God used Elijah as an example of how to take down wicked national leadership through the power of prayer. In fact, King Ahab called Elijah “the troubler of Israel”. He confronted both Jezebel and Baal. The story is a classic which can be found in 1 Kings 18:20-40. I will never forget going to Mount Carmel in 2018 when Cheryl and I visited Israel. It sits to the west of Megiddo which will be the staging ground for the armies of the world as they gather to war against Jerusalem according to the book of Revelation 16:16. Imagine the defeat and slaughter of 400 prophets of Baal in the wake of seeing fire falling from heaven and consuming the sacrifice, the water, and the stones of the altar. What an incredible God we have.
To live in the power of the resurrection, you must first go through the cross. To be a follower of Jesus demands a death to the “self” life and a yes to the “deeper” life, life in the Spirit. This life of the cross is in many ways the opposite of what we hear coming out of the pulpits of America. So many teach the exaltation of self instead of the willingness to lay your life down for Jesus as He did for you.
Remembering the Lord faithfulness in the past gives us confidence for the future. Even when things look bleak as they did for me in 1975-1976, God was working behind the scenes to put all the details together for my future. He does that for every one of His followers because of His great mercy and love. Here is a great verse to meditate on this week; Jeremiah 29:11-13 (ESV)
The way to Jesus is through the cross. There has to be a death to self and ego and a worship and love of the Lord. A hunger for the Lord comes from stepping away from the worship of self and distraction and a responding to the invitation by drawing near to Jesus. Knowing Him must become the priority in your life. Falling in love with the lover of your soul. It does not come by “happenstance”. It comes through decisive action and purpose to make Jesus first in your life. Your soul desire must be to please and be obedient to Him. To step into the place of loving others.
The one thing that is consistent in all awakenings or revivals is the spiritual awareness of righteous God and the confession of and repentance of sin before Him. There is a hungering for more of the tangible presence of the Lord and a loss of the importance of time as those worshipping who don’t want it to end. Endless worship seems to be playing a major role in these events along with the reading of scripture and the sharing of testimonies. People are so desperate for a touch of Jesus that they will drive hours and travel from other nations to receive a touch from God. Each of God’s movements have different characteristics.
When my wife and I were in Israel 5 years ago, I was fascinated by watching the Bedouins as they cared for their sheep. There are 210,000 Bedouins in Israel. Wherever we travelled, we would see them. In fact, they were all over the various regions of Israel, from the luscious green pastures of Galilee to the dry arid desert region around the Dead Sea. Sometimes there were 3 or 4 different flocks mixed into one large flock. However, as soon as the shepherd called the sheep, they would separate and follow their own shepherd. Observing this reminded me of what Jesus said about His own sheep in John 10:27 (ESV)
“My sheep hear my voice, and I know them, and they follow me.”
When Jesus said that He came to bring us “abundant life”, we must understand that there is nothing that Jesus did to dismiss the idea of providing abundantly. He is the source of everything. He can bring the fullness of everything. Abundance is just who He is and what He does. The actual word abundant is from the Greek word περισσός; perissos. (An adjective, derived from perí, ("all-around, excess") – properly all-around, "more than" ("abundantly"); beyond what is anticipated, exceeding expectation; "more abundant," going past the expected limit.
I was listening to a message by the late David Wilkerson today. He was referencing this portion considering the “latter rain” that is still to come. As it was in ancient Israel, the harvest couldn’t be gathered until the latter rain came first. The latter rain speaks of the outpouring of the Holy Spirit that will come just before the final harvest. The recent outpouring at Asbury College in Kentucky is just an appetizer to what God is about to do. What God is about to do is pour out His Spirit on all flesh. The crowds that have been coming show just how dry and thirsty people are for the Lord. Pentecost was the former rain; we are still awaiting the latter.
I hope that everyone had a wonderful “Valentine’s Day”. Per the “History Channel Newsletter” the following gives the possible origin of “Valentines Day”…
Something a little different this week. The last 5 months of Cornerstone has been most difficult to say the least. Moving to Friday nights has challenged us greatly in almost every way. We are so appreciative to many of our congregants who have successfully navigated the change. We are also extremely grateful to our audio/video team who selflessly come early every Friday to come and set up. They provide a valuable service in broadcasting our service to the many who are unable to attend our services in person. Our online audience is slowly growing, and we are subscribed in over 700 homes globally. Our online giving is also growing slowly and is becoming a valuable source of support for this ministry.
One of the many things I love about the Lord is that no matter how bad things look, there is always hope of restoration. Isaiah was a prophet to the southern nation of Judah. Israel, the northern kingdom is in serious decline and is eventually destroyed by the Assyrian Empire. Judah lasts longer but is also in decline spiritually. Isaiah lived during the reigns of four kings of Judah: Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah. His ministry began in about 740 B.C., the year Uzziah died, and perhaps continued some 40 to 50 years, through and beyond the reign of Hezekiah. Isaiah helped to prevent Judah’s captivity and exile by Assyria when the Assyrian king Sennacherib invaded the land during Hezekiah’s reign (2Kings 17-20, 2Chronicles 26-32, Isaiah 36-39). However, Isaiah’s ministry began 47 years earlier in the last year of king Uzziah, Hezekiah's great grandfather (Isaiah 6:1,8). Isaiah’s work spanned the reigns of four kings in Judah (Isaiah 1:1). Isaiah probably lived to the exile of the Southern kingdom and into the reign of Manasseh (Hezekiah’s son). The time and manner of Isaiah’s death are not specified but Jewish tradition says that he suffered martyrdom by being sawn in two under the orders of Manasseh (Hebrews 11:37).
One of the things I enjoy watching are the “real-life” programs that feature families living off the grid in Alaska. I love watching the families survive and thrive against the elements. They rely on their God-given gifts to build homesteads, fish, and hunt for food, grow crops and raise sled dogs to live in a climate that is anything but livable in Alaska. All this without having a “Lowes” or “Home Depot” nearby to buy tools and supplies for their needs.
The following is a “call to action” that our dear friend and intercessor, Cheryl McCall received towards the end of 2022. Both she and Karen Austin have spent many hours praying for Cornerstone especially during the last few years dealing with the “plan-demic” and crisis that we faced at the church. I wanted to preface what she wrote with Ezekiel 22:30 since it’s this verse that she is referring too. Ezekiel 22:30 (ESV)
It’s hard to believe but tonight, Wednesday the 11th is my 68th birthday and the 31st anniversary of the first prophetic word that Cheryl and I ever received. It was 1992 and I had just graduated from Washington Bible College (now defunct) the summer before with a BA in “Pastoral Ministry”. Important to understand that WBC was a “cessationist” school which taught that many of the sign gifts on the Spirit were phased out by God after the “Canon” of scripture was completed. I was also a full-time associate pastor at a Baptist church in Frederick where I directed and oversaw youth and music ministries. To make long story short, my wife and I were invited to a house meeting where Michael Ratliff was the invited speaker. It was also a very difficult and stressful time in our lives.
I sense a shift in the release of the Kingdom of God in 2023. Just as a seismic shift takes place and shifts the plates of the earth, there is a shift in the spirit that will also affect a shift in the spirit realm and in the earth.
It’s impossible to come to this time of year and not reflect on the past year as much as you look forward to the new wondering what it will bring. James, the half brother of Jesus gives us an interesting perspective in his letter to the global church in James 4:13-14 (ESV)
“Come now, you who say, “Today or tomorrow we will go into such and such a town and spend a year there and trade and make a profit”— 14 yet you do not know what tomorrow will bring. What is your life? For you are a mist that appears for a little time and then vanishes.”
Maybe it’s part of my personality or redemptive gift but I find that I’m always processing the past and looking forward what God has for us in the future. I find that no matter how dark it may seem, God has a plan of redemption in every situation. The key is to stay low and trust Him in the process. James gives some further advice in James 5:13-18 (ESV)
I did some research on the origins of “Christmas traditions” this week and wanted to share a few highlights of what I discovered. Some of the following is from the “Love to Know” website.
Although the actual beginning of the Christmas “festival” is not clear, many researchers feel that the celebration of Christmas is related to the Jewish celebration of the “Festival of Lights” which is the same festival that we read about in John 10 as the “Festival of Dedication”. The modern Jewish festival is called “Hannukah” which usually lasts for 8 days in December. Each day, a candle is lit commemorating the miracle that took place when the Maccabean revolt recovered the temple that Antiochus Epiphanes had profaned by slaughtering a pig on the alter. The Maccabean family not only took back the Temple from the Romans but lit the temple candlestick. There was only enough oil to fuel the menorah for 1 day, but it supernaturally remained lit for 8 days. This event was celebrated for hundreds of years before Jesus was born. In fact, we read that Jesus was in Jerusalem for this dedication where He also declared to the religious leaders that He was the great “I AM “, John 10:22-30 (ESV)
The scriptures say the we love Him because He first loved us. (1 John 4:19). Love is in-ate in us when the Holy Spirit takes up residence in our spirit. Before we find Him, love in the flesh is often conditional and self-centered. We love because someone loves us. We give because it benefits my relationship to do so. God’s love is unconditional and is given when it is not earned. In fact, sacrificial love is the central idea behind agape love. John 15:13 is the perfect definition behind this kind of love.
“This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you. Greater love has no one than this, that someone lay down his life for his friends. You are my friends if you do what I command.”
The greatest form of love is a self-sacrificial love the one has for another where a life is given when nothing is expected in return. The Greek word for this kind of love is called Agape. I’ve studied the Greek terms for love, especially the word agapē which is supposed to be the highest expression of love - a pure, selfless, unconditional thing. Agape love is love at the highest level. It's so much more than we could ever dream or imagine. When we fully understand and grasp what agape love means for us, it will transform how we view ourselves and ultimately, how we view ourselves. It is used over 106 time in the New Testament.
The following story of an American Icon symbolizes this, Alfred Vanderbilt.*
Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt
When disaster strikes, men and women are capable of moments of pure heroism. Sadly, all too often, such acts are largely forgotten to history. Unless that is, you are no ordinary person. If, say, you are one of the world’s richest men – and a globe-trotting playboy to boot – then your act of sacrifice certainly will be noted, and celebrated, for posterity. This is certainly true for Alfred Gwynne Vanderbilt, who is remembered not just for his wealth but for the fact he gave his life so others may live.
To say Vanderbilt was born into privilege is something of an understatement. His great-grandfather, Cornelius Vanderbilt, left school at the age of 11 and then went on to make a fortune in shipping and railroads. Cornelius left the equivalent of $150 billion in today’s money to his son, who then doubled the family fortune. So, when Alfred inherited the family fortune, he had big shoes to fill. And fill them he did. For, while he may well have scandalized polite society with his partying and womanizing ways, he was also an astute investor, putting his money in real estate and, to a much lesser extent, horses.
It was for the latter that Vanderbilt set off from New York aboard the Lusitania in May 1915. He was planning on attending a meeting of the International Horse Breeders’ Association in Britain. Even though the waters of the Atlantic were teeming with German U-boats, most passengers on the huge vessel assumed that, since they were on a non-military ship, they would be safe. How wrong they were. On the morning of 7 May, the Lusitania was attacked off the coast of County Cork, Ireland. It soon became clear that it was going down.
Vanderbilt was, as a First Class passenger, given a lifejacket. He gave it away. Then, as the ship started to sink, he concerned himself with making sure as many children as possible got into the lifeboats. Given his status – and given what had happened on the Titanic – he could have easily got a spot on a lifeboat himself and saved his own skin. However, he was still trying to save others when the boat went under the waves. Vanderbilt’s body was never found. A reporter in the New York Times noted that he displayed “gallantry which no words of mine can describe”.
Sacrificial love is the same kind of love that causes a soldier to throw himself on a live grenade to save the rest of his platoon. It’s the same when first responders put themselves at risk running into a burning house or collapsing building to save people they don’t even know. This is the kind of love we’re supposed to have for one another. Christ was the supreme example of.
Agape love is a love that supposed to set the church far above the world yet so seldom does. Instead, the church is often a place that is divided by personal and theological difference which lead to cliques and insecurities which cause people to draw others to themselves.
This Christmas, buy a gift for someone who cannot do anything if return for you. When you do, remember Chris’s love for you. When you could do nothing in return, Christ freely gave His life for you. His is the deepest kind of love .
History Collection
December is the month that many celebrate Jesus’ birth. I’m more of the persuasion Jesus was probably born in September or October during the “Feast of Trumpets”. If that be the case, then Jesus was probably conceived during this time of year. That perhaps is more miraculous than His birth. The Holy Spirit gives us the explanation in Luke 1:30-35 (ESV)
And the angel said to her, “Do not be afraid, Mary, for you have found favor with God. 31 And behold, you will conceive in your womb and bear a son, and you shall call his name Jesus. 32 He will be great and will be called the Son of the Most High. And the Lord God will give to him the throne of his father David, 33 and he will reign over the house of Jacob forever, and of his kingdom there will be no end.” 34 And Mary said to the angel, “How will this be, since I am a virgin?” 35 And the angel answered her, “The Holy Spirit will come upon you, and the power of the Most High will overshadow you; therefore the child to be bornwill be called holy—the Son of God.
Whether you celebrate a Traditional Christmas (December 25) or Hanukkah, known in Jesus’ time as the “Feast of Dedication” John 10:22 (ESV),
“At that time the Feast of Dedication took place at Jerusalem. It was winter”
The “Feast of Dedication” was instituted by Jude Maccabeus, to commemorate the purification of the temple from the profanations to which it had been subjected by Antiochus Epiphanes 165 B.C., and kept for eight days, from the twenty-fifth Chisleu (December), the day on which Judas began the first joyous celebration of it (1 Maccabees 4:52,56,59; and Josephus, Antiquities, 7.7.7). This all took place in the 400 year inter-testament. Jesus was possibly in Jerusalem to celebrate the dedication. Certainly, He was there to declare that he was indeed the “light’ of the world come to save men. He also later declared during this trip oneness with the Father (John 10:30 (ESV).