Showing posts with label Christ's Power. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Christ's Power. Show all posts

Thursday, February 7, 2013

Praising God….


Today, one of my professors—while lecturing on the book of Psalm—told of the personal, powerful impact and blessings received from spending time praising God for who God is in the mornings while at White Rock Lake in Dallas.

Timeless, Biblical Wisdom....!


This professor describes, among other blessings, receiving powerful insight into a project. This insight and wisdom transformed the project from respectable to amazing. The Holy Spirit's intercession results in amazing achievements.


Last summer I faced a challenge. Regardless of the amount of time and angles I pondered and prayed, no solution appeared. I then responded to the Holy Spirit's command to visualize the desired achievement of the challenge and to respond as if I the results were already received. I have used this technique to some degree in running, including back in the early-mid 1980s.


Last summer, as I visualized in response the Holy Spirit and seeing the result achieved, I began praising, singing and dancing—good thing that I live alone. J After several weeks of praising, singing and dancing, the Lord assured me that I would receive the desired result on August 15th. Logic defied this revelation until the moment I received an anonymous phone call on August 14th informing me that they were providing the promised results. I also emphatically praised God for who He is—the God of all creation, the one for whom every knee will bow and every tongue shall confess that Jesus Christ is Lord to the glory of God the Father (Philippians 2:9-11)


The power of praising God is incalculable and beyond human comprehension. Because in praising God our souls express love, adoration and appreciation for whom God is to the best of our understanding. The word praise appears two-hundred-and-ninety-two times in the New American Standard Bible (NASB). The definitions range from meaning to praise, to glorify, to bless (bless = to remember), song of praise, to agree, to confess, hallelujah, thanksgiving, admire, to exclaim and various combinations of these words.


Praising God opens our heart, mind, and soul to God: Father, Son and the Holy Spirit. This enhances our ability to hear and respond to the Holy Spirit's voice (virtually always non-audible) in our lives. Additionally, God loves to receive praise from us, His children—His creation. The first commandment informs us that He is a jealous God and that we are to have no other gods in our life—only Him the true God. Jesus sums up the law and the prophets in Matthew 22:35-37 in instructing us to love the God with all of our heart, mind and soul.


Jesus also describes how to receive everything in your life that God wants in your life, according to God's timing, seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things will be added unto you (Matthew 6:33).
Consider re-reading this sentence to grasp the supremacy of God's wisdom in this passage at least ten times per day for the next thirty days. Praise God for His intervention of providing our needs and desires according to His wisdom—remember to ask and praise Him for placing His desires on your heart.



We praise, adore, glorify, remember, confess and exclaim to and about our greatest love, that which we seek first in our lives.


Begin your day with praising God for who God is.


See Christ, Believe Christ, Achieve with Christ—in Praise, Singing and Adoration!
Rick E. Meyer
See, Believe, Achieve Inc.
www.rickEmeyer.com

Tuesday, January 15, 2013

1 Corinthians Argument 1:4 – 2:16


Thanksgiving 1:4-9

An old saying states, People do not care how much you know, until they know how much you care (love). This passage informs the Corinthian church of Paul sharing Christ's love for them, which opens the audience's heart and mind to the message. Paul dwells on the God's eternal faithfulness, praising God for using those in the Corinthian church. He instructs the church of amazing gifts of grace resulting from dwelling in Christ. This grace is comprised of at least three factors defined by Dr. Gene Getz, first, God's Favor in Salvation, "called as saints" (Eph. 2:8-9). Second, A Divine Source of Strength, in each greeting of Paul's thirteen letters, he uses "grace" and "peace" (1Cor. 1:3) and Paul requested God to provide strength to all believers in their daily lives. 3) The Grace—Freely given gifts of the Holy Spirit (1Cor. 1:4-7; 12:11). The Corinthians needed reassurance of the power available to them from God to overcome the temptations. Prudence also mandated understanding among the Corinthian church that these gifts resulted in God's goodness as opposed to any perceived human goodness.

Divisions in the Church 1:10-17

Paul proverbially grabs the church by the ear saying, get your act together as there is only one Christ, follow Him as a unified church body. Paul quickly acknowledges Chloe as his source of information, a significant factor for credibility in any repudiation. The church errantly divided over which of Christ's servants to follow, Paul, Apollos, Peter—most likely one of his disciples or members of Christ's party—probably Judaizers, those falsely claiming to be Christians. Division destroys (Mk. 3:24-26) relationships, organizations and structures. Conversely unification enhances strength (Ec. 4:12). Additionally, "I thank God that I baptized none of you" strongly illustrates salvation's independence of baptism—especially human wisdom,
rather salvation's complete dependence on the gospel of Christ.

Christ's Wisdom and God's Power 1:18-2:5

Corinth residents pontificated on human wisdom, this arrogance infiltrated the church. Soil saturation measures the volume of water in relation to the soil's total volume (θ = Vw /Vt). Conversely, salvation relies 100 percent of one's belief and acceptance of the "message of the cross." Any dependence on any human wisdom fully negates salvation in Christ. Salvation = Belief in Christ / Christ's deity and humanity multiplied by Christ's death and resurrection. Denying Belief in Christ or any factor of the denominator equates to zero salvation. This principle decimates credibility from boasting about human wisdom. Philosophers elevate humanity's thoughts and actions with human wisdom.


Paul, a well-educated man, counters this by negating an attempt of "excellency of speech or of wisdom" with Greek philosophy, rather speaks solely with gospel philosophy. For example, the Greek's human wisdom comprised denying Christ's resurrection. When shooting a rifle with a mounted scope, the true hunter avoids observing and describing the rifle or scope in attempting to bag his trophy buck. Firing the gun while externally observing the scope will result in missing the target at best, or injuring or killing an unintended target at worst. Human wisdom interacts with religion and Christianity as the above described gun handler. Two primary reasons for observing the scope instead of using the scope reside in ignorance and arrogance. The ignorant fail to understand the power of the scope, or lack cognizance of the scopes optic components. Arrogance believes one can see as well as, or perhaps better, on one's own than with the optics.

Spirit's Wisdom 2:6-16

Spiritual wisdom causes one to evaluate religion and Christianity first through the scope of scriptural truth, placing one's spiritual eye in line with the lens of creation (Gen. 1:25-26), the fall, the seed of the serpent, and the seed of woman (Gen. 3:1-16) all the way through the scope to the book of Revelation. Only the Holy Spirit's optics of spiritual wisdom enable placing the cross-hairs of salvation firmly and solely on Jesus Christ. Paul explains that those who externally observe the scope lack comprehending the clarity, magnification and cross-hairs viewed within and through the scope of the Holy Spirit to recognize Christ.


Gun scopes offer various magnifications, each level increases clarity and precision. Many details undistinguishable with the naked eye appear magnificently through the scope. Moreover, spiritual maturity increases our scopes magnification. This scope enables the understanding of such things as Christ's congruent deity and humanity, as well as his death and resurrection. Spiritual wisdom utterly befuddles those—like the Corinthians—relying on human wisdom. Paul informs the Corinthian church that as Christians they have the Holy Spirit's scope, they simply must look through it to properly understand the world and the resurrection of Christ and the saved, and avoid confusion. He acknowledges the development of some Corinth church members' development into spiritual maturity.




See Christ, Believe Christ, Achieve with Christ!
Rick E. Meyer
See, Believe, Achieve Inc. www.rickemeyer.com



(Getz 2011, 1566)
2 (Toussaint 2012, Class Notes)
3 (Radmacher, Allen and House 1999, 1460)
4 (Hillel 1982, 11)
     5
(Coffman 1984, 27)