Wednesday, August 7, 2013

The Bible - Part III

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the previous session, Part 1 and Part 2, we learnt that unless God takes the initiative to disclose what is in His mind, we shall never be able to find out. Unless God makes Himself known to us, we can never know Him. We also understood that God reveals Himself in two manners - first through Natural Revelation, where the Divine Artist has revealed Himself in the beauty, balance, intricacy and order of His creation and secondly through speech. Speech is the main model used in the Bible to illustrate God's self revelation. We understood that Scripture is God's Word, issuing from God's mouth.

Having affirmed that God speaks through the Scriptures, now let us learn a few of the qualifications to clarify our understanding of how God spoke His Word...
First, God's Word (now recorded in Scripture) was closely related to His activity. Put differently, He spoke to His people by deeds as well as words. He made Himself known to Israel in their history, and so directed its development as to bring to Isrealites now His salvation, now His judgement. Thus, He rescued the people from their slavery in Egypt; He brought them safely across the desert and settled them in the promised land; He preserved their national identity through the period of judges; He gave them kings to rule over them, despite the fact that their demand for a human king was in part a repudiation of His own kingship; His judgement fell upon them for their persistent disobedience when they were deported into Babylonian exile; and then He restored them to their own land and enabled them to rebuild their nationhood and their temple. Above all, for us sinners and for our salvation, He sent His eternal Son, Jesus Christ, to be born, to live and work, to suffer and die, to rise and to pour out the Holy Spirit. Through these deeds, first in the Old Testament story but supremely in Jesus Christ, God was actively and personally revealing Himself.

For some theologians, it has been fashionable to distinguish between personal revelation (through God's deeds) and propositional revelation (through His words). There is no need for us to choose between these two media of revelation, as God used them both. Moreover, they are closely related to one another. For God's words interpreted His deeds. He raised up prophets to explain what He was doing to Israel, and He raised up apostles to explain what He was doing through Christ. It is true that the process of divine self-revelation culminated in the person of Jesus. He was God's Word made flesh. He showed forth the glory of God. To have seen Him was to have seen the Father (Jn. 1:14, 18; 14:9). Nevertheless, this historical and personal revelation would not have benefited us unless, along with it, God had unfolded for us the significance of the person and work of His Son.

We must, then, avoid the trap of setting personal and propositional revelation over against each other as alternatives. It is more accurate to say that God has revealed himself in Christ and in the biblical witness to Christ. Neither is complete without the other.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus, we have now understood God has revealed Himself in all the activities that He has done in the Bible and Bible is a testimony for His activities. Both are together. In the next session, we will understand how God's Word has come to us through human words.
May the Lord Almighty bless you and keep you in all your ways. Have a blessed day ahead.

Source: The Bible Book for Today - John Stott

Your Brother n Christ Jesus
Jobin George
You may please get in touch with me with your thoughts and views on jobin.george2012@gmail.com


Tuesday, August 6, 2013

The Bible - Part II

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
I understand it has been a bit long after the previous post, but some work has been making me unable to spend more time blogging. In the previous part, Part 1, we learnt that unless God takes the initiative to disclose what is in His mind, we shall never be able to find out. Unless God makes Himself known to us, we can never know Him.
Now let us learn and understand how He reveals Himself to us.

My thoughts are not your thoughts,
neither are your ways my ways, says the LORD.
For so as the heavens are higher than the earth,
so are my ways higher than your ways
and my thoughts than your thoughts.
For as the rain and snow come down from heaven,
and return not thither but water the earth,
making it bring forth and sprout,
giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater,
so shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth;
it shall not return to me empty,
but it shall accomplish that which I purpose,
and prosper in the thing for which I sent it.
-Isaiah 55:8-11

The Way of Revelation
Even though it is reasonable for God to reveal Himself, how has He done so? He has revealed Himself, in principle, in the same way that we reveal or disclose ourselves to one another, that is, by both works and words, by things we do and say.
Just as creative arts has always been the chief means of human expression, God is said to have "formed" or "fashioned" the earth, and mankind to dwell upon it (Gen 2:7; Ps. 8:3; Jer. 32:17). Moreover, He Himself is seen in His works. "The heavens are telling the glory of God," and "the whole earth is full of His glory" (Ps. 19:1; Is. 6:3). Or, as Paul writes near the beginning of Romans, "What can be known about God is plain to them (the Gentile world), because God has shown it to them. Ever since the creation of the world His invisible nature, namely, His eternal power and deity, has been clearly perceived in the things that have been made" (Rom. 1:19-20).
In other words, just as human artists reveal themselves in their painting, sculpture, or music, so the Divine Artist has revealed Himself in the beauty, balance, intricacy and order of His creation. From it we learn, therefore, something of His wisdom, power and faithfulness. This is usually referred to as natural revelation because it has bee given in and through nature.
Though this is not what prophet Isaiah text refers to in Isaiah 55:8-11, he refers to the second and more direct way in which we make ourselves known to one another and God has made Himself known to us, namely, through words. Speech is the fullest and most flexible means of communication between two human beings. Speech is the best means of communication and speech is the main model used in the Bible to illustrate Go's self-revelation. Notice in thee text, verses 10-11: "As the rain and the snow come down from heaven, and ... water the earth, making it bring forth and sprout, giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater, so shall my word be." Notice the second reference to heaven and earth? It is because the heavens are higher than the earth that the rain comes down from heaven to water the earth.Notice also that the writer goes straight from the thoughts in the mind of God to the words in the mouth of God: "So shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth; it shall... accomplish that which I purpose, and prosper in the thing for which I sent it." The parallel is plain. As the heavens are higher than the earth, but the rain comes down from heaven to water the earth, so God's thoughts are higher than our thoughts, but they come down to us because His word goes forth from His mouth and thus conveys His thoughts to us. As the prophet had said earlier, "The mouth of the LORD has spoken" (Is. 40:5). He was referring to one of his own oracles, but described it as a message coming out of the mouth of God. Or, as Paul wrote to Timothy, "All scripture is God-breathed (the literal translation of theopneustos)" (2 Tim. 3:16). That is, Scripture is God's Word, issuing from God's mouth.

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the previous session, we understood that God's thoughts are so higher than ours that we cannot comprehend them without His help and allowance. Now we understood two ways in which God reveals His thoughts - one though the natural works of His hands which shows the grandeur and magnificence of hiss thoughts and secondly, through the Holy Scriptures, which is the Bible. In the next session, we will understand some of the qualifications of hos God spoke His Word.

May the Lord Almighty bless you and guide you to walk along His paths, and please do keep this sinful brother in your prayers.
Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin George

P.S. You may contact me with your suggestions, recommendations and views on jobin.george2012@gmail.com

Source: The Bible - Book for Today - John Stott

Thursday, July 18, 2013

The Bible - Part 1

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
We all know the Bible. If the Bible needs any introduction, then this might be how it can be said - 
The only book that continues to the world best-seller, throughout the ages. Total number of Bibles printed has crossed 6,001,500,000 and it has been translated and is being translated to 2000+ languages. But what intrigues me and saddens me most is that even though the Bible as a book is a best seller, it is most probably the most neglected book.

Many people buy it, but it is then placed in some corner of the house, never to be read and understood. Even in some churches we find that the knowledge of the Bible is abysmal. We are neither saying our prayers, nor reading the Bible except when we are in some terrifying emergency. We neither enter our churches on a weekly basis, except for a baptism, marriage or a funeral or for some feasts. Few parents read the Bible to their children, let alone teach them out of it. Few church members make a practice of daily Bible meditation.

Where have we lost the importance of the Bible? Why is the Bible lost its importance? In the earlier ages, people were ready to die for spreading the Bible. Where has the zeal to know about God lost? Is it because we do not know whether the Bible is an authentic book? Is it because we do not know how to authenticate the Bible? In this current series, I would like to put some light on the theological aspect on how the Bible corroborates with the thoughts of God, Jesus & Holy Spirit. I will share the historical validity of the Bible in another series.

Hope you would love to know more about the Bible and I hope and pray that this neglected book changes your life with the person names Jesus Christ, whom it testifies to.

GOD & THE BIBLE
My thoughts are not your thoughts,
neither are your ways my ways, says the LORD.
For so as the heavens are higher than the earth,
so are my ways higher than your ways
and my thoughts than your thoughts.
For as the rain and snow come down from heaven,
and return not thither but water the earth,
making it bring forth and sprout,
giving seed to the sower and bread to the eater,
so shall my word be that goes forth from my mouth;
it shall not return to me empty,
but it shall accomplish that which I purpose,
and prosper in the thing for which I sent it.
-Isaiah 55:8-11

We might question sometimes, why should the God who created the whole universe reveal Himself? How can He do so? I would like to answer this by stating an example. Most people in every age have felt baffled by the mysteries of the human life and human experience. So most people have admitted that they need wisdom from outside themselves if they are ever to fathom the meaning of their own being. Hence, the evident necessity of divine revelation makes the notion eminently reasonable.

Without revelation, without divine instruction and direction, we human beings feel ourselves to be like a boat drifting rudderless on the high seas, like a leaf that is being tossed helplessly by the wind, like a blind person groping in the darkness. How can we find our way? More importantly, how can we find God's way without His direction? Just as Isaiah 55:8-9 says, there is a great gulf between God's mind and human minds. There is a great chasm between the our ways and thoughts and between the ways and thoughts of God. The thoughts of God are as high as the heavens than the earth: that means infinity.

How can we discover God's thoughts or read His mind? We can't even read each other's minds. We try to. We look into each other's faces to see if they are smiling or frowning, we peer into each other's eyes. But in the end it is a risky business. Then how much more impossible is it for us to know and penetrate the thoughts of the Almighty God? His mind is infinite. His thoughts are tower above our thoughts just as the heavens tower over the earth. There is no ladder by which our little minds could climb to His infinite mind. There is no bridge that we can throw across this chasm of infinity. There is no way to reach or fathom God.

It is then only reasonable to say that unless God takes the initiative to disclose what is on His mind we shall never be able to find out. Unless God makes himself known to us, we can never know Him, and all the world's altars - like the one Paul saw in Athens - will bear the tragic expression "To an unknown god" (Acts 17:23).

This is the place to begin our study. It is the place of humility before the infinite God. It is also the place of wisdom, as we perceive the reasonableness of the idea of revelation.

Dear brethren in Christ Jesus, hope you would start knowing the infinite God through the Bible. May the Lord Almighty bless you and keep you in all your views.
Your brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin George

P.S. You may contact me with your queries on jobin.george2012@gmail.com

Sources:
The Bible, Book for Today - John R W Stott

Tuesday, July 16, 2013

Demands of Jesus - REPENT - Part 3

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the previous session, Part 2 we understood that sin is an assault on God and dishonors Him and puts us in debt to Him to make our relationship right with Him. We also understood that repenting is experiencing a change of mind so that we can see God as true and beautiful and worthy of all our praise and all our obedience. This change of mind also embraces Jesus in the same way, because He came from the Father and He and the Father are one.
But do we all need to repent? If so why? Let us learn about it.

THE UNIVERSAL NEED FOR REPENTANCE
No one is excluded from Jesus' demand to repent. He made this clear when a group of people came to him with news of two calamities. Innocent people had been killed by Pilate's massacre and by the fall of the tower of Siloam (Luke 13:1-4). Jesus took the occasion to warn even the bearers of the news: "Unless you repent, you will all likewise perish" (Luke 13:5). In other words, don't think calamities mean that some people are sinners in need of repentance and others aren't. All need repentance. Just as all need to be born again (John 3:7), so all must repent because all are sinners.

When Jesus said, "I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance" (Luke 5:32), he did not mean that some persons are good enough not to need repentance. he meant some think they are (Luke 18:9), and others have already repented and have been set right with God. For example, the rich young ruler desired "to justify himself" (Luke 10:29), while "the tax collector... beat his breast, saying 'God, be merciful to me, a sinner! [and he] went down to his house justified [by God]" (Luke 18:13-14).

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
We now understood why there is a universal need for repentance, because not one of us is righteous enough to stand in the face of Jesus, save one - Jesus. We may think that we are not sinners in our deeds, which are  seen by everyone, but we sin in our thoughts - the only place that is seen by God. Jesus came down from Heaven to set us right with God, and to be set right with Him, we need to repent of our sins and come anew. We must be washed in His blood and become as white as newly fallen snow. Let us try to repent of our sinful thoughts and deeds and come and enjoy the presence of our Savior King.
May the Lord Almighty bless you and keep you in all your ways.
Your brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin George

Source: What Jesus Demands from the World - John Piper

Thursday, July 11, 2013

Demands of Jesus - REPENT - Part 2

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the previous session, we understood what is repentance. We also understood that repentance is not the new deeds, but the inward change that bears the fruit of new deeds. And Jesus was demanding such a change in us. Now let us understand WHY?

SIN: AN ASSAULT ON GOD
Why? His answer is that we are sinners. "I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance" (Luke 5:32). What was Jesus' view of sin? In the parable of the prodigal son, Jesus describes the son's sin like this: "He squandered his property in reckless living... (and) devoured (it) with prostitutes" (Luke 15:13, 30). But when the prodigal repents he says, "Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you. I am no longer worthy to be called your son" (Luke 15:21). Therefore, throwing away your life away on reckless living and prostitutes is not just humanly hurtful; it is an offence against heaven- that is, against God. That is the essential nature of sin. It is an assault on God.

We see this again in the way Jesus taught His disciples to pray. He said that they should pray, "Forgive us our sins, for we ourselves forgive everyone who is indebted to us" (Luke 11:4). In other words, sins that God forgives are compared to the ones people commit against us, and those are called debts. Therefore, Jesus' view of sin is that it dishonors God and puts us in debt to restore the divine honor we had defamed by our God-belittling behavior or attitudes. Later we will see how that debt gets paid by Jesus himself (Mark 10:45). But for us to enjoy that gift he says we must repent.

Repenting means experiencing a change of mind so that we can see God as true and beautiful and worthy of all our praise and all our obedience. This change of mind also embraces Jesus in the same way. We know this because Jesus said, "If God were your Father, you would love me, for I came from God" (John 8:42). Seeing God with a new mind includes seeing Jesus with a new mind.

Dear brethren in Jesus, hope you all enjoyed a fruitful reading and understanding on sin and how it is an assault on God and why we should repent of the same. Hoping that this would change your view of the sins we commit and come back to God and honor Him with all our heart, soul, mind and body.
May the loving God always have compassion on you and may He bless you all the days of your life.
Your Brother in Jesus
Jobin George



Tuesday, July 9, 2013

Demands of Jesus - REPENT - Part 1

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
It has been a long time since I last posted here. In the last few sessions, we finished learning about Jesus' demands on not to be anxious and to always pray. Now let us move to one of Jesus' first demands- to repent.

From that time Jesus began to preach, saying, "Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand." - Matt. 4:17

I have not come to call the righteous but sinners to repentance. - Luke 5:32

Unless you repent, you will all likewise perish. - Luke 13:3,5

The first demand of Jesus' ministry was, "Repent". He spoke this command indiscriminately to all who would listen. It was a call for radical inward change toward God and man.

WHAT IS REPENTANCE?
Two things show us that repentance is an internal change of mind and heart rather than mere sorrow for sin or mere improvement of behavior. First, the meaning of the Greek word  behind the English "repent" (metanoia) points in this direction. It has two parts: meta and noia. The second part (noia) reffers to the mind and its thoughts and perceptions and dispositions and purposes. The first part (meta) is a prefix that regularly means movement or change. In view of the way ths prefix regularly functions, we may infer that the basic meaning of repent is to exercise a change of the mind's perceptions and dispositions and purposes.
The other factor that points to this meaning of repent is the way Luke 3:8 describes the relationship between repentance and new behavior. It says, "Bear fruits in keeping with repentance." Then it gives examples of the fruits: "Whoever has two tunics is to share with him who has none, and whoever has food is to do likewise" (Luke 3:11). This means that repenting is what happens inside of us. Then this change leads to the fruits of new behavior. Repentance is not the new deeds, but the inward change that bears the fruit of new deeds. Jesus is demanding that we experience this inward change.

In the next session, we will see why Jesus demands that we experience this change in ourselves. May the Lord Almighty bless you all and keep you in all your ways.
Please do uphold me in your prayers.
Your Brother in Jesus Christ
Jobin George

P.S. The above extract has been taken from the book "What Jesus demands from the World" by John Piper.

Thursday, June 13, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Always Pray and Do Not Lose Heart - 5

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
Greetings and peace to you all in the name of the Almighty name of Jesus Christ. In the last session, Part 4 we learned HOW to pray. We learned that we should pray with Faith and that we should not pray for the praise of others. Now let us concentrate on FOR WHOM are we to pray exactly? And WHAT should we pray?

FOR WHOM?
For whom does Jesus demand that we are pray? Of course it is for ourselves, is it because we are deserving? Prayer has nothing to do with deserving, it's all about mercy. We pray for ourselves because we are weak. We are so prone to sin and utterly dependent on preserving grace to sustain our flawed obedience. "Pray then like this," Jesus said, "lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil" (Matt. 6:9,13). That is a prayer for ourselves first, since we know our own frailty and vulnerability better than anyone. Then it is a prayer for the other followers of Jesus and the world.
Praying for self does not allow us to exclude others from our prayers. When Jesus tells us to pray, "Hallowed be Your Name" (Matt. 6:9), He means that we should pray this for anyone who does not yet hallow God's name. And if our selfish hearts should think of some adversary that we do not like, Jesus is unsparing - these too must be blessed in our prayers. "Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you" (Matt. 5:44); "bless those who curse you, pray for those who abuse you" (Luke 6:28). None must be excluded from our love, and none may be excluded from our prayers.

WHAT?
Finally, what does Jesus demand that we pray? What are we to ask the Father to do? Jesus' summary answer is called the Lord's Prayer (Matt. 6:9-13).

Our Father in Heaven,
  1. hallowed be Your Name.
  2. Your kingdom come ,
  3. Your will be done, on earth as it is in heaven.
  4. Give us this day our daily bread,
  5. and forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.
  6. And lead us not into temptation, but deliver us from evil.
We pray for ourselves and for other followers of Jesus and for the world (1) that we should reverence and cherish the name of God above things. This is the first function of prayer - to pray that people would pursue the glory of God.

(2) We pray that God's saving, purifying, Jesus-exalting rule would hold sway in our lives and would finally come in universal manifestation and extent.
(3) We pray that we would do the will of God the way the angels do it n heaven - namely, without hesitation and full of zeal and thoroughness.
(4) We pray for the practical provisions of body and mind that make an earthly life of obedience possible.
(5) We pray for forgiveness for our daily failures to honor God as we ought. That is, we ask God to apply to us each day the perfect redemption that Jesus obtained once for all when He died on the cross.
(6) We pray that God would protect us from the evil one and from the temptations that would bring us to ruin and weaken our witness for Him.

The Lord's Prayer shows us the astonishing nature of prayer. It puts in the position of greatest importance the prayer for God's Name to be glorified, God's kingdom to advance and triumph, and God's will to be accomplished on the earth the way it's happening in heaven. This means that God intends to use human prayers to accomplish His most ultimate and universal purposes. For example, Jesus tells us to pray for workers that will be required to spread the gospel to all the nations. "Pray earnestly to the Lord of the harvest to send out laborers into his harvest" (Matt. 9:38). Yet nothing is more certain than that the kingdom of God will triumph. Jesus said, "I will build my church, and the gates of hell shall not prevail against it... this gospel of the kingdom will be proclaimed throughout the whole world as a testimony to all nations, and then the end will come" (Matt. 16:18; 24:14). There is no uncertainty about the triumph of God. Nevertheless, in God's providence it depends on human prayer.

This implies that prayer is not only a duty of man but a gift of God. Jesus will awaken in His people the spirit of prayer that asks for everything it will take to accomplish God's purposes in the world. The prayers of Jesus' followers and the purposes of God will not fail.

Source: What Jesus Demands from the World - John Piper

Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin 

Wednesday, June 5, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Always Pray and Do Not Lose Heart - 4

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
In the previous session, we were learning on "HOW" we should pray. If we look back to Part 3, we learned on how to pray with Simplicity, Perseverance and to pray through Jesus' death and in His Name. Today, let us understand on How we should pray with Faith.

HOW? With FAITH

"Whatever you ask in prayer, you will receive, if you have faith" (Matt. 21:22; Mark 11:24) we can say that Jesus wants us to pray with faith. Some have taken verses and like this and turned them into the power of positive thinking. They believe that if we can be confident that something will happen, it will indeed happen. But that would be faith in our faith. When Jesus teaches us how to "move mountains" by faith, He says explicitly, "Have faith in God" (Mark 11:22). There  seem to be times when God makes clear to us that His will is to do a particular thing. In that case we may be perfectly confident that very thing will be done. In that sense Jesus says to us, "Whatever you ask in prayer, believe that you have received it, and it will be yours" (Mark 11:24). It is God who does it, and our belief rests on Him and His revealed will. Otherwise, we would be God, and He would run the universe according to our will, not His.
Jesus makes it clear that there is a kind of filter that our prayers must pass through in order to be sure that they are according to God's will. "If you abide in me, and my words abide in you, ask whatever you wish, and it will be done for you" (John 15:7). Here Jesus' promise is more clearly qualified than in Mark 11:24. Are we trusting in Him as our all-supplying vine? And are His words shaping our minds and hearts so that we discern how to pray according to His wisdom?
Praying in faith does not always mean being sure that the very thing we ask will happen. But it does always mean that because of Jesus we trust God to hear us and help us in the way that seems best to Him. It may mean that He gives us just what we ask, or that He gives us something better. Will a father give a son a stone if he asks for bread? No. But neither will he give him bread if it is moldy. He may give him cake. Sometimes God's answers will overwhelm us with their excess. Other times they taste more like medicine than food and will test our faith that this medicine is really what we need.

HOW? Not for the Praise of Others
In view all that we learnt, it should be clear that the reward of prayer comes from God, not man. But Jesus shows us that the human heart is capable of turning the most beautifully Godward act in a manward direction and ruining it. He warns us:
When you pray, you must not be like the hypocrites. For they love to stand and pray in synagogues and at the street corners, that they may be seen by others. Truly, I say you, they have received their reward. But when you pray, go into your room and shut the door and pray to your Father who is in secret. And your Father who sees in secret will reward you. (Mark 6:5-6)
Jesus hates hypocrisy - like appearing to love God when what you really love is the praise of man. His most disparaging language was reserved for "hypocrites". He called them children of hell, "blind guides", "full of greed and self-indulgence", "whitewashed tombs" (Matt.23:15, 24, 25, 27). The demand is unmistakable: "Beware of the leaven of the Pharisees, which is hypocrisy" (Luke 12:1). The implication for prayer (ad fasting and alms-giving, Matt. 6:1-4, 16-18) is: Treasure God, and all that He will be for you, in prayer; but do not treasure the praise of man. And most of all do not turn a God-treasuring act of prayer into a man-treasuring act of hypocrisy.

Dear Brothers and Sisters, we have now completed on the how we are to pray. Hope you all enjoyed reading and understanding Jesus' words on how to pray. In the next session, I would take up for whom to pray. May the Lord Almighty bless you and keep you in all your ways. 

Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Always Pray and Do Not Lose Heart - 3

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus
We have been learning about the demand of Jesus to pray. In the previous session, Part 1 & Part 2, we received an answer to our why we should pray, Jesus says: because God is very much inclined to hear and answer our prayers - which is not surprising, since prayer is designed to magnify God's glory while sustaining our joy in Him. Now let us understand on How we are to pray...

HOW? Simplicity
The readiness of God to answer and His perfect knowledge of what we need before we ask means that we should be simple in our wording and reject anything like a repetitive mantra that would imply God is aroused by our monotonous incantations. "When you pray, do not heap up empty phrases as the Gentiles do, for they think that they will be heard for their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask Him" (Matt.6:7-8).


HOW? With Perseverance
This does not mean that there is no room for perseverance in prayer. In fact, Jesus is explicit in telling us to be persistent in prayer over a long period of time, if necessary, as we seek some crucial breakthrough in the cause of righteousness for His glory (Luke 11:5-8; 18:1-8). The point is not to finally break God's resistance but to discover, by patient prayer, God's wisdom as to the way and time the prayer should be answered. He is not disinclined to help His children and glorify His name. He simply knows better than we do when and how the answer should come. Therefore, our persistence in prayer shows both our confidence that God is our only hope and that He will act in the best way and the best time in response to our persistent pleas.

HOW? Through His Death and In His Name
The confidence that we have in prayer is owing to Jesus. He did not just teach us to pray - He died for us and rose again to remove insuperable obstacles to prayer. Without the death of Jesus, our sins would not be forgiven (Matt. 26:28) and the wrath of God would still be against us (John 3:36). In that condition we could expect no answers to prayer from God. Therefore, Jesus is the ground of all our prayers. This is why He taught us to pray in His Name. "Whatever you ask in my name, this I will do, that the Father may be glorified in the Son" (John 14:13; 16:23-24). Ending our prayers "in Jesus' name, Amen' is not a mere tradition; it is an affirmation of faith in Jesus as the only hope of access to God.

Dear Brothers and Sisters, I know stop here. We have understood 3 aspects on How we are to pray to our Father in Heaven. May the grace of our Father, the love of our Savior Jesus, and the fellowship of the Holy Spirit be a guidance unto us to keep on praying on our knees and in our hearts. Please do keep our spiritual fathers, especially our father, H. G. Zachariah Mar Theophilus, who is undergoing treatment for cancer in US  and please do keep me a sinful servant in your prayers.

Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin

Source: What Jesus Demands from the World - John Piper

Friday, May 17, 2013

Demands of Jesus - Always Pray and Do Not Lose Heart - 2

Dear Brothers and Sisters in Christ Jesus

It has been a month since I last posted on the series on "Demands of Jesus". I had been busy with some personal matters and was also in the transfer process from Cochin to Pune in India on work related matters. We have been learning about the Demands made by Jesus of His followers for the past few months. In the previous session, we started to learn about Jesus' demand to keep on praying and we were learning on WHY should we pray. We learnt one of the reasons being that prayer glorifies our God - Prayer is designed by God to display His fullness and our need. Prayer glorifies God because it puts usin the position of the thirsty and God in the position of the all-supplying fountain.
Now let us look into the second reason why Jesus asked us to pray

WHY? For our Joy
The other purpose Jesus came to accomplish was our joy. Everything He taught was aimed to free us from eternal-joy-killers and fill us with the only joy that lasts - joy in God. "These things I speak in the world, that they may have my joy fulfilled in themselves" (John 17:13). One of His most pervasive teachings for our joy was the teaching on prayer, and He made His motive explicit: Our joy. "Ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be full" (John 16:24). The most wonderful thing about prayer, as Jesus demands it, is that it is perfectly suited to secure God's glory and our joy.


These are great incentives for us to obey Jesus' demand that we "always... pray and not lose heart" (Luke 18:1). To these He adds other incentives, because He is so eager for us to feel hopeful in our praying. He says, for example, "Your Father knows what you need before you ask Him" (Matt. 6:8). The point is that we don't need to multiply pious phrases in prayer hoping that we might awaken God's attention or inclination. He is our caring Father, and He is all-knowing. He will answer. Then Jesus underlines God's readiness to answer by comparing Him to a human father, but pointing out that God is far more eager to answer than human fathers:
Ask, and it will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be opened to you... which one of you, if his son asks him for bread, will give him a stone? Or if he asks for a fish, will give him a serpent? If you then, who are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father who is in Heaven give good things to those who ask Him! (Matt. 7:7-11)
So in answer to the question why we should pray, Jesus says: because God is inclined to hear and answer our prayers - which is not surprising, since prayer is designed to magnify God's glory while sustaining our joy in Him.

Dear brothers and sisters in Christ Jesus, we have now understood on 'WHY' Jesus asks us to pray without losing heart. In the following series, we will understand on How are we to pray and What are we to pray and For Whom are we to pray. 

May the love of our Heavenly Father, grace of our Lord Jesus Christ and the Fellowship of the Holy Spirit guide us all to pray unceasingly to our Father. Please do keep this sinful servant in your prayers.

Your Brother in Christ Jesus
Jobin

Source: What Jesus Demands from the World - John Piper