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Friday, May 30, 2008

He Deserves All Our Praises

I will bless the Lord,
for when I am weak,
He become strong.
He is a super strong God.

I will bless the Lord,
For when I am living in darkness,
His light shine ever so brightly.
He is the light of the world.

I will bless the Lord,
For when I fall,
He lift me up.
He hold me in His hands.

I was a sinner,
Lost in my own world,
Deceived by the devil.

Yet Jesus saw me
While He was on the cross.
He paid the price
To give me victory,
Over sin and death,
To give me life,
To show me His mercy and grace.

What else can I say?
But to give Him praise
All the days of my life.

The world may fall,
But may praise for Him will never cease,
Because He is more than enough for me.

I will bless the Lord,
Because He deserves it.
I will bless the Lord,
Forevermore.

When we lose faith, we don’t have to beat ourselves to it. We just need to turn back to God. He is always there waiting for us. Regardless of our circumstances, He is still who He claims to be, He is still God. He still deserves all our praises. We praise Him when things are good, and we praise Him even more when things are bad, because He is still holding our hands. Jesus said that He will never leave us nor forsake us, and He means it! Your world may have fallen, you may be at the saddest stage of your life, you may feel that life is so meaningless sudddenly, you may even feel that God is so faraway, but the truth is, God is right beside you, waiting for you to give Him your hands so that He can guide you through all adversities. You may have little faith left to trust in God, but Jesus said that faith as small as a mustard seed can move mountains! Even with little faith, trust that Jesus will do the impossible for you, because He loves you!

PRAISE GOD!

Sunday, May 18, 2008

He Didn't Pay the Price for Nothing

Often, many Christians say that they believe in Jesus, that He is the truth, the Way, and the Life, that nothing is impossible with Jesus. Yet when a situation arises, the first thing that comes to their mind is never about trusting God, but rather, doubting God or even completely remove Him from the equation. Think about it - When you were sick, did you remember that God is our Healer? When you had lack in your life, did you remember that God is our Provider? When you were troubled and down, did you remember that God is our Comforter? Or when the circumstances before you seemed so difficult to resolve, did you remember that God is the God of the Impossible?

When we are faced with an obstacle, we tend to forget about who God is, and what He can do to guide us out of it. We tend to lose faith and trust in Him, and we tend to resolve the situation using our own way. And when things get really bad, we start to ask God this question: “Lord, where are You when I need You?” But did it ever come to your mind that it is you who fail to seek Him, to trust and have faith in Him that He will deliver you from that hopeless situation? Jesus said that He will never leave us nor forsake us, and He means it! All we need to do is to commit our circumstances to Him, have faith in Him, and continue to sing praises to Him. Remember, Jesus said on the cross, “It is done!”

Jesus didn’t pay the heavy price for nothing! He didn’t come down as a man to be despised, rejected and cursed by men for nothing. He didn’t suffer and die on the cross for nothing. He didn’t put our iniquities, our shame, and our pain upon himself for nothing. He healed the sick; not for us to doubt His healing power. He saved the lost; not for us to drift further away from Him. He died on the cross for us; not for us to reject Him. He resurrected; not for us to feel defeated. He was sinless, perfect, and righteous, yet He paid the price for us.

Who are we that we deserved all that the King of Glory had done for us? Are we worthy of His grace and mercy?

WE ARE NOT WORTHY!

But because He saw us when He did all that for us. He loved us. He longed for a relationship with us. He created us in His image. He made us His highest creation.
He wants us to do the things which he had done, and greater things shall we do also, because He has gone to the Father.

Jesus didn’t pay the heavy price for nothing! He died on the cross, was placed in a tomb, but the tomb could not contain Him! When He resurrected, He gave us victory in His Name, and the devil has been defeated! It is not “The devil is going to be defeated”, but rather, he has already been defeated by Jesus on the cross! We have victory against the devil in Jesus’ Name! The battle has been won. All we need to do is to claim God’s Words! He paid the price for these very reasons, to heal us, to give us victory, to set us free, to break the strongholds, to redeem us, to deliver us, to bless us!

DON’T LET JESUS PAY THE PRICE FOR NOTHING!

Let your faith arise in Jesus’ mighty name!

Amen!

Saturday, May 3, 2008

Was Jesus Lord?

I cannot personally conclude that Jesus was a liar or a lunatic. The only alternative is that he was – and is – the Christ, the Son of God, as he claimed. But in spite of the logic and evidence, many people cannot seem to bring themselves to this conclusion.

The issue with these three alternatives is not which is possible, for obviously all three are possible. Rather, the question is, “Which is most probable?” You cannot put him on the shelf merely as a great moral teacher. That is not a valid option. He is either a liar, a lunatic or Lord and God. You must make a choice. Your decision about Jesus must be more than an idle intellectual exercise. As the apostle John wrote, “these are written so that you may believe that Jesus is the Messiah, the Son of God, and” – more important – “that by believing in him you will have life.” (John 20:31)

Remember, Jesus died on the cross. Who in the world is willing to pay this huge price for us and worst still, if he knew he was a fake?

The evidence, therefore, is clearly in favour of Jesus as Lord.

Why is the question over Jesus’ true identity so important? Why does it matter whether or not Jesus is God?

The most important reason that Jesus has to be God is that if He is not God, His death would not have been sufficient to pay the penalty for the sins of the whole world (1 John 2:2). Only God could pay such an infinite penalty (Romans 5:8; 2 Corinthians 5:21). Jesus had to be God so that He could pay our debt. Jesus had to be man so He could die. Salvation is available only through faith in Jesus Christ! Jesus’ deity is why He is the only way of salvation. Jesus’ deity is why He proclaimed, “I am the Way and the Truth and the Life. No one comes to the Father except through me” (John 14:6).

Source: gotquestions.org, More than a Carpenter by Josh McDowell.

Was Jesus a Lunatic?

Extracted from "More Than A Carpenter" by Josh McDowell.

If we find it inconceivable that Jesus was a liar, then couldn’t he actually have mistakenly thought himself to be God? After all, it’s possible to be both sincere and wrong. But we must remember that for someone to mistakenly think himself God, especially in the context of a fiercely monotheistic culture, and then to tell others that their eternal destiny depended on believing in him, is no small flight of fancy but the delusions and ravings of an outright lunatic. It is possible that Jesus Christ was deranged?

Today we would treat someone who believes himself to be God the same way we would treat someone who believes he is Napoleon. We would see him as deluded and self-deceived. We would lock him up so that he wouldn’t hurt himself or anyone else. Yet in Jesus, we don’t observe the abnormalities and imbalance that go along with such derangement. If he was insane, his poise and composure was nothing short of amazing.

Psychologist Gary R. Collins explains that Jesus “was loving but didn’t let his compassion immobilise him; he didn’t have a bloated ego, even though he was often surrounded by adoring crowds; he maintained balance despite an often demanding lifestyle; he always knew what he was doing and where he was going; he cared deeply about people, including women and children, who weren’t seen as important back then; he was able t accept people while not merely winking at their sin; he responded to individuals based on where they were at and what they uniquely needed. All in all, I just don’t see any signs that Jesus was suffering from any known mental illness… He was much healthier than anyone else I know – including me!”

Next: Was Jesus Lord?

Was Jesus a Liar?

Extracted from "More Than A Carpenter" By Josh McDowell.

If, when Jesus made his claims, he knew that he was not God, then he was lying and deliberately deceiving his followers. But if he was a liar, then he was also a hypocrite because he taught others to be honest whatever the cost. Worse than that, if he was lying, he was a demon because he told others to trust him for their eternal destiny. If he couldn’t back up his claims and knew it, then he was unspeakably evil for deceiving his followers with such a false hope. Last, he would also be a fool because his claims to being God led to his crucifixion – claims he could backed away from to save himself even at the last minute.

It amazes me to hear so many people say Jesus was simply a good moral teacher. Let’s be realistic. How could he be a great moral teacher and knowingly mislead people at the most important point of his teaching – his own identity?

To conclude that Jesus was a deliberate liar doesn’t coincide with what we know either of him or of the results of his life and teachings. Wherever Jesus has been proclaimed, we see lives change for the good, nations change for the better, thieves become honest, alcoholics become sober, hateful individuals become channels of love, and unjust persons embrace justice.

Historian Philip Schaff gives a convincing argument against Christ’s being a liar: “How in the name of logic, common sense, and experience, could an imposter – that is deceitful, selfish, depraved man – have invented, and consistently maintained from the beginning to end, the purest and noblest character known in history with the most perfect air of truth and reality? How could he have conceived and carried out a plan of unparalleled beneficence, moral magnitude and sublimity, and sacrificed his own life for it, in the face of the strongest prejudices of his people and age?”

If Jesus wanted to get people to follow him and believe in him as God, why did he go to the Jewish nation? Why go as a common carpenter in an undistinguished village in a country so small in size and population? Why go to a country that so thoroughly adhered to the concept of one God? Why didn’t he got to Egypt, or even Greece, where they already believed in various gods and various manifestations of them?

Someone who lived as Jesus lived, taught as Jesus taught, and died as Jesus died could not have been a liar.

Next: Was Jesus a lunatic?

Lord, Liar, or Lunatic?

Why is it that you can talk about God, and nobody gets upset, but as soon as you mention Jesus, people often want to stop the conversation? Why is it that the very name of Jesus seems to bother people, making them feel embarrass and angry, and even make them want to change the subject? Why don't the names of Buddha, Muhammad, or Confucius offend people the way the name of Jesus does? Why have men and women down through the ages been divided about the question, who is Jesus?

Who is Jesus Christ? Unlike the question, "Does God exist?” very few people have questioned whether Jesus Christ existed. It is generally accepted that Jesus was truly a man who walked on the earth in Israel almost 2000 years ago. The debate begins when the subject of Jesus' full identity is discussed. Almost every major religion teaches that Jesus was a prophet, or a good teacher, or a godly man. The problem is, the Bible tells us that Jesus was infinitely more than a prophet, a good teacher, or a godly man.

C.S. Lewis in his book Mere Christianity writes the following: "I am trying here to prevent anyone from saying the really foolish thing that people often say about Him [Jesus Christ]: 'I'm ready to accept Jesus as a great moral teacher, but I don't accept his claim to be God.' That is the one thing we must not say. A man who was merely a man and said the sort of things Jesus said would not be a great moral teacher. He would either be a lunatic -- on a level with a man who says he is a poached egg -- or else he would be the Devil of Hell. You must make your choice. Either this man was, and is, the Son of God, or else a madman or something worse... You can shut him up for fool, you can spit at him and kill him as a demon; or you can fall at his feet and call him Lord and God. But let us not come up with any patronizing nonsense about his being a great human teacher. He has not left that option open to us. He did not intend to."

Hence, believing Jesus to be a good teacher is not an option. It's either you believe that Jesus is a liar and therefore, a lunatic, or He is indeed, God. You have to make one decision.

Source: gotquestions.org, More than a Carpenter by Josh McDowell.

Next: Was Jesus a liar?

Friday, May 2, 2008

Isaiah

I have never told anyone about my christian name. I will feel kind of uneasy if someone were to know this name. Recently, I have this friend who asked for my christian name and I refused to tell him. I believe he was pretty irritated by my refusal to give him my name. Then he said something that made me reflect on what I have done. He said something along these lines: "Are you ashamed of your name? Your name is given by God. Being ashame of your christian name is like being ashamed of God." What he said made me feel so uneasy and guilt-stricken. There was no peace in my heart. I prayed to God and asked for His forgiveness, and God opened my eyes and allowed me to understand why He gave me this name, Isaiah.

Isaiah means "God is Salvation."

Ever since I was saved by God's grace, I had been worrying about my family's salvation. It came to a point where I would doubt God, wondering if He would ever save my family. Sometimes, I was so eager for their salvation that I would criticise their beliefs. I knew I had hurt my parents and was behaving in an ungodly manner, but i was becoming impatient with their salvation. "God, when are You going to save them? Can't You just make them believe now?" This was what I was thinking.

For this very reason, God gave me this name, Isaiah. He wants me to understand that Salvation comes from the Lord, not from my impatience, not from my eagerness, and above all, not from me. Only Jesus can save my family! Who am I to worry? Who am I to be impatient?

IT'S ALL IN GOD'S HANDS!

Isaiah 55:8-9
"For My thoughts are not your thoughts; neither are your ways My ways," declares the Lord. "As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways and My thoughts than your thoughts."


Indeed, God's ways are higher than my ways, because only He knows the right time for my family's salvation. God must have greater plans regarding my family's salvation and I know that He will bring them to salvation because He will make all things work out for our good. Praise God. Come to think of it, God has been training me to shine for Him in my household. I have become more patient, my trust and faith in God is building up, and I have learnt to seek first His kingdom. I know that one day, me and my household will praise and worship Jesus together, and for all the days of our lives!

I thank God for this particular friend of mine, because His testimony about His family has greatly touched me, and I know that one day, my family will be like his too. I would love to see this happening, where there is true love for one another, the kind of love Jesus showed us through the Cross of Calvary. Thank You Jesus!