Wednesday, 26 August 2015

Answered Prayers

The Lord generally has three types of answer as He always answers prayer. His answer could be an affirmative "Yes", a negative 'No" or a passive "Wait." But He always answers all His children's prayers. Only one has to discern what is the Lord's answer.

Recently, the Lord encouraged me very much with affirmative "Yes," again and again, resounding. Of course, these have been answers to years of prayer. Whichever the answer may be, prayer is always a win-win exercise. The result of the prayer itself is worth praying for. The very act of praying and the answers to the prayer are always worthy. In fact, the act of prayer itself is the benefit of prayer, and much more, answers will be added in due time.  

In the past one month itself, the Lord has brought in three solid result to our prayers in the literature service, and two more are on the way. In our office, every morning we spend at least an hour of prayer and pursuing. It is not a mere obligation but an experience and enjoyment of the Lord. As we faithfully prayed for the need of the literature service in various languages and for various parts of India, the Lord bountifully blessed us. In time, He begins to answer our prayer one by one.

One particular language was suffering for lack of proper serving ones, but the Lord is now filling up the lack and a new beginning is dawning. The Lord is faithful and meets His own need. This particular experience is very encouraging to me.

When in one spirit with the Lord, every prayer uttered is the Lord's prayer and the Lord will always answer His prayer through us. Our simple responsibility is to exercise to be one spirit with the Lord by being in the mingled spirit. This brings us to the basic Christian living as in Romans 8:4 "That the righteous requirement of the law might be fulfilled in us, who do not walk according to the flesh but according to the spirit.", 1 Timothy 4:7 "exercise yourself unto godliness", Galatian 5:16 "But I say, Walk by the Spirit and you shall by no means fulfill the lust of the flesh," 25 "If we live by the Spirit, let us also walk by the Spirit."

Lord, grace me such a basic living and walking in the Spirit.

Thursday, 13 August 2015

Presumption

A great and grave danger of a mindset is "presumption." Often many, including myself, have the habit and temptation of "counting the chickens before it hatches." The paradox is, without any certainty of what the future might hold, one presumes things as though it has already been so. And to a sarcastic surprise, what comes out in reality is often the exact opposite of what was presumed to be.

Not merely once have I been a victim of such mindset, it has happened again and again. I hope I learn this lesson well this time.

Yesterday, I visited a sister who was admitted in a hospital for "dengue." My observation was that she was recovering as her blood platelet counts was above 60. I comforted her and presumed confidently that she will be alright and was not that burdened at all, even for prayer. What a grave oversight. And this morning I was informed that her platelet counts went down to below 30 and was very critical. Not only so, I received a mail and a message about the seriousness of her health condition. This was a big lesson for me, not to presume anything before its confirmation.

This reminds me of my need for more carefulness in saying anything before hand and not to take things for granted. But to commit everything to the Lord in prayer that the will of the Lord be done, and not my presumption. 

On the flip side, this is also indeed an attack of the enemy as this sister had passed through much struggling and had decided to join the full time training in truth and church services. Besides, she is also a core team member for the gospel preaching in a reputed university in New Delhi. On the one hand its a spiritual battle, yet on the other hand its a spiritual lesson for me.

I have had enough experiences of my presumptions being nullified, and I am still learning this simple lesson. Though I trust my brothers in many things, still the Lord would allow some "exceptional cases or unavoidable circumstances" to withhold my plan and make my presumption void, though ultimately things will be cleared up later. It was the hand of God for me to learn my lesson, of not being presumptuous but depend on the Lord step by step, trusting Him all the way through.

Praise the Lord for the lesson of "not to be presumptuous."

Lord, grace me to be so.

A Living Testimony : I Have Decided to Follow Jesus

A week ago I received a post about the author of a very well known song, "I have decided to follow Jesus!" The story, I believe, was genuine and authentic, and was so touching and living that issues in two things in me. 

First, I was so convicted of my lack of burden and prayer for my tribesmen in my village who are still unbelievers and modernly pagan, still in the same part of India where the story originated from. Though I had this burden before the reading of the story below, it enlivened my burden and I started praying and interceding for my own native people.

Second, having received good and heart-touching story, I forwarded to many Christian contacts and some others too. The response was amazing. Many replied to the post of how much they were touched by the Lord. Two significant reactions were:

One brother translated the whole story into Mizo and post it on Facebook and sent it via WhatsApp. I was just left to my guess, to how many he must have sent it out.

Another sister and her husband testified to me, almost in tears, how the Lord touched them through the story and their faith in the Lord was greatly strengthened.

The story goes...
"I Have Decided to Follow Jesus" is a Christian hymn originating from India. The lyrics are based on the last words of a man in Garo, Assam, north-east India.
About 150 years ago, there was a great revival in Wales, England. As a result of this, many missionaries came from England and Germany to North-East India to spread the Gospel. At the time, north-east India was not divided into many states as it is today. The region was known as Assam and comprised hundreds of tribes. 
The tribal communities were quite primitive and aggressive by nature. The tribals were also called head-hunters because of a social custom which required the male members of the community to collect as many heads as possible. A man’s strength and ability to protect his wife was assessed by the number of heads he had collected. Therefore, a youth of marriageable age would try and collect as many heads as possible and hang them on the walls of his house. The more heads a man had, the more eligible he was considered.
Into this hostile and aggressive community, came a group of Welsh missionaries spreading the message of love, peace and hope of Jesus Christ. Naturally, they were not welcomed. One Welsh missionary shared gospel and a man, his wife, and two children believed in Jesus. This man’s faith proved contagious and many villagers began to accept Christ.
Angry, the village chief summoned all the villagers. He then called the family who had first converted to renounce their faith in public or face execution. Moved by the Holy Spirit, the man instantly composed a song which became famous down the years.
He said:"I have decided to follow Jesus. No turning back, no turning back."
Enraged at the refusal of the man, the chief ordered his archers to arrow down the two children. As both boys lay twitching on the floor, the chief asked, “Will you deny your faith? You have lost both your children. You will lose your wife too.”
But the man said these words in reply:"Though no one joins me, still I will follow. No turning back, no turning back."
The chief was beside himself with fury and ordered his wife to be arrowed down. In a moment she joined her two children in death. Now he asked for the last time, “I will give you one more opportunity to deny your faith and live.”
In the face of death the man said the final memorable lines:"The cross before me, the world behind me. No turning back, no turning back."
He was shot dead like the rest of his family. But with their deaths, a miracle took place. The chief who had ordered the killings was moved by the faith of the man. He wondered, “Why should this man, his wife and two children die for a Man who lived in a far-away land on another continent some 2,000 years ago? There must be some remarkable power behind the family's faith, and I too want to taste that faith.”
In a spontaneous confession of faith, he declared, “I too belong to Jesus Christ!
When the crowd heard this from the mouth of their chief, the whole village accepted Christ as their Lord and Savior. The tune for the song was given by Sadhu Sundar Singh few years later when he stumbled upon some historical literature and read about this incident during one of his travels to the North East.
This is one of the most powerful songs composed by a man who gave his life for Christ, which became the reason for the salvation of the whole tribe. The tune given by a man who forsook everything in his life for the sake of Christ. The combination of both these great lives makes this song filled with vitality to generate more followers of Christ even today.

Monday, 10 August 2015

Need Versus Want

Needs are necessities that must be met and cannot do without them, whereas wants are desires or wishes that are optional and one can do without them. These two matters have been trying hard to balance these days in my cognitive weigh scale. It was a good time experiencing the Lord to know and follow His feelings.

Recently I sensed a need that would save my time and ease my life. But upon consideration and researching online whether to buy the thing or not, I finally concluded that that I can do without it, and would not invest so much for that automatic thing for which I can do manually. Similar case arose when my dad called me to send some thing for him. Immediately I decided to buy what he asked for, clubbing together with a gift for my wife. But as I was about to buy, something within me struck me to reconsider it before I buy, that prompted me to pray and discern the Lord's feeling. 

Quite amazing, as I brought the matter before the Lord in prayer, my mind was very clear that I do not need to venture to invest that much amount for such things which are just wants and not needs. It was a great salvation indeed. My mind was changed by simple prayer. In fact, I was saved in this matter of wants. But to the matters of needs I do not need a second thought too much, for needs must be met somehow.

In fact, as I reconsidered the matter, I reckon that I would not be at peace at all if I ever went ahead with what was only wants and not really needs. This taught me a wonderful lesson in life, especially as children of God to live a life worthy of His calling; simple living, not indulging in luxury, yet having all that are needed.

Even the children of the world are wise enough to distinguish the difference between the two and live accordingly, why not the children of God? A very deep lesson in managing one's finance and a litmus test of our heart whether we are influenced by the glamour and glitters of the world. 

This matter is also of great economic concern for the economist: One important idea in economics is that of needs and wants. Needs would be defined as goods or services that are required. This would include the needs for food, clothing, shelter and health care. Wants are goods or services that are not necessary but that we desire or wish for. For example, one needs clothes, but one may not need designer clothes. One does not need toys, entertainment, gems, etc.. One needs food, but does not have to have steak or dessert. One does not need glamorous trips, mall shopping, etc..

It is a salvation indeed to discern and cater to needs in life and not indulge in wants which often is a temptation linked to lust and covetousness.

Lord, preserve me from lures of wants, and provide all my needs.

Sunday, 9 August 2015

Saved by Grace

On 31 May 2015, I blogged concerning the salvation of a new one;  http://palmeichung.blogspot.in/2015/05/saved-by-grace.html. That was an incident of some people being brought to salvation. That was indeed a salvation by grace. But that is not all; salvation by grace is being enjoyed and experienced day by day, and will be, in the whole course of our Christian life. 

Salvation by grace is not just a one time matter; in fact, it is also a daily matter. This truth has been a theological debate for centuries for some unwarranted "orthodoxical" zealots. The first experience of being saved by grace was undoubtedly the salvation from eternal perdition which is reserved for Satan and his followers including all the unbelievers; for the greatest sin is a sin of unbelief, not believing into Jesus Christ as the Savior. However, every truth of the Bible has two sides, not contrary to one another nor contradicting in any way, but a complement to each other, if not a supplement. Paul gracious talked about "daily salvation" in Philippians 2.  

Philippians 2:1212 So then, my beloved, even as you have always obeyed, not as in my presence only but now much rather in my absence, 3work out your own4salvation with fear and trembling;
Note 3: I.e., carry out, bring to the ultimate conclusion. We have received God's salvation, which has as its climax our being exalted by God in glory as the Lord Jesus was (v. 9). We need to carry out this salvation, to bring it to its ultimate conclusion, by our constant and absolute obedience with fear and trembling. We have received this salvation by faith; now we must carry it out by obedience, which includes our being genuinely one in our soul (v. 2). To receive this salvation by faith is once for all; to carry it out is lifelong.  
Note 4: Not eternal salvation from God's condemnation and from the lake of fire but the daily salvation that is a living Person. This daily salvation results from taking the very Christ whom we live, experience, and enjoy as our inward as well as outward pattern. The main elements of this salvation are Christ as the crucified life (vv. 5-8) and Christ in His exaltation (vv. 9-11). When this pattern becomes the believers' inward life, the pattern becomes their salvation. Only this would make the apostle's joy full.
In ch. 1 salvation comes through the bountiful supply of the Spirit of Jesus Christ, but here salvation comes from the operating God within us. The operating God is actually the Spirit of Jesus Christ. In both these cases salvation is a practical, daily, moment-by-moment salvation. The constant salvation in 1:19 is one in which a particular believer is saved from a specific encounter in a particular situation; whereas the constant salvation in 2:12 is one in which any believer is saved from ordinary things in common situations in his daily living.

Since few days ago I have been experiencing the matter of "saved by grace" again and again. Though I was already saved, I am still experiencing the daily salvation. Though I am unworthy and fails in may areas, still the Lord is gracious enough to save be by His grace day by day.  

The testimonies of my neighbor and a brother was very humbling to me in a positive sense. Even in my short comings which I was very conscious of, the Lord is even using that as a testimony to my unbelieving neighbor. Hearing such a word was so encouraging  on the one hand yet very humbling, for I know my weaknesses too well.  Even a brother on whose house I am staying on rent gave a wonderful testimony which I inwardly felt "I don't deserve it at all." Perhaps, they both have seen something I have not seen. Or perhaps, my vision need to be broadened to see in a wider way. Whatever it may be, it is the Lord's grace, and I am being saved by grace. This indeed is a daily matter.

Not just a one time matter, nor just a sinner getting saved only, but our being saved day by day from many things other than Christ is also a "saved by grace" experience.

Lord, grace me the daily salvation; from all things other than You and to live You only and daily.  

Joy of Salvation

When I was regenerated of God's divine life way back in December 31, 1997, I was flooded with the joy of salvation. Especially when all burdens and load of cares, burden of sins rolled away, and was washed by the precious blood of Jesus Christ, my joy knew no bound, even sleep was not reckoned; everything was bright and shining, it seemed as though there was no night, but only bright shining days. The word of God was so clear, prayer so sweet, fellowship so enjoyable..... The joy of my salvation was extremely marvelous, miraculous and mysterious, yet so subjective and real. And that joy was not just a "born again" matter only but a joy that indeed lasts forever. Now and then, the joy of the Lord is filling me in varying degrees.

Recently as me and my wife have experienced, the joy of salvation is not merely confined to personal experiences alone. In fact, these joy is shared commonly by all stakeholders; the saved ones, the one who is instrumental in this salvation, the angels in the heaven and the Lord Himself. 

Last week, the Lord gave me and my wife, a new believer each to shepherd. In my time of shepherding with a new brother in the Lord, his relative of a native Gurgaon was introduced to me, which subsequently led to the preaching of the gospel of Jesus Christ and him receiving the Lord. What a joy it was to witness a sinner being saved! It was not merely my own salvation that brought the joy of salvation, but the leading of man to the Savior commanded the same joy.

Sovereignly enough, the Lord also brought a new sister to my wife, and she started shepherding her, another decent educated lady of a native Gurgaon. In our night family prayer, my wife could not help but fellowshipped with me, with joy bubbling, how the Lord led her to shepherd this new sister with the word of God and prayer. We both shared the joy of salvation the Lord had blessed us. This joy is also 'shareable' in fellowship. Not just my own salvation joy, nor merely of leading others to Christ, but also of a fellow member in the Lord leading people to Christ. The joy of salvation is common in all cases. This joy is of the Lord and blessed are they whom He chooses to partake of it.

Such is the sweetness of the experience of salvation, the special visitation of the Lord, the joy of salvation. O how I wish this be all the believers' experience day by day when we are all fully mingled with the Lord in absolute oneness and lost in His presence. That day is coming soon...

O may, I partake of this joy now and forever!  

Monday, 27 July 2015

A Macedonian Call

Though my plans were already fixed, I was always flexible as the Lord leads. One night I received a surprise call from a sister stating desperately her concern about her family condition whose husband is a brother, perhaps, more than an acquaintance of mine. In fact, a very dear brother in the Lord and a very close friend of mine. Gauging the urgency and need of the call, I prayed over and considered it before the Lord how to render some shepherding, as much as the Lord allows. But left it to the Lord for His confirmation. 

Surprisingly the next day morning the Lord confirmed the call as I was reading the "Macedonian call" in Acts 16, and the lady saved in the obedience of that call was "Lydia". So was also the sister who called me. When I received this solid confirmation from the Lord, I changed my plan and made a plan to visit them for fellowship, prayer and shepherding. Praying and trusting the Lord to speak His timely word for the full recovery of my brother's family for His testimony.

Acts 16:
9 And a vision appeared to Paul during the night: A certain man, a Macedonian, was standing and entreating him and saying, Come over into Macedonia and help us.

14 And a certain woman named Lydia, a seller of purple-dyed goods from the city of Thyatira who worshipped God, was listening, whose heart the Lord opened to give heed to the things being spoken by Paul.

As planned, I did visit them, all the while, looking to the Lord for His feeling, speaking and leading. As and when I got the opportunity I would minister something of Christ from the word and experiences to them, mostly related to God-man living and the need to be filled with the word and the Spirit; more practically of spending time together as couple to pray and fellowship. Though my experiences were trivial, still I would testify to them and shepherded them. At times, specific and other times generic; here a little, there a little. For about two days and nights I mingled with them, blend with them and ministered to them. We also delved at large on a particular matter of matrimonial concern. Though being a naive myself, still with whatever I have learned and understood, I have faithfully ministered, using some Bible verses with readings from the ministry books. All the time ending in prayer, looking to the Lord for His grace.

The Lord knew how much time I needed to spend with them and He arranged it accordingly. He even had to cancel an appointment with my cousin brother, and even had to delay my return flight ticket at least by an hour, so that I can spent extra one hour in fellowship and prayer before I left. In fact, the last one hour turned out to be the climax of my two days stay there. I enjoyed a lot, I believe, they too.

In factual term, it was indeed a "Macedonian Call." The Lord indeed opened up the heart of a sister and her household! May the Lord fully restore and recover this precious family for His testimony in that city!