominence in Heaven.

“Then I saw thrones, and they sat on them and judgment was given to them, and I saw the souls of those who had been beheaded, because of their testimony of Jesus and because of the word of God, and those who had not worshiped the beast or his image, “ Revelation 20:4

Faithful Christians know this passage of Scripture. Radical Muslims know it too. This is at the very heart of the recent beheadings of “The 21” by the Islamic terrorists.

The threat of the edge of the sword is designed to intimidate true believers into denying their faith. It is also meant to challenge the validity of God’s word. It not just a random tool used to take the life of an infidel. It is a weapon of choice.

In the 1st and 2nd Century Spiritual Awakening blossomed when early Christians died with the name of Jesus on their lips. When the seed of their faith was planted, there was a great harvest. People starving for life-giving faith in a world without meaning, turned their backs on false gods and turned their eyes upon Jesus. Pray that it will happen again in the 21st Century.

Nothing proves the spiritual bankruptcy of a religion of peace quite like the deafening silence of Muslim clergy who refuse to speak out against the atrocities done in the name of Islam. Millions of Muslims have expected more of their leaders and their religion. Pray they hear the voice of Jesus calling to them through the lips of the martyrs. Their final words of witness are given great power by their last drop of blood

The question remains. How long will this murderous persecution of 21st Century Christians go on? Scripture says it will continue until it is completed. It will end. It will be judged and avenged on earth, but it will not end until it is completed.

“And there was given to each of them a white robe and they were told that they should rest for a little while longer, and their brethren who were to be killed even as they had been, would be completed also.” Revelation 6:11

The story of redemption is a message of hope because it is the character of God to overcome evil with righteousness. He chooses to take the worst of things and accomplish His will through them. God still does the best of things in the worst of times, in the name of Jesus. Pray for the next Great Awakening to be ushered in by the harvest that comes from the seed of the martyrs’ blood.

When Joseph revealed his true identity to his treacherous brothers, he spoke timeless words of wisdom. They are as true today as they were when he spoke them centuries ago.

“You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good in order to bring about this present result, to preserve many people alive.” Genesis 50:20

NOTE TO SELF: Prayer and persecution are two powerful conduits for Spiritual Awakening. Pray for the persecuted church to stand strong and invest well in this evil world. Any life taken by agents of evil will not be forgotten. The word of God promises that martyrs like “The 21” will be avenged on earth and honored in Heaven. There will be more to come. Pray for those who hear their last gasp to call on Jesus with their next breath. TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Unworthy

“We came to your brother Esau, and…he is coming to meet you.’…Then Jacob was greatly afraid and distressed. ” Genesis 32:7

Fear is a great motivator. Prayerless people are spurred to a new level of prayer by all kinds of crises. Jacob was no exception. He had wronged his brother, Esau, and the day of reckoning was at hand.

Jacob the deceiver expected to become the receiver of some rough justice from his brother, Esau. The worst part was, he knew he had it coming.

Jacob was at the end of his rope, but he was not through making rope. Prayerless people are master rope-makers.  

“He divided the people who were with him…into two companies…” V. 7

Jacob was not implementing a plan of attack. He was looking for a way of escape. Jacob was a shrewd man, not a wise man. Being shrewd is the world’s substitute for wisdom.  A shrewd man tries to keep his options open even when he doesn’t have any.

“If Esau comes to the one company and attacks it, then the company which is left will escape.” V. 8

Blind panic may be the lowest motivation for prayer, but it is still a highly effective one. Jacob may have been out of options, but he was not looking forward to the consequences of his behavior. God intended for him to face the consequences.

When your fear turns into prayer, your foolishness will evaporate in the Presence of God. Prayer releases your tight grip on the crisis at hand and places it in God’s hands.  Don’t be a fool. Pray.

When Jacob finally came face to face with his crisis, he turned his face towards God. Prayer is always the wisest move you can make when faced with a crisis, and overwhelmed by panic. No matter what your motivation may be for prayer, just start praying. God hears prayers forged in the furnace of panic.

Jacob said, “O God of my father Abraham and God of my father Isaac, O LORD, who said to me, ‘Return to your country and to your relatives, and I will prosper you,’ ‘I am unworthy of all the lovingkindness and of all the faithfulness which You have shown to Your servant…Deliver me, I pray.” Genesis 32:9-11

Jacob’s obedience to God, not his rebellion, had put him face to face with an encounter with his wronged brother. When he heard God say, “Return to your country,” Jacob must have known this day of reckoning was coming. He obeyed God anyway. Then he prayed when he realized where his obedience had led him.  

“O God of my father” – Turning to God involves being right with God. Being right with God includes making things right with others. When Jacob remembered to get with God, God improved his memory about what Jacob had done to his brother.

“I am unworthy” – There comes a point in prayer when being right with God is all that matters. The masks of pretentious infallibility and self-righteous rationalization are dropped. Standing under the gaze of omniscient God, leads to one assessment. “I am unworthy.” The prayerful know they are unworthy. They don’t make excuses for it. They admit it to God. 

Deliver me, I pray.”  - Deliverance is not an escape from conflict. It is a victory in the middle of a battle. Prayerful people trust God.

NOTE TO SELF: If God has brought you to it, then God will bring you through it. God intended for Jacob to meet his brother face to face. When he ran out of rope, he ran to God. Prayer is where the battle is won. When you come face to face with a crisis, get face to face with God. You aren’t worthy of God’s lovingkindness and faithfulness. Jesus is. Pray in His name. TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The Appeal

“I appeal to Caesar.” Acts 25:11

Paul’s appeal to Caesar is a powerful statement regarding his belief in a Sovereign God and his trust in government as God’s earthly instrument to administer justice. Paul believed government was an instrument devised by God to serve His purpose.

“For there is no authority except from God, and those which exist are established by God.” Romans 13:1

Paul, by right of birth, was due certain civil liberties as a free Roman citizen. Paul had no death wish. If he was ready to gain his Heavenly reward and leave his earthly prison, all he had to do was surrender his civil rights to the Roman authorities, or surrender himself to his Jewish accusers.  He chose life. He didn’t give up his rights. He claimed them.

There will always be a holy tension between a Christian’s weariness with political battles, and the longing for his Heavenly home. Paul’s appeal gives a clear example of a devout Christian who called on the civil government to protect his personal liberties. Though death was in his future, and this world was not his home, he would not go down without a fight. Paul turned his waiting room into a war room.

Pastors and people in the pews should do no less in the 21st Century.  Paul’s appeal was to Caesar. In a representative form of government, the American Christian appeals to “We the People.” The Appeal is not a call to arms take a nation back to Reagan. It is a call to prayer to turn a people back to God. Religious liberty was not just a good idea. It was God’s idea.

Dr. Watlke’s words of wisdom call pastors and people back to God’s word for His direction, protection and correction. God intends for His people to welcome His wisdom back to their house, and to take it with him to the church house.  From there it overflows into every place of authority from the state house to the White House. Pray for wisdom. Register to vote. Take your stand. Vote with wisdom. Heal the land.

“If my people who are called by my name, humble themselves and pray…I will heal their land.” 2 Chronicles 7:14

The Vow

“Then Jacob made a vow, saying, ‘If God will be with me and will keep me on this journey that I take, and will give me food to eat and garments to wear, and I return to my father’s house in safety, then the Lord will be my God. This stone, which I have set up as a pillar, will be God’s house, and of all that You give me I will surely give a tenth to You.” Genesis 28:20-22

Jacob was ill equipped physically and spiritually for the journey before him. He was the son who loved life in the safety of the encampment. Esau was the son who was wild at heart and had a spirit of adventure. Abraham was way out of his comfort zone. The life of faith always leads away from comfort and through danger.

Jacob had always been dependent on the faith of his father, and the comfort of his mother. Now he found himself separated from both. He turned to God with what he had in his heart, nothing more nothing less. That is all God ever expects from His children.

 Jacob’s heart was filled with a conniving and striving spirit. He was always making a deal to give himself an advantage over someone else.

Jacob started out on this journey in obedience to his father. When the magnitude of what he had undertaken began to sink in, fear began to take over. He responded to God’s promise made to him in a dream, by talking about God, not to Him. What Jacob brought to God was a step in the right direction. It wasn’t much, but God heard him. He always does.

After a powerful promise from God, Jacob sought to make a deal with God. This may be the lowest form of prayer, but God condescends to meet His children where they are. Thank God He doesn’t leave them there. He raises them to embrace the life of faith, He intends for them to receive.

 “If God will be with me, and will keep me on this journey…then the Lord will be my God.”

Jacob inserts into The Vow, his version of the “If…Then Clause.” By the time Jacob finishes his vow to God, he had transitioned from talking about God to talking to God.

“All that You give me I will surely give a tenth to You.” V. 22b

The Vow of Jacob has never been given the same high profile The Prayer of Jabez received a few years ago when it became all the rage. Today those who pray it hardly make a ripple on the pond of prayer. Why?

There is a big difference between praying for God to expand your territory and vowing to return to God one tenth of everything He gives you.  The world is still waiting for Genesis 28:22b to be stamped on a throw pillow at Hobby Lobby. Word to the waiting; don’t hold your breath.

The Vow of Jacob preceded The Law concerning the tithe. His willingness to return to God 10% of all God gave to him is still one of the best deals a man has ever tried to make with God. God provides 100% and man keeps 90%. Where is the spirit of sacrifice or the heart of generosity in that? But I digress.

In a dream God gave this fearful man His word. Jacob responded by making a vow to God, not by taking God at His word. Again. Big difference.

“Behold, I am with you and will keep you wherever you go, and will bring you back to this land, for I will not leave you until I have done what I have promised you.” Genesis 28:15

Abandonment to the promise of God brings great joy when accompanied by an absolute surrender to the purpose of God. Jacob was still the man with the plan. He intended to hold God accountable for the promise He made to him, by making a vow to God, not by taking God at His word.

Jacob tried to cover his audacity with a cloak of generosity. He was so full of himself. He thought he could buy off God by paying a 10% surcharge on God’s own generosity. God planned to knock Jacob out of himself, and to fill the emptiness of his life with His Presence.

Jacob’s journey of faith was going to take lifetime. It always does. Praying and staying on course, eventually he received honorable mention in “The Hall of Faith.”

“It was by faith that Jacob when he was old and dying, blessed each of Joseph’s sons and bowed in worship as he leaned on his staff.” Hebrews 11:21

NOTE TO SELF: Anything that comes out of your mouth that resembles a conditional “IF…THEN” response is not an expression of unconditional surrender.  When God says it, that settles it, whether you believe it or not. Making a deal with God deludes you into thinking you are an equal partner with Him. You are not. Talking about God is not the same thing as talking to Him. Talking about God leads to making a deal with Him, not to total abandonment to Him. TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!

The End

"The end of all things is near; therefore, be of sound judgment and sober spirit for the purpose of prayer." 1 Peter 4: 7

By 64 A.D. the Roman world was a place of chaos, confusion and catastrophe for many Christians. Peter made a dire assessment of the situation, but offered suffering believers a sense of direction in the fog of war.
 
Peter’s words, predicting the end, may appear to miss the mark, but when they are read in the light of eternity, the past 2,000 years have flashed before the eyes of God like a split second. He sounded a call to battle for prayer warriors in his day. They still ring true. Read them. Heed them.
 
The study of end times over the past 2,000 years has taken serious scholars and competing crackpots down many different paths. In the end, they always end up in the same place. When The End comes, God wins. Case closed.
 
In the meantime, Peter issues The Commander’s standing order. He reveals the one purpose for the obedient prayer warrior. Pray with sound judgment and sober spirit.
 
Praying with sound judgment means to pray with a moderate estimate upon yourself, while placing a high estimate on God. Sound judgment is marked by calm, not panic.
 
Panic is the lowest form of praying. It causes fools to rush in where angels fear to tread, and implement the first good idea that pops into their mind. Praying with sound judgment understands how God works, in the climate of prayer.
 
“Our tendency is to rush out and help God do this. God works in the climate of prayer and opens doors as a result of prayer.” Michael Catt
 
Those who lack sound judgment breathe their own ether, drunk with the toxic cocktail of personal desire, and perceived destiny. With great passion, they race right by God’s idea and put their name on a man-made movement that misses His purpose. Putting a man’s name of a movement of God is a sure-fire way to invite God to take His hand off of it. This only happens…EVERY TIME.
 
Those who seek to make a name for themselves as leaders of the next Great Awakening might be surprised to know that Jonathan Edwards did not perceive himself as leading a great revival. He was convinced that God was leading it, and he was humbly surprised that he was included in it.
 
The partial title of the essay Edwards wrote in 1737 describing the Awakening God brought to his church holds one of the keys to understanding revival. Pray for a Great Awakening, but expect to be surprised by it. 

“Containing a Faithful Narrative of the Surprising Work of God in the Conversion of Many Hundred Souls in Northampton, Massachusetts, A. D. 1735.” Jonathan Edwards

Praying with sound judgment means to think of yourself soberly, to be calm, and to be in your right mind. When every one around you is losing their mind, have the mind of Christ.
 
“Let this mind be in you, which was also in Christ Jesus: Who, being in the form of God, thought it not robbery to be equal with God: But made himself of no reputation,…” Philippians 2:5-7
 
 Praying with sound judgment means to exercise control over your emotions, to curb your passions. It is not enough to desire for answered prayer, or to be desperate for it, like a petulant child about to receive something it wants, but just won’t wait for it. Waiting for an answer to prayer does not mean pouting through the process. It should build one’s confidence and expectancy in the provision and grace of The Father.
 
Prayer calms my heart by replacing desperation with expectancy. Sound judgment reveals that I know prayer is my first priority not my last resort. This builds my confidence in The Father and I wait, knowing His answer is on its way.
 
Recently, I returned from a gathering of pastors praying for the next Great Awakening. I went to my parent’s retirement center and gave my 92 year-old father a report. As I began, he leaned towards me like a child on Christmas morning. With his eyes wide open with expectancy and his face beaming with joy, he whispered, “What do you hear out there? Is it coming?”   Taken aback by his unbridled enthusiasm, I choked out the words, “Dad, your prayers have been heard. Pastors are praying. It is coming.” He leaned back on the couch and clapped his hands together and looked towards Heaven, not me. I was the messenger of revival, but God was the mover. It was a sacred moment for us both. Trust the process.
 
Note to Self: Trust the process. Be engaged in it. Don’t rush it. Sober spirit is a call to you to be calm, collected and circumspect in the face of the enemy. Peter uses this word to describe seasoned warriors marching in step with God, and engaging the enemy. When you pray, you do not stand alone. You fight next to The Champion. Remember The End. God wins. TALK LESS! PRAY MORE!