Sunday, February 26, 2017

"PAYDIRT" FROM GOD'S WORD

“PAYDIRT” FROM GOD’S WORD
It’s planting time in Vegas. Last week I bought a couple new plants to attract butterflies, bees and hummingbirds. I also bought a bag of “Paydirt” that I mix with ground soil and use it to pack in the hole around the new plants. Paydirt is made for my Southwest soil and it does what it says on the bag: “brings poor soil to life.”  Here’s some scriptures from God’s Word that can be Paydirt for us this week:

Isaiah 45:2-3 : “I will go before thee, and make the crooked places straight: I will break in pieces the gates of brass, and cut in sunder the bars of iron: And I will give thee the treasures of darkness, and hidden riches of secret places, that thou mayest know that I, the Lord, which call thee by thy name, am the God of Israel.”

Joel 2:25-26  “And I will restore to you the years that the locust hath eaten. . . And ye shall eat in plenty, and be satisfied, and praise the name of the Lord your God, that hath dealt wondrously with you: and my people shall never be ashamed.

Psalm 103:5 : “Who satisfieth [is satisfying] thy mouth with good things; so that thy youth is renewed like the eagle's.”

1 Peter 2:24 : “Who his own self bare our sins in his own body on the tree, that we, being dead to sins, should live unto righteousness: by whose stripes ye were healed.

Jeremiah 17:14 : “Heal me, O Lord, and I shall be healed; save me, and I shall be saved: for thou art my praise.”

Psalm 66:12 : “We went through fire and through water: but thou broughtest us out into a wealthy place.”

Have a great week!
Love, Carolyn
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Wednesday, February 22, 2017

"SOMEONE TO STAND IN THE GAP"

“SOMEONE TO STAND IN THE GAP”
I have an embarrassing confession to make. I didn’t want to be nice. I wanted Jesus get rid of the graffiti in my neighborhood. The taggers had diminished a while ago, then came back with a vengeance. I was so angry. And out of anger, I prayed Psalm 35:5 against them: “Let them be as chaff before the wind: and let the angel of the Lord chase them.” Guess what? It wasn’t working—even more graffiti showed up! I was angry with the Lord too, “Why aren’t You fixing this?” It was only a day after I asked, that I heard a teaching on “Identification Repentance” and got my answer. I had made the mistake of vilifying the taggers, when I was supposed to stand in the gap for them.

In the act of Identification Repentance, we identify with the ones who are in error and we repent to God on their behalf. This is what the priests of the Old Testament did. They would go before God and give sacrifices for the sins of the people. They themselves may not have committed any sins, but the people God gave them to watch over were sinning and needed atonement and forgiveness so they could get right with God.

Well, I’ve known for a while that a certain area of Las Vegas is mine to oversee and it starts with my own neighborhood.

If we’re able to identify in some way with those in our realm of spiritual responsibility, we can help them in a very positive way. I had to learn this with the taggers.

The Lord showed me I can identify with their rebellion. I understand rebellion. When no one understands you and no one seems to care; when they try to push you into a mold you don’t fit in; when you feel like you’ve been rejected, you either go deep into yourself in depression, or you get angry and fight. In either case, if someone comes along who accepts you for who you are, it doesn’t matter much what they do, you just want to be accepted. Or if you’re a fighter with a persuasive mouth, you become the leader and others will follow and satisfy your need for acceptance in that way. I understand that. I was once in the same state of mind as the taggers, so I can totally relate.

The taggers’ response to rejection is taking them down a bad path. But I can totally understand the why behind some of their actions. So instead of getting mad at them, I can repent for them. I can stand in the gap for the taggers of my area, repenting for them and asking the Lord to forgive them.

I can take this situation in hand much like Jesus did when He was being accosted before the crucifixion. The people were angry. They were angry at their situation, being cruelly ruled by the Romans and they were angry at Jesus for not being the military leader they wanted. They acted out their anger and disappointment in a bad way by calling for His crucifixion. But how did Jesus respond?

“Then said Jesus, ‘Father forgive them; for they know not what they do’” (Luke 23:34). I feel like that’s what the Lord is telling me to do in my situation with the young taggers in my neighborhood. Repent on their behalf because they know not what they do, and forgive them.

God looks for those of us who are willing to fight when necessary, but also willing to take spiritual responsibility for those who the devil has taken captive because they were desperate for respect, care and love.

In Ezekiel 22:30 God says: “And I sought for a man among them, that should make up the hedge, and stand in the gap before me for the land, that I should not destroy it: but I found none.I kind of wanted Him to destroy the demons responsible for those taggers, but I was wrong in my thinking. God had a different and better answer to this problem and I’m thankful He showed me what to do and I’ve started doing it.
I heard the voice of the Lord, saying, ‘Whom shall I send, and who will go for us?’ Then said I, ‘Here am I; send me’” (Isa. 6:8).

I know when I was rebellious and continued to make bad decisions, I didn’t really understand why I did it. Then one day Jesus sent me someone to help me see: all the things I was looking for emanated from a true relationship with Jesus, and my life totally turned around. I believe it will happen for my neighborhood taggers as well. They have no idea who’s praying for them now and how willing the Lord is to answer my prayers.

I may have started off wrong in how I wanted this taken care of, but now I’m on the right path for sure. We don’t get to be Bible teachers and prophets because we’re always right, but because we are willing to be wrong, willing to be humbled and willing to change.

Love, Carolyn

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Sunday, February 19, 2017

DON'T BE AFRAID

    
DON’T BE AFRAID
Upheaval and churning is upon us, but God says: “Don’t be afraid.” Everyone who calls on Him is covered by His love and grace. Isaiah 41:10 says: “Fear thou not; for I am with thee: be not dismayed: I will strengthen thee; yea, I will help thee; yea, I will uphold thee with the right hand of my righteousness.” But what about when it doesn’t look like this is happening? Gideon was wondering about this. The children of Israel were taken over by the Midianites. They had to hide anything they wanted to keep because the Midianites would see it and take it. Gideon was threshing some wheat, getting ready to hide it when “the angel of the Lord appeared unto him, and said unto him, ‘The Lord is with thee, thou mighty man of valor’” (Judges 6:12).

Gideon responded, “Oh my Lord, if the Lord be with us, why then is all this befallen us? And where be all the miracles which our fathers told us of? But now the Lord hath forsaken us.”

The angel “looked upon him, and said, ‘Go in this thy might, and thou shalt save Israel from the hand of the Midianites: have I not sent thee?’” (v. 14). This is so awesome.

The Lord didn’t tell him to do someone else’s job. He told him to go in “his” might. God only wants us to do what’s in “our might” and believe that we can do what He’s asking.

Gideon looked at this challenge from a natural, rational point of view and told the angel that he wasn’t really able to do this thing God was asking, because his family was the poorest and he himself was too young.

But the angel pushed him: “Because I’m with you, you’ll defeat the Midianites as if they were just one person” (v. 16). This took quite a leap of faith for Gideon. He was looking at this idea of changing his life around, from a totally logical natural way of thinking. But the angel was pushing him to see it from God’s point of view. All things, wild things, amazing miraculous things are available in the spiritual world, that can and do change our lives for the better, if we take a step of faith.

I’m sure we can all relate to Gideon when it comes to turning our situations around for the better. We want others to make things different for us, but then the Lord has the nerve to tell us we are to actually do something to change things. We come up with rationalizations, excuses and downright fears as to why we just can’t.

And here’s where the most amazing and kind heart of God comes in. He lets us freely challenge Him. He so wants us to believe, that He is willing to answer our doubts and unbelief. He knows we are sometimes weak in our believing and His love overrides any rolling of His eyes and shrugging of His big shoulders because of our hesitations.

Gideon’s heart wanted to somehow believe. He was hoping it could really be true, but his insides were quivering, fearful and small. He told God he needed a sign. And guess what, God didn’t run away or turn His head in disgust. He saw Gideon’s heart, and He said, “No problem.” In fact, Gideon was so apprehensive, he asked God for another sign just to be sure. And God lovingly gave it.

We’ve been taught to belittle Thomas, one of Jesus’ disciples, because he wanted to touch the nail holes of the crucifiction. Jesus had already shown these to the other disciples, but Thomas wasn’t with them at the time, so when they told Thomas they’d seen Jesus alive, he said: “Except I shall see in his hands the print of the nails, and put my finger into the print of the nails, and thrust my hand into his side, I will not believe” (John 20:25).

Jesus didn’t get mad at him at all or reprimand him. Religion has taught us that we are bad children if we ask Jesus for proof or a sign, but the Bible doesn’t tell us that at all. Instead it tells us that when Jesus came to see His disciples again, and Thomas was with them, Jesus said: “Peace be unto you.” We don’t ever have to be afraid of Jesus. He wants peace for us even more than we want it for ourselves sometimes.

“Then saith he to Thomas, ‘Reach hither thy finger, and behold my hands; and reach hither thy hand, and thrust it into my side: and be not faithless, but believing’” (John 20:26-27).

When we have unrest in our lives and are a bit fearful about decisions; or if God seems to want us to step out on something to make things better and we’re not so sure what to think or what to do or if it’s God or not, let’s not be afraid to get personal with Him. He’s very personal with us! It’s not a sin to ask for a sign like Gideon did, or like Thomas.

Jesus told us and keeps telling us that each of us is vitally important to God.

“But the very hairs of your head are all numbered. Fear ye not therefore, ye are of more value than many sparrows” (Matt. 10: 30-31).

The Lord is always going to help us when we seek Him, or as the case may be, turn back to Him.

Joseph expresses the heart of God when he talks to his brothers who meant to kill him, or trade him in for something else: “But as for you, ye thought evil against me; but God meant it unto good, to bring to pass, as it is this day, to save much people alive. Now therefore fear ye not: I will nourish you, and your little ones. And he comforted them, and spake kindly unto them.”

God is speaking kindly to us, calling us back to Himself, telling us we can come to Him anytime and even ask for proof, when we’re unsure of His voice. We don’t ever have to be afraid to talk to Him.

Let’s seek a more intimate relationship with Him. If we doubt like Gideon or Thomas, the Lord will lovingly give us a sign. His Word tells us He is perfectly willing to do so. Don’t be afraid.

Love, Carolyn

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Wednesday, February 15, 2017

WE ARE

WE ARE THE DAVIDS AND SAMSONS OF OUR TIME
(This is a revision of an article I did on Super Bowl Sunday.)
The Apostle Paul told the Corinthians: “We are ambassadors who represent Christ” (2 Cor. 5:20). Because we have Christ in us, we all have the opportunity to be ambassadors for Him in our fields of influence: in our work, our family, our school, our neighborhoods and all the places close to us. But the Lord also needs people who will accept positions bigger than their perceived ability.

The other morning the Lord gave Jane and me a new spiritual realm of influence. He inspired us to pray for the shaking up of the judges in the United States. It’s the judges who interpret the laws. They are supposed to interpret the laws according to the intent of the Constitution, which is based on the Bible. But many have strayed, and instead, they make up their own interpretations biased by peer pressure and personal agenda.

Jesus said this about the interpreters of the law in His day: “O generation of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things? For out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh. A good man out of the good treasure of the heart bringeth forth good things: and an evil man out of the evil treasure bringeth forth evil things” (Matt. 12: 34).

So the Lord gave us some things to pray concerning judges. We are to pray that the evil ones either get turned back around to good, or if they refuse, that their mouths are stopped, their mental capacity scrambled and their influence blocked.

Though I know very little about judges, I do know something about prayer and I do know something about taking down devil spirit influence. And I do know that the Lord never gives us anything He won’t show us how to do and how to do well. We may think we are mere shepherds, but we all have a warrior on the inside!

The shepherd boy David’s only job was to take care of his flock of sheep. In his small realm of influence, he had to fight off a bear and a lion who came after his sheep, and he did it. This small boy was called by God later, to defeat the giant Goliath, who threatened Israel’s whole existence, and he did it. (See 1 Sam. 17).

Samson was just a regular guy. Before the incident with Delilah, he had married a Philistine woman. One day he went off and the wife’s father thought he abandoned her. The Philistine father kidnapped her and gave her to another guy to marry. Samson went after her and burned up fields of corn and vineyards as a retribution for the evil they had done. They came after him, arrested him, bound him up and then God worked in this regular guy to do something amazing.

“And the Spirit of the Lord came mightily upon him, and the cords that were upon his arms became as flax [linen] that was burnt with fire, and his bands loosed from off his hands. And he found a new jawbone of an ass, and put forth his hand, and took it, and slew a thousand men therewith.

And Samson said, ‘With the jawbone of an ass, heaps upon heaps, with the jaw of an ass have I slain a thousand men’” (Judges 15:14-16).

One person who believed in our God wiped out a thousand men with only the jawbone of a donkey. That’s miraculous, but no more miraculous than what our Lord is asking us to do in these times.

You and I are the Davids and the Samsons of our day. We may think we only have influence over a few, and those few are highly important to God, but He may be asking us to step it up a notch. By revelation, He may ask us to go into some very new areas of life, even physically. But whether or not our jobs are to fight physically, we can never forget that our ultimate battle is always spiritual and the spiritual is what affects the physical results the Lord wants.

Second Corinthians 10:4 tells us: “The weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds.”

“For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places” (Eph. 6:12).

Believing and acting from a spiritual point of view will always manifest in a material way. Let’s expect the Lord to expand our spiritual realms of influence and be ready to say yes to whatever He asks. It might be a little scary, but more than that, it’s exciting, wonderful and such an awesome privilege! The Lord is thrilled to have us; He loves us and He never gives us something He won’t show us how to accomplish.

Love, Carolyn

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Sunday, February 12, 2017

EXPERIENCING THE SPIRITUAL SEED OF CHRIST-IN-US

EXPERIENCING THE SPIRITUAL SEED OF CHRIST-IN-US
The other day I was listening to a friend who knows a lot about the clandestine motives and hidden background to world events, things the general public does not know. There are people who orchestrate international tragedies, as well as national ones and even down to the state and local levels. It can be horrifying, maddening and depressing. Religion might say, “Just don’t look at it.” That may be okay for some, but if we look at the Bible, we see that more often than not, God’s people were involved on the grass roots level of life. They faced the cultural and political fields head on and dealt with it.

In the Old Testament times, the Spirit of God was “on” a person. In Jesus’ time on earth the Spirit of God was “with” them. Jesus told His disciples that after He went back to the Father in Heaven, they would have the Spirit of God “in” them. Then He told them how they could build up that seed of His Spirit within. Remember, it’s called “being born again.” A baby has all the raw material, but needs to grow. That’s how Christ-in-us is.

And he [Jesus] said unto them, ‘Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature. He that believeth and is baptized shall be saved; but he that believeth not shall be damned.

‘And these signs shall follow them that believe; In my name shall they cast out devils; they shall speak with new tongues; They shall take up serpents; and if they drink any deadly thing, it shall not hurt them; they shall lay hands on the sick, and they shall recover.

So then after the Lord had spoken unto them, he was received up into heaven, and sat on the right hand of God” (Mark 16: 15-19).

Jesus told them they will speak in new tongues. Why would they need that? Well, Jerusalem and that part of the world wasn’t exactly in a peaceful place, much like the world now is not in a peaceful place. They would need to build up that Spirit in them as fast as they could, to be able to be strong and powerful and peaceful and trusting. They would have to be spiritually sharp on the inside, to be able to righteously handle the things happening on the outside.  

Speaking in tongues is something that is spiritual “Wheaties,” or a power energy drink to the Christ-in-us.

The Apostle Paul said: “When a person speaks in another language, he helps himself grow” (1 Cor. 14: 4).

Jude corroborates this: “But ye, beloved, building up yourselves on your most holy faith, praying in the Holy Spirit” (Jude 20). “Praying in the Holy Spirit includes speaking in tongues. We need to be built up spiritually, just like the believers of the first century church.

I want to remind those of us who know how to speak in tongues, to do it more. For those who want to do it and don’t know how, it’s not hard at all. Thank the Lord for what He’s given you. He’s the one who said you can do it.

If you need more documentation, read the book of Acts and see how often it comes up. Regular people all over the book of Acts, spoke in tongues. Jesus told the disciples to breathe in, then speak out the words the Holy Spirit gives. They will be a different language than you already know, so don’t think it’s weird just because it sounds odd to you.

The more you speak, the more comfortable you will be. Once you start speaking in tongues out loud, probably in private, you can start speaking in tongues in your head, just like you would talk to yourself silently. This way, you can speak in tongues while you’re at work or at the gym or just going about your regular daily routines, without people wondering about what the heck you’re doing.  

There are many other great benefits to speaking in tongues. Do you want to understand things better from God’s point of view? How about when you don’t exactly know what a person needs and you want to pray for them? The Word of God says speaking in tongues is for that. It’s perfect prayer. (See Romans 8: 26).

First Corinthians 14:22 says speaking in tongues is a sign to unbelievers. It’s also a sign to us. Anyone who takes the time to learn a different language knows it takes time and effort and memorization. When we speak in tongues, the words just come out. Maybe it’s a little slow at first, but not necessarily. In a very short time, it flows easily.

But the biggest affect you’ll see from speaking in tongues is that you’ll see yourself growing spiritually. You’ll experience more insight in your life, more power, more confidence, more trust, more might, more energy, all of which come from the spiritual fire getting stronger and bigger within you. Worth it? Yes, very worth it!

In a treacherous world we can be better equipped as ambassadors and warriors for our Lord when we agree with Jesus: “They shall speak with new tongues.” When a person speaks in tongues, “he helps himself grow.”

Love, Carolyn

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Wednesday, February 8, 2017

3 QUESTIONS TO ASK WHEN WE'RE SERIOUS ABOUT HELPING A LOVED ONE

THREE QUESTIONS TO ASK WHEN WE’RE SERIOUS ABOUT HELPING A LOVED ONE 
When we pray for close friends or family, we sometimes miss the mark. We think we know them and think we know exactly what they should be doing to have a better life. But I listened to a talk the other day that gave me some new insight about seriously helping people close to us. Three steps were mentioned. The first is to ask, “What is their biggest challenge?”  Notice, it’s not “What’s our biggest challenge with them?”

Too often we look at other people’s problems from our own point of view and say things like, “I wish they would just do so and so and such and such and they would be just fine and get over that problem.” We think we have the perfect solutions for those we love. But what if we start looking at a problem from their point of view? Step into their shoes for a while. What is the biggest challenge they are facing? Is it that they are afraid of something? Is it that they aren’t mature enough to really understand a situation? Is it that they are overloaded with too many decisions to make? Is it that they’re not sure who they should trust?

There could be any number of reasons a person isn’t getting blessed results in their lives. The Bible tells us in Luke 6:31: “Treat others the same way you want them to treat you.” When we want someone to help us with a problem, we want them to first try to understand our side, what we’re going through. We want them to lovingly help us, not just blast us with some rote simplistic answer and be gone. (I have to admit I’ve done this a time or two and been sorry after). So let’s think about how we would want to be talked to, how we would want to be treated if we had a challenge like theirs.

Often it’s just a matter of asking the person what they think their biggest challenge is. But sometimes people aren’t so transparent; they’d rather keep their problems private. Depending on how well we know the person, some things we could probably figure out, but if we don’t really know, the Lord can help us. “For thou, even thou only, knowest the hearts of all the children of men” (1 Kings 8:39).

The second question is: “What do they need?” Do they need money? Do they need a friend? Do they need a peaceful heart to figure out the situation? Once we have a pretty good idea of what their biggest challenge is, find out what they need.

Then the third question is one we ask the Lord: “What are You telling me to do?” Maybe He’ll just tell us to pray. Maybe He’ll tell us to do something in the physical. Personally, I think He often tells us to do something in the physical realm and we just don’t act fast enough and it slips by us, or we think it’s just our imagination. If we think He’s telling us to do something we’re uncomfortable with we can always ask Him about it. He’ll be glad to find a way to let us know it was really Him.

These three questions will help us, when we’re serious about helping someone else:
1.      What is their biggest challenge?
2.      What do they need?
3.      What is the Lord telling me to do?

Love, Carolyn


Sunday, February 5, 2017

WE ALL HAVE INFLUENCE

 
WE ALL HAVE INFLUENCE
A couple weeks ago I was asked to try a new paint that I was told was “environmentally safe” and would give us the results we wanted. The fact that it was a two-part system made it suspect. The Lord influenced me to read the Material Safety Data sheets to find out just how toxic it really was. What I found was, though it’s not bad for the ozone, which is way up there, it’ll kill the guy next to you. There is no respirator, besides a full body suit, that will block one of the chemicals in the paint, and it has negative effects on male reproductive organs as well as causing cancer and pulmonary disorders. It’s so flammable, the vapors will crawl along the floor away from the can and can catch on fire easily.

I was pretty squawky about this to my fellow painters, but I toned it down somewhat when I told my boss I didn’t think he really wanted us to use that paint. He totally understood and it looks like we won’t be buying this product. I had a positive influence and if things go the way they should, many of my painter friends will be out of harm’s way on the job.

All of us have a realm of influence. No matter how small it may seem, it’s big to God. We are super important to the Lord in the things we do to “love our neighbor as ourselves” (Mark 12:31). To love our neighbors as ourselves is the second part of the one great commandment given by God in the Old Testament and given again by Jesus in the New Testament to those of us who follow Him.

This morning the Lord gave my best friend Jane and I a new realm of influence: A Big one. He inspired us to pray for the shaking up of the judges in the United States. It’s the judges who interpret the laws. They have tremendous power and influence, but there is corruption in the midst. Jesus spoke to the religious Pharisees, the interpreters of the law in His day: “O generation of vipers, how can ye, being evil, speak good things? for out of the abundance of the heart the mouth speaketh [is speaking].  A good man out of the good treasure of the heart bringeth [is bringing] forth good things: and an evil man out of the evil treasure bringeth [is bringing] forth evil things” (Matt. 12: 34).

I’m not saying that every judge is speaking evil judgements, but there are enough who have been under the influence of wrong thinking. Their hearts treasure pride in their own opinions and they have strayed from the truth that they are to interpret the laws, especially of the Constitution, as it was intended, according to the righteous laws of the Lord God of Heaven. The Lord told Jane and me to pray that their tongues be stopped and their minds scrambled. If appointed, they’ll get fired; if elected, something else will happen in their lives to either turn them around or block their influence.

So, why did the Lord give Jane and me this prayer job? We certainly don’t see ourselves as any huge significance, and yet we are, and so are you! We’re doing our best to do His will and we’re bold enough to just believe what He shows us, and just do it. We may think we are mere shepherds, but we all have a warrior on the inside!

The shepherd boy David’s only job was to take care of his flock of sheep. In his small realm of influence, he had to fight off a bear and a lion who came after his sheep, and he did it. This small boy was called by God later, to defeat the giant Goliath, who threatened Israel’s whole existence, and he did it. (See 1 Sam. 17).

Samson was just a regular guy. Before the incident with Delilah, he had married a Philistine woman. One day he went off and the wife’s father thought he abandoned her. The Philistine father kidnapped her and gave her to another guy to marry. Samson went after her and burned up fields of corn and vineyards as a retribution for the evil they had done. They came after him, arrested him, bound him up and then God worked in this regular guy to do something amazing.

“And the Spirit of the Lord came upon him mightily, and the ropes on his arms were like flax (linen) that had been burned, and his bonds dropped off his hands. He found a fresh jawbone of a donkey, so he reached out his hand and took it and killed a thousand men with it. Then Samson said, ‘With the jawbone of a donkey, heaps upon heaps, with the jawbone of a donkey I have struck down a thousand men’” (Judges 15:14-16).

One person who believed in our God wiped out a thousand men with only the jawbone of a donkey. That’s miraculous, but no more miraculous than what our Lord is asking us to do in these times.

You and I are the Davids and the Samsons of our day. We may think we only have influence over a few, but those few are highly important to God. And he is asking us to step it up a notch. God inspired me to expose the toxic nature of the new “environmentally safe” paint, so that many could be spared its negative influence. Today the Lord expected me to take on the toxic judges in prayer. To both I said yes.

Second Corinthians 10:4 tells us: “The weapons of our warfare are not carnal, but mighty through God to the pulling down of strong holds.” “For we wrestle not against flesh and blood, but against principalities, against powers, against the rulers of the darkness of this world, against spiritual wickedness in high places” (Eph. 6:12).

Let’s expect the Lord to expand our spiritual realms of influence and be ready to say yes to whatever He asks. It’s a little scary, but more than that, it’s exciting, wonderful and such an awesome privilege! The Lord is thrilled to have us.

Love, Carolyn

This weekend thru Tuesday: FREE Part 2 of WINGS: A JOURNEY IN FAITH.
Get it on Kindle or get a free PDF cjmolica@hotmail.com
Great chapters, including:
HISTORY IN THE HEAVENS

THE MISSING MANUAL
PRAYING AND SINGING IN TONGUES
POWER-PACKED BLESSINGS

PREACH YOURSELF HAPPY

CALLING THE DOG
THE ADVENTURE OF PLANTING SEEDS
FIXING EMOTIONAL PROBLEMS

THE QUEEN OF SHEBA HAS ARRIVED


Wednesday, February 1, 2017

NO POLITE CONVERSATIONS WITH SNAKES

NO POLITE CONVERSATIONS WITH SNAKES
In Revelation 12:9 we learn of “that old serpent, called the Devil, and Satan, which deceiveth the whole world.” He uses deception and trickery to take good people down the wrong road. The first place we see his sly ways is in Genesis 3:1, with Eve. “Now the serpent was more subtle than any beast of the field which the Lord God had made. And he said unto the woman, ‘Yea, hath God said, ‘Ye shall not eat of every tree of the garden?’” The serpent tries to get the woman to question what God said. The serpent knew perfectly well that God said there was one tree they shouldn’t eat of. It wasn’t that God was never going to let them eat of it; it was the tree of the knowledge of good and evil and as we see later, they just weren’t prepared for that knowledge yet. But the serpent was doing his best to make it seem that God wasn’t quite as wonderful as Eve thought He was. The devil was trying to bend her thinking.

What did Eve do with Satan’s sly question? That’s what I want to talk about: She responded. First Big mistake! She actually didn’t have to respond at all. She could have just told the serpent she wasn’t going to talk to him. When I lived in Johannesburg, South Africa, one of my jobs was acting secretary for the financial minister of the Witwatersrand University. My duties included answering his phone calls. I was to tell everyone that he would not be taking calls for the next three months, but I could take their number if they’d like to leave one. I was shocked! He was right there in the office, but he wasn’t going to take any phone calls for three months. Before this, I never even thought anyone could dare to do such a thing. I grew to think it was pretty awesome.

When I quit the religious group I was ordained under, they sent me several letters. I read the first one and then threw away all the rest, unopened, after that. I knew my decision to leave was the right one for me, so I didn’t need to see anything they had to say in the letters.

 In 2 Kings 18 the evil king Sennacherib wanted to capture Judah. He sent a messenger to badger the people with words to make them respond first, then be afraid and give up. But King Hezekiah of the Israelites had been given revelation and already told the people, “Answer him not” (v. 36). And they didn’t and Sennacherib was unable to take any of the cities. Eve should have been more like the people under Hezekiah’s care.

How many times has someone asked you a stupid question and instead of telling them you aren’t going to talk to them, you get into a ridiculous conversation that goes absolutely nowhere, or worse, you get into a heated argument?

When the Apostle Paul gave instructions to Timothy on how to be a better minister for the Lord, he says, “But foolish and unlearned questions avoid, knowing that they do gender strifes. And the servant of the Lord must not strive” (2 Tim. 2:23-24). I just love that. Jesus doesn’t want us to get into foolish arguments. And we have the Spirit of the Lord in us. You and I both know when someone is asking a stupid question, or one that is intended to start up an argument, or “debate.” Is it really worth it? The answer is, “Only if the Lord tells you to go for it.”

We don’t have to have a polite conversation with a snake. We have Holy Spirit in us and we are smart enough to know when it’s not wise to respond.

Love, Carolyn

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