'Therefore, since we are receiving a kingdom that cannot be shaken, let us be thankful, and so worship God acceptably with reverence and awe, for our God is a consuming fire.' Hebrews 12:28-29
A fire gutted St Barnabas Church in Sydney several years ago. Bad news for St Barnabas but over time, the church was able to find the finances to rebuild. The new church building at the same location was completed some years later. One can say that St Barnabas rose out of the ashes of the fire. I took the photograph outside the church a year after the fire; St Barnabas is still on fire! This is good Christian witness!
Still burning for Jesus speaks of Revivals. One such revival started recently in Asbury Kentucky USA on the 8 February 2023. The Asbury Revival started when students of Asbury University, a Christian university, spontaneously continued to stay behind in the Hughes Auditorium after a regular chapel service. Many others joined them in worship that seemed never to end. The President of the university, Kevin Brown sent out an email, "There's worship happening in Hughes. You're welcome to join." The news spread like wild fire and soon many descended onto the auditorium joining in worship, many from the surrounding cities and universities. The video below are testimonies of witnesses to the revival
A Christian revival is the work of the Holy Spirit, who touches the hearts and spirits of individuals, churches and communities in a most inexplicable and unexpected manner, stirring them towards piety, worship and commitment. “We want to be true to how the Holy Spirit showed up with our students,” said Baldwin, the vice president of student life. “We experienced joy. We experienced love. We experienced peace. There was lots of singing and testimonies. Those became our signposts. This is how, in front of our eyes, we are seeing the Holy Spirit come upon our students, and we want to honor that.”
Revival occurs when a Christian community undergoes revitalisation. It is a religious awakening, a renewed interest in the spiritual and a strengthening of faith. In words of the St Barnabas Church of Sydney, "On fire for Jesus."
We acknowledge that God moves in mysterious ways. Jesus said
'The Holy Spirit gives birth to spiritual life. The wind blows wherever it wants. Just as you can hear the wind but can't tell where it comes from or where it is going, so you can't explain how people are born of the Spirit.' John 3:6b and 8 (NLT).
Jesus tells us that the Spirit blows where it wills (John 3:8). And sometimes God does what Jonathan Edwards called “surprising work” and John Wesley referred to an “extraordinary” ministry.
The university is named after Francis Asbury, an early Methodist Bishop, who himself experienced many revivals. The Methodist Church has a long tradition of how to to nurture an outpouring of the Holy Spirit, a theology that teaches us to wait and watch for a divine wind to blow, a movement of the Holy Spirit.
When the emotions subside, the music fade and the praise and worship cease, what will remain is the longer term impact of this movement of the Holy Spirit. Revival will
Restore our relationship with God
Humble us in the presence, glory and majesty of God
Turn us to obeying God
Turn us away from sin
Lead us to find God's will
Improve our relationship with others
Imbue us with a sense of mission, service and discipleship
The Church needs an awakening and reawakening from time to time. We need to be on fire with God and not turn lukewarm like the church in Laodicea.
"I know all the things you do, that you are neither hot nor cold. I wish that you were one or the other. But since you are like lukewarm water, neither hot nor cold, I will spit you out of my mouth.
You say, 'I am rich. I have everything I want. I don't need a thing!' But you don't realise that you are wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked." Revelations 3:3:15-17
“Be still, and know that I am God;I will be exalted among the nations, I will be exalted in the earth.” Psalms 46:10
There is a very small island call Visovac in the middle of a lake at the KRKA National Park in Croatia. The lake is surrounded by mountains and wooded hillsides. It can be reached by boat from the village of Skradin. Pat and I visited Visovac on the 25 August 2005 and decided it must be the choicest place on earth to have a quiet retreat.
The Augustinian monks built a monastery there in the 15th Century. They vacated the place when the Turks ruled the Balkans. In their place, the Franciscans came. Today only 8 Franciscan monks and novices live on the island tending to the monastery and gardens. For these monks, the seclusion is medicine for the restive soul. It is the perfect place to recede from our busy, crowded world for contemplation and the study of faith and theology.
Many of us feel that living in a monastery is a form of escaping from the realities of the modern world. Some of us look down on these monks because we think they are avoiding the challenges of the outside world. We need to do things whereas monastery living is not so much about doing and achieving but to be in the presence of God. Places like Visovac engender a quiet contemplative environment where the focus is on being rather than doing.
This is unfamiliar territory for many of us. We live in a very busy go-get-to-it world. The present worldview makes us measure ourselves by what we do or achieve and judge others in the same way.
Such a living quickly wears out not only the physical body but also the soul and spirit. There is hardly any time to stop and think. The moments pass us by and before long we become old. Then we realize, rather too latMy files - OneDrivee, that we have lost time and failed to savour and enjoy inspirational moments. If only we can find our very own quiet place, then we can appreciate this song'Be still for the presence of the Lord'.
Be still, for the presence of the Lord,
The holy One, is here;
Come bow before him now
With reverence and fear
In him no sin is found
We stand on holy ground.
Be still, for the presence of the Lord,
The holy One, is here.
Be still, for the glory of the Lord
Is shining all around;
He burns with holy fire,
With splendour he is crowned:
How awesome is the sight
Our radiant king of light!
Be still, for the glory of the Lord
Is shining all around.
Be still, for the power of the Lord
Is moving in this place:
He comes to cleanse and heal,
To minister his grace -
No work too hard for him.
In faith receive from him.
Be still, for the power of the Lord
Is moving in this place.
Our world cannot manage this stillness. In the Battle of the Fittest, success goes to the aggressive person who needs to climb up the corporate ladder in a rat race. To them, to be gentle, contemplative and still before God is to be weak.
Jesus understood the struggles of the law of the jungle completely and all of its futility. Jesus advises us,
"Take my yoke upon you and learn from me, for I am gentle and humble in heart" Matthew 11:29
Everyone needs to find a quiet place where one can visit with God and hear the quiet and gentle whispers of God’s leading. The Quakers call this 'soul making' and seek often these times of refreshing for the soul and strengthen it.
'The righteous will flourish like a palm tree, they will grow like a cedar of Lebanon; planted in the house of the Lord, they will flourish in the courts of our God. They will still bear fruit in old age, they will stay fresh and green, proclaiming, "The Lord is upright; He is my rock and there is no wickedness in him." ' Psalms 92:12-15
The Cedar of Lebanon is a strong tree with deep roots and extensive foliage. The wood is durable, gives out a strong pleasant aroma and is much sought after for timber since ancient times. The Bible described the cedars as strong and durable (Isaiah 9:10), graceful and beautiful (Psalms 80:10), high and tall (Amos 2:9), and fragrant (Song of Songs 4:11).
Its aromatic wood is used for buildings, notably the temple of Solomon and the palaces of King David and King Solomon.
The Bible said that this cedar tree is planted by God.
'The trees of the Lord are well watered, the cedars of Lebanon which He planted.' Psalms 104:16
The cedars of Lebanon has been used as a metaphor for growing old gracefully. Indeed the Pasir Panjang Hill Brethren Church's senior generation ministry used Psalms 92:12-15 to describe their group. These verses tell of longevity and vitality in old age.
Many of us take this to be promises of strong physical health. Yet the reality is that as we grow old, our bodies become frail and disease set in. Our bodies weaken and we are no longer as strong as we used to be.
While it is true that the Lord will remain our strength and shield in old age, I learned that the descriptive qualities of the Cedars of Lebanon refers to our spiritual selves; more so than our physical bodies.
How will we prosper in old age? The elder generations will possess and show the following attributes:
Abiding Witness and Testimony. The righteous man and woman will be like the cedars with abundant foliage and spreading branches. They will flourish in the courts of the Lord, witnesses of Jesus Christ.
'Blessed is the one who does not walk in step with the wicked or stand in the way that sinners take or sit in the company of mockers, but whose delight is in the law of the Lord, and who meditates on His law day and night.' Psalm 1:1-2
Firmly Planted Faith. The roots of the cedars run very deep underground. These roots sustain the formidable tall tree. Deep roots represent deep faith, unshakeable and immovable.
'So, my dear brothers and sisters, be strong and immovable. Always work enthusiastically for the Lord, for you know that nothing that you do for the Lord is ever useless.' 1 Corinthians 15:58 (NLT)
Abundant Fruitfulness. In the silver years, the lives and testimony of faithful elders will bear much fruit and yield good results.
'That person is like a tree planted by streams of water, which yields its fruit is season and whose leaf does not wither - what ever they do prospers.' Psalm 1:3
And so the Cedars of Lebanon bear witness to our spiritual strength and fortitude in old age. God himself planted and continue to tend us.
'This is what the Sovereign Lord says, "I myself will take a shoot from the very top of a cedar and plant it; I will break off a tender sprig from its topmost shoots and plant it on a high and lofty mountain. On the mountain heights of Israel, I will plant it; it will produce branches and bear fruit and become a splendid cedar. Birds of every kind will nest in it; they will find shelter in the shades of its branches." ' Ezekiel 17:22-23
'Then if my people who are called by My name will humble themselves and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, I will hear from heaven and will forgive their sins and heal their land.' 2 Chronicles 7:14 (NLT)
How many of us dare to face God? On the day of reckoning, many of us will have tremendous trepidation even fear when we have to stand before God. What will be our attitude? What posture can we take?
Some of us have entered into the presence of God through prayer, some through meditation and others through our interaction with nature and creation. Almost all of us do so with genuine humility and contrition. However in the three chapters of the Book of Habakkuk we see a dialogue between a prophet, a holy man, with God in a confrontational manner with some air of defiance. Habakkuk questioned God.
'How long, Lord, must I call for help, but you do not listen?
Or cry out to you, "Violence!" but you do not save?
Why do you make me look at injustice? Why do you tolerate wrongdoing? Destruction and violence are before me; there is strife, and conflict abounds." Habakkuk 1:2-3
There is much anxiety and perplexity in Habakkuk crying out, overwhelmed by unanswered questions. He was living in Jerusalem at the end of the 7th Century BC in an age of moral decline and spiritual decline. There was an impending doom as the Babylonians' conquest of Israel and the sacking of Jerusalem was imminent. Yet God seemed remote and did not take any action. Habakkuk complained, "Why aren't you intervening, God?"
This 'to your face' dialogue went on over the two chapters with God delivering a series of woes and rebukes. Finally Habakkuk changed his tone and learnt to keep silent in the presence of God.
'The Lord is in His holy temple; let all the earth keep silent before him.' Habakkuk 2:20
Jonathan Lamb in his 30-day devotional on Habakkuk wrote 'The word silent is onomatopoetic in Hebrew, like our word, hush: be silent, stop all the arguments, all the arrogant assertions of human power, the efforts of human glory, the petty ambitions. It is a call for reverence, because the one who is speaking is the Lord of the Universe.' (Ref 1)
When we face God, stand in His presence, do we realise that we are facing the God of the Universe?
In a sermon on 19 Feb 2023, Rev Peace Choi of Charis Methodist Church made 3 points on Habakkuk's final humility in relating to God even in the face of impending doom and disaster. There was a change of tone in Habakkuk's approach; this time a more humble approach to God, not confrontational. When we face difficulties, perplexities and problems,
Plea for God's mercy, be humble enough to plea for God's help.
Recollect God's goodness
'Lord, I have heard to your fame; I stand in awe of your deeds, Lord. Repeat them in our day, in our time make them known; in wrath remember mercy.' Habakkuk 3:1-2
'But in my distress I cried out to the Lord; yes, I prayed to my God for help. He heard me from His sanctuary, my cry to Him reached His ears.' Psalm 18:6
Proclaim God's greatness
Recollect God's glory, what He has done in your life.
'His glory covered the heavens and His praise filled the earth. His splendor was like the sunrise. He stood and shook the earth; He looked and made the nations tremble.' Habakkuk 3:3a,4 and 6a
Pledge to God's praise
Recollect God's provision
'Yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God my saviour. The sovereign Lord is my strength; He makes my feet like the feet of a deer, He enables me to tread on the heights.' Habakkuk 3:18-19
In the face of God, a penitent Habakkuk accepted that the will of God will prevail,
'Though the fig-tree does not bud and there are no grapes on the vines, though the olive crop fails and the fields produce no food, though there are no sheep in the sheepfold and no cattle in the stalls, yet I will rejoice in the Lord, I will be joyful in God my Saviour.' Habakkuk 3:17-18
How do we face God? When we face life's uncertainties, when everything is stripped away, can we respond to God with a prayerful expectancy? This prayer-hymn, 'If My People Will Pray' composed Jimmy and Carol Owens will help.
If My people
which are called by My name shall humble themselves, shall humble themselves and pray.
If My people which are called by My name shall seek My face and turn from their wicked ways
Then will I hear from heaven then will I hear from heaven, Then will I hear and will forgive forgive their sin.
If My people which are called by My name shall humble themselves, shall humble themselves and pray.
I will forgive their sin, I will forgive their sin, I will forgive their sin, and heal their land.
Lionel
Ref 1: Jonathan Lamb with Elizabeth McQuoid, 30 Day Devotional - Habakkuk Inter-Varsity Press, 2018
'So be strong, act like a man, and observe what the Lord your God requires: walk in obedience to Him and keep His decrees and commands, His laws and regulations...' 1 King 2:2-3
The wisdom of King Solomon was dramatically evident by the judgement he made on the custody of a child disputed by two mothers. It is a well-known account of sound judgement found in the Bible in 1 King 3:16-28.
Two women living in the same house gave birth to a child each but one died soon after. The two mothers claimed the living baby as their own, resulting in a child custody dispute brought before the king. Solomon called for the living child to be cut into two giving each half to the mothers. The false claimant did not contest the verdict agreeing that if she could not have the baby then no other person should. In contrast the true mother, protested against this action and asked for the child to be kept alive and be given to the other woman. The King declared her to be the true mother because she was prepared to give up her claim if it meant that the child could be kept alive.
This was a moment of profound wisdom that marveled many and became an epitome of sound judgement. That wisdom came from God. Early in King Solomon's reign, God asked the King what he wanted and Solomon replied,
'Give me wisdom and knowledge, that I may lead this people, for who is able to govern this great people of yours?' 2 Chronicles 1:10
God answered,
"Since this is your heart's desire and you have not asked for wealth, possessions or honor, nor for the death of your enemies, and since you have not asked for a long life but for wisdom and knowledge to govern my people over whom I have made you king, therefore wisdom and knowledge will be given you." 2 Chronicles 1:11-12a
It was a brilliant and unselfish request from Solomon, so much so that God promised Solomon great wealth and prestige along with wisdom.
"And I will give you wealth, possessions and honour, such as no king who was before you ever had and none after you will have." 2 Chronicles 1:12b
Under Solomon's wise leadership Israel reached its zenith but it all went wrong subsequently. The strong united kingdom broke into two under Solomon's successors, decayed until the Jews were driven from their land first by the Assyrians (733 BC) later by the Babylonians (598 BC). Finally, in AD 70 with the destruction of Jerusalem and its temple by Rome, the remnant Jews were scattered. The State of Israel ceased to exist until 1948 when it was established after the British Mandate of Palestine.
Why did Solomon self-destruct? Kevin and Lynette Teo (Ref 1) in analysing 1 King 11:1-11 gave the reasons
Distraction. Solomon had many wives and concubines, nearly 1000 in all, many of them foreigners. It was recorded that these wives led Solomon astray.
'As Solomon's grew old, his wives turned his heart after other gods and his heart was not fully devoted to the Lord his God, as the heart of David his father had been.' 1 King 11:4
Disobedience. Solomon was disobedient in having many foreign wives and of worshipping other gods and idols. He built places of worship to these other gods causing God to be angry with him
'Although He had forbidden Solomon to follow other gods, Solomon did not keep the Lord's command.' 1 King 11:10
Drift. In time, Solomon drifted and turned away from God. His beliefs and faith became nominal and compromised.
'So Solomon did evil in the eyes of the lord; he did not follow the Lord completely, as David his father had done.' 1 King 11:6
Decline. Solomon's relationship with God went downhill. It is not only in his actions but in his attitude too. Thus the kingdom that was established by his father King David went into a tailspin decline.
'So the Lord said to Solomon, "Since this is your attitude and you have not kept my covenant and my decrees, I will most certainly tear the kingdom away from you and give it to one of your subordinate." ' 1 King 11:11
Kevin and Lynette put it plainly and bluntly, "The wisest man on earth became the greatest fool."
What about us? The Christian Life begins with Salvation but it should continue to Sanctification. Like Solomon we can start off well but many falter in a continuing journey to righteousness by being distracted and disobedient. To avoid the pitfalls of a compromised Christian Life, let us wisely learn from the Solomon blunder.
The journey of sanctification requires a undivided devotion for God as the hymn 'Be Thou My Vision' articulates. Notice how Kristyn Getty sang with much prayerfulness. Isn't this like the prayer of Solomon at the start of his reign?
Be Thou my vision, O Lord of my heart
Naught be all else to me, save that Thou art
Thou my best thought, by day or by night
Waking or sleeping, Thy presence my light
Be Thou my wisdom, and Thou my true word
I ever with Thee and Thou with me, Lord
Thou my great Father, and I Thy true son
Thou in me dwelling and I with Thee one
Riches I heed not, nor vain, empty praise
Thou mine inheritance, now and always
Thou and Thou only first in my heart
High King of heaven, my treasure Thou art
High King of heaven, my victory won
May I reach heaven's joys, O bright heaven's sun
Heart of my own heart, whatever befall
Still be my vision, O ruler of all
Heart of my own heart, whatever befall
Still be my vision, O ruler of all
Lionel
Ref1: Kevin and Lynette Teo, Passion with Purpose: A weekly devotional 38.2 2023/6