PRAYERS

Welcome to this site. My prayer is that you take a look at the site and as you do, let the Holy Spirit speak to your heart and reveal what God wants you to discover. (in Jesus' name)

God tells us that if we see a brother (or sister) in need we should do that which is within our means to help. Prayer is always within our means but we never know what doors Father may open through them. Should you desire prayer for anything (healing, direction, etc.) or if you want supportive prayer along with your own please feel free to e-mail that request to sharbu3@gmail.com and be assured that there are others who will be praying with or for you.


In this blog, I share what the Lord shares with me. I reference scripture a lot in support of what is being said. I realize that what is in each entry is NOT a complete 'word' (discussion) on what is being said, but is rather enough information to stimulate our spirits to dig deeper (remember the Bereans Acts 17:10-11) thereby gaining a fuller understanding for ourselves.

At the end of each post are the options to share, forward or make a comment. Click 'comment' to respond. Let us know if you like, don't like or are helped by what you read. Comments can be made or read by anyone. All you have to do is select the "comment" at he end of the entry.

Saturday, March 22, 2025

 3-22-2025 Job & our Relationship with our Heavenly Father                                            

Over a year ago, Father showed me Job 42:5.  He showed me that my relationship with Him was not yet where I thought it was nor was it where He wanted me to be.  How much He has shown me over the past year!

Job 42:1-5

When Father showed me this passage, like Job’s, my eyes were really opened to my relationship with Father.  Off and on, I would share with someone about the ‘sidewalk adage’.  Consider a boulevard.  Most parking spaces and traffic lanes allow about eight feet from side to side so a two lane, each way, plus parking (six lanes) would be about forty-eight feet.  Let’s say two men were walking on the sidewalk, going the same way but on different sides of the street.  Each man would be ‘aware’ of the man on the other side of the street.  They may even acknowledge each other and they may try to communicate back and forth as they walk.  The man on one side of street, speaking in a normal tone, would be doing okay (from his perspective) but the man on the other side of the street might hardly hear him, if at all.  Ergo, the voice level would have to be raised, significantly, and even then they may not be very successful in communicating.  If one man walks towards the center of the street, communication becomes better. But when both men wind up on the same side of the street, communication becomes very clear and understood.  Get the picture?

Let’s look another example.  Some people believe that President Joe Biden is the best thing since mom’s apple pie.  Others believe that Donald Trump is the best thing since mom’s apple pie and each group thinks that the other is worse than dog poop.  We know about both men by what we read in the newspaper or magazine or what we see on TV or other social media.  Keep in mind that the media only shows us what it wants us to see, that is substantiating its perspective.  Maybe we don’t deal with the media but go by what people we know tell us.  So, the question is “who has ever, actually, shook their hand or even met and got to talk with Joe or Donald”?  Most of us only know what the world around us tells us.  Written and visual media can be manipulated to support the point they are projecting.  We may never know the intention or truth unless we encounter the persons or situation in person.

So what did Job say in his relationship with God?  “I’ve heard about You, but now I have seen You with my own eyes!”   

Job grew up learning about God.  Most likely, he also heard other people’s experience with God (testimony).  The first two chapters of Job, God sets the stage.  God declared Job a righteous man, that is he was abiding according to God’s law (Job 1:8, 2:3).  Yet, Job experiences much hardship and disappointment in losing his possessions and children.  The next thirty plus chapters Job argues with his friends about unrepented sin.  Job challenges the fairness of God then, for four chapters God takes the stage with Job. God gets up close and personal with Job and puts things into proper perspective!  Job comes to realize that, though he knew about God, he had never taken the time to really get to know the Creator of all things.  And Through his experience Job has now met God ‘face to face’.  He has come to know God up close and personal.  He has come get a personal understanding and relationship with Father.

So, just where is our relationship with God?  Do we know ‘all about’ Him or have we come to the point where we truly ‘know’ who He is?

Job and his friends knew the scriptures, that is what they said and they lived was by the law.  Yet,through his experience, Job came to know the heart of our Lord!

True, we have to come to ‘know about’ God before we can truly come to ‘know’ Him.  Knowledge does come from hearing the Word, then the Word must come through some sort of communication and that communication may be through reading the bible or someone telling us about the Word (a preacher).  If we don’t read the bible or if a preacher is not sent, where does that leave us? Usually with someone telling us what they think we should know.  But how can we know what another person tells us unless he is truly sent (by God) and then by hearing, we receive Jesus into our heart (Rom. 10:13-18).  The day I let Jesus into my heart I knew that ‘then’ I was saved.  I felt a huge burden being lifted off of my body!  I learned later that this was the Holy Ghost confirming my salvation in my heart (2 Corinth. 1:21-22). 

Yet still, there is an obligation on our part.  If we love the lord, we will keep his commandments (John 14:15).  That is, live the best that we can abiding in His will.  Did you catch that?  I said in His will!  The words help us understand His will so we can abide therein.  Jesus brings us life and helps us to be productive in our life (John 10:10).  As we seek and abide in His Will, He will provide for us.  AND He desires us to continue (abide) in His love (John 15:4-9).  Coming to truly know God first enables us to abide in His love.  Then as we abide in His love, we share that love with others (Matt. 28:19-20).

I’ve discovered as I read the scriptures, my mind is being renewed (Romans 12:2).  I’ve discovered that every time I go back over scripture, Father gives me more clarity and a deeper understanding of what that passage is slaying.  My prayer time has also expanded.  Instead of just ‘barking out’ my needs, I also sit back and listen to understand what Father is trying to tell me.  After all, the Holy Ghost will lead me into all truth, right (John 16:13)?  So I also pray in the Spirit (Eph. 6:18).

Through trials and tribulations Job came to know God personally. Consider Enoch who loved God and whom God loved so that He took him, Enoch did not die a natural death (Gen. 5:24).  Even though we have to wait for God to call us home, our relationship with God is based on how much we love the Almighty.  Are we seeking and abiding in His will?  Are we loving with Agape Love?  not neglecting ourselves but letting our ego step aside and seeking Father’s will in all that befalls us.

So, just where is our relationship with the Lord?

Amen

Saturday, March 8, 2025

3-8-2025    Not Everyone Who says ‘Lord, Lord’

                         

Matthew 7:21-24

Not everyone who unto says Me ‘Lord, Lord’ shall enter into the kingdom of heaven, but he who does the will of My Father which is in heaven.

When I was a young teen in church, we had evangelists come in and preach a rousing sermon on giving our lives to Jesus.  The idea is to get souls into heaven.  Get ‘saved’!  Its’s a great idea, but it’s only the first step.  For when we confess the Lord Jesus with our mouth and believe in is our heart that God has raised Him (Jesus) from the dead, we shall be saved (Rom. 10:9)!   Note the word ‘shall’.  This is true but the ‘shall’ implies that there just might be something more.  We gain access to the eternal heavenly realm but we’re not physically there yet.  It is not necessarily a ‘done deal’. 

Yes, with our confession, we died at that moment (to ourselves), through our faith, we will have eternal fellowship with Jesus in eternity.  Our sins are forgiven at the moment of confession, though we have not ritually have been baptized with water or received the Holy Ghost.  I said ’ritually’, that is according to common practice.  Think about the thief on the cross next to Jesus, “Truly I say to you, this day you will be with me in paradise” (Luke 23:43).  Here, paradise is not eternal heaven.  The Greek word paradeisos (G3857) is used in this passage and relates to a park (aka Eden) or a place of happiness.  It is derived from the Hebrew word pardec (H6508) which is a forest, park or orchard.  Had it been eternal heaven, Jesus would have said so, but nonetheless, it is a place where there is no more pain nor suffering – until we do reach that eternal existence with our Lord.  Note, the thief received paradise without ceremonial water baptism.  We do know that the thief had received Jesus into his heart because Jesus said “today, you will be with Me in paradise”.  Jesus would not have said that had the thief not believed.  We have to believe that God is (Heb. 11:6), to let Him into our hearts (1 John 4:3, 14-16).

My wife to be and I counselled with the pastor of the church we had started attending.  He had this funny idea that if Jesus wasn’t in the marriage, it was doomed to failure.  Modern Family Law states that between 40 and 50 percent of first marriages will end in divorce (https/www.modernfamilylaw.com), yet 67% of Americans profess to be Christians (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christianity_in_the_United_States/). A sad state.  I confessed Jesus during that counselling session and I felt a huge burden, a huge weight, being lifted up off my body, literally.  It was spiritual and not physical, but nonetheless, the real feeling was there.

As we live in this world now, salvation (confessing Jesus) becomes our first step in growth as we continue to yield ourselves to Jesus.  Note that Jesus also said “that those who do the will of My Father shall be saved”.  The hint that there is something more than just professing Jesus Christ.

Consider that Jesus said many false prophets shall arise and their intent will be to turn us away from God’s truth (Matt. 7:15-20).  And even though some of these folks will say “Didn’t we do wonderful things in Your name?” and Jesus will reply “I never knew you, depart from me, you who work iniquity (Matt. 7:22-23)!”  These were church people, who thought they had eternity locked in!  Jesus also says that those who are told to depart, will be cast into darkness, where there will be weeping and gnashing of teeth (Matt. 8:10-12Rev. 20:11-15).  Jesus also tells us that false prophets will arise, even deceiving the elect, if it were possible (Matt. 24:24).  Here ‘elect’ is the Greek word eklektos (G1588) which is favorite, chosen or elect.  God’s sons and daughters, those who truly love and follow the Lord.  Again church people who never really got to know Jesus will be subject to deception!  So Jesus never really knew them who didn’t really know Him.  Jesus is the Good Shepherd and He knows the children of God (John 10:1-5).

 Yes, there will be those, even who come into the church doing their best to draw us away from God.  We need to always be on guard.  We can recognize them by their fruits (Matt. 7:15-20).

So, the first thing we need to do is to learn how to grow in God’s love.  1 John 4:1-21 give us a pretty good picture of the bottom line of love.  As children of God, the Holy Ghost in us will help us to recognize the devil’s attacks that come our way (John 16:13).  We will truly come to realize that God is love and if we love Him, we will abide in His love.  We show this love by sharing it with those whom we encounter.  When we don’t love others, our love (and our relationship with the Lord) comes into question.  Why?  Because God IS LOVE, so our lives should be a reflection of His love (1 John 4:7-16). 

Jesus tells us that if we love Him, we will keep His commandments (John 14:15).  His commandments are one, upward move and one outward, to love Father with all our heart, soul, mind and strength and then love our neighbor as ourselves (Mark 12:29-31).

So how do we grow in love?

We have to talk with God.  I said with, not at.  When we pray, we need to focus our attention on the Lord.  Jesus has given us a prayer that suffices our daily living:   “This, then, is how we should pray:

“‘Our Father in heaven,
   hallowed be your name,
10 your kingdom come,
   your will be done,
    on earth as it is in heaven.
11 Give us today our daily bread.
12 And forgive us our debts (trespasses),
    as we also have forgiven our debtors (trespassers).
13 And lead us not into temptation,
    but deliver us from the evil one.  (Matt. 6:9-13)

We should go to a quiet place so we can focus on the Lord, as Jesus did in the garden (Matt. 26:36-39).  Jesus was in a place where He could pour His heart out to the Father.  Father has shown me through personal experience that He cares about the little things as well as the big.  He cares for us so much that He calls us His children (1 John 3:1).  Keep in mind the relationship between a little child and his parents.

We should always pray, with all prayer and supplication in the Spirit (Eph. 6:18).   Now, it is a huge help when the Holy Ghost abides in us.  Take note that the 12 Apostles of the Lamb believed and confessed Jesus then walked with Him for over three years.  Then, ten days after Jesus returned to the Father, they and 108 others received the Holy Ghost (Acts 2:1-16).  Paul met twelve men on the road to Ephesus who had knowledge of Jesus but were lacking.  So He baptized them in Jesus’ name and they received the Holy Ghost (Acts 19:1-7). Phillip preached Jesus in Samaria but Peter and John came up so the people could receive the Holy Ghost (Acts 8:12-17). The Spirit makes intercession for us according to the will of God for all things work together for our good and the purpose for which God has called us (Rom. 8:26-28).

To receive from the Lord, we must believe that Father will answer our prayers (Mark 11:24).  If we don’t believe that God will do something, why should He?  Remember the lame man with Peter and John at the temple, he expected them to give him something – and they did (Acts 3:1-11).  Jesus says that we should believe, then we will receive it (Matt. 21:22).

The entire bible, Genesis through Revelation, gives us more than enough examples of God’s love, so we need to learn God’s love so we can live in it.  Right?  Prayer is one way, but how do we know that what we are praying is right?  So we need to know what the bible says (His Word) so we can know as God speaks to us in the Spirit and the Spirit is in us, so He speaks to our heart (Rom. 8:26-28).

We have to renew our minds – daily.  That is read the bible every day (Rom. 12:2).  We don’t have to read a whole book, or even a chapter in a single sitting, but even just a few verses a day will help.  And as we read, ask the Holy Ghost to guide and direct us.  He is our teacher, isn’t He (John 14:26)?

Job says “l heard about You by hearing with my own ear, but now, I have seen you face to face (Job 42:5).  God considered Job a righteous man (Job: 1:8) because Job knew all about God (Job 42:5).  Yet, by the end of the book, we see that Job finally comes to understand who God really is!

So, not everyone who says “Lord, Lord” shall enter into the kingdom of God for, truly, not everyone’s heart is truly with the Lord.  We need to know and understand His Word so we can operate in His will.  There are many who halve an understanding God’s Word (the bible) says but not all actually live in His will.

Amen