Cry Out

Rev. Hannah Lafferty

“They raised their voices together…” (Acts 4:23-24)

In a culture where Truth has stumbled in the streets and is steadily being manipulated by society(Isa 59), prayer is our ultimate lifeline, our mandate, our greatest weapon, and guide. Prayer is our open door and our God-given assignment. Peter and John knew that prayer is not meant to be our last resort or ditch effort, rather it is the engine, identity and driving force in which the Church must operate despite our present reality. Since the beginning of creation, prayer was established in the garden in order that we may commune with God. We later discover in the New Testament that Jesus taught his disciples how to pray according to His word, but after the upper room encounter in the book of Acts, prayer was made more evident as a common practice among the body of believers.   

In this passage of scripture, we see that Peter and John’s report essentially led everyone into a prayer meeting. Verse 24 states that, “they raised their voice to God in one accord and acknowledged him as ‘Sovereign Lord’.” The Bible is accountable to many stories that reveal the power of praying aloud. Pastor David Guzik wrote in his study that, “It is certainly possible to pray silently in our minds, but we focus our thoughts more effectively when we speak out in prayer…praying with one voice.” 

There is something about a group of believers crying out to the Lord together, in one heart and one mind, seeking the purposes, protection, and presence of God. The worthy promise here is that He always shows up! “For where two or three are gathered together in My name, I am there in the midst of them” (Matt. 18:20). The truth is, the Lord not only delights in unity, but He requires it–for He does not accept discord.

The end of verse 24 says that they “acknowledged him as Sovereign Lord.” The word Lord here is the Greek word for, despotes. It was a word used of a slave owner or ruler who has power that cannot be questioned. They recognized Him as the one in control, and their acknowledgment of who He is revealed their level of confidence in Him, so much so, that after they prayed, the place where they were meeting was shaken! They were filled with the Holy Spirit and spoke the word with boldness

In our prayer meetings today, It is easy for us to get caught up in our prayer requests to God without actually acknowledging who He is. May we be challenged today to consciously pray and believe that He REALLY IS able to do “exceedingly abundantly more than we ask or imagine…” (Eph. 3:20) when His people call on His name. May we be a people who go before Him as sheep in need of a Shepherd–lifting our voices in one accord–desperate for Him to shake everything that can be shaken. 

 

When we do our part in the natural, God will begin His supernatural work!


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The Discipline of Prayer
Dr. A.D. Beacham Jr.
January 10, 2024

Psalm 55:17; Acts 3:1

The poet Carl Sandburg penned, “Time is the coin of your life. It is the only coin you have, and only you can determine how it will be spent. Be careful lest you let other people spend it for you.” 

Most of us use the end of a year and the start of a new year as a time of reflection. In recent weeks I have been thinking about time, how I use or misuse it, how easily I am distracted, how undisciplined I feel about quiet time with Jesus through prayer and Scripture. 

There’s something about the hard work of discipline that is essential to a life that brings glory to God. I want to be, and be known as, a disciple of Jesus. That desire of the heart runs into the reality that “disciple” is another form of “discipline.” Without the hard work of discipline, it is difficult to be the kind of disciple that shows forth God’s glory.

This is why time is so important in our walk with the Lord. The more I read about God’s people in the Bible, the more I discover how they disciplined their lives. 

Firstly, the Biblical Sabbath was an entire day given weekly to trusting in the Lord for all provision. It is more than a commandment and certainly more than a tool of legalism. It is the recognition of divine grace, provision, and God Himself setting aside the distractions of daily life so that we can engage in true communion with Him.

Secondly, the Lord’s people were led to focus on certain periods of the day for “time-out” with God. The passages from Psalm 55 and Acts 3 identified those times as “evening, morning, and noon.” The Bible doesn’t call us to be legalistic about this in terms of being “right on time,” or even feeling guilty if we are unable to pause at a certain time. It’s not about how many seconds or minutes we spend in prayer. We are not competing against others in prayer. The point is not rigidity but relationship with God. Identifying daily time(s) with God begins the process of disciplining all our time. It leads us into acknowledging our daily dependance upon our Creator and Redeemer for wisdom and strength. 

Sandburg identified the challenge we encounter in these “time-outs” with God. The world presses in to “spend that time,” robbing us of the renewal, repentance, and refreshing that comes from time with God. The practice of these times of prayer, commonly known as morning, noon, mid-afternoon, and evening prayer, is something God’s people in the Temple era, the synagogue, and the church have done for centuries. It is part of what it means for us to order and discipline our lives as the Word and Spirit work together to form “Christ in us, the hope of glory” (Colossians 1:27). 

Prayer: Lord Jesus Christ, thank You for entering our experience of time and showing us the importance of a disciplined life rooted in the divine Word and empowered by the Holy Spirit. I ask You to help me live a more time-disciplined life in every aspect of my life. Teach me how to set aside time for You and Your life-giving Word each day. Each day may more of Your divine power that pertains to life and godliness be given to me as I grow in Your knowledge (2 Peter 1:2, 3). Amen.


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Simple Sermon Series

Simple
Pt. 1 – Disciples?
by Steve Ely

  1. Introduction

Some things are complex and complicated. Rubix Cubes. Algebra. Or maybe better said . . . math. Why do people in horror movies go into barns and cellars. Why do people in action movies never take the gun of the person they disarm when there are more bad guys to face. Women. 

However, faith was never supposed to be complex or confusing. Man has this propensity to make things harder than they should be. When Jesus arrives on the scene man had severely complicated matters. In fact, they had taken the 10 Commandments as easily understood as they were and they had “clarified” them until now there were 613 laws. They had developed the Mishnah which was an oral tradition of commentary on the Mosaic Law that introduced additional, man-made rules that “built a fence” around the Mosaic Law so people wouldn’t even come close to breaking God’s commandments. This had 63 subsections. For instance, on the idea of keeping the Sabbath they had 39 categories of forbidden labor which are prohibited by this commandment and under these categories dozens of other kinds of labor that were forbidden. Complex. Confusing. Jesus walks into this crushing environment and systematically tries to simply everything. Once when asked to make commentary on the already commentaried to death Commandments, He simply says there are two great commandments. Love God and love your neighbor. Jesus made it simple. We should too.

That is what we are going to try to do over the course of the next few weeks. Let’s go back to basics. Let’s make sure we focus on what matters. We could take time and try to be profound and deep. However, too often we are simply educated beyond our level of obedience and certainly beyond our level of experience. 

One of the simplest truths we learn is one of the ones that we forget and when we do the ramifications on our actions/behavior and thought life is dramatic and often devastating.

Mark 1:16-20 (NIV)

As Jesus walked beside the Sea of Galilee, he saw Simon and his brother Andrew casting a net into the lake, for they were fishermen. “Come, follow me,” Jesus said, “and I will send you out to fish for people.” At once they left their nets and followed him. When he had gone a little farther, he saw James son of Zebedee and his brother John in a boat, preparing their nets. 20 Without delay he called them, and they left their father Zebedee in the boat with the hired men and followed him.

In Mark 2, the scene is repeated and He calls Levi – tax collector. 

By the time we arrive in Mark 3, Jesus has chosen 12 disciples to be with Him.

We don’t even understand that Jesus is turning the system of the day on its head. The first way He did this was who He chose as His disciples.

Each village/town had a synagogue. The Temple had been destroyed so since they couldn’t get to the temple, they brought the temple to them. The synagogue was more than just a place of worship. It was their place of education. So, all the 5-10 years old boys and girls go to House of the Book to learn Torah. Then all 11-12 years old boys go to a great interpretation – learn how to apply Word. Then at 13 years old – Bar mitzvah a rite of passage. Then the “A” students looked for a rabbi. All the other boys entered their father’s business. The fact that all the men that Jesus called/picked/chose were involved in their father’s business tells us they flunked out. They didn’t excel. They weren’t good students. They showed no promise in religious things. The second important thing is that in the system of the day the disciple selected the rabbi. The 13-year-old would attach himself to a teacher who he wanted to become like. Not just learn what he taught but to become like him in character. However, Jesus, the rabbi, chooses His disciples. The Chosen One chooses these men to follow Him. 

The good and simple news is that Jesus continues to choose! He still seeks people others would cast off and cast aside. He still selects the unselectable. In fact, 

1 Corinthians 1:26-29 tells us this . . . 

For ye see your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not many mighty, not many noble, are called: But God hath chosen the foolish things of the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world to confound the things which are mighty; And base things of the world, and things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to bring to nought things that are: That no flesh should glory in his presence.

Take a good look, friends, at who you were when you got called into this life. I don’t see many of “the brightest and the best” among you, not many influential, not many from high-society families. Isn’t it obvious that God deliberately chose men and women that the culture overlooks and exploits and abuses, chose these “nobodies” to expose the hollow pretensions of the “somebodies”? That makes it quite clear that none of you can get by with blowing your own horn before God. Everything that we have—right thinking and right living, a clean slate and a fresh start—comes from God by way of Jesus Christ. That’s why we have the saying, “If you’re going to blow a horn, blow a trumpet for God.”

Then again in . . .

Ephesian 1:3-6
Praise be to the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ, who has blessed us in the heavenly realms with every spiritual blessing in Christ. For he chose us in him before the creation of the world to be holy and blameless in his sight. In love he predestined us for adoption to sonship through Jesus Christ, in accordance with his pleasure and will— to the praise of his glorious grace, which he has freely given us in the One he loves.

Why are those portions of Scripture important when we consider whether we are disciples?

  1. We need to remember who did the choosing.
    Despite our shortcomings and unworthiness, Jesus added us to His team. Overlooked and outcasts in society. Less thans and unwanted He still gathers us. Why is this an important thing to know? It should fill our hearts with joy! He first loved us. We were handpicked. Selected. We weren’t worthy. But it should also fill our hearts with humility! If we did the picking it would lead to pride! We didn’t choose Him He chose us!  While we were still sinners. 

We also need to remember this because there will be days when we are facing difficult situations that we won’t feel chosen. However, we need to remember that our chosenness has nothing to do with feeling . . .  Feelings are great liars. Feelings are important in many areas but completely unreliable in matters of faith. Paul Scherer said, “The Bible wastes very little time on the way we feel.” We live in an “age of sensation.” We think that if we don’t feel something there can be no authenticity in doing it. But the wisdom of God says something different: that we can act ourselves into a new way of feeling much quicker than we can feel ourselves into a new way of acting.”

Just because we don’t feel chosen has no bearing on the fact that we are chosen! Remember we are chosen!

  1. Chosen leads to choices!
    Being chosen forces us to make choices. You can be chosen and refuse to really follow. Being chosen leads to choices. There are many choices that we must make once we have been chosen but I want to just keep it simple and focus on 1 thing that if done will take care of the rest.

The #1 choice we must make is to obey

This is the single most important choice and the one all others hinge on. We must make a conscious decision to obey. 

The disciples had to make that choice. Remember when Jesus found them on the seashore frustrated because they had fished all night but caught nothing? Jesus gives them odd instructions . . . wrong time of day – cast your nets again. Fishermen being instructed on fishing by a carpenter! They start to make excuses but then obey and a great harvest comes.

Disciples make decisions in spite of feelings, their own wisdom or even experience and they obey. 

In the Old Testament, the whole story is an account of God trying to get His people to obey. David knew that with God obedience is better than sacrifice and nothing changed in that regard in the New Testament. 

Jesus drives home the importance of obedience in the life of a disciples by saying . . . 

John 14:15 – If you love me, show it by doing what I’ve told you.

John 15:10 – If you keep my commands, you’ll remain intimately at home in my love. (So if you we don’t keep commandments we don’t remain in His love?)

Simply put disciples obey. We don’t look for loopholes or for how much we can get away with and still stay in right relationship. Close following requires complete obedience.

One man rightfully said, “We have disconnected obedience from faith, producing a default gospel that is eating the life out of our churches.”

Our fallback position must become “Even so lord we will do as you say”. Our level of discipleship will be determined by the depth of our obedience.

When you have choices and you will let’s keep it simple . . . simply obey. Every other choice you have must be weighed out through this choice. If it comes down to my way, the world’s way, what’s right, what’s wrong, preference, tradition, influence, trend, socially acceptable I will stop and weigh it out in light of my choice to obey Jesus!

We call Jesus Lord because that term is more socially acceptable. His disciples often called Him “Master!” We don’t like that term. However, let that sink in! Master. Maybe we need to let Jesus become Master in our lives! We need to ask ourselves, “are we really disciples?”

Simple
Pt. 2 – Study
by Steve Ely

  1. Introduction

Some things are complex and complicated. Politics. The sport called Cricket. Defining the word “the”. The human brain. Cats.

However, faith was never supposed to be complex or confusing. Man has this propensity to make things harder than they should be. When Jesus arrives on the scene man had severely complicated matters. So, last week I challenged you to really ask yourself if you are truly a disciple. Remember we said disciples are disciples because they choose to obey. This leads me to a conclusion. If we are going to be disciples, then not only must we follow the example of Jesus but of the first disciples. If they were disciples because they obeyed, what did they do? Let me pose this question another way. In recent years a local church has defined “disciple” in what may be one of the best and most succinct ways. They say a disciple is a “fully devoted follower of Christ.” I think they are right. But my question is what then is a disciple devoted to? Fortunately for us we are told. 

Acts 2:42-47 (NIV)

They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. Everyone was filled with awe at the many wonders and signs performed by the apostles. All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had need. Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.

 

We are clearly told exactly what the disciples were devoted to. The very first one is that they were devoted to the apostles’ teaching. Man, I wish we had record of those lessons don’t you? I so wished we had a document where their teachings were written so that we could devote ourselves to those teachings! I say that tongue in cheek because we do. What those early disciples were hearing we can read. It is what we call Scripture.

So simply stated the disciples were devoted to study of Scripture. In fact, Paul comes along and instructs those of us who want to obey to devote ourselves to this same practice. 

2 Timothy 2:15 (AMP)

Study and do your best to present yourself to God approved, a workman who has no reason to be ashamed, accurately handling and skillfully teaching the word of truth.

So, the early disciples and then Paul giving instruction to his disciple Timothy reveal that disciples should study. 

Disciples study.

Most of us after school have an aversion to the concept of study. So, we have substituted listening for learning. Notice it didn’t say listen to the Word to grow in ability to handle the Word. I am not discounting the necessity and benefit of hearing the Word. However, too many of us only want to learn from someone else’s work. The result is we simply don’t study like we should. We tend to become lazy. We expect to be spoon fed. 

One of the issues is that the earliest trick the enemy used against us is the one he will continue to use. He approaches Eve and says “Is that what God said?” That challenge leads Eve into failure and sin simply because she didn’t know what God said. So often just because we don’t study, we don’t know. And our lack of study results in the fulfillment of the truth in Hosea 4 which states, “My people perish or are destroyed due to lack of knowledge.” 

In the Yosemite and Yellowstone Park’ s there are signs that say, “Do not feed the bears”. Most people think the signs are to protect people. The signs are to protect the Bears. If they depend upon the tourists for food, then in the fall, they starve to death. Every year the Rangers must remove the dead carcasses of bears who were so dependent upon the Tourists for food that they forgot how to find food for themselves. If we don’t feed on the Word ourselves, we wind up like the Bears, dependent upon pastors, teachers, podcasts, or TV preachers for “food” and we spiritually starve to death.

A recent survey revealed that most Americans don’t know first-hand the overall story of the Bible—because they rarely pick it up,” One of the researchers said, “Even among worship attendees less than half read the Bible daily. The only time most Americans hear from the Bible is when someone else is reading it.” He went on to say “Americans treat reading the Bible a little bit like exercise. They know it’s important and helpful, but they don’t do it. Americans are fond of the Bible but don’t read it.”

Disciples study! Why?

There are all kinds of reasons I can give you light, direction, protection, healing, provision, promises, etc. But let’s keep it simple today. We must study for two reasons . . . 

Study shows us Him.

John talking about Jesus states that in the beginning was the Word and the Word was with God and the Word was God. So, Jesus was the literal embodiment of the Word of God. So, when we study the written Word, we get revelation about Jesus. We said last week that a disciples would follow a rabbi not just to be with him or just to learn his teaching but also to learn his character. It is as we read the Word that we learn the character of the One we are trying to follow. If we don’t study the Word, then we can’t really know The Word. 

Remember, I told you feelings are liars and the truth is our experience can lie to us as well. Too many of us rely on liars to give us a revelation of Jesus. We meet the true Him in the Word. It is His Word that gives us a reliable and clear picture of who He is. If we don’t know His Word someone can tell us untruths about Him that sound right but aren’t true. Too often we allow others to paint the picture of Him rather than seeing the picture that He drew of Himself. We must study so we, as sheep, will know the voice of the Shepherd. Scripture says His sheep will know His voice, but you can’t know His voice if you don’t study His talk! Through His Word He speaks for Himself rather than through the filter of someone else’s voice/thoughts/feelings.

Too many of us claim to Jesus while at the same time we’re not devoted to His Word.   

The daily saturation in the Word produced disciples. The disciples were the disciples because they were daily disciples and disciplined by the Word.

Study shows us . . . us.

Not only do we study to get a clear picture of Him. We study because as we read the Word . . . The Word reads us. 

Hebrews 4:12 NIV

For the word of God is alive and active. Sharper than any double-edged sword, it penetrates even to dividing soul and spirit, joints and marrow; it judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.

God means what He says. What He says goes. His powerful Word is sharp as a surgeon’s scalpel, cutting through everything, whether doubt or defense, laying us open to listen and obey. 

As we study, we get a clear picture of what is in us and what needs to change. Until we study, we can’t be obedient to change because we don’t know if there is change needed. Ever met anyone who had no self-awareness? They were rude, angry, calloused, bitter, sarcastic and didn’t even know it? If we read the Word the Word reads us and points out things that need to be addressed in our lives in order for us to change, clean up and become more like the One we are reading about.

How many times have you been reading when illumination takes place and the Scripture suddenly addresses you?  

All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness. (2 Tim. 3:16) 

We must be trained in righteousness because without His Word we get trained in religion and rules!

If we want to be disciples, we must study! We must become devoted to study. We can’t be satisfied with simply listening. We must dig into His Word so we will know Him and so we will know us!

How much are you studying? Not concerned how long. New Christian start somewhere like John. Seasoned Christian start anywhere.

Simple
Pt. 3 – Pray

by Steve Ely

  1. Introduction

Some things are complex and complicated. Tax Code. The scoring in boxing. Relationships. The fascination with pumpkin spice!

However, faith was never supposed to be complex or confusing. Man has this propensity to make things harder than they should be. When Jesus arrives on the scene man had severely complicated matters. So, we have been trying to get back to the simple things Jesus called us to do. I have been asking you to wrestle with whether you are really a disciple. We said disciples are disciples because they choose to obey. A local church has properly defined “disciple” in what may be one of the best and most succinct ways. They say a disciple is a “fully devoted follower of Christ.” I think they are right. But my question is what then is a disciple fully devoted to? What are the simple things these first followers did? Fortunately for us we are told. 

Acts 2:42-47 (NIV)

They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. Everyone was filled with awe at the many wonders and signs performed by the apostles. All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had a need. Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.

I talked last week about study. I am not going to discuss the fact that they devoted themselves to fellowship because I have talked to you probably 50 times over the last 10 years about our need for one another. Although I do believe it is worth noting that fellowship is mentioned 3 different times in this passage. So, we see another thing the disciples were devoted to.

The record indicates that . . . 

Disciples pray.

I am probably just like you when I hear someone start a teaching or a sermon on prayer because I think we all feel inadequate in this area. I usually leave one of those teachings feeling like my prayer life will never meet the “standard” and therefore another attempt is made, out of guilt, to become the defined prayer warrior! I don’t want that to happen out of today’s message. If we make things complex, then we tend to gravitate to eloquent prayers. However, Scripture declares in James 5:16 that it is the effectual fervent prayer not the eloquent prayer that availeth much! So then, how do we make sure our prayer is effective? In order to do that I want us to look at the two types of prayer that I believe that Jesus and the disciples modeled for us. 

Disciples pray consistently.

Luke 5:16 (NIV) – But Jesus often withdrew to lonely places and prayed.

One of the reasons that the disciples devoted themselves to consistent prayer is that their rabbi modeled a consistent prayer life. Parents – Selah. 

This is why Paul would come along and say in 1 Thessalonians 5:17 – Pray without ceasing. The Greek word for “without ceasing” doesn’t mean nonstop — but actually means constantly recurring. Paul would come back again in Colossians 4:2 and give us a command – Devote yourselves to prayer, being watchful and thankful.

Simply put to be a disciple we must have a consistent – ongoing – personal conversation with Jesus. Communication will determine your connectedness! We used to judge whether someone was praying by whether they attended prayer meetings. However, the private ongoing dialogue with Christ in every situation, circumstance, and moment and life is the real indication of discipleship. 

How consistent in your prayer life? Do you catch yourself talking to our Rabbi on an ongoing manner? How many hours of each day do we neglect the opportunity to speak to Him? Are you constantly checking in? Are your prayers proof of desire towards Him? 

We talk about the fact that sheep know the Shepard’s voice, but I want to flip the script. Does the Shepard recognize your voice? Is He familiar with it? There are people in my life that never have to identify themselves when they call. I don’t need caller ID because through frequency and consistency I have become familiar with their voice. Disciples carry on an ongoing conversation with Jesus. 

Disciples prayed persistently.

Consistent and persistent sound and are somewhat similar. However, persistent prayer is something that disciples must also develop. 

Persistence is an acquired skill. You learn to endure. You learn to hang on. Your strain and struggle develops strength. Why is persistence necessary? Persistence in prayer says that I believe who you are even when who you are hasn’t brought the results I desire to see. 

One man said that God works through persevering prayer to 1. To purify our desires. Sometimes we may want the right thing for the wrong reasons. 2. To prepare us for His answer. A premature answer might cause us to glory more in the gift than in the Giver. 3. To develop our life and character. One of God’s greatest priorities in prayer is the work He desires to do in us. 4. To bless us with a more intimate relationship with God. 

Jesus talks about persistence in prayer on two occasions. In Luke 11, after Jesus responds to the request by His disciples to teach them to pray He gives them Lord’s Prayer and then says . . . “Suppose you have a friend, and you go to him at midnight and say, ‘Friend, lend me three loaves of bread; 6 a friend of mine on a journey has come to me, and I have no food to offer him.’ 7 And suppose the one inside answers, ‘Don’t bother me. The door is already locked, and my children and I are in bed. I can’t get up and give you anything.’ 8 I tell you, even though he will not get up and give you the bread because of friendship, yet because of your shameless audacity he will surely get up and give you as much as you need.

Then again in Luke 18 by telling a parable. Then Jesus told his disciples a parable to show them that they should always pray and not give up. He said: “In a certain town there was a judge who neither feared God nor cared what people thought. 3 And there was a widow in that town who kept coming to him with the plea, ‘Grant me justice against my adversary.’ 4 “For some time he refused. But finally, he said to himself, ‘Even though I don’t fear God or care what people think, 5 yet because this widow keeps bothering me, I will see that she gets justice, so that she won’t eventually come and attack me!’”

Jesus makes it clear that disciples simply must develop a never give up attitude in prayer. Even when what we see in the natural doesn’t indicate change, we continue to persist in prayer. Too many of us give up in prayer and by so doing we also say we are giving up on God! 

Spurgeon once said, “If you will give him no rest, he will give you all the rest you need.” 

Alexander Whyte said, “If you find your life of prayer to be always so short, and so easy, and so spiritual, as to be without cost and strain and sweat to you, you may depend upon it, you have not yet begun to pray.”

Our microwave lifestyle has robbed too many of us of the ability to slow cook in prayer. Persist. Hold on. Ask and keep asking! 

What do you need to ask for and about again? Who do you need to bring before the Father again? Learn to endure in prayer. Become tough in prayer. Have you allowed what your eyes see to cause you to give up? 

The disciples would have been taught how to pray in synagogue (school) and yet they ask Jesus how to pray. Why? Was it that the consistency and persistency of His prayer resulted in the power they saw and therefore they wanted to know how He prayed? Has anyone asked you to teach them to pray? The prayer life I am most attracted to is the one that is consistent and persistent. It is that type of prayer that others will mimic!

I want to challenge you to simply become more consistent . . . Moment by moment, set daily times if needed and persistent in your prayers! Disciples pray!

Simple
Pt. 4 – Worship
by Steve Ely

  1. Introduction

Some things are complex and complicated. People’s choice in music (Bob Dylan). The cloud (all this stuff up there somewhere and somehow, we can access at will). Commitment to soap operas and reality shows. Oklahoma weather.

However, faith was never supposed to be complex or confusing. Man has this propensity to make things harder than they should be. When Jesus arrives on the scene man had severely complicated matters. So, we have been trying to get back to the simple things Jesus called us to do. I have been asking you to wrestle with whether you are really a disciple. We said disciples are disciples because they choose to obey. A local church has properly defined “disciple” in what may be one of the best and most succinct ways. They say a disciple is a “fully devoted follower of Christ.” I think they are right. But my question is what then is a disciple fully devoted to? What are the simple things these first followers did? Fortunately for us we are told. 

Acts 2:42-47 (NIV)

They devoted themselves to the apostles’ teaching and to fellowship, to the breaking of bread and to prayer. Everyone was filled with awe at the many wonders and signs performed by the apostles. All the believers were together and had everything in common. They sold property and possessions to give to anyone who had a need. Every day they continued to meet together in the temple courts. They broke bread in their homes and ate together with glad and sincere hearts, praising God and enjoying the favor of all the people. And the Lord added to their number daily those who were being saved.

I talked about disciples being devoted to study. We mentioned fellowship, and last week prayer. These men and women gave their lives to these things. The final thing I want to see in the simple approach the disciples had was that devoted . . . 

Disciples worship.

You will remember that last week I said that we when we hear someone talk about prayer we tend to check out because we have heard about it so much. It that is true regarding prayer it is true a thousand times more in regards to worship. We are in a moment of history that may be the most saturated with worship resources than any other era. And yet it is my contention that we have a few issues in spite of the availability of worship.

  1. We have turned worship into a spectator sport. We watch other people worship and we say we have worshipped. Never open our mouth or sing a song but because we listened to them sing, we treat worship like we treat football/basketball teams . . . they played but we won. 
  2. We are apt to get caught up in worship of worship. So that it becomes about style and preference rather than the object of the worship.

So, if we want to become fully devoted disciples, we must learn some things about how disciples worship!

Disciples are holistic in worship!

I thought about how to say this and I could have just as easily said, “the disciples worship as a lifestyle.” But we are too familiar with worship as a lifestyle statement without actually embracing it. So, I chose the word holistic which means ” characterized by comprehension of the parts of something as intimately interconnected and explicable only by reference to the whole.” 

Worship was a part of their everyday experience and life. It wasn’t reserved just for Sundays. Nor was it confined to involving music. Notice in our text there is no mention of their praise being connected to music. It simply says they praised God. 

You know I have no issue with music. That isn’t the point. The point is their worship wasn’t defined or determined by accompaniment. There are times when you have no band. No worship team. No sound track. Paul and Silas worshipped in the dungeon and there weren’t recessed Bose speakers in the ceiling cranking out Bethel Worship or Tye Tribbett. Yet the silence didn’t drown out their worship.

There are basically two types of worship that the disciples involved themselves in as worship became holistic in nature. Paul addresses these two types of worship in 

In Colossians 3:16-17  . . . 

Let the message of Christ dwell among you richly as you teach and admonish one another with all wisdom through psalms, hymns, and songs from the Spirit, singing to God with gratitude in your hearts. And whatever you do, whether in word or deed, do it all in the name of the Lord Jesus, giving thanks to God the Father through him.

Paul addressed corporate worship . . . 

Paul knew that as worship becomes a part of our daily experience that we lose the need to be coerced/prodded to worship. Worship becomes second nature or natural and it also becomes essential to our growth. In fact, Paul says that corporate worship is necessary because we teach and encourage each other as we worship. We need to worship together! There are instructions on how and when to worship. There is strength and courage that comes when we worship together!

However, Paul also addresses personal daily worship . .

Our view and understanding of worship must expand until we simply see our entire, our whole life as worship. 

“Cause every task of your day to be a sacred ministry to the Lord. However mundane your duties, for you they are a sacrament.” — Richard Foster

Foster is simply reiterating or restating what Paul taught! Your daily life is the real platform of worship. In fact, I believe it is as we learn to worship in the daily routines of life that we are prepared and positioned to come together and not only minister to the Father but to one another. 

Church members worship on Sunday. Disciples live a worship lifestyle that bleeds over to Sunday! 

How much worship do you do outside of Sunday morning? I didn’t say singing. I said worship. As disciples we must devote ourselves to giving affection and attention to the One we are following. 

Disciples are persistent in worship.

If you were here last week, then you may say wait you repeated what you said about prayer. I know. On purpose. Because the record indicates that the disciples learned to worship in spite of rather than when it was comfortable or convenient. Just as too many of us give up in prayer too many have allowed the convenience of worship to whittle away at our ability to persevere worship. By being unable/unwilling to worship in the tough times of life we elevate what we are facing (at least in our minds/spirits) into a higher place of power and attention worthiness than God! What was true about their prayer life was equally accurate in regards to their worship life. 

We like the lesson that God is sovereign and turns setbacks to triumphs. However, we must also learn the lesson that if He doesn’t turn things around His praise worthiness is unaffected and undiminished. Our devotion to worship is based on who we worship not what we face! If God can only be worshipped when things are going perfectly, then you have a God who is no longer sovereign and in control! Or you have a God you are trying to manipulate and hold hostage! I will only worship you when you do what I want!

Stop just a minute and think about what the disciples were facing while they develop this commitment to worship . . . 

While they worship, they were being persecuted, tortured, imprisoned, rejected, stoned scattered and excommunicated. What they faced deepened their worship. They had learned the worship toughness of Job. Job was blessed. Rich. Prosperous. Fine family. Full bank account. Then he lost it all. Kids killed. Livelihood lost. Sickness rather than strength. His response . . . “The Lord gave and the Lord has taken away; may the name of the Lord be praised.” God is to be praised when He gives me everything my heart desires. But as a disciple I will be persistent in worship even when He takes away. His praise worthiness isn’t affected by Him giving or taking.  

We must learn to make what the writer of Hebrews calls “a sacrifice of praise!” That is more than just when it isn’t convenient, or when they didn’t sing my song. I will make a sacrifice and worship anyway! That is petty. A sacrifice is a sacrifice when it costs us something! A sacrifice of praise means worship when it makes no sense, when I would rather be bitter, when I would rather blame, when I don’t have time, when I don’t have the strength, when I am sick, when I am broken, when I am down, when it didn’t turn out like I wanted. But I am a disciple and disciples worship!

How devoted to worship are you? How devoted are you to personal moments of praise? How devoted are you to spending time at His feet? How devoted to corporate worship are you? Does any excuse keep you away. Is it a priority or an option?

I want to mention this. We haven’t paid any attention to the last verse. As a direct response to the disciples being devoted to study, fellowship, prayer and worship God added to the church daily. May I point out the obvious just so we don’t miss what is right under our nose? Growth was granted when the disciples were simply devoted to what was important. Perhaps if disciples are distracted by the trivial, mundane, complicated, even good things but not these things, then growth is not only missing but unlikely! It is these things that set them apart and caused others to want to be a part. 


Help Sermon Series

Help Sermon Series

Help Sermon Series

HELP!
Pt. 1 – The Help Prayer
by Steve Ely

  • Introduction: 

(Help by the Beatles)

Help, I need somebody,
Help, not just anybody,
Help, you know I need someone, help.

When I was younger, so much younger than today,
I never needed anybody’s help in any way.
But now these days are gone, I’m not so self-assured,
Now I find I’ve changed my mind and opened up the doors.

Help me if you can, I’m feeling down
And I do appreciate you being round.
Help me, get my feet back on the ground,
Won’t you please, please help me?

And now my life has changed in oh so many ways,
My independence seems to vanish in the haze.
But every now and then I feel so insecure,
I know that I just need you like I’ve never done before.

Have you ever been there . . . In need of help? When I was younger, I never needed anybody’s help in any way and then I realized that help was essential. Do you remember when you were young and thought you knew it all and could do it all? The Beatles had this awakening and encapsulated the cry that we all utter at some point. . . “Help!” However, I think the word “Help” is so overused that we underestimate its power! David used this word on at least 9 different occasions in the Psalms and each time it was part of a simple and yet profound prayer. Here are a couple of examples.

  1. Text

Psalm 18:6
In my distress I called to the LORD; I cried to my God for help. From his temple he heard my voice; my cry came before him, into his ears.

Psalm 109:26 – Help me, oh help me, God, my God, save me through your wonderful love.

Simple prayers – HELP! Nothing eloquent or impressive about these prayers they are simple desperate calls for God’s assistance. These prayers offer great hope to us because they teach us several things. 

  •  The Help Prayer
  1. It is the perfect prayer!
    The simple prayer of help needs no elaboration or explanation. It is simply perfect because with one word it sums up the need, the emotion, the desperation, and the expectation! It is suitable and applicable for every situation. It is appropriate for good days and bad days. It can be prayed in life-or-death situations or in moments of simple resistance. It covers catastrophes as well as a common bad day. Its power isn’t diminished by the situation. The scope of the word grows/shrinks to match your need.
  2. It fits any person.
    It not only fits any situation, it also fits any person. Sinner or saint. Well-spoken or simpleton. Regardless of education, station in life, learned or unlearned, saved or unsaved. It is a universal prayer. We have all and will all pray this prayer at some point in our life. King or fugitive it works. Hero of the faith or forgotten sideliner it still fits. That is important because some of you feel inadequate when you are addressing God, the Maker of the Universe! You hear others with all of their rhythmic rhymes and eloquent words and the temptation is avoid praying because you can’t match their prayers. May I teach you how to pray? HELP!!!!
  3. It is the most answered prayer!
    There is unexpected help, which we will discuss next week. However, most help comes as a direct result of a request. In fact, I would submit that many of us don’t get help because we have failed to request it. 

All you have to do is go back and examine the life of Christ and consider all of the miracles (divine intervention or help) and think about how many of those moments of help took place as direct result of a prayer/request for help. He turned water into wine due to request from His mother. He healed the blind as a direct result of request. He healed the lepers due to a petition to help. He calmed a storm because disciples cried out for help. He fed the 5,000 because they let it be known that they were hungry. He heals Jairus’ daughter because he asked Him to do so.

We have not because we ask not! Perhaps you haven’t received the help you desire because you have failed to request the specific help you need! If you need help request it today! 

There are 4 very important things we need to know about receiving help from God.

  •  Getting Help
  1. God still wants to help!
    We hear David cry for help, but we must also see that God responds with assistance. He testifies of this in Psalms 118:12, “I was pushed back and about to fall, but the LORD helped me.”

We read the multiplied account of God’s intervention into the lives of the Children of Israel. We read occasion after occasion of parted seas, food on the ground, victories in the face of impossible odds, healing from sickness and then we turn to the New Testament. Everywhere Jesus went He helped. In fact, in one passage it says Jesus healed all their sick. He helped with healing. He helped with taxes. He helped defend the defenseless (woman caught in adultery). He healed bodies. He healed minds. He healed souls. He healed families. He healed finances. He met every need found in the human condition. He helped!  

Some of you have forgotten that He still wants to help you today! We quote the passage of Scripture that teaches us that God is the same yesterday, today and forever. However, we fail to apply that truth to the help equation. God helped Moses so He will help you. He came to David’s rescue; He will come to yours. He backed up the 3 Hebrew Children; He will come to your aid as well. He healed the sick. He will heal you. He provided for the hungry, He will provide for you! You have to not only know this truth, but embrace, believe, trust, depend on, and have faith in the fact that God still wants to help today! His help didn’t come to an end at the end of Revelation. He still looks for ways to get involved in and intervene in your life today! Don’t give up. Don’t discount God’s ability or desire to come to your rescue!

Lee Ielpi is a retired firefighter, a New York City firefighter. He gave 26 years to the city. But on September 11th, 2001, he gave much more. He gave his son, Jonathan. His son was a firefighter as well. When the Twin Towers fell, Jonathan was there. Firefighters are a loyal clan. When one perishes in the line of duty, the body is left where it is until a firefighter who knows the person can come and quite literally picks it up. Lee made the discovery of his son’s body his personal mission. He dug daily with dozens of others at the sixteen-acre graveyard. On Tuesday, December 11, three months after the disaster, his son was found. And Lee was there to carry him out.”

Your Father has made it His personal mission to care for, carry, uncover, and dig out, His son’s body. He won’t give up. He won’t quit. He will dig through your collapsed and crushed world to find you and bring you assistance. Hang on! Believe! Trust! Hope. 

Some of you right now don’t believe that or are unsure about this because you are saying in your mind “I have asked Him to help me and He hasn’t.”  Some of you are thinking, “I have depended on Him and He has failed me so I don’t know if I believe that God will help me or not.” So why doesn’t God help? In order to receive help you must learn the next two things.

  1. We must come to the place where Jesus in our only option rather than only one option!
    Many of us don’t see God’s hand at work in our life is because we treat Him as one option rather than as the only option! We don’t really rely on Him. We don’t really live our life as if He is the only way out. We say we depend on Him for provision, but we live as if we are our hope and answer, so we trust our job more than we trust God. We refuse to tithe because we really aren’t sure the God option works. I can figure out this thing better than you can God. I can manage my 100% better than He can manage the 90%. We have more faith in our 401K than we do in Him. We seek His healing power only as an afterthought. We seek counsel from every other source and then ask Him at the end if He has any ideas or thoughts on our stuff. 

Jesus always responds to the cry of desperation. Go ahead, search Scripture and find one time where Jesus responds to someone who had other options.  You won’t find one. The woman with the issue of blood, the lepers, the lame, the dead . . . they had no other options. Doctors had tried everything, the family had lost hope, and all possible solutions were spent. Likewise, search Scripture and find one example of Jesus turning a deaf ear or ignoring the cry of a desperate person. You can’t find one. Jesus always stopped in His tracks when He heard the cry of desperation! Could it be that the reason that we aren’t receiving help is because He hasn’t really heard a cry of desperation, but a cry that says, “If you can help me fine and if not fine, I will find another solution to this issue or problem?” I will come to you and hope for answer but make plans in case I don’t get one. Could it be that our lack of desperation results in a lack of deliverance? Maybe all of our contingency plans reveal a lack of genuine trust, faith and reliance.  Jesus comes through when He is our only hope!

Maybe if we would get really desperate for financial health Jesus would show up and teach us how to find it. Maybe if some of us would get desperate for our marriage to be healthy we would get the assistance we need. Jesus never responds well to “Oh by the way . . .” Some of you need to recognize this morning that unless Jesus shows up, your situation is hopeless. There is no other option! Maybe if some of us were desperate enough we could stop Jesus in His tracks with our cry!

  1. Recognize and accept His help!
    Maybe, just maybe our issue isn’t that God hasn’t helped. Perhaps our issue is that He has already done so and we have just failed to recognize or accept the method of His help! Maybe the reason you feel like He isn’t responding to your cry for help is because God hears your cry and shakes His head in frustration because He has already sent the answer and you have snubbed your nose at the answer He has given.

There is at least one illustration in the Bible when this happened. Naaman gets the remedy that he desperately needs for his leprosy and gets angry and left to his own hard headedness would have failed to get healed just because He disliked the means of the solution. Dirty river no way! That seems crazy. Would you take that trade any day? A little dip in dirty water for clean skin. A little dirty water to get rid of my day’s AIDS disease. The truth is we are a lot like Him.

We desperately cry out to God to help with our finances and yet we won’t sell the new car even though the monthly payments are absolutely killing us. All because we have wrapped our identity up in that vehicle. God says, “Here is your answer. I have provided a means for rescue.” And we turn down the dirty water.

We desperately cry out to God to help us in our dysfunctional marriage and then an opportunity comes for counseling or accountability and we snub our nose and treat the answers as dirty water. That’s too hard, takes too much effort and then we continue to cry out and for some weird reason God seems to be deaf.

We cry out for healing and God gives us the opportunity to change whatever it is in our lifestyle that is feeding the sickness and we keep puffing away, or eating away, or drinking away and wonder why the God of healing refuses to restore our health!  

We cry out to get closer to God and our boyfriend/girlfriend or friend cut off relationship with us and we are so wrapped up in them that we miss the very answer to our prayer. They distracted us and God intervenes and we miss His intervention.

If you don’t think that happens, remember the instance in the New Testament where a group of desperate people gather to passionately cry out for God to help their highly esteemed brother in the faith, Peter. He has been wrongly incarcerated and they need God to intervene. God does. Peter miraculously walks out of jail free. Peter shows up at the house where they are desperately praying. He knocks on the door. Rhoda answers the door, sees the answer to their prayers literally standing there and then proceeds to slam the door in his face!

How many of us are at this very moment slamming the door in the face of God’s answer to our cry because we don’t like the form, fashion, shape, cost, flavor, taste, pain, or discipline it would take to access the answer? Some of you to quit praying, quit fasting, quit crying out and open your eyes, heart, and mind to the answer that God has already sent your way. 

I will tell you that God is unlikely to send another answer until you accept the one He has already sent. He sent Jesus as the answer to man’s sin problem. Most men didn’t recognize or embrace Him as the Messiah. Their lack of acceptance didn’t cause God to come up with another plan or send another solution. God doesn’t have many back up plans. He hears our cry, sends a solution, and it is up to us to accept that solution!

Some of you are so busy praising and praying that you can’t even recognize the answer to your prayer. Get off the floor and open the door. Some of you have so boxed God into your idea of how the answer should come that you are missing the answer that has come! Some of you have so boxed God into an instantaneous miracle that you won’t even clue into the gradual process He is providing for your rescue. We want help, but too many of us dictate that help be given on our terms.

What if His help comes in an unexpected or unwanted form? What if you want help and He spits! What if you want sight and His solution is Spit Therapy? We have got to come to the place where if there is power in the spit then let it rain on me!

Recognize and embrace His answer! 

  1. You may be someone’s help!
    You may very well be God’s help wrapped up in flesh. We hear people cry for help and then sit back and wait for God to do His deal. His deal may already be done in you. Find a need and fill it. Become someone’s answered prayer today! I think too many of us underestimate our role in God’s ability to answer prayers. He sends us! He uses us! Someone’s help is contained in you. If you don’t respond they will blame God. They should blame you . . . God responded. Don’t let someone go without God’s help because you were unwilling to be God wrapped in flesh!

HELP!
Pt. 2 – The Help Place
by Steve Ely

  • Introduction: 

(Help by the Beatles)

Help, I need somebody,
Help, not just anybody,
Help, you know I need someone, help.

When I was younger, so much younger than today,
I never needed anybody’s help in any way.
But now these days are gone, I’m not so self-assured,
Now I find I’ve changed my mind and opened up the doors.

Help me if you can, I’m feeling down
And I do appreciate you being round.
Help me, get my feet back on the ground,
Won’t you please, please help me?

And now my life has changed in oh so many ways,
My independence seems to vanish in the haze.
But every now and then I feel so insecure,
I know that I just need you like I’ve never done before.

It seems the older we get the more we realize that we all need assistance. So, we talked about the Help prayer. It is perfect for any situation, any person, and is the most answered prayer. Jesus was constantly giving assistance to those who requested it. He turned water into wine due to request from His mother. He healed the blind as a direct result of request. He healed the lepers due to a petition to help. He calmed a storm because disciples cried out for help. He fed the 5,000 because they let it be known that they were hungry. He heals Jairus’ daughter because he asked Him to do so. We need to request that assistance.

There were instances where no one asked for assistance and Jesus showed up and helped. 

  • Text

Mark 16:9
Jesus appeared first to Mary Magdalene, out of whom He had cast seven devils.

Luke 8:26-31
They sailed on to the country of the Gerasenes, directly opposite Galilee. As he stepped out onto land, a madman from town met him; he was a victim of demons. He hadn’t worn clothes for a long time, nor lived at home; he lived in the cemetery. When he saw Jesus he screamed, fell before him, and bellowed, “What business do you have messing with me? You’re Jesus, Son of the High God, but don’t give me a hard time!” (The man said this because Jesus had started to order the unclean spirit out of him.) Time after time the demon threw the man into convulsions. He had been placed under constant guard and tied with chains and shackles, but crazed and driven wild by the demon, he would shatter the bonds. Jesus asked him, “What is your name?” “Mob. My name is Mob,” he said, because many demons afflicted him. And they begged Jesus desperately not to order them to the bottomless pit. 

Luke 22:47-51
While he was still speaking a crowd came up, and the man who was called Judas, one of the Twelve, was leading them. He approached Jesus to kiss him, but Jesus asked him, “Judas, are you betraying the Son of Man with a kiss?” When Jesus’ followers saw what was going to happen, they said, “Lord, should we strike with our swords?” And one of them struck the servant of the high priest, cutting off his right ear. But Jesus answered, “No more of this!” And he touched the man’s ear and healed him.

III. The Help Place

  1.  Help came to the unlikely/unexpected place.

Her name was Mary and she came from the town of Magdala, hence the term Magdalene. This Mary was the victim of a terrible, terrible evil. Possession by one devil would be bad enough, but her body had become the home of seven. We are not told what happened in her past that caused her to open herself up to demon possession. All we know is that her life had been arrested by evil. Mary Magdalene was living a helpless life, a hopeless life; she was a woman in terrible shape, a horrible case. Obviously, she was bound with something stronger than chains, for the iron that bound her was the powerful arms of hellish demon spirits that wrapped Mary of Magdala in their invisible grip.  Mary could not help herself; she could not defend herself. She was enslaved.

Mary’s condition is an important element of the story and certainly the most prominent feature of this account. However, there is a secondary feature of this story that is also worthy of our focus. Although Mary’s situation was terrible, we must look past her condition to see her location. The Great Physician, wearing a peasant’s robe, at some point visited Magdala incognito. The little village was positioned on the northern edge of the Sea of Galilee. It was a totally inconspicuous place. It commanded no strategic importance to Rome or to Jerusalem. It was a forgotten town. It was a proverbial little, one traffic light, blip on the map. It certainly wasn’t a destination for sight seers and most definitely not for a Savior. Jesus came to Magdala. It was an unlikely place to find the King of Glory! He went to an out of the way place. It was an unexpected place to find the Light of the world. He arrived there unsought. It is probably true that no one in Magdala was looking for Him. I’m convinced Jesus went to Magdala for one purpose and one purpose only, to look up a woman named Mary – and He found her. Please note that He found her; she did not find Him.

This should encourage you. You find yourself in an out of the way place. You are in a condition spiritually that you don’t expect to find God. You are so far from Him that you feel like it would be unlikely for Him to show up. You find yourself isolated and don’t think He can find you. You may not even be looking for Him, and you probably haven’t asked Him to show up, but guess who is coming to dinner? Jesus will travel to out of the way and unlikely places. He will walk in unexpected and unrequested to help you! Right when you least expect Him . . . expect Him to show up. 

He will go out of His way! I want that to sink into your spirit. He will change His travel plans. He will detour from His normal travel patterns to come to your rescue! 

Some of you feel forgotten, overlooked, unnoticed, unwanted, your chains grow tighter, your sickness grows stronger, your condition deteriorates daily and Jesus will pack a sack lunch and reroute to get to you! If you are in an unlikely or unexpected place keep an eye pealed for an uninvited, unsought, unexpected visitor who will bring freedom and healing! Help is in your village. Help has come looking for you! He can and will find you! And not only will He find you He will change you! The Lord had visited her little town uninvited, looked her up, freed her from Satan’s grip, and 18 months later gave her the high honor of being the first witness of His resurrection. Unexpected grace came to an unexpected place!

  • Help came to the impossible place.

Luke paints the portrait of an impossible place. Darkness so black that a cemetery is the canvas of choice. Bondage so severe that it can’t be bound. If there was ever an impossible situation it was this one. Can you fathom the depth of the evil that must have invaded this man’s soul? In Mary’s case, we know the number of demons that lived in her . . . 7. In this man’s case, the number is so high that when asked his name he responds, “Mob” or “Legion”. If you take the typical meaning of the word “Legion” it would indicate that there were anywhere from 3,000 to 6,000 demons residing in this man. This may be the worst case of bondage and torment recorded in Scripture. 

This man had been offered assistance. Others had tried to control him. They had tried to watch over him. However, on every occasion guards had been lost or perhaps driven off as they ran for their lives. Chains had been shattered and clothes had been abandoned. This was an impossible situation. 

Some of you are facing mountains of financial challenges. You have tried everything the experts have said. You have utilized every Dave Ramsey trick in the book. Some of you are facing physical issues that have the doctors scratching their heads and you ducking yours. No remedy seems to be available. No solution seems to be the final prognosis. Some of you are in a relationship that seems damned. No amount of counseling seems to help. Adjustments have been made and nothing has changed. Hearts are hard. Hope is gone. Hands have been thrown up and vows thrown out. It may seem like it is over. 

How impossible is your place? Has all assistance been given that man can give? Has every stone been overturned? Has every logical effort been made? Good news! You are in the perfect place to meet the God who not only can but loves to walk into and overturn the impossible!  This account is the worst-case scenario. It was a bad environment. The surroundings weren’t ripe for redemption. There was no chance! And that is the powerful news . . . Jesus’ help isn’t limited by or weakened by the environment you live in or work in or by the impossibility of your situation. The impossible bowed its knee instantly to the presence of Jesus on that day and can do so again on this day! And once again He didn’t seek help . . . help sought him!

  1. Help came to the touchy or tense place!

If there was ever a scene that was fraught with tension this, is it. The disciples are on edge and ready to fight. The soldiers are armed to the teeth and ready to exert force if necessary. It was dark, hard to see, adrenaline was flowing, fists were clenched, and weapons were grasped. One wrong move and a full-on street fight would erupt. And the wrong move was made. Peter snaps and snips. You could tell he was a fisherman and not a solider because if he had been trained in the art of hand to hand combat the blow would have been better placed and he would have killed the servant rather than just slicing off his ear. Do you really think he was just trying to wound him? It was a touchy place. It was a tense place. Blood had been spilled. Pain had been caused.

Ever been in this place? Some of you are there now. Every word must be measured. Eggshells have become your carpet of choice. Tension in every look. One wrong word could end it all. Job could be lost. Love may be abandoned. One wrong glance could cause everything to spiral out of control. One wrong decision and everything could come crashing down. Maybe you didn’t cause the tension or the touchiness, but now its web engulfs your thoughts and your life.

Uninvited and perhaps even unwanted Jesus walks into the touchy and tense place with tenderness and healing and disarms the situation. He helps and heals what was severed or cut off. Some of you are tense because of what has been cut off from your life and Jesus is about to walk into that situation and restore what was severed. Was peace cut off? Was hope snipped away? Was your heart spliced in two? Was your joy surgically removed by a misplaced blow? Jesus is about to walk in and with one touch restore what was lost! He will walk in and remove the tension!

What place are you in? You may feel like you are living in an unlikely place. You may feel forgotten and overlooked. You may feel isolated or ostracized. Perhaps you are in an impossible place. Maybe every solution has been sought and failed miserably. It may appear that your lot in life is bondage, life spinning out of control, totally unreachable! You are so beyond help that you would even welcome chains because that would at least give some boundary to your misery and pain. Perhaps you find yourself living in a tense or touchy place? Every nerve on edge. Every word scrutinized. Blows have been struck. Wounds have been inflicted. Regardless of where you find yourself Jesus has walked into your place today. You may not even be able to ask for help anymore. You may have asked and been disappointed so many times that you have given up hope. But hope is here because He is here. He is in this place. His presence can change hell to heaven. His presence can put your place on the map. He can make a cemetery a dressing room. You are in the Help Place! 

David, who knew how to pray the “Help Prayer”, would shout to us about the “Help Place” in Psalms 46:1, “God is our refuge and strength, an ever-present help in trouble.” He is ever-present right in the middle of your trouble! There isn’t a day that goes by that His presence isn’t on sight and on the scene to bring help!