Dear
Present Truth Magazine Subscriber:
We
are glad to have you as a subscriber to our Present Truth Magazine. Below
you will find articles from individual authors who have written for our
magazine. Our prayer for all who
receive read these articles is that the Lord "...may give to you the
Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the
knowledge of Him, the eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that you may
know what is the hope of His calling, and what are the riches of the glory of
His inheritance in the saints” (Ephesians 1:17-18).

DEVIL OR
FLESH?
By A. Wilson Phillips
Years ago comedian Flip Wilson
would humorously say, “The devil made me do it” when he was caught in some
unacceptable behavior. Unfortunately, some today seem to share Wilson’s
“theology,” and the comedians in our culture point out the flaws that
exist in postmodern Christianity. Pride deceives the human heart (Obad.
3), and too often we do not want to take responsibility for our immature
behavior and want to blame the devil—who has been defeated in our
redemptive history.
Paul and John, apostles of
Jesus Christ, wrote the truth concerning what is to blame for childish
rebellion that divides the church. Paul told the immature Corinthians that
they were living like mere men—babes who refused to grow up (1 Cor.
3:1-3). We see the same problem in our modern day.
John wrote:
Whoever commits
sin also commits lawlessness, and sin is lawlessness (rebellion).
And you know that He (Christ) was manifested to take away
our sins, and in Him there is no sin. Whoever abides in Him does
not sin (1 John 3:4-6a).
Paul wrote:
For if we have
been united together in the likeness of His (Christ’s) death,
certainly we also shall be in the likeness of His resurrection, knowing
this, that our old man (nature) was crucified with Him, that
the body of sin might be done away with, that we should no longer
be slaves of sin. For he who has died has been freed from sin
(Rom. 6:5-7).
Both apostles were declaring
that a consistent life in the spirit is free from the power of sin.
Watchman Nee, a Chinese
Christian brother who became mature through much suffering in Christ,
wrote about “the divide of the cross.” Nee said,
“The blood of Christ
cleanses our sins (plural)” (1 John 1:7). The co-crucifixion
with Christ frees us from the power of sin that causes us to commit
sins (Gal. 2:20).
In his Roman letter, Paul
explained our co-crucifixion and life in the Spirit:
There is therefore now
no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus, who do not walk
according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit. For the law of the
Spirit of life in Christ Jesus has made me free from the
law of sin and death…But if the Spirit of Him who raised Jesus from
the dead dwells in you, He who raised Christ from the dead will
also give life to your mortal bodies through His Spirit who dwells in you.
Therefore, brethren, we are debtors—not to the flesh, to live
according to the flesh. For if you live according to the flesh you will
die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body,
you will live (Rom. 8:1-2, 11-13).
Father God expects us to live
this normal Christian life that is free from the power of sin, self
(old nature), and Satan.
God’s prophet Moses also wrote
concerning the “devil-made-me-do-it” theology. Moses described how the
serpent (alias Lucifer, the devil, Satan, the dragon) tempted Adam
and Eve—the first parents, created in the image and likeness of God—to
disobey the voice of God in the garden of Eden.
God said to the serpent,
And I will put
enmity
Between you and
the woman,
And between
your seed and her Seed;
He shall bruise
your head,
And you shall
bruise His heel (Gen. 3:15).
The woman’s Seed refers
to Jesus, and He did triumph over the serpent. Mel Gibson’s movie The
Passion of the Christ wonderfully depicts the victory of the cross; it
is the greatest love story ever told.
Paul wrote of Lucifer’s
defeat—
Having
disarmed principalities and powers, He (Christ) made a
public spectacle of them, triumphing over them in it (the cross
episode) (Col. 2:15).
Paul told the suffering saints
in Rome (in about 56 A.D.): “And the God of peace will crush
Satan under your feet shortly” (Rom. 16:20). Some today say
that the word “shortly” does not mean “soon” but “swiftly”
at the end of the Christian age. Perhaps this is because of their “Flip
Wilson theology.” However, further study shows that Satan’s demise took
place in the first century.
Apostle John’s Revelation of
Jesus Christ proclaims:
Blessed is
he who reads and those who hear the words of this prophecy, and
keep those things which are written in it; for the time is near
(Rev. 1:3).
The Revelation of Jesus Christ
that John wrote to the seven churches in Asia was readable and
understandable—with all of its symbolism—to the first-century
believers. They believed what God’s prophets (Moses, Ezekiel, Daniel,
Joel, Zechariah, and Isaiah) had spoken and written concerning Jesus
Christ of Nazareth. Jesus quoted the prophets concerning the end of the
Jewish age (Matt. 24).
Revelation was written in about
65 or 66 A.D. before the destruction of the temple and the fall of
Jerusalem in a war with Rome. God used Rome to punish the Jews who had
rejected His Son.
John said he saw
...an angel
(messenger) coming down from heaven, having the key to the bottomless
pit and a great chain in his hand. He laid hold of the dragon, that
serpent of old, who is the Devil and Satan, and bound him for a thousand
years; and he cast him into the bottomless pit, and shut him up, and set a
seal on him, so that he should deceive the nations no more till the
thousand years were finished. But after these things he must be released
for a little while (Rev. 20:1-3).
I believe that this symbolizes
Jesus coming down from heaven as the Son of Man and binding Satan in order
that the gospel could be preached throughout the Roman Empire where God’s
covenant people were scattered (Col. 1:6a). He was then loosed for a
“little while” to provoke the Jewish war against Rome. This is in
keeping with God’s ways of judgment—using the ungodly to discipline His
covenant people. Isaiah said, “...I have created the spoiler to
destroy” (Is. 54:16).
Jesus Christ emptied Sheol/Hades
where the souls of men and women were held by the serpent from the time of
Adam until Christ (Heb. 2:14-15).
At Jesus’ coming (parousia),
when He returned in judgment (67 - 70 A.D.), death and Hades along with
the devil and his angels were cast into the lake of fire (John 5; Matt.
25:41; Rev. 20:11-15).
John’s summary could be:
For this
purpose the Son of God was manifested, that He might destroy the works
of the devil (1 John 3:8).
Our elder Brother defeated the
devil for us.
Today, all who are in union
with Father God, His firstborn Son of the new creation, and His Holy
Spirit can live free from the bondage of sin, Satan, and the flesh by
walking in the Spirit (Gal. 5:16-26).
Those who are Christ’s have
crucified the flesh
with
its passions and desires. If a brother or sister stumbles, let the mature
restore them in a spirit of gentleness (Gal.
6:1-2).
By faith in God’s Word and
Spirit, I say, “The best is yet to come.”
A. Wilson Phillips is the co-founding and senior
pastor of Abundant Life Covenant
Church.

THOSE LAST
DAYS
By Richard K. Clark
In our world today, it is
commonplace to hear someone declare with passion, “We’re living in the
last days!” Most likely this statement conjures up the notion that time,
as we know it, is about to end. Probably mixed in are an anti-Christ,
tribulation, Armageddon, judgment, and possibly a mass exodus of the
current Christian population from the earth. The term “last days” is
biblical, but it does not refer to a world-ending event in our day—it
refers to a world-ending event nearly 2000 years ago.
God, who at various times
and in various ways spoke in time past to the fathers by the prophets, has
in these last days spoken to us by His Son, whom He has appointed
heir of all things, through whom also He made the worlds; who being the
brightness of His glory and the express image of His person, and upholding
all things by the word of His power, when He had by Himself purged our
sins, sat down at the right hand of the Majesty on high (Heb.
1:1-3).
The Hebrew letter was written
in approximately 65 A.D. to encourage Jewish Christians to remain true to
their faith in Christ. They were living in “the last days of the old
covenant world” and were being persecuted by the Jews. Many of them
had been believers for many years and were drifting from their steadfast
confession of Christ’s new and better covenant.
In that He
says, “A new covenant,” He has made the first obsolete. Now what is
becoming obsolete and growing old is ready to vanish away (Heb.
8:13).
In a few short days, the temple
would be destroyed, and the 1,500-year tradition of sacrifice given
through Moses would be finished. Jesus had already paid the ultimate,
once-for-all sacrifice, and His soon coming would complete His high
priestly duties.
...so Christ was offered
once to bear the sins of many. To those who eagerly wait for Him He
will appear a second time, apart from sin, for salvation (Heb.
9:28).
Therefore the Hebrew
Christians were repeatedly admonished to practice their “diligence to
the full assurance of hope until the end” (Heb. 6:11).
…let us draw near with a
true heart in full assurance of faith, having our hearts sprinkled from an
evil conscience and our bodies washed with pure water. Let us hold fast
the confession of our hope without wavering, for He who promised is
faithful. And let us consider one another in order to stir up love and
good works, not forsaking the assembling of ourselves together, as is the
manner of some, but exhorting one another, and so much the more as you
see the Day approaching (Heb. 10:22-25).
The “day
approaching” was the revealing (parousia) of
Christ.
The New Testament gospels foretold the last days, the epistles confirmed
their imminency, and the Revelation said the time had come. Biblically,
those were the only “last days.” Today we live in the “everlasting
covenant” (Heb. 13:20).
Richard K. Clark is an associate pastor of Abundant Life Covenant Church.

Re-Made in the Image of God
By Benjamin Davis
I frequently read about the
debate between evolution and creation—or the new term that is meant to
be acceptable for public school teaching, “intelligent design.” On one
side of the debate, evolutionists believe that the theory of evolution
is the only valid scientific theory that should be taught in the
schools. On the other side is a growing number of scientists who are
showing that intelligent design in creation has as much scientific proof
as evolution and should be taught along side other theories. I believe
there is a greater issue at stake: the truth of how God relates to His
own image.
Scripture says, “In the
beginning God created…” (Gen. 1:1). After He created the heavens and
the earth, He created animals, each “according to its kind” (Gen.
1:24-25), implying that there could be room for microevolution within the
species He created but not macroevolution between species. God’s final
creation was mankind.
The unique thing about
mankind’s creation is the words God used to communicate His intention:
“Let Us make man in Our image, according to Our likeness”
(Gen. 1:26). Animals were made according to their kind, but mankind was
made according to God’s image!
After God declared His image in
the creation of man, He went on to define what His image was like: “Let
them have dominion…” (1:26, 28).
Adam and Eve were created to
have dominion and subdue the earth. They practiced their dominion in the
garden as they walked with God. However, after they sinned, they
immediately failed to practice dominion and were dominated by sin. First,
the serpent dominated them by deceiving them. Second, they hid from God,
saying, “I heard Your voice in the garden, and I was afraid
because I was naked…” (3:10). Adam and Eve had manifested God’s image
by having dominion over fear and shame so they could walk with God in the
garden. Now they were being dominated by the negative emotions that caused
them to hide from God.
Sin entered the whole human
race at Adam’s fall (Rom. 5:12). To illustrate this point, God tells us
the story of two of Adam’s children, Cain and Abel. When Abel’s sacrifice
to the Lord was accepted and Cain’s was not, Cain became dominated by
jealousy and self-pity. The Lord said to him:
Why has your
countenance fallen? …sin lies at the door. And its desire is for you
(to rule over you), but you should rule over it (have
dominion) (4:6-7).
Cain did not rule over it and
murdered his brother Abel. The Old Testament goes on to reveal story after
story of men and women being dominated by sin rather than ruling over it.
Then Jesus appears on the scene.
The story of Jesus is one test
after another concerning dominion. As a youth (12 years old), He was
tested with youthful independence in Jerusalem. He practiced dominion over
it by returning with His parents to be “subject to them” (Luke
2:51). When He was tested in the wilderness, He was tested with the lust
of the flesh, the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life (1 John 2:16).
He practiced dominion over each as He quoted Scripture to rebuke the
devil’s lies. Finally, in the garden of Gethsemane, He practiced dominion
over self-preservation and pride as He went willingly, in obedience to the
Father, to the cross.
God can only bless His own
image; because of His holiness, He must curse (judge) the rest. When
He created Adam and Eve, He blessed them and gave them their assignment to
multiply and practice dominion. Because of Adam’s sin, however, all
mankind is tainted with sin and therefore under God’s judgment. The good
news is that in Christ we have been re-made into God’s image. In Christ,
we have
...put on the
new man who is renewed in knowledge according to the image of
Him who created him... (Col. 3:10).
As we practice dominion over
sin in these bodies, we are qualified to receive the full blessings of God.
He
who says he abides in Him (Jesus) ought himself also to walk just
as He (Jesus) walked (1 John 2:6).
Said another
way, “Anyone who says he is a Christian should live as Christ did”
(TLB).
Benjamin Davis is an associate pastor of Abundant Life Covenant Church

WONDERFUL WORDS OF LIFE
By Jonathan Clark
Sing them over again to me
Wonderful words of life
Let me more of their beauty see
Wonderful words of life.
Just as we set goals for our
kids, Father God has set goals for His children. A wise question for me to
ask Him every morning would be, “Father, what goals have You set for me
today?”
Then it’s time to still my soul
and listen, for God is always communicating, and I would do well to hear
His words today. His words are refreshing to my soul. His words are life
to my spirit. As I hear and receive His words of life, I speak them
inwardly. As I meditate inwardly on His words, the Father and I can have
ongoing inner fellowship of heart and soul.
However, God’s goals for me
almost always supercede the beautiful inner fellowship that we have…He
desires that I take the next step and speak His powerful words out of my
mouth. His words become my words. This is vitally important
because:
God’s ultimate goal for me is
that I grow spiritually into the likeness of Christ. For me to grow, He
will challenge me daily in my circumstances. He (not the devil) will apply
pressure to my life. He may use others to apply pressure, but they are not
the source of my stress.
If I am experiencing any
stress, I have created it myself (through my words and thoughts). Stress
is my improper response (heart and mouth) to His growth stimulus. Properly
responding to His pressure produces robust growth; stress produces anxiety
and poor health. Stress is never His goal for me.
To grow into the likeness of
Christ is to speak His words of life with a kind voice—so that my words
may smooth the way, light the day, lessen stress,
heal, and bless. I must
keep strife and stress not only out of my words but also out of my voice
(paraphrased from the book Power of Speaking Positively
by Joy Haney).
Words of life and beauty
Teach me faith
and duty
Beautiful
words, wonderful words
Wonderful words
of life.
Jonathan Clark is an elder of Abundant Life Covenant Church and a physician in
Springfield, Missouri.

Parenthood: God’s Greatest Risk
By Benjamin Davis
In working with youth, I have
discovered that one of the greatest struggles youth will face in their
Christianity is the way they relate to their parents. This relationship is
where “the rubber hits the road” in their faith. To help them in this
area, I will often misquote, then quote Ephesians 6:1—
Children, obey your parents in
the Lord, for they are always right.
Actually, I’m still looking for
a Bible that says that. To quote correctly, Paul said,
Children, obey your parents
in the Lord, for this is right. “Honor your father and mother,”
which is the first commandment with promise: “that it may be well with you
and you may live long on the earth” (Eph. 6:1-3).
Each of the Ten Commandments
has implied promises, but God felt the need to articulate a promise with
this commandment. It is right in God’s eyes that children should obey and
honor their parents. As youth learn to obey and honor their parents, they
learn to respect authority, which will enable them to relate rightly to
others in authority so they can live long and enjoy God’s life on the
earth.
The greatest risk God took
in creation was parenthood. When He created Adam and Eve in His image,
He blessed them and said, “Be fruitful and multiply” (Gen. 1:28).
Adam and Eve were created to practice intimacy in God’s image. As they had
children, all that they were—both good and bad—would go straight into
their children.
Today as parents, it is the
same. When we have children, all that we are, both good and bad, goes
straight into our children. The gospel of “do as I say not as I do” does
not work in parenting. In truth, we model for our children, and they
naturally grow up into our image. For this reason, when I see things in my
children that I do not like, the first question I have learned to ask the
Lord is, “Did they learn this behavior from me?” If the answer is yes,
then change must be made in me before lasting change can be made in my
children’s lives.
God took a great risk in
creating parenthood, but there is also potential for great reward. Our
children are the best disciples we will ever have because they naturally
model after us and want to grow up into our image. The apostle Paul, as a
spiritual father, recognized this truth and wrote:
The things
which you learned and received and heard and saw
in me, these do, and the God of peace will be with you (Phil. 4:9).
It is God’s
desire that parents grow up into His image and live out the image of Jesus
on this earth. God will use our children in this process to help grow us
up. As we grow into God’s image, we will be able to say to our children,
“The things which you learned and received and heard and saw in me, these
do, and the God of peace will be with you.”

GOD’S CAREER PLANNING
By Amy Clark
Growing up, I thought I had to
go to college to be a successful person or to have any kind of respect in
this world. When I graduated high school, I went right into college
without any understanding as to why I was there. Father God spoke strongly
to my spirit that He had different plans for my life. I felt He did not
want me to go to school for the time being. This gave me great peace,
because I had felt like I was wasting my time and my parents’ money since
I had no clear direction of what I was called to do. As word got out to
friends and family, I had feelings of inadequacy and failure. I know that
they wondered how I was going to make it in life without a college
education.
Through the Lord’s direction
and some help from a friend, I got a job as a pharmacy technician. I
worked there for about eight months and then felt the Lord leading me to
move on. I knew that the Lord wanted to bless my husband and me through an
increase, and I eventually transferred to Cox North Hospital’s business
office to work as an insurance follow-up representative. I did this for
about a year and a half and enjoyed my job and co-workers.
My husband mentioned that I
could work my way up at Cox. I was not looking for another job or even
wanting something different. I told him that I did not see any way of
moving up without a college education. My husband responded, “So God can’t
create a job for you?” I did not realize I was limiting an unlimited God.
The Person who created everything could not provide another increase for
us?
A few months later, I received
an e-mail from my manager saying a new position had been created, and it
would be an increase in pay. I knew I needed to apply for that job but put
off telling my manager because I knew more pay meant more responsibility
and accountability. The Holy Spirit led me to several verses, and I wrote
them down and took them to work with me.
But seek first
the kingdom of God and His righteousness, and all these things shall be
added to you (Matt. 6:33).
Ask, and it
will be given to you; seek, and you will find; knock, and it will be
opened to you. For everyone who asks receives, and he who seeks finds, and
to him who knocks, it will be opened (Matt. 7:7-8).
If you abide in
Me, and My words abide in you, you will ask what you desire, and it shall
be done for you (John 15:7).
Until now you
have asked nothing in My name. Ask, and you will receive, that your joy
may be full (John 16:24).
The next day I went to work and
applied for the job. I am now a financial counselor for Cox.
The Lord takes us through tests
and trials to grow us up to become like His Son and to solidify our
foundation in Him. The storms may rock our boat, but as long as we act on
His Word, we will not tip over or sink.
My work is sacred not secular.
As I feed on His Word, I must expect Him to manifest His miracles through
me in my workplace.
Amy Clark is a financial counselor for Cox
Health. She and her husband Kyle lead Abundant Life Ministries at Missouri
State University.

Finding the Will of God
for Your Life
By Byron Hamilton
During my teenage years, the
“will of God” was always a common topic discussed at our annual
youth camps. If it wasn’t part of the prepared agenda, it would always get
raised during the open question-and-answer sessions. With our adult years
still ahead of us, the desire to know the will of God was especially
pressing. Then there were always the “what if” questions: What if you
miss the will of God for your life? What if you married the wrong person?
What if you sinned and made irreversible choices?
At some point in my spiritual
journey, it was explained to me that God had three wills: His (a) perfect,
(b) acceptable, and (c) good will. This concept came from Romans 12:2,
where we are exhorted, not to be “conformed to this world…” but
“prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.” I
was taught: God’s desire is that we find His “perfect” will, however, if
we screw up and make those bad choices then we have to settle for His
“acceptable” will. And if we manage to foil that plan, then we drop down
another notch to just His “good’ will.
This poor interpretation of
Scripture puts those of us who are less than perfect into a life of
despair and confines us to a state of complacency, once we lose His
perfect will. As I have walked with the Lord over the years, I have come
to realize that God is so much bigger than One who keeps changing His will
in response to my poor decisions. I have learned that God has only one
over-riding will—that is, to conform me to the image of His Son.
And we know
that all things work together for good to those who love God, to those who
are the called according to His purpose. For whom He foreknew, He also
predestined to be conformed to the image of His Son, that Christ might
be the firstborn among many brethren (Rom. 8:28-29).
I have learned that nothing is
beyond the Father’s reach to use as a tool to accomplish this purpose in
my life. So even immoral living, failed relationships, felonies—you name
it—all become part of His arsenal to accomplish His overall will for me.
Although I am responsible for my choices and will suffer the consequences
of my decisions, God is still in control and will use these things to
conform me to His image. Thus, He can assert that all things work
together for good … for those who are called according to His purpose.
God also uses my current
circumstances to remove behavioral patterns from me as He continues this
process. This often feels like being pulled through a knothole in a wooden
fence. To maximize the benefits of my “knothole” experiences, I must
actively yield to His lordship, repent to Him and others of my wrong
thinking, words, and actions, renew my mind to the truth of His Word, and
allow this transformation to take place.
But we all,
with unveiled face, beholding as in a mirror the glory of the Lord, are
being transformed into the same image from glory to glory, just as by the
Spirit of the Lord (2 Cor. 3:18).
I must follow the Holy Spirit’s
leading in finding the right job, living in the right place, marrying the
right person, etc. However, my confidence rests in Him who will always
cause me to fulfill His will—transforming me to His image.
...being
confident of this very thing, that He who has begun a good work in you
will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ (Phil. 1:6).
As this transformation takes
place in me and those of us who make up the body of Christ, the result is
that the church as a whole is transformed into Christ’s image. We will
continue to be equipped by God’s delegated authorities “till we all
come to the unity of the faith and of the knowledge of the Son of God, to
a perfect man, to the measure of the stature of the fullness of Christ”
(Eph. 4:13).
Byron and his wife Leesa own Med-Soft National Training
Institute in Springfield, Missouri.

TURNING POINT IN MY LIFE
By Janissa Hole
Not
too long ago something wonderful happened… I surrendered my life
completely to the Lord, and He changed me! Over and over, people have
said to me that my eyes are clear and sparkly—which they hadn’t been for
a very long time.
As a
teenager in high school, I had a very close walk with God. When I was 19,
we left our hometown, and I moved in with my aunt in a different town than
where my mom and siblings were going to live. I had fewer rules, less
stipulations, and could basically come and go as I pleased. I started a
new job and made friends with people my own age who were not Christians.
After the move, I didn’t get reestablished in a church home. I was
completely out of my norm and did not make the right choices.
Eventually, I started going to parties, which involved heavy drinking and
smoking pot and cigarettes. At the time, I thought clubbing and partying
was the way to go—but the Lord brought me to a place where I had no choice
but to give it up.
At the
age of 20, my life started going downhill fast. I was hanging
around with people who did methamphetamines, even though I wasn’t doing
them. I moved into my own apartment, and one of the guys I hung out with
needed a place to stay. I invited him to stay with me. After he moved in
with me, he quit working, and money got really tight; I couldn’t meet my
bills. I ended up moving in with a friend and his mom and lost my
apartment. While I was there, I did things I said I would never do and
some things I had never even thought of doing. I ended up getting in
trouble with the law—twice.
Just
four years before this happened, I was a Christian girl, active in my
youth group and knew right from wrong. I chose the life of the world, and
now I am on probation with the law for five years.
After
all these wrong choices and suffering the consequences of those choices, I
was labeled with a mental illness: “bi-polar with schizoaffective
disorder.” I was admitted to the psychiatric floor of the hospital, twice.
I felt I had hundreds of voices talking in my head all at once. I would
even cut myself just to relieve the pain in my mind. I saw things that
weren’t there. I heard things that didn’t exist. I went to no less than
ten doctors and ended up on nine different medications. Since God has been
working in my life, I am down to only four. I know that God is going to
heal me completely, and that one day my testimony will be that I no longer
need medication. I will not have this the rest of my life as I was told,
and I believe that with all of my heart.
My life
seemed out of control, and I felt like I was going nowhere. Over a process
of four months, God has been working on me and slowly bringing me around.
I have had a few setbacks when I rebelled against what He was telling me
to do. Recently one night my mom started talking to me about what she was
doing for her quiet time with the Lord. I was like “Yeah, that’s nice.”
Before I knew it, we were talking about me and my walk with the Lord. She
made some really good points that got me to seriously thinking.
Eventually, the tears came, and I found myself saying, “I want to be where
I used to be in my faith and walk as a high school teenager.” God, through
my mom, had brought up old memories of how I used to be. That’s when I
realized how much I missed living in the light. I longed for it—for
knowledge, for strength in the Lord, and for His love. I finally gave up.
Now I am praising Him every day as I rediscover Him.
Since I
have surrendered to my Lord and have been walking with Him, I could not be
happier! And I can see that there was purpose in my pain, because it has
brought me to where I am today.
Janissa Hole lives and works in
Springfield, Missouri.

LOST AND FOUND
By Michael Lawrence
The effectual fervent prayer of a righteous man
availeth much.
I remember it well. I was barely clinging to the
emotional roller coaster ride that was my turbulent mid-twenties—clinging
to be in control, yet very much out of control and flailing
about—inadvertently buffeting those who, through no real fault of their
own, were along for the ride. A few years before, I had experienced a
frightening and shamefully painful emotional collapse, being relegated to
a locked facility for several months. I still had no clue why it had
happened to me. I did not know anything that I could do nor anything that
I could avoid doing that would prevent it from happening to me again.
After I had recovered, I began working for a
relatively large electrical contracting firm, wiring houses for them. Once
I was given a sizable new house to wire. During the project that lasted
for more than a year, I worked closely with the lady of the new house. I
helped her make the numerous necessary decisions as she chose the various
elements of a complete wiring system. She was almost ten years my senior,
married with children, quite attractive, comfortably friendly, and very
outgoing—at times near the point of exhibitionism. Yet there was a certain
unmistakable aura of wholesomeness about her. I immediately developed a
little crush on her.
I remember using an embossing
tool to plainly label the electrical distribution panel’s various circuits
in bold letters when I was near the end of the project. Using the same
labeler, I added the date and my name near the bottom on the inside of the
panel cover door. Then, I moved on to other projects, other companies,
“through many dangers, toils and snares.”
I once was lost, but now
am found.
Almost a decade later, I was
hunted down, apprehended, and forced into full surrender by the God of all
comfort. Being without a church home yet hungry for spiritual nourishment,
I decided to attend the Bible study that a counselor had recommended. It
met on Friday nights at a hotel in the city not far from the town where I
was living at the time.
I remember being a little
nervous driving to the city, going into the hotel, seeing the sign
directing to the room where the study was about to start. I would be among
strangers, I surmised. The first face I saw upon entering the classroom,
however, was a friendly one. It was the lady of the large new house, the
woman that I had worked with almost a decade before. She smiled and was
genuinely glad to see me. She asked her husband if he remembered me. Then
she told a story.
She said at times during the
years that they had lived in the house, she would have to go down into the
basement to the electrical panel and either turn a circuit off or turn one
on, depending on the situation. She said she was always drawn to my name
inside the panel cover. She said that somehow she had known that I was in
turmoil. She said she would always put her fingers on my name and pray for
me.
Michael Lawrence owns and operates
Lawrence Electric Company and is a freelance writer.

LEARNING GOD’S WAYS
By Kyle Clark
Today, if you will hear His voice:
“Do not harden your hearts, as in the rebellion,
As in the day of trial in the wilderness,
When your fathers tested Me;
They tried Me, though they saw My work.
For forty years I was grieved with that generation,
And said, ‘It is a people who go astray in their hearts,
And they do not know My ways.’
So I swore in My wrath,
‘They shall not enter My rest’” (Ps. 95:7b-11).
Unfortunately in our culture
today, many Christians recognize God’s work but do not know His ways. Many
fail to understand Holy Spirit’s discipline in our lives. God uses our
flesh to discipline us to bring us to maturity. I have come to know this
by revelation as God has been disciplining me.
A few months ago I began to
practice a healthier lifestyle. I stopped overeating and began to exercise
more regularly. Since I got married, the problem I had was overeating. I
would exercise, but eating a great deal obviously worked against me. A guy
in our church told me, “You eat to live, not live to eat.” I recognized
that I was living to eat. When I decided to eat healthier, the consistency
came easier.
Everyone has to deal with the
flesh, which hinders his or her development in God’s kingdom. My flesh
pattern was overeating. I know the image I portray speaks as loud as the
words I say. People need to see me live the life and hear me speak words
of life; the two go hand-in-hand. I didn’t lose hundreds of pounds, but I
prevented myself from having a serious problem in the future.
God’s way is to harness every
aspect of our lives. He wants us to enjoy life and at the same time
understand that He is first—with no exceptions. Too often, we see God do
wonderful works of healing, provision, and protection and then fail to see
the Holy Spirit’s dealing in our personal lives. If we do not hear the
voice of the Spirit today, we will perish in the wilderness and never
enter God’s rest (promised land).
Kyle Clark is a religious studies major at
Missouri State University. He and his wife Amy lead the Abundant Life
Ministries on campus.