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Grow in Prayer

8 Aug

Two categories of prayer :

  1. Subsidiary “Chatter” praying
  2. Formal “Tap Root” praying

The podcast is at –
http://www.greentreechurch.com/message-sort/podcasts-by-series/treasuring-your-treasure-values-of-gtcc/
A Worksheet of suggestions to grow in Prayer
Informal “Chatter” Prayer
1. Pay attention to the conversation in your head, and understand, deliberately, that God is part of it.
2. Cultivate awareness of complaints, turn them into praise through an act of willful prayer.
3. Praise Him for the delightful things that catch your eye.
4. Pay attention to the body of language of people and pray for them according to the insight.
5. Practice random acts of prayer.
6. Share with someone that you are doing all these things and invite them to be a fellow traveler.
7. Always (always means always) at a verbal or unconscious level, receive the fullness of the Holy Spirit by saying an informed “thank You.”

Formal Prayer
1. Set aside a time and place every week. Mark it as high priority, meaning you will only cancel the appointment for death or sickness. Start with 30 minutes. Keep increasing. Set a goal to grow to a full day in prayer.
2. Find (ask for help from the Holy Spirit or your prayer traveler) a scripture and pray your way through it.
3. Buy a Book of written prayers, and read them as your own (e.g “In the Valley of Vision”) Ask around and search for more.
4. Buy and study a book on prayer (e.g. “Prayer” by O. Hallesby) Ask around and search for more.
5. Use the Lord’s Prayer as a template. (Maximise: Your Name, Your will, Your Kingdom (Develop a relationship with a few missionaries, familiarize yourself with and pray for the persecuted church), Temptation (Reflect on your life and the chatter in your head and understand the dynamics of your individual temptation) and Forgiveness (Your need of, any people you have not forgiven). Minimize: Daily Bread
6. Write out some formal prayers.
7. Never pray without first reflecting on the Majesty of God. Never Ever. Let your first sentence(s) always be in exaltation of Him. Always. Every time.
8. Seek always to pray with a scripture in mind, and apply the scripture to the requests (daily bread) you make.
9. Invite a friend to do help you develop and hold yourself accountable.
10. Develop a list of promises God has made, and pray them in their context. E.g. The Church (look for promises in Ephesians; Holiness, Look for promises in 1 and 2 Peter. Develop your own lists)
11. Introduce lofty praying in every context where you pray.
12. Always (always means always) at a verbal or unconscious level, receive the fullness of the Holy Spirit by saying an informed “thank You.”

Treasuring your Treasures

5 Jul

Matthew 6:17-23
Where your treasure is, there will your heart be also. A podcast
http://www.greentreechurch.com/message-sort/podcasts-by-series/treasuring-your-treasure-values-of-gtcc/

Diamonds that Sparkle – Romans 15:14-22

1 Jun

A Sermon on May 27 at Greentree Community Church

http://www.greentreechurch.com/sermon/diamonds-that-sparkle/

Have Kleenex to hand

19 Apr

http://www.youtube.com/watch_popup?v=W5mbldTkruM&feature=share

God is Good

19 Apr

God is good. There is a beauty in the name appropriated by the Saxon nations to the Deity, unequalled except by his most reverential Hebrew appellation. They called him “GOD, “which is literally “THE GOOD.” The same word thus signifying the Deity, and his most endearing quality. Turner, in Spurgeon’s Treasury of David, on Psalm 73

From the Inside Out

30 Mar

A podcast of a message on Romans 12:14-21
http://www.greentreechurch.com/sermon/from-the-inside-out/

Show me the Way # 4

13 Jan

THE PATH OF LIFE

You make known to me the path of life;
you will fill me with joy in your presence,
with eternal pleasures at your right hand. Psalm 16:11

The Dynamics of the Path of Life from Psalm 16

1                  Cry out “Help!” Preserve me! (v1) Blog on Dec 5

2                  Recognize God is the Lifeguard  (v1) Preserve me, O God Blog on Dec 15

3                  Committed Trust (v2) In You do I put my trust and hide myself. Blog on Dec 30

4   apart from you I have no good thing (v2)

Imagine the conversation when King Hussein of Jordan proposed marriage to Lisa Halaby, a commoner from the USA.

King Hussein: “Will you marry me?”

Lisa (blushing): “I am flattered, Your Majesty,  but it is out of the realms of possibility! I am a commoner. I have student loans to pay off at Princeton. I have a huge credit card      balance. I am struggling to make my car payments and I am 6 months in arrears on my apartment.”

His Majesty: “My dear, I make $10 million a month in oil revenues. I can take care of all that with one hour of income. Will you marry me?”

 Every good thing I have comes from you

Love does not flinch from finding a way to force us to cope beyond our inadequacies.

Helen Keller was an infant when she was struck by illness that left her both blind and deaf, this before she could speak. The child was angry, unruly, unmanageable and untamable. Ann Sullivan was hired to teach Helen Keller. Anne’s initial handling of Helen was rough, even brutal, and shocked the parents who kept interfering. Anne insisted she move with Helen alone into a nearby cottage.  Initially, sounds of violence increased the anxiety of her parents. Persistent love penetrated the isolation of the seven year old. Together Anne and Helen became role models that make one weep with joy and wonder. God’s task is with those who are spiritually deaf and blind. The first necessity is to get our attention. When Helen first grasped that the signs being spelt into her hand were symbols that named reality, enabling communication, she never looked back. She had no goodness apart from “Teacher” as she always called Anne. Every good thing came from this relationship. It is in this sense that David says “Every good thing I have comes from you.”

For David, trust includes accepting the circumstances that brought him to cry out for help. Those very circumstances brought him to a new appreciation of God. Sure, they were rough, but he (we) tend to have hearts calloused into hardness, hearts that require tough love.

This now becomes the foundation for the future. “Teacher” has demonstrated persistent love; trust has bonded pupil and teacher; and now all things are possible. Helen went on to a brilliant career, including public speaking. Remember, she could not recall ever having heard a single word pronounced.

 Every good thing I have comes from you, an exclamation of gratitude

 Let us give thanks to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! For in our union with Christ he has blessed us by giving us every spiritual blessing in the heavenly world. (Ephesians 1:3)

Every good thing I have comes from you, an exclamation of confidence

The dimensions of trust are now fully revealed. A bankrupt commoner has joined estates with a Royal Multi-Billionaire. All debts are paid. All future needs are no longer a concern. David eloquently expresses this in later Psalm 16

And so I am thankful and glad,
and I feel completely secure,
because you protect me from the power of death.
I have served you faithfully,
and you will not abandon me to the world of the dead. (vv9-10)

Every good thing I have comes from you, a fact of history

The Apostle Peter preaching the first Christian Sermon quoted Psalm 16 (Acts 2):

24 But God raised Jesus from the dead, freeing him from the agony of death, because it was impossible for death to keep its hold on him. 25 David said about him:

“‘I saw the Lord always before me.
Because he is at my right hand,
I will not be shaken.
26 Therefore my heart is glad and my tongue rejoices;
my body also will rest in hope,
27 because you will not abandon me to the realm of the dead,
you will not let your holy one see decay.
28 You have made known to me the paths of life;
you will fill me with joy in your presence.

29 “Fellow Israelites, I can tell you confidently that the patriarch David died and was buried, and his tomb is here to this day. 30 But he was a prophet and knew that God had promised him on oath that he would place one of his descendants on his throne. 31 Seeing what was to come, he spoke of the resurrection of the Messiah, that he was not abandoned to the realm of the dead, nor did his body see decay. 32 God has raised this Jesus to life, and we are all witnesses of it.

God raised Jesus to life, and we through faith, are participants in it.

Fear and anxiety, guilt and shame, all, all swallowed in the spectacular munificence of the gracious Groom. The last enemy is death. If that be conquered, then all else is – must be – under His sway.

Show Me the Way #2 The Plumber

15 Dec

THE PATH OF LIFE

You make known to me the path of life;
you will fill me with joy in your presence,
with eternal pleasures at your right hand. Psalm 16:11

Preserve me O God, for in You I put my trust.  Psalm 16:1

It was a very expensive mistake. I neglected the maintenance of the sewer line, and when it became apparent a problem was brewing, I attempted to fix it myself. My amateurish efforts proved useless, and a messy film of raw sewerage flooded the basement laundry. My problem was now compounded: the stinking mess needed clearing; all the plumbing in the entire house was inoperable; and the clogged line still had to be cleared. It now needed an urgent call to 3 experts. Sigh.

Preserve me Is a desperate cry, but it is often misdirected, compounding the problem.

  • Self help, as addicted people in recovery testify, is the proud man’s attempt to fix matters himself. With real problems it usually leads to denial or masking; deliverance requires the confession “I am helpless and need to submit to a Higher Power.” HELP!
  • Human help normally consists of sound advice (repeated to the point of nagging in some relationships) all pretty useless for someone caught in a life threatening situation. What is the point of a lifeguard who responds to the cry of help from a drowning person by reading “A Dummy’s Guide to Swimming” over a loudspeaker?
  • David’s cry is addressed to an Expert Helper. Preserve me O God, for in You I put my trust.  The Hebrew word for God is EL (אל ‘el). It means strong, mighty, a mighty one, a hero.

He is a capable helper that can be trusted.

This lifeguard plunges right into our ocean of turmoil. Isaiah (9:2) records:  

 The people walking in darkness
have seen a great light;
on those living in the land of deep darkness
a light has dawned.

Then he describes the light in v 6:

For to us a child is born,
to us a son is given,
and the government will be on his shoulders.
And he will be called
   
Wonderful Counselor, Mighty God, ( אל EL)
Everlasting Father, Prince of Peace.

What a Life Guard!

  • The Mighty God shows us the path of life:
  • his counsel causes wonderment;
  • he bestows his peace upon us;
  • all as a wise heavenly father.

He is the three-fold Expert who clears the sewer line, cleans the mess and restores the plumbing to full functionality.

When there is a stinking mess, there is no point in waiting. Cry to him for help right now, and determine to discover the dynamics of The Path as we continue in Psalm 16.

Show me the Way # 1

13 Dec

THE PATH OF LIFE

11 You make known to me the path of life;
you will fill me with joy in your presence,
with eternal pleasures at your right hand.

“Help!” The shout sounded desperate and immediately the lifeguard on duty scanned the thronged beach. “Help!” There! The cry came again, distinct above the crash of the waves and from the normal hubbub of the happy beach. “Help!” It was hard to distinguish exactly where the sound came from, given the distracting noises and the “where’s-Waldo” scenario of a packed and multi-colored mob of moving sun and fun seekers. The lifeguard also knew the person shouting might well be underwater between alarms. Finally he glimpsed a waving arm in a trough between the foam of crashing surf. A drowning person is calling for a trusted lifeguard to come to the rescue.

Psalm 16 starts with a similar scenario. 1 Preserve me, O God, for in You I put my trust. (NKJV) David does not define his trouble, but the desperation of his cry resonates with the anxiety of any and every hue. Life is dangerous –

  • physical life is precarious, witness weird bacteria and unpredictable traffic;
  • and spiritual life is described as wrestling with powers greater than ourselves, where the devil is described as a roaring lion seeking to devour;
  • practically, tedium, boredom, dissatisfaction, insignificance are all symptoms of a rut – a rut is a shallow grave.

HELP! HELP! HELP!

David’s example instructs us to cry to God any time we are overwhelmed in the foamy trough of the crashing breakers of life, whether physical, spiritual or in practice. Drowning swimmers are not likely to delay the cry for help, neither should overwhelmed people.

Preserve can have either positive or negative connotations. Those who swim among sharks usually do so in metal cages. This is safe, but terribly inhibiting. David develops the dynamic of preservation positively. In contrast to the confining safety of a steel cage, he explores preservation as the path of life where joy is constant and pleasures are eternal. Far from simply being caged for safety, a plan to snorkel, surf and sail in safe enjoyment is in mind. Full potential cannot be attained from a restricted existence in a cage; it requires the freedom to range. Full potential requires liberty to explore both deep and wide with complete confidence.

11 You make known to me the path of life;
you will fill me with joy in your presence,
with eternal pleasures at your right hand.

May this tempt you, whet your appetite and lead you into a journey of discovery.

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9 Dec