Living Faith Alliance Church

Carnal Self

Whenever the interest of carnal self is stronger and more predominantly habitual than the interest of God, Christ or everlasting life, there is no true self denial, but where God’s interest is stronger, self denial is sincere.

So says one of the great puritans of the 17th century, Richard Baxter. Though they aren't always easy to read, as the language can be a little dated, let me encourage you to take a look at the Puritans. They are challenging and encouraging, and still very relevant. They’ll also make you think a little harder, well, they do me. The following is taken from a reading I was listening to online. As I was listening these were the notes I jotted down on the subject of self-denial.

  1. What is it that you live for? What is that good which your mind is principally set to obtain on which you set your heart on (pleasing God or pleasing of fleshly mind)? Know this and you may know whether self or God has greatest interest in you. For that is the God that you love most, would please best, and do most for.

  2. Which do you most prize? Do you prize Christ and holiness or pleasures that gratify the flesh?

  3. If truly self-denying, you are ordinarily ruled by God, His word and Spirit and not by carnal self. Whose word and will is it that ordinarily prevails? When God draws and self draws, which do you follow?

  4. Refuse to be ruled by it or love it as your god. Fight it and tread it down as your enemy and strive against it.

  5. If you have true self-denial, there is nothing in the world that is so dear to you that on deliberation you would leave it for God. A trial of the sincerity to part with that that is dearest to the flesh. Nothing so dear to a gracious soul which he cannot part with.

  6. True self-denial is procured by knowledge and love of God, advancing Him in the soul to the debasing of self. The illuminated soul, so much taken with the glory and goodness of the Lord, carries him away from self to God, to the love of God and hopes of glory.

“Oh, that this too solid flesh would melt.” Or to quote another, “What a wretched man I am! Who will rescue me from this body of death?”
“What a wretched man I am!” Indeed. How easily I can be undone by the flesh.

Thankfully, though, we are not left to fight on our own.
To quote another, “We have the Spirit of God working in us, and part of that work of the Holy Spirit is to put to death the old man. To get rid of that fleshly nature that has been that body of death that has beset us for so long.”
I’m thankful to the Lord for His patience and for giving us a helper so that we might overcome.

—Mick Sanderson

What Kind of Following?

Following is a very common aspect of life these days. We follow sports, authors, preachers, health experts, house flippers, stores, political figures, scholars, comedians, worship bands, pet fans, bloggers, friends, and the list goes on. Not only do we follow, but some of us may even have followers! The truth of the matter is that when it comes to following in our day there is hardly any effort or sacrifice involved in doing so. In some cases, following involves a few clicks, a few minutes of browsing through our mobile device or in some more extreme cases it involves dedicating a bit of extra time to read or listen to that podcast.

So, how are we doing in our day when it comes to following Jesus?

My wife and I had a chance recently to watch episodes 1 & 2 of The Chosen Season 3 series. It was fantastic, at least from our perspective. We appreciated the fact that the directors of the series made it a point to highlight the sacrifice involved in following Jesus, at least from what they are portraying of the Gospels’ accounts. The episodes really bring out the cost involved in following Jesus. For some, it was prioritizing their new master over their spouse. For others, following represented the forsaking of an existing vocation or career. For others, it meant facing the very same dangers they were seeking to flee from. For someone like Matthew, the tax collector, it meant relating to the people who hated or rejected him—and by the same token those he had in some cases extorted. For all of them, it meant becoming part of a community they would not choose for themselves! And let’s not forget John the Baptist. Preparing the way for Jesus cost him his own head!

So, my head is spinning just thinking about it. Would you agree that most of what we call following Jesus today is couched in a very safe, comfortable, and low-sacrifice manner? 

I need to wrestle with this as much as you probably do too. 

If anything, this short blog is intended to invite you to reflect on how you would describe your following of Jesus today. Is your following of Jesus guided by attitudes and choices that are safe? Is it guided by comfort? Does comfort tend to set the limits to your faith? Is your following resistant to or void of sacrifices? 

May I suggest that if we don’t pay attention to the kind of following we are doing or pursuing, we may end up living a Christianity where our following is nothing else than an attempt to re-design a Savior and Lord who is domesticated? A Savior and Lord according to our image. And perhaps a Savior and Lord we follow not according to a faith that responds to His revelation but more according to our interpretation, desires, and fears.

May God’s Spirit help us rethink our following of Jesus wherever needed! And may we celebrate the places in our lives where by God’s grace we are following Him with self-abandonment and in true faith! 

—Diego Cuartas

An Unexpected Gift

I am still stuck on generosity.

Maybe it’s because the India Team just left for Omie’s Home.

Maybe it's because Thanksgiving is just around the corner.

Maybe it’s because I still have a story to tell you about generous giving and living.

I hope you will get all these connections after you read on.

It was 8 years ago and I was slowly driving to work, carefully rehearsing in my mind just what I would say to the ladies I cared for. I knew they weren’t going to be happy.

At church the day before, Dot Marketto had approached me with her charming little smile and informed me she desperately needed me to accompany her to India in a few weeks. She only had one other person signed on to go; she needed more help or she would have to cancel her trip. Now Dot can be quite persuasive indeed, but so can the Holy Spirit nudging me deep inside. I told Dot I would pray about it, discuss it with Kenny, and get back to her the next day.

In the car on our way home from church, before I even finished telling my faith-filled, missions-minded husband about my conversation with Dot, he was encouraging me to go. But I protested, listing all my concerns, my hesitations. I would have to quickly obtain a visa and get some dreaded shots. Nearly impossible, anxiously feared. I would have to take off a lot of work. Not easy for a self-employed caregiver whose clients are quite dependent. I would miss Thanksgiving with my family. Bummer. And it cost $3000!! How on earth could I raise that much money in just a couple of weeks? And just who could I ask to support my last-minute trip? We didn’t have it ourselves. That alone seemed to make the trip unreasonable.

So I shook my head. Kenny nodded his. I called Dot.

I would proceed with joining her small team and asked her to pray that all the apparent obstacles to my “yes” would be removed by my Good and Generous Father if this trip was His plan for me. I needed to know.

Then I had to face my ladies. I dreaded the conversation I would have to have.

The morning dragged as I busied myself with my usual tasks. Lunchtime would be the best opportunity to explain my plans to go to India. So, over our tomato soup and grilled cheese sandwiches, I broke my news. It went much worse than I had anticipated. One of the dear ladies simply cried and the other harshly lashed out at me. Why would I go to such a place and endanger myself? Weren’t there needs here in the United States? Why would Kenny allow me to go? How could I consider leaving my family for Thanksgiving? How could they, my ladies, manage without me? Did I care more for children I hadn’t even met than I did for them? It was hard. My heart was torn.

When I got ready to leave them in the late afternoon, my lady friend who had cried at my plans followed me onto the porch in her wheelchair. She pulled an envelope addressed to me from under her sweater. “This is for you,” she whispered, cautiously looking over her shoulder. “You do so much for us. I went to the bank on Friday and took out some money to give you to help you replace the rug in your bedroom that was ruined when your dear mama lived with you. I know that is the project you are saving your money for. But you can always get a new rug, Eileen, but you can’t always obey God and go on a trip to India to love people who need to know Him. Just don’t tell anybody!”

Ooops! I just told YOU! Will you keep our secret?

I hugged my generous friend, tears running down my cheeks, and climbed in my car. Relief and peace flooded over me. This had been a big hurdle for me, a big condition for me being able to go on to India with a clear conscience. I felt I more than received her permission to take time off; I had her blessing! I knew she would and could influence and convince my other more suspicious friend that they could do without me for a while.

I called Kenny to say I was on my way home and related my clandestine meeting by the back door. My heart was overflowing with gratitude. But, practical as always, Kenny interrupted me and asked me how much money was in the bank envelope she had slipped me. I hadn’t even given it a thought. I was still focusing on and rejoicing that she had so kindly released me to go, giving me the confirmation I needed. “You knucklehead,” he laughed. “Pull over and count the money!”

On the side of the road, colorful fall leaves cascading over my car, I incredulously began to count crisp $100 bills out loud in a very shaky voice. Thirty of them! Yes, you got it. Thirty! $3000. Exactly what I needed for the trip.

I had never told my benefactor the cost of my trip. I hadn’t even mentioned my concern for fund raising. When she visited the bank days earlier, she had no idea I was going anywhere. But my generous Father did. It was He who prompted her love and generosity toward me for one purpose that He had all along planned for another. Not only were my needs totally met, but He confirmed my desire to go with Dot. There was no doubt. Isn’t that just like our awesome God?

And it was, in part, all due to the generosity of one elderly lady who responded to the prompting of the Holy Spirit, the very same Spirit of God Who had prompted me to go to an orphanage and leper colony thousands of miles from Elmer, New Jersey, and love generously in the name of Jesus.

Generous people beautifully reflect the character and the heart of our God. Isn’t that what all His children really want to do, ought to do? Make much of Him? Make Him known for Who He really is? And if living and loving generously accomplishes that amazing purpose, let’s all sign on today! It’s a very good time of year to do so.

Let’s look around our neighborhoods, our places of work, our families, our church and listen to the Holy Spirit prompting us to be generous with our friendship, our hospitality, our free time, our love, our forgiveness, our encouragement, our resources, our talents, and yes, our money too. Needs and brokenness abound. We won’t have to search long and hard.

Let’s not let this Thanksgiving season go by without purposefully and generously blessing someone with an unexpected gift of some kind. Won’t you think about it? Dot’s team is at it right now.

I guarantee you will get more out of it than they will, a very unexpected gift to yourself.

And more than that, it will be a special gift to our loving and generous God Who will get the praise He deserves and the honor due His Name.

Believe me, it doesn’t have to cost you $3000. But it might…

I AM

Please consider Abraham, Job, and Martha…

When facing the imminent death of his son Isaac, Abraham reasoned that, because of God’s promises, God must be able to resurrect the dead (Hebrews 11:19).

When facing his own imminent death, Job stated,

“For I know that my Redeemer lives, and at the last he will stand upon the earth.  And after my skin has been thus destroyed, yet in my flesh I shall see God, whom I shall see for myself, and my eyes shall behold, and not another.” (Job 19:25-27)

When facing the death of her brother Lazarus, Martha said to Jesus,

 “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died. But even now I know that whatever you ask from God, God will give you.” (John 11:21-22)

Each of these three found themselves facing the greatest enemy, death. In the flesh, all hope was lost. Still, they had hope. Each of them had asked the questions we will ask today:

Is God good? Is He present? Is He able? Does He care for me? Will He act on time? Will He make something beautiful from these ashes? Can He defeat sin without and within? Is He enough?

And, from His mouth they had received an answer.

“I AM”

More powerful than “I have” or “I will”, Jesus tells us,

“I AM” 

“I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live, and everyone who lives and believes in me shall never die” (John 11:25).

“Behold, I am making all things new.” Also he said, “Write this down, for these words are trustworthy and true” (Revelation 21:5).

Do you believe this?

Yes brothers and sisters, even now, He is.

On our knees may we pray, “We believe; help our unbelief.”

To God be the Glory,

—Roger Garrison

 

 

 

Growing as a House of Prayer

One of the things that Christians throughout the centuries have done is to align themselves with the persecuted and those bereft of assistance from any other source but God and his people. Prayer, uttered in faith, to our God who sees and hears is practiced as a last resort, and that is such a shame because we are powerless without Father’s work within us. 

Today, I yield my blog space to share the story of what is happening to our brothers and sisters in Nigeria in hopes that as we grow into a house of prayer, will learn to pray with passion for our brothers and sisters worldwide.

Pastor George

In Nigeria, a Christian is killed for their faith every two hours; that’s nearly 13 Christians a day and 372 Christians a month.

They’re sobering statistics—each number is a man, woman, father, mother, son or daughter who die violently just because they follow Jesus.

Research for the 2022 World Watch List reveals that in 2021, more Christians were murdered for their faith in Nigeria than in any other country. Last year, Nigeria accounted for nearly 80% of Christian deaths worldwide, with more than 4,650 believers killed. The death toll once again makes Nigeria the world’s most violent place for Christians—for the second consecutive year.

“We can document that 4,650 Nigerian Christians were killed during the previous reporting period for the 2022 World Watch List,” says Open Doors CEO David Curry.“ Those are just those we know about—and can report. They were tracked, targeted, raped and killed . . . because they were Christians.

The epicenter of jihadist violence 

The numbers paint a horrific picture of what’s happening in Nigeria.

Today, persecution in Nigeria is—simply put—brutally violent, as Islamic extremist groups work to carry out their agenda to Islamize the world’s seventh-largest country. Leveraging the country’s political instability and poor economy, these groups have turned Nigeria and the surrounding Sahel region (Burkina Faso, Cameroon, Chad, Niger) into an epicenter for jihadist violence.

“Generally speaking, there is no single part of Africa that is spared of Islamist insurgency,” says Illia, Open Doors analyst for Nigeria. “The phenomenon—the issue of radicalism—is now expanding and gaining territories. Radical preaching and teaching continue to lead to hostility towards religious minorities, such as Christians.”

In Nigeria, people are living their lives under constant threat of attack from several main groups: Boko Haram, the Islamic State West Africa Province (ISWAP), Fulani militants and criminal gangs who kidnap and murder for ransom with few consequences.

An ongoing and horrific insurgency

In 2015, Pastor Andrew’s village was attacked by the Islamic extremist militant group, Boko Haram. The group destroyed Pastor Andrew’s church and set fire to the entire village. Villagers fled for their lives and went running into the brush to survive. In the panic, some children were separated from their parents and left on their own to care for themselves.

“We saw how the fire consumed the whole village,” Pastor Andrew said. “The persecution was so much that I never imagined we would come together again to worship in the church.”

Pastor Andrew’s village is one of many Boko Haram has attacked since it was founded in 2002. Despite attempts and claims by the Nigerian government to bring down Boko Haram, the extremist group has long been one of the world’s most infamous terrorist groups. The group exploded onto the scene in 2009 during a failed uprising in northern Nigeria and in 2014 generated world attention when they kidnapped more than 300 girls from a finishing school in Chibok.

Boko Haram doesn’t hesitate to specifically target Christians. They see Christianity as a great evil with ties to the West and frequently target churches, often attacking villages where Christians are the majority religious group. To them, Christians are outsiders to be killed.

“The Christians realized that the attacks were against their faith,” Pastor Andrew said. “But after losing everything, they realized God is all you need.”

Kidnapping Christians with impunity

Although Boko Haram targets Christians, they also go after anyone who doesn’t share their narrow view of Islam. That means they often also target more moderate Muslims, or Muslims who don’t come from the same school of radical, hardline preaching they claim.

Continued targeting of Muslims is one reason Boko Haram split into factions in 2016. Now, there are two rival groups, one claiming allegiance to ISIS (now known as ISWAP, or the Islamic State Western Africa Province) that does not attack Muslims and one still primarily known as Boko Haram that continues to attack mosques and Muslim civilians. However, both share a passionate hatred for Christians.

ISWAP has quickly become a formidable force. Most recently, on Friday, January 21, 2022, ISWAP attacked Piyemi village in Borno State, Nigeria. An estimated 21 houses and shops were burnt after being completely looted, a church was destroyed to its foundation, several people were killed and 16 others were kidnapped, including 15 girls. A week earlier, they led an attack on nearby Kautikari village, where they opened fire on villagers, killing three people. They went on to kidnap four girls and loot and raze two churches.

Four years ago, the same group kidnapped Leah Sharibu and 100 other classmates from their girls finishing school in Dapchi. Nightmarishly, Leah’s story is just one of thousands of stories of persecution that happen every year in Nigeria at the hands of extremist groups like ISWAP and Boko Haram.

Middle Belt clashes that impact thousands

Over 38 million people belong to the larger Fulani cluster of ethnic groups found in pockets across 19 Central and West African countries. They speak a variety of languages, including Hausa, English, French and Arabic and are the world’s largest nomadic group. The Fulani people roam a wide territory for their cattle to graze. Among the Fulani, less than one percent are professing Christians; almost 100 percent of them follow Islam. Traditionally, the Fulani are herders, driving cattle across the wide grasslands of west Africa. But climate change and desertification have driven them south, often setting up conflicts with settled Nigerian farmers—many of whom are Christians.

There is an extremist faction of Fulani that goes beyond being just simple herdsmen. Pastor Jeremiah’s village was attacked by Fulani militants in April 2020, and it’s part of a massive wave of violence against Christians in Nigeria’s Middle Belt. In this region, militant Fulani herdsmen push their cattle through the regions where Christians have lived for generations. When these radicals attack, they do so with brutality, burning down homes and churches to gain more land and wipe out the Christian presence in the region.

Pastor Jeremiah described the attack on his village: “We heard gunshots close to our vicinity, so we told our women and children to go to the next town while the men stayed guard. About 15 minutes later, armed Fulani surrounded our town. They came bearing automatic weapons, shooting anyone in sight, and torches to burn down the village.

“It was impossible to protect the town against such heavily armed men, so everyone fled. Some ran deep into the bush, others to the rocks and others tried to run to the next town. The radicals shot at me while I was running. Some of us didn’t make it out alive.”

The militants went from house-to-house and set everything ablaze. Miraculously, Pastor Jeremiah’s church survived the fires. But his village and church is one of thousands that has suffered at the hands of militant Fulani.

Pastor Jeremiah in Nigeria captures the fear and trauma in Nigeria that our family lives with every day: “When we go to sleep at night, we are never sure we will make it to the next day.

Our Nigerian family needs our prayers

Now is the time for us—as brothers and sisters in Christ—to raise up our Nigerian church family in desperate prayer. Our Nigerian family lives each hour under threat of attack, kidnapping or death, simply because they believe in Jesus as Savior.

Let’s pray for the government in Nigeria, that they would quit turning a blind eye and instead support Christian Nigerians.

Nigeria was removed from the U.S.’s new list of “Countries of Particular Concern.” Pray the international community would recognize the insecurity in Nigeria that is allowing violent extremist groups and armed bandits to continue and even increase their terrorist activity.

Let’s pray for those who are harassing, terrorizing and murdering Christians, that God would work in their lives and that their hearts might become flesh again (Matt. 5:44).

Let’s pray for the widows and children growing up without one or both of their parents, that God would comfort them and hold them close to His chest. Pray they’ll feel His supreme peace in the scabbed pits of their hearts.

And let’s pray for those who are being persecuted or who live in fear of persecution, that they might feel God’s abundant comfort in their valleys, His amazing hope in their storms and for their souls to be made whole again amidst painful struggles and unbearable loss.

Taken from:

https://www.opendoorsusa.org/christian-persecution/stories/every-two-hours-a-christian-in-nigeria-is-killed-for-their-faith/?utm_campaign=coschedule&utm_source=facebook_page&utm_medium=Open%20Doors%20USA&fbclid=IwAR1QgHuc31XAhoQmXQUM_c5Zu8M4fQyKg665CrBZWqq1zc9V0-44H69BTpI

 

Powered by Squarespace