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Influencers Weekly Devotional

Monday, August 30, 2010


Go With ME
 
Embracing our Sacred Responsibility with Christ
                                                                                                                        
Loosen Your Grip
 
But he said to me, “My grace is sufficient for you, for my power is made perfect in weakness.” Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me. 2 Corinthians 12:9 (NIV)
 
Like many men who take up golf and tennis as an adult, I had a problem with my grip on the racket and golf club. I would grip it too hard. It was more of a mental issue for me, which had its roots in my perceived notion that I could control the outcome of the shot by keeping a tight grip on the racket or club. Now, you golf and tennis aficionados know I would not be able to control my shot this way, but rather, it leads to terrible results. A tight grip not only impedes a natural swing through the ball, but it also robs power from the swing and decreases accuracy. It goes against our instincts to loosen our grip on just about anything, especially in these sports. But when those instincts are retrained and the grip is loosened so that correct fundamentals can take over, enjoyment of the game follows, along with success. Most experts will tell you it starts with the grip. Even though your fundamentals may be good on every other aspect of the swing, if your grip is faulty, the other fundamentals will not work as they should.
 
One thing I have discovered about my relationship with Christ and my Christian walk is that there is also a grip fundamental that must always be practiced, before the other religious fundamentals come together. The grip fundamental I speak of is faith. My relationship with Christ begins with faith, and learning to walk with Christ requires faith. Maturing as a Christian requires faith, and learning to live with peace, power and purpose requires a correct faith grip, or else I will frustrate my other Christian fundamentals. Since it is the most foundational fundamental in our Christian life, I think we need to explore what a correct faith grip looks like.
 
In the passage above, we see Paul being required by God to relax his grip on his life, so that he could be taught how to have a correct grip. As an ex-Pharisee Paul had been well-schooled as a religious fundamentalist. He had taken all the classes and had done well in his religion training. He had then arrived to an "elite" status in his profession and religion. He was a "Pharisee of Pharisees." When he had his great conversion experience with Christ on the road to Damascus, his reprogramming then began to prepare him for the rest of his life. You see, God had to do with Paul as He does with many successful men who come to know Him. He had to break his tight grip on who he was and how he got things done. God had to break Paul of his self-importance, his self-reliance and his notion of how to relate with God. All the religious fundamentals he had studied could not work and would not make complete sense, until the basic fundamental of faith was engaged first. This was a hard life divergence for a performance-driven, religious, perfectionist like Paul. He was now asked to give up his notion that salvation could be earned by his adherence to the Law, and put his faith in another Man's work on the cross. If this was not hard enough, he was then taught that his ability to do great things for God would not be by way of his credentials, his training, and his hard work, as he had been taught, but rather, by God's grace and his dependence on it. In the passage above we read where Paul says in essence, "I get it. I get in the way of God's great power being delivered to me and through me when I operate in my own strength. God is binding me to a concept that through my weakness, and my dependence on Him, His power is perfected in my life!" When this was done, he then had a complete picture, and all the religious fundamentals that seemed so incomplete before then came together for him. When he got his faith grip right, the other fundamentals fell in place.
 
Although the Apostle Paul was a unique man and had a unique experience, the basic fundamental of our faith grip is the same as his.   The hardest part for us to understand is how our weakness and dependence on God's grace works for the good because we have been raised to think otherwise. Just like a new golfer who grips his club too hard by thinking that he will have more power and control, likewise is our grip on life as we try to get things done "correctly." We actually hurt our ability to do things "correctly" by doing it this way. Just as fear and our attempt to control the outcome of a shot will destroy a good swing in golf, so it is with life. Our fear and our attempts to control the outcome of our life, destroy our joy, peace and spiritual growth. We must loosen our grip on these things, so that God can grip them for us, and then, we will live a life that He can bless.
 
Personal Abandonment of ourselves and Absolute Trust in Christ always require of us a step in faith. But this step is always rewarded, as we begin a life that will eventually lead to fulfillment, joy and great power from God being delivered to us. As with Paul, it is the beginning step in a journey with Christ that will go with us into eternity. It all begins with the faith grip, which makes everything else make sense. Listen to Paul's words as he tells us what he thinks about his new faith grip
 
"Therefore I will boast all the more gladly about my weaknesses, so that Christ’s power may rest on me."
 
Ok guys. Let's loosen our grip so that Christ's power will rest on us. That's the kind of grip that will keep our life under His control.
 
In His grip,
 
Rocky

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Influencers Weekly Devotional

Monday, August 23, 2010


Go With ME
 
Embracing our Sacred Responsibility with Christ
                                                                                                                          
Refinement Though Waiting
 
 
"How long will you assault a man? Would all of you throw him down this leaning wall, this tottering fence? They fully intend to topple him from his lofty place; they take delight in lies. With their mouths they bless, but in their hearts they curse. Find rest, O my soul, in God alone; my hope comes from him. He alone is my rock and my salvation; he is my fortress, I will not be shaken." Psalm 62:3-6 (NIV)
 
 
When the Holy Spirit whispers His invitation to us, "Go with ME", He also whispers...."with personal abandonment of yourself, and absolute trust in ME." In essence, He tells us to strip off the old man, and leave him behind. Why is this?
 
The old man is self-centered and fear driven, for it is the basic nature of man to be this way. Although we men do not want to admit that at our core resides a spirit of fear, this becomes evident in our thinking and actions. It is fear that makes us create walls of defenses for dealing with people and circumstances. Do a little introspection and look at the number of decisions you make that are driven by your need to build a wall against your fear of failure, fear of vulnerability, fear of being duped and fear that comes in many other forms.   This core fear debilitates spiritual growth and peace of mind. It will really hold us back in our spiritual journey to becoming the Champion God wants to make of us. Furthermore, our man-made defenses will do little to dispel the fear that resides within us. 
 
By leaving this old man behind, as a result of responding to Christ' invitation to Go With Him, God is able to begin the process in us of recreating a new man..... a better one. The new man Christ recreates is a man He can pour His own life through, without tainting the Living Water that begins to flow in him. This will be a man after God's own heart, a new man who rises from the one that was abandoned and left behind. It is the work of the Holy Spirit to disciple God's man into this kind of man. It starts with a deep conviction within us that suspects something is not right in our walk with Christ, that there is more to the Christian life than we’re experiencing. It then becomes a holy discontentment within us to seek and find an answer. The answer will always point to our need to leave the old man behind and become the new one Christ will make of us, if we will follow Him. If you have begun this pilgrimage, or now realize it is the next step in your Christian walk you need to take, there will be a necessary discipleship process God will use to make of you this new man. Do not be surprised, and certainly, do not be discouraged, when the process begins. Remember, it is only part of your training regiment, as your Heavenly Coach uses this process to make a man after His own heart. This "process" I speak of is Refinement Through Waiting.
 
The transformational process needed to become God's Champion is very difficult because it is thorough. To be thorough, God uses long periods of waiting time for God to act on a prayer for a certain need or situation, which is a process most of us do not want to endure. The “refinement through waiting” process also has many applications, from finances to health. In all cases, we must suffer through some delay when an immediate intervention is thought to be required. When we get into the darkest hours of our waiting, we often cry out "Why Lord?" and only hear the echo of our question bounce off the walls of our room. To be sure, Refinement Through Waiting is the most transforming process we will ever face. But when it is over, a new man will emerge from the purifying furnace, a man forged into God's Champion.
 
Concerning the waiting process, there is no greater test within it than waiting on God to defend us than when people, inspired by evil, whisper their lies with the intention to hurt us. Often this act is delivered through personal betrayal. King David went through just such an ordeal, as we read about it in his life story. He also gave us insight into the way he got through it, in the passage I have referenced in this devotional.  Look at how he processed it:
 
I've heard it said that it's OK to talk to ourselves. But we better get a little worried when we answer our own questions. However, this is not always true, for we see David doing it in the passage referenced. David is agonizing with the lies and deceit of people around him whose intention it is to undermine him. If it were not true, he could be seen as being a little paranoid. But the truth is that his life as king consistently saw this kind of opposition. Now, keep in mind, David was a warrior. So, we know he was fully capable of facing a foe in battle and physically dispatching his opposition. However, in the realm of politics and dealing with schemers around him, he was out of his element. I know the feeling. Being raised to be a man of my word and to play by the rules, I have had my greatest battles, not on the gridiron facing an angry behemoth in front of me, but rather, in being instructed by God to refrain from defending myself against the betrayal and deceit of another person. This was one of the most agonizing periods of my life, for not only was I denied the pleasure of taking revenge on this guy, but I also had to allow him to continue for a period of time to expand his deceit. There was no debating it. God made it very clear to me that I must obey Him and allow Him to work in His own time and way to both defend me and reveal what the man had done. It was in my own lonely hours of Refinement Through Waiting that I did as David did. Like David, I talked to myself and gave these words of assurance to my soul:
 
"Find rest, O my soul, in God alone; my hope comes from him. He alone is my rock and my salvation; he is my fortress, I will not be shaken."
 
I can say truthfully that the schemes and the schemer were eventually found out. God did defend me and cleared my name. But far greater to me was the benefit that came from it, as God forged me in His furnace of waiting and recreated a man He wanted to reform. I am so glad He did.
 
If you find yourself in the furnace of waiting on the Lord, don't be discouraged if the delay seems too long. Be encouraged that God is working in your life, and when the process is over, His Champion will emerge. Therefore, wait patiently and expectantly for God to act. He hears your prayers, and there is a work He is doing that you do not see going on behind the scenes. Find rest my brothers, for He is your fortress, and you will not be shaken.
 
Rocky

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Influencers Weekly Devotional

Monday, August 16, 2010


Go With ME
 
Embracing our Sacred Responsibility with Christ
 
The Heart of a Volunteer
 
My heart is with Israel's princes, with the willing volunteers among the people.
       Praise the LORD!” Judges 5:9 (NIV)
 
 
I love the line out of the movie, Pearl Harbor, when Lt. Col. Jimmy Doolittle says: “There's nothing stronger than the heart of a volunteer.” When I heard it, I thought of the men around me I’ve seen, and not seen, who are faithfully serving our King by the way they give their life in serving others. For you men volunteering your services in the greatest army ever assembled, the Army of God, this devotional is dedicated to you. I wish I could be with every one of you, lift you up on my shoulders, walk you around the stadium of God, and allow the applause of Heaven to fill your ears. I cannot do this. However, you can hear it if you listen closely, by faith. By faith you must strain your ears, and position your weary spirit in such a way that you listen to it being spoken to your heart. It is being sent down to you right now. Your good works, although they may be obscure and hidden from view by the people around you, are being seen and are deeply appreciated by the pioneers of the faith who have gone before us, as well the angels of God, and God Himself. Take it by faith this is true. There is a great “cloud of witnesses” watching your works, cheering you on, pulling for you, as you strain to the finish line at the end of your life.
 
Influencers is a ministry built on the shoulders and willing spirit of volunteers. We have only a few essential paid staff who support the work of these volunteers, and yet, we minister to thousands of men and their families across the nation and globe. It is these volunteers who are the hands, voice, and heart of this ministry. I am assured that God is delighted by the service of these men, and He has anointed our work because of it. As far as I can see, this will never change for this ministry, for a process has begun that will eventually transfer my leadership of Influencers to an Executive Cabinet of highly gifted, called volunteers, who will lead this ministry into the future. If God allows, I will always be part of Influencers to play my part in going after God's men. But the movement God began almost 10 years ago by Christian businessmen must be sustained by like-minded men who will carry the torch into the future.
 
In this day and time of the institutionalism of many churches and other ministries, we are seeing volunteers being replaced by paid staff for most ministerial functions. The fact is these paid staff members actually become the ministry of their church because it is required of them. I am not faulting this paradigm, for I praise God that He financially provides for people who dedicate their careers to serve Him professionally.   I have precious loved ones and friends who faithfully serve our God, while serving as pastors. But I also know these men and women are overworked and are close to burning out.
 
In many ways, an institutionalized church will always burn its staff out, for a tacit, hidden message is conveyed that volunteers are needed only to support the “real” ministers who do the work. This message is demeaning and demoralizing. It is certainly not one God would convey, or approve of. Therefore, there must be a balance within a ministry where volunteers and paid staff serve in a ministry together, not based not on a W2 designation, but rather, on giftedness and calling. A “tentmaker” who supports himself financially, while serving our God with a minister’s heart and gift set, is no less called, or needed, or fruitful, than one who is “paid staff.” This needs to be stated over and over in the Body of Christ, for the Harvesters need to be raised up to go to God’s great harvest that unfolds before us.
 
Some time ago, I felt God was leading me to understand the process He has given the Church for raising up “Harvesters.” Like many other things in our current church culture, we have forgotten a very important formula God has given us to equip men and women to be part of God’s great campaign for reaching a lost and dying world. It goes like this:
 
Saved → Discipled →Abiding → Transformed →Enabled →Expressing = A Harvester for Christ
 
Paramount to seeing a new convert go from a baby Christian to a seasoned Harvester for Christ, is a much-needed discipleship process that will move him or her into an abiding relationship with Christ. The reason this process is essential is because abiding transforms a believer and then enables his spiritual gifts. When this occurs, the combination of an authentic love relationship with Christ,the equipping of discipleship, and the enablement of the Holy Spirit, creates a supernatural expression. It is at this point in the life of the believer when he is made supernaturally ready to join God in the harvest, by becoming the Harvester God has inspired him to be. This process God gave the Church for making disciples, and for those disciples to evangelize the world as Harvesters, has been overlooked in the church culture far too long, and it must now change. The Body of Christ is formed to be God’s tool for making disciples, and then sending them to the harvest. This should be the main mission of a church, as it builds up the Body of Christ, and equips its members for the work of the ministry. For those who would say the main mission of the church is to glorify God and to enjoy Him, I would agree. However, making disciples and sending these men and women to the harvest glorifies God, and we enjoy Him best when are co-laboring with Him in something near and dear to His heart. Getting a Christian into close proximity with Christ and into an abiding relationship with Him will create a disciple. This is the place a disciple is formed. People do not make disciples. Christ does. But the Church plays its part by getting a believer close to Him. In addition, we should never simply evangelize and then forget a new convert, as is the habit of some churches. On the contrary, we disciple a new convert, and then, they become evangelizers as well when they are made ready. Believe me, I have never seen anyone who is engaged in an intimate, abiding relationship with Christ who is not also very concerned and active, in some way, in evangelism. A disciple of Christ will always be concerned for the lost people in his world because he is a disciple. However, not all Christians are disciples, and very few are engaged in evangelism. For this reason, a church culture of the “hired gun” developed, as church members hired, and then handed off , their sacred responsibilities to the church staff. Before long, it was expected by both staff and member alike that this is the way things are done. A fragmented church culture developed, and it is now time for this culture to change!
 
This change will have to occur first in the minds and hearts of both the church leaders and their volunteers. No longer should volunteers be delegated to simple support roles for the staff ministry. Volunteers must be integrated into the fabric of the ministry of the church, and in every position. Church members must also accept their ministry responsibility and opportunities. If no opportunities exist in your church, or you are not invited to be part of its ministry, take your heart and spiritual gifts to a place that will use them. The harvest is plentiful, the workers are few, and you are needed. But you must be first equipped for the work your ministry will require.
 
Now let’s get this right about being equipped. To the Church Staff I say: Do not start a new evangelism campaign without properly equipping your members. And members, you need to submit yourself to your staff for being equipped. But both of you please understand a very important distinction: Being equipped is not just being trained to explain, or hand out a gospel track. A volunteer must be discipled, to be equipped. But the discipleship process must lead to an intimate, abiding relationship with Christ. If this is not done, your efforts will be just another good program but will not create a transformed life. It is the transformed life God wants to put in the harvest fields. This is His plan for evangelizing the world and is what His church must do. This process creates a lot of manpower if we do it His way. So, let's do it His way and trust Him with the results.
 
His way,
 
Rocky

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From Rocky

Thursday, August 12, 2010


I just wanted to drop you short note and say I am home from the hospital and doing remarkably well. I owe this to the barrage of prayers given on my behalf and a loving God Who responded. I am a very blessed man to have the friends and family that I do. I will have several weeks of physical therapy before being released. I intend to use the time wisely as I have many books I want to get caught up on. Please thank all our friends for their support.




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Influencers Weekly Devotional

Monday, August 09, 2010


Go With ME
 
Embracing our Sacred Responsibility with Christ
                                                                                                                          
Where Is My Security Found
 
 
“Satan rose up against Israel and incited David to take a census of Israel.” 1 Chronicles 21:1
 
“This command was also evil in the sight of God; so he punished Israel. Then David said to God, "I have sinned greatly by doing this. Now, I beg you, take away the guilt of your servant. I have done a very foolish thing." 
1 Chronicles 21:7-8
 
 
It is interesting to me why the taking of a census of the number of fighting men ready for battle was a temptation given to David by Satan. There is no question why Satan rose up against Israel and David. These were God’s people, and David was God’s anointed king for leading His people. We know God’s enemy will always rise up against God’s family, then, as well as now. There is also no doubt that God was displeased with David, in yielding to this temptation. We see His displeasure in verse 7. Finally, we see there is no doubt David realized his guilt. We see his repentance in verse 8. So, in these 3 verses, we see the whole cycle of temptation, sin, and repentance.   But there is still the question as to why this ploy by the enemy caused this sin? What was it about a simple census that caused this? Can this also happen to God’s man today, without him realizing the trap being laid for him? Let’s explore it.
 
Our nation has recently gone though a census.   The purpose was to number the people in households, for reasons likely more invasive to our privacy than we realize.   In taking a census, bureaucrats seek information about men, women, children, ethnic groups, property ownership and such, to allow them to make plans for the future of our nation. It makes them feel secure to know these things. It makes them feel intellectually-enlightened, so their plans can be intellectually-designed, intellectually-measured, and if needed, be intellectually-adjusted to achieve the goals they intellectually determined would be best for us. Is this a sin? I doubt it, although much of their work is misdirected. But why was it a sin for David? To answer this, we will need to travel back about 20 – 30 years in David’s life to the Valley of Elah where Goliath waited below. Saul was King at the time. His fighting men had the same heart as their king when they looked at the giant bully in the valley below. They were “reluctant.” You see, these men, including Saul, had metaphorically taken a “census” of the situation, and they had intellectually determined it was not in their best interest to respond to the giant’s taunts. They did simple physics. He was 9 feet tall, at least 3 feet taller than any of them. He had a spear big enough to carry a bronze tip that weighed about 15 - 20 pounds. He had a coat of armor about 200 pounds or more. He was an awesome sight. Anybody in their right mind wouldn't face this guy, and for this reason, they cowered far away from Goliath. Their census of the situation fed them the facts, and they responded appropriately, based on this census.
 
Then a young shepherd boy came on the scene. You know how the story ended, as Goliath's head rolled that day. But what needs to be observed is how David processed the massive man who had everyone scared and what he had to do to face this giant. Obviously, he didn't take a census, or else he would have joined the other men in their point of view. If he looked through the eyes of fear as they were doing, he would see the same impossible situation they did. David did something else. He didn't count on his strength, nor the strength of any man, to face this giant. He counted on God's strength and God's help. He knew that the superior odds against him required more power than he, as a man, could muster. The young shepherd boy had something the other men didn't have. He had real faith, and he was willing to put his life on the line by facing the giant. He abandoned his life and the situation to God, and he trusted Him absolutely. As a result, God was pleased with David's faith and courage. It became the beginning of David's "coming out party" as the Israelites saw the young man, who would one day be their king, take down the mighty man they feared.,
 
Back to the future: It was when David was at the end of his reign as king, in his older years, that He began to think like other census takers by finding comfort in intellectual odds. He wanted the assurance of numbers, and he didn’t want to be required to trust God with the unknown. Like other auditors who consider only hard facts, David wanted to know if his kingdom might be vulnerable at some point, and if so, he wanted to shore it up. Some would say this was good "due diligence and sound thinking." God saw it as appalling. In my Mississippi upbringing, we had a phrase for it. "David left the one who brung him to the dance."   This describes how I think God saw it. David left his faith in God and, instead, put his security in the strength and intellect of sound thinking. God never approves of this, and David regretted it.
 
"But my righteous one will live by faith. And if he shrinks back, I will not be pleased with him." Hebrews 10:38 (NIV)
 
How do we, as God's men, do our own census taking, and based on the assessment, do fear-based planning and make fear-based decisions? It is easy to do, for it is the way of mankind to follow this way of thinking. It is the exception to see though the eyes of faith, as the young shepherd boy did. There have been many times where friends and family of mine have not understood my plans and my trust in God. They thought I was committing intellectual suicide, for based on their assessment of my challenge, my course did not make sense. I could not help these people see with my eyes of faith, for they were census takers. They didn't get it, and they also missed the blessing. I have never regretted a faith-based decision I have ever made. On the other hand, there have been many calculated decisions I regret.
 
Influencers was founded by godly men, who also happened to be successful businessmen. Early on, we discovered how easily we gravitated to being businessmen when making decisions concerning the ministry. We were attempting to make sound decisions based on experience in marketing, availability of resources, and other criteria that we used in business, as we carried out our leadership duties. Before it got out of hand, God reeled us in and made it clear that this ministry would not be led by census takers. He made it clear that He would anoint our efforts born from faith. But He would not join us if we didn't want His leadership and were not willing to lead by faith. It was at this point we understood the absolute essential importance that this DNA must never change if we were to remain who we are as a ministry and if we hoped to be under God's anointing.
 
It is the same with all God's men. He wants us to become giant slayers and live by faith in Him. Sure, many people will not understand this. Be prepared to be misunderstood. But also be prepared to see things you would have never imagined, as God joins you in your lonely valley to face those impossible odds from which most people will run. This process will build a man in whom God delights. So take a step in your Valley of Elah, and face your giant with the strength God will provide a man of faith. Become the giant slayer God is inviting you to become, the one you long to be. We need more men like this showing the way.
 
Standing strong in His might,
 
Rocky 

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Pray for Rocky

Monday, August 09, 2010


Please pray for Rocky today as he undergoes knee replacement surgery on his right knee!





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Influencers Weekly Devotional

Monday, August 02, 2010


Go With ME
 
Embracing Our Sacred Responsibility
 
Debt Cancelation
 
"Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors." Matthew 6:12
 
For those of you familiar with the "Lord's Prayer," you know the Matthew 6:12 verse above is part of it. I first learned the Lord's Prayer in the King James version. Trespasses was used instead of debts. Living in Mississippi as a child, I saw a lot of signs that said, "No Trespassing," as farmers wanted to protect their property. In fact, the neighbor near our house had one that could be clearly seen. So, I kinda thought the Lord was talking about those times I trespassed on the neighbor's land to steal some of his plums. As a child, I grasped pretty quickly that the Lord knew I stole those plums, and I needed His forgiveness for it. I had climbed the fence, crawled on my belly to a big plum tre, and helped myself to the forbidden fruit. It was clear I did something wrong. What I couldn't understand was why I needed to forgive my neighbor his trespasses against me. We had no plums to steal, we didn't have a "No Trespassing" sign posted, and we didn't even have a fence. But for the sake of being obedient, I forgave the neighbor for stealing the plums we didn't have, on the land without a "No Trespassing" sign posted on it. And just in case he caught me stealing his plums again, I could tell him I had forgiven him, as if he had done it to me. Sounds like some perverted theology doesn't it? Also, it sounds like I was skewing the theology to meet my own needs, doesn't it? Well, I was a child, so I get a free pass on my thinking. But even when older, I still tried to make this verse say what I wanted it to say. For example:
 
Later in life, I began reading the NIV translation of the Bible. This is when I read the words "forgive us our debts", instead of “forgive us our trespasses.” The new description really spoke to me. You see, I was a man in his 20s, married, with a child. Like many young couples who started out, we had no assets or savings to buy necessary household things, requiring me to use the only thing I had as collateral for buying these things, which was debt and my future ability to earn money. And like many couples, it got out of hand and became a burden to cash flow our debt for the cars, the house, the furniture and the boat. This is when I saw the passage, "forgive us our debts" as a quick way out of the burden. Of course, I was looking for a rapid bail-out by the Lord. I later learned that He builds in us a lot of faith and character by helping us dig out of our mistakes over a long period of time rather than with a quick remedy. By viewing it the way I did, I maintained the same self-serving perversion of the true meaning of Matthew 6:12 that I had as a child.   Ever caught yourself trying to make God serve you, rather than you serve Him? Ever tried to make a verse support your point of view, even though, in truth, your position is in opposition to what God's word is really saying? You would be surprised how easy it is to do, especially if it is all about "me" rather than God.
 
Financial debt is a hard thing to carry for a long period of time, especially if the interest compounds, making the original debt grow way beyond the amount borrowed. It can become financial bondage, and it can destroy our happiness and quality of life. Most of us know this from personal experience or by the experience of others. However, spiritual debt can be much more damaging than financial debt. Spiritual debt can eat us up inside out, and unless it is dealt with completely, this kind of debt will compound in such a way it will make us detestable and without peace. It can also deeply wound the people we love, and hinder our fellowship with Christ. It was when I began to understand that Matthew 6:12 was speaking of spiritual debt, that I came to understand how important this passage was. This verse is directing us how to have the burden of spiritual bondage lifted from our life, to find the blessed life God wants for us.
 
There are two components in spiritual debt. First is the sum of our offensesagainst God, and second is the sum of other people's offenses against us. Retaining either will bankrupt us spiritually. I use the word "sum" to describe the compounding effect of unforgiven sin, and our unforgiveness of an offense against us, especially in the way we view those people who have hurt us. The longer we hold our forgiveness from people who have hurt us, the greater their offense grows in our mind. In our mind, their debt to us compounds and grows, even to the point they can do nothing that would pay off their debt to us. And like most debt collectors, we often become ruthless in our dealings with those in debt to us, and we can be super critical in our view of them. It can come to the point where this person can do no right, and the original offense against us is only the tip of the iceberg with how bad he or she really is --- in our mind.
 
"Then the master called the servant in. ‘You wicked servant,’ he said, ‘I canceled all that debt of yours because you begged me to. Shouldn’t you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you? ’ In anger his master turned him over to the jailers to be tortured, until he should pay back all he owed. This is how my heavenly Father will treat each of you unless you forgive your brother from your heart. ”   Matthew 18:32-35 (NIV)
 
Jesus made it quite clear how important it is to Him that we extend debt cancellation to others who "owe us." He connected our motivation to do this with the debt we have been forgiven by Him. Why is it so important to Jesus? It is important to Him, for we are important to Him. He knows how our life will be ruined if we allow the poison of unforgiveness to live and grow in our life. He knows how it will destroy the most important thing He can have with His child, which is unhindered fellowship with us. He also knows Satan will exploit unforgiveness that we retain, and it will allow access for him into other areas of our life, thus "compounding" the effect of our debt to the Father even further. If we retain the debt that others owe us by not forgiving them, we also retain our debt to God for the sins we have committed against Him. Because of this, we will not be able to grow spiritual equity, for the compounding of our debt will demand an interest payment of our joy, wisdom and spiritual maturity. What a price we pay when we hold back our forgiveness of others. It is just too big of a price to pay. Nothing is worth giving up the blessings God wants for us by doing this.
 
Here's the good news: God is always willing and ready to forgive us the sum total of our debt to Him, if we seek it. Because His grace, by the atonement through Jesus Christ, has brought us into His family, He has completely demolished the separation from Him that would have led to our spiritual death. That is a done deal for those who have received Christ. But I am not speaking on the issue of our forgiveness that leads to salvation.   Rather, I speak about spiritual debt that breaks our fellowship with God and the ongoing responsibility we have as His children to get rid of it. Our King is a God of mercy, grace and love, and He is willing to forgive all wrongs, even our unforgiveness of others. But He also wants us to reflect His heart and values to the people who have hurt us, by forgiving them as He does --- completely. The good news is we can be forgiven our debt that breaks our fellowship with Him, when we forgive the debt others owe us. Believe me when I tell you that this is the best deal we will ever have, for our debt to Him is far greater than any debt owed to us by another person, no matter what it might be.
 
Do not argue or debate the facts as I have presented them. Anyone who knows the teachings of Christ, knows what has been presented is true doctrine. Research it for yourself, if you doubt this. If you agree with me, then move without haste to the place where you hand over your forgiveness of another person to God. Yes, giving your forgiveness to another person is actually a gift to God, and this is a holy place for you to go, a place of "Living Sacrifice." This is an act of worship, and is something that will bring great delight to the Lover of your soul. Therefore, go to this place right now and do that which you know you should do.
 
Forgiven ,
 
Rocky

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