FIRST-TIME MISSIONARIES IN PRIME TIME

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Day 14

FIRST-TIME MISSIONARIES IN PRIME TIME

READ:

Acts 13.1-52

This chapter tells of the first missionary journey. The Holy Spirit selects Saul/Paul and Barnabas and sends them out. They certainly don’t know exactly what is going to happen when they leave their home base and venture out. They travel to Cyprus and go to the city of Paphos where they immediately run into opposition. Witchcraft! The Holy Spirit, who Jesus says guides us into all truth, points out the sorcerer to them, and they prophesy against him. And then these radical brothers for the Lord go to a synagogue where they are asked to get up and preach. These brothers begin to recount the whole history of Israel and the message of Jesus to the Jews who were listening to this new and totally awesome Word. They are invited back and this time the whole city comes to hear them. Some people rise up in opposition to the message of Jesus, but these brothers hold true and keep on preachin’! The work that the Holy Spirit sent them to do was accomplished because we read that “The message about the Lord spread all over this region” (v 49). These guys were filled with joy and with the Holy Spirit, and they shared it with those who would listen.


REFLECT:


Are you asking God to help you be radical? Are you asking God to fill you with the Holy Spirit so you can be sold out for God?

PRAY:

God, I like where I am, but you, Lord, may have others plans for me. If you want me to go somewhere like you did Paul and Barnabas, please let me know. Thank you, Lord—I can always count on you to talk to me

THE CHURCH PRAYS 24/7, GOD ANSWERS—AWESOME!

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Day 13

THE CHURCH PRAYS 24/7, GOD ANSWERS—AWESOME!

READ:

Acts 12.1-25

In this chapter, King Herod goes on a rampage and begins to lock up the Lord’s followers and kill those he didn’t put in prison. The apostle James loses his head, literally, and Peter is thrown in jail. When the people of God heard about Brother Peter being locked up, they began to pray around the clock. God heard their prayers, and answered with miracles. God sent an angel to release Peter from prison. Every chain fell off Bro. Peter, and every door opened automatically! Even the iron gate to the city! Awesome!


Peter then went to the house where his people were praying for him and even they couldn’t believe that Peter was free. God is truly a prayer-answering God. Later, God punished King Herod for thinking in his heart that he was God. While he was sitting on his throne an angel struck him down for taking the honor that belonged to God. Afterward, worms ate him alive and he died. Herod died but “God’s message kept spreading” (v 24). No one can stop the message of the gospel of Christ!

REFLECT:


When you pray, do you really believe that God will answer your prayer?

PRAY:

Lord, I know that rough times may come. Like Peter, I may be persecuted for believing in you. If that time comes, God, would you help this teenager to continue to serve you?

DEALING WITH CONFLICT IN THE ‘FAMILY’

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Day 12

DEALING WITH CONFLICT IN THE ‘FAMILY’

READ:

Acts 11.1-30

Sometimes the people closest to you, are the ones that hurt you the most. The apostle Peter, recently being freed of his prejudice toward Gentiles, now returns to Jerusalem to meet with ‘the brothers’ to tell them the exciting things God is doing among the Gentiles. When Peter gets there ‘the brothers’ criticize him harshly for breaking Jewish religious law and eating with Gentiles. Imagine this criticism coming from people in the Early Church who had pledged to love and be kind to each other! Peter, who has been changed by his recent experiences, tells them about his new-found relationship with Cornelius, a Gentile. He tells them that whereas he would have been wary to go to the house of a Gentile with three strange men, “The Holy Spirit told [him] to go with them and not to worry” (v 12). After sharing this great story, ‘the brothers’ had no problem with Peter. The church was once again unified, and God poured out a huge blessing upon them, allowing great numbers of people to come to faith.


REFLECT:


Are you jealous when you hear a good report from another believer about how God is working in and through them? Do you share their excitement? Honest?

PRAY:

God, you have chosen me to bring a message of reconciliation because you have changed my heart. Give me the strength to take a message of love and forgiveness to people in my family, my church, and my community!

GOD’S MESSAGE DESTROYS OUR PREJUDICE

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Day 11

GOD’S MESSAGE DESTROYS OUR PREJUDICE

READ:

Acts 10.1-48

We gotta be honest with ourselves—some things die hard. Imagine one of the apostles being confronted with his own prejudices! And God, who knows every crevice of each heart, uses a vision as a means of changing the apostle Peter’s heart and mind. It took a lunch-hour roof top vision to finally confront Peter about his self-righteous upbringing. God also uses a vision to link Cornelius, the Gentile, with Peter the Jew. As they exchange their experiences, they realize that each had a role to play in demonstrating that God loves all people and longs to see each one reach out to him for salvation. This awesome story concludes with Peter recognizing his prejudices and acknowledging: “Now I am certain that God treats all people alike. God is pleased with everyone who worships him and does right, no matter what nation they come from” (vv 34, 35). Whoa! The text ends with God pouring out the Holy Spirit upon Gentiles.


REFLECT:

Is your heart completely clean of any hatred or prejudice that you have toward any particular type or group of people?

PRAY:

Lord, speak to me about my prejudices and improper attitudes toward people who are different from me. Change me, Lord, I am desperate for change.

THE GIFT OF SALVATION

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Day 10

THE GIFT OF SALVATION

READ:

Acts 9.1-43

No sinner is beyond God’s long arm of love. Here, Saul is so obsessed with persecuting the Church that he wants to get rid of Christians in areas other than Jerusalem. Then, Jesus reveals himself to Saul as Saul travels on the road to Damascus. Saul responds with obedience and surrenders to Jesus Christ. It is an amazing transformation. In this narrative, we see God’s salvation plan at work. First, the person is dead in sin and blinded by disobedience. God then reveals himself, and the sinner has to either choose or reject the Lord’s invitation. Upon accepting God’s invitation, God removes the scales from the eyes of the formerly sinful person, and ushers him into a new life with Christ.


REFLECT:


How does your story relate to Saul’s? Have you allowed God to work in your life as he did in Saul’s?

PRAY:

God, thank you for your gift of salvation. May I always treasure it and be mindful of what it cost you.

Unleashed: As You Go – Pray

Unleashed – As You Go – Pray

“Beloved, we are God’s children now; what we will be has not yet been revealed. What we do know is this: when he is revealed, we will be like him, for we will see him as he is.” I John 3:2

 

“Certainty is the mark of the common-sense life: gracious uncertainty is the mark of the spiritual life. To be certain of God means that we are uncertain in all our ways; we do not know what a day may bring forth. This is generally said with a sigh of sadness, it should be rather an expression of breathless expectation. We are uncertain of the next step, but we are certain of God.”

I enjoyed reading Oswald Chamber’s devotion the other morning and especially the title, “The Graciousness of Uncertainty.” I was greatly struck by how much I needed certainty in my life yet seldom could I say with certainty what certainty I had in my life. Growing up on a farm in Oklahoma I realized there was a rhythm of certainty others may not experience in their growing-up years. Life on a farm allows you to comfortably settle into a predictable routine; a certainty of life.  I could almost guess I am not alone in the need for certainty. This pandemic we find ourselves living through right now has taken countless lives but also has caused us to no longer live a settled, certain life.

I came to radically understand what leaving your comfort zone really meant on that early morning flight out of Will Rogers Airport in Oklahoma City. Connie and I boarded our plane that morning, leaving Oklahoma for our new home in Bophutatswana. There was uncertainty pulsating through every fiber of my body; leaving family, friends and the known; for a country whose name I could barely pronounce. Over the next five years, I came to understand ever so slightly the “gracious uncertainty of life” that God gives us.

I wouldn’t trade the uncertainty of those first days in Africa for anything. The morning I didn’t think I could take another day in this dry and desolate place, I walked out of the front door of our house in Mmabatho to see God’s signature in the sky. The most perfect rainbow took my breath away, a sight that even today is etched deep into my soul. Normally rainbows come after a rainstorm but God doesn’t always work normally.  Bophuthatswana was in the midst of a dust producing drought. I’m sure there is a scientific explanation for a rainbow without rain but for me it was God’s signature to me that He had me secure in the midst of uncertainty.

That first term we would still face frustrations of living in a different culture, experience the hurt of a miscarriage, overwhelming joy of two of our children’s births, the gut-wrenching despair at the near death of our son, civil unrest, and normal first term adjustments. However, I could settle into the uncertainty because I could trust in the certainty of God. He brought into our lives friends who still hold a special place in our hearts, ministry that encouraged us, and a rhythm of life that echoed God’s grace in our lives.

Chambers continued in his devotion, “If we are only certain in our beliefs, we get dignified and severe and have the ban of finality about our views’ but when we are rightly related to God, life is full of spontaneous, joyful uncertainty and expectancy.” I truly don’t know what a day may bring but I do trust God. I can now say with certainty that I am learning to live in every uncertain day with an “expression of breathless expectation.”

“For God alone my soul waits in silence, for my hope is from him. He alone is my rock and my salvation, my fortress; I shall not be shaken. On God rests my deliverance and my honor; my mighty rock, my refuge is in God.” Psalm 62:5-7

Who needs a comfort zone when you can live in God’s unexpectedly glorious creation!

God is great,

 

A DOWN SOUTH READING LESSON

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Day 9

A DOWN SOUTH READING LESSON

READ:

Acts 8.1-40

In this Scripture text, an angel speaks to the apostle Philip, telling him to arise and go to the south. This is an interesting command in that the angel does not give him any word about what to do down south, or how to get there, just get up and go. When he does, Philip meets an Ethiopian who is struggling to understand the Scriptures he is reading. Philip explains the passage and eventually leads the man to accept the Lord Jesus as Savior, and be baptized.


Obedience is key to honoring God. Philip had no way of knowing that he would witness to the man in the chariot. Oftentimes in life, God calls us to “arise and go.” It could be a call to the mission field, a school, to witness to an unlikeable person, or even an enemy. Whenever God calls, we need to be obedient.


REFLECT:


In what ways do you sense God’s call in your life? How can you be open to God’s voice so that you know when he is speaking to you?

PRAY:

God Almighty, my heart yearns for more of you and your beautiful truth. Open my eyes that I may see wondrous things in your Word.

WHERE IS YOUR GAZE?

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Day 8

WHERE IS YOUR GAZE?

READ:

Acts 7.1-60

Stephen took his faith seriously. He was so convinced of Christ’s saving power that he was willing to die for what he believed. As he was being stoned to death, Stephen’s gaze was on heaven and Jesus. We know that a person’s worship is always towards the object of his or her affection. What was it about Jesus and the message that he preached that made Stephen willing to give it all up, even his life? Those stones were not small pebbles being thrown at Stephen; those stones were large rocks that were meant to maim and mutilate his body. The excruciating death Stephen suffered is a testimony of how worthy he considered Christ to be.


We sing, “Open the eyes of my heart” asking God to let us turn our gaze upon Jesus who died for our sins. Stephen’s witness and martyrdom demonstrate that Jesus was truly the object of his worship.


REFLECT:


Are you gazing on the Lord with the eyes of your heart? If not, how can you refocus your gaze in order to get back to worshiping the true and living, loving God?

PRAY:

Lord, as I come before you today, speak truth into my heart so that I may live to honor you.

PREACHERS, WAITERS, AND PRAYER WARRIORS

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Day 7

PREACHERS, WAITERS, AND PRAYER WARRIORS

READ:

Acts 6.1-15

As people who belong to God, we are all God’s servants. There is no difference in our rank as we give our service in the Lord’s kingdom. When we read about how the Lord’s followers worked in the Early Church, it is clear that they did not consider one position higher than another. Whether it’s an apostle teaching the Word, a man waiting on tables, or a woman praying, God does not bless us based on our rank. The true mark of a believer’s position is his or her faithfulness in serving God. The men chosen to wait on tables, a seemingly menial and meaningless task, were all people who were filled with the Holy Spirit. It should be a liberating concept to know that whatever you do to help build God’s kingdom, counts. Do it always with a servant’s heart and God will honor your efforts.


REFLECT:


Whatever your position in life may be, are you asking the Holy Spirit to fill you?

PRAY:

Heavenly Father, help me to stay devoted to you in prayer and by reading your Word. Give me understanding so that I may follow you in all that I do.

IT’S NOT ABOUT THE MONEY!

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Day 6

IT’S NOT ABOUT THE MONEY!

READ:

Acts 5.1-42

This chapter of the book of Acts clearly displays the awesome power of the Holy Spirit in the life of the Church. In this narrative of Ananias and Sapphira, we see that the Holy Spirit’s power is far greater than that of Satan’s. Satan’s tactics are divisive and contradictory to the Word of God. By tempting the husband and wife to lie and cheat, Satan sowed seeds of corruption in the Church. But, the Holy Spirit, who knows all things and knows our hearts, permanently removes Satan’s instruments, Ananias and Sapphira, from the Church.


While this judgment may seem cruel, it is meant as a warning and a learning experience to the Early Church. The death of these two had an impact on the others. “The church members were afraid, and so was everyone else who heard what had happened” (v 11). We see that when something is held back from God, he is grieved. God did not need Ananias and Sapphira’s funds; he wanted their undivided, sincere faith in God’s providence. As a Father, the Lord wants his children to completely rely on him, so that we are not tempted to hold anything back from him.


REFLECT:


What are you holding back from God? Is it money, like Ananias or Sapphira? Are you lying, cheating, or gossiping to get ahead? The Lord yearns for his children to have complete trust in him. God wants our faith to be undivided and sincere. Is your faith resting completely in the Lord’s providential power?

PRAY:

Lord, speak to me through your Word. Reveal to me the idols and sins that may be hindering my walk with you.