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Why take time to pray, we ask? VR

Prayer can seem so tedious and just another religious ritual. However all around us are people who want an authentic relationship with God.

This only happens when we pray. In John 15.15 Jesus says, ’I no longer call you servants – because a servant does not know his master’s business. Instead, I have called you friends, for everything I have learned from my Father I have made known to you.’

A revelation of this friendship will keep our prayer life alive. We become true friends of God if we take time o talk to him. We also need to develop a partnership with the Holy Spirit.

In Romans 8.26 we read about this partnership. It says ‘Likewise the Holy Spirit helps us in our weakness. For we do not know what to pray for as we ought, but the Spirit himself intercedes for us with groanings too deep for words”.

We need to develop a healthy two-way communication with God. We need to understand that prayer is more than a place to ask for help with our most recent crisis but also a place of exchange and conversation with God.

Someone once said “Prayer is not about seeking an answer but about seeking the One who had all the power to answer”, We need to expect to hear God speaking with us too. Prayer is about knowing that as we draw near to the heart of God, God is going to touch our lives.

Good friendships take time. If we are prepared to invest quality time into a relationship with God then we will be rewarded with a more intimate knowledge and understanding of Him.

There are many areas where the church needs fresh insights and wisdom, but those revelations will not be given to us unless we spend time talking to God. The disciples were captivated by Jesus and His relationship with God, His father, and said to Jesus, “Teach us to pray”. As Christ’s followers this should be our cry.

As we pursue God and establish our prayer relationship, like Jesus we need to inspire others.

Anyone who has travelled on the London Underground will be familiar with the voice reminding people ‘Mind the Gap, please Mind the Gap’ as the doors open and people get on and off the train.

In the same way, God is calling us to stand and ‘mind the gap’ for others. We are being challenged to pray beyond ourselves and embrace the needs of others.

As we pray, with one hand we are laying hold of heaven’s desire and with the other hand earth’s reality and we cry “Lord let your Kingdom come now to this place at this time.

Everything can shout “Don’t bother – give up – your prayers will make no difference. But it says in Galatians 6:9. “Let us not become weary in doing good, for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up. Remember, now is not a good time to give up.

Our prayer lives are probably far more effective than we realise. So don’t stop now. The enemy (the devil) would love us to believe that the delay to the answers to our prayers is because we are not good enough at it and that our prayers are powerless. We just need to be persistent – we are doing good – so let us not get weary. Every prayer we pray is like laying another piece of tarmac on that highway of freedom.

It is by our prayers and intercessions that we bridge the gap. Even when we cannot discern any change in the earthly situation, our prayers are having effect in the spiritual realms.

Praying time is never wasted time. Each time we pray, something is happening. One day our mission will be accomplished. So let us remember “Never give up” and see what happens because we prayed a prayer of generosity for others.

We need to stand in the gap for our families, our neighbours, our cities, our towns our villages and our nation.

Prayer is vital because it gives God’s solutions to our daily living and strengthens our faith in God. Prayer is our communication with God and it opens our spirit to the possibilities of God. The liberty of our families, communities and nations depends on us standing in the gap as soldiers in the battlefield against the onslaught of darkness. That is why prayer is important and why we will keep on praying.

VR

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Hopes for a better world: Graham Kendrick

Widely appreciated hymnwriter and missioner, Graham Kendrick, also has critics; he was described by the journalist Quentin Letts as “king of the happy-clappy banalities”.

But in his 1950s song he prophetically expresses hopes – rarely discussed at the time but in the forefront of many minds now:

  • Bread for the children, Justice, joy, peace
  • Shelter for fragile lives cures for their ills
  • Work for the craftsman, trade for their skills
  • Land for the dispossessed,
  • Rights for the weak
  • Voices to plead the cause of those who can’t speak
  • Refuge from cruel wars. havens from fear, cities for sanctuary,
  • Peace to the killing-fields,
  • Scorched earth to green.
  • Rest for the ravaged earth, oceans and streams
  • Plundered and poisoned our future, our dreams.

End our madness, carelessness, greed, make us content with the things that we need.

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To hear the hymn go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=08utbDFP9AE

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God is not a magician: VR

Our Bible reading today (Luke 6;17-26) started by telling us that people came to Jesus from far and wide to be healed of their diseases, their troubled minds and to be set free from evil spirits.

When news of the healing power of Jesus spread throughout the land crowds gathered just to touch Him. For many he had become a symbol of good fortune, a lucky charm or a magician.

Instead of desiring God’s pardon and love, they only wanted physical healing or a chance to see spectacular events.

Some people still see God as a cosmic magician and consider prayer as a way to get God to do His tricks.

But God is not a magician – He is the Master. Prayer is not a way for us to control God, it is a way for us to put ourselves under His control.

It is quite understandable that people desire to be set free from all the things that ruin their lives and, when it says that Jesus healed them all, it looks as though they got what they asked for. They would have felt truly blessed – who wouldn’t be?

But Jesus goes on to say something strange to their ears then and strange to most people’s ears today, that they who are poor, hungry, sad, hated, rejected and persecuted will be blessed. Surely no-one can be expected to go along with that! Then he goes on to say woe to you who are rich, well-fed and esteemed by society. That won’t last. You’ll come down to earth with a bump.

He is saying, great though it is to receive what we desire, if we try to find fulfilment only by receiving the desired outcome to our prayers, that is temporary, it will not last forever.

The Beatitudes in Matthew 5 go into more detail. Jesus is not telling us that it is a virtue to be poor, hungry, sad, hated rejected, despised, persecuted and that will qualify us for the Kingdom of Heaven, he is saying that when we are in those situations we realize that we need help, God’s help.

In life, when things are going smoothly and we have what we want, God is often out on the backburner – sometimes switched off altogether.

So perhaps, if we think about it, going through those difficult situations is a blessing in disguise, for it puts us in the position of recognising our need for God: not just for an answer to our particular problem of the moment but to start or rekindle our relationship with God, our loving heavenly father, the source of our true and lasting happiness.

VR: February 2022

 

 

 

 

 

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Living in the seventh dimension

The site has a Christian perspective– but welcomed readers of other faiths and none from the countries opposite last year (2022).

It is for all interested in the seventh dimension, which, in the language of Space and Astronomy, is described as a spiritual place, calm and serene, peace surpassing all peace and God centred.

The first dimension, is that which gives it length. A good description of a one-dimensional object is a straight line, which exists only in terms of length and has no other discernible qualities.

Add to it a second dimension, height and you get an object that becomes a 2-dimensional shape (like a square).

The third dimension involves depth and gives all objects a sense of area and a cross-section.

Beyond these three lie the seven dimensions which are not immediately apparent to us, but which can be still be perceived as having a direct effect on the universe and reality as we know it.

The fourth dimension is time, which governs the properties of all known matter at any given point. Along with the three other dimensions, knowing an object’s position in time is essential to plotting its position in the universe..

According to Superstring Theory if we could see on through to the fifth dimension, we would see a world slightly different from our own that would give us a means of measuring the similarity and differences between our world and other possible ones.

In the sixth, we would see a plane of possible worlds, where we could compare and position all the possible universes that start with the same initial conditions as this

The seventh dimension, is claimed to be a spiritual place, calm and serene, peace surpassing all peace and God centred.

The ten dimensions  are described here. https://www.universetoday.com/48619/a-universe-of-10-dimensions/

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