Time to Strike the Ground


2 Kings 13:14-19 – Now Elisha had a terminal illness. King Jehoash of Israel went down to visit him. He wept before him and said, “My father, my father!  The chariot and horsemen of Israel!” 15 Elisha told him, “Take a bow and some arrows,” and he did so. 16 Then Elisha told the king of Israel, “Aim the bow.” He did so, and Elisha placed his hands on the king’s hands. 17 Elisha said, “Open the east window,” and he did so. Elisha said, “Shoot!” and he did so. Elisha said, “This arrow symbolizes the victory the Lord will give you over Syria. You will annihilate Syria in Aphek!” 18 Then Elisha said, “Take the arrows,” and he did so. He told the king of Israel, “Strike the ground!” He struck the ground three times and stopped. 19 The prophet got angry at him and said, “If you had struck the ground five or six times, you would have annihilated Syria! But now, you will defeat Syria only three times.”

Hear this!  Today is a day without compare!   What is unique about today?  It is a day of opportunity and marks the beginning of a new outpouring of God we have longed for.   It will be viewed as just another day by all but those whose hearts are not attuned to the quiet whispers of the Holy Spirit.   Today, God is reassuring His timeless call to Himself in full surrender and complete obedience.   No more mixed worship and divided hearts.

As I read in 2 Kings, a repeated theme surfaced.  Those Kings who did what was pleasing to God all had a similar flaw – they failed to fully rid the land of the high places and mixed worship.

The same situation exists today in many churches and lives.  There is a burning hunger for God, but there is evidence of allowing things of the flesh and world to be mixed into the church and life.  We call it tolerance and inclusiveness; God calls it an abomination.

In 2 Kings 13, when Elisha was terminally ill, he called King Jehoash to him for a prophetic revelation.  He had the king shoot an arrow to the East to symbolize victory over Syria.  In order to complete the victory, he instructed the king to take the arrows and “strike the ground.”

The king was clearly not enthusiastic, nor did he grasp the power of symbolism, so he nonchalantly hit the ground three meek times.  Elisha became irate!  He said, “If you had struck the ground 5 or 6 times, you would have annihilated Syria!  Complete victory was yours, BUT not only partial victory is coming because you did not give God your whole heart.”

In 2 Corinthians 6, Paul speaks to this attitude, condition, and requirement for Victory.  In verses 16-17, he says, “For we are the temple of the Living God, JUST AS GOD SAID, I will live IN them, and walk AMONG them, and I will be their God, and they will be my people.  THEREFORE, come out from their midst, and be separate, says the Lord.  AND touch no unclean thing…”

God not only expects but demands complete commitment and obedience.

If we want complete victory and desire to be an integral part of God’s Last Days Harvest, there must be a coming out from the world and a coming into God.  Nothing of the flesh can be allowed to be mixed in.

Of course, this is only possible through the work of the Holy Spirit, not by willpower.  It is not performance but a surrendered heart that God seeks.

We are to seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness!   That is where victory comes, spilling over into everyday life.  We become flames to moths and honey to flies as we are totally invested in Him. Power flows unhindered by pride, or the impurity of mixed worship mingled with divided hearts.

So, today is the beginning of renewal, revival, and restoration.   The door is open, so let’s walk through it and into the glory of God!

It is time for us to Strike the Ground in a declaration of Victory!

How Did Fear Get In?


1 Kings 19:1-4 – “Ahab told Jezebel all that Elijah had done, including a detailed account of how he killed all the prophets with the sword. 2 Jezebel sent a messenger to Elijah with this warning, “May the gods judge me severely if by this time tomorrow I do not take your life as you did theirs!”  3 Elijah was afraid, so he got up and fled for his life to Beer Sheba in Judah.  He left his servant there, 4 while he went a day’s journey into the wilderness.  He went and sat down under a shrub and asked the Lord to take his life: “I’ve had enough!  Now, O Lord, take my life.  After all, I’m no better than my ancestors.”

Elijah had just participated in a mighty miracle and had killed the prophets of Baal.   Jezebel sent him a threat.    He became afraid.    That captured my thoughts.   How did the Fear get in?

He had just seen the demonstration of God’s Almightiness, and yet became fearful when the queen of Baal threatened him.  Why?   We are often the most vulnerable after a victory. 

Before the battle and during the battle, we are focused, and faith flows.  After the victory, we are often physically, mentally, and emotionally drained.  We shift from supernatural strength and adrenaline to our humanity.

Elijah ran!   Exhausted, he lay down to sleep.   The angel came and gave him food.   He slept more, and a second time, the angel fed him.  The food of heaven and divine, as well as physical rest, is required to reach the place God has purposed.

He traveled 40 days and nights away from where he was, the victory and the threat.  In the cave, God asked a probing question, “Why are you here, Elijah?”   It was not rhetorical but literal.   “Elijah, why have you run from Jezebel?”

Elijah gave his human justification.   God responded by manifesting Himself to the prophet.   There was a powerful wind, earthquake, and fire (demonstrations and manifestations we call a move of God), but God was not in them.  

The real move of God was in the soft whisper of God.   Then God asked again, “Why are you here, Elijah?”  He got the same response.  The presence of God should have transformed him, but he was still focused on himself and his problem.

God then said in verse 15, “Go back the way you came and then go into the wilderness…”   Do you see that?  It is first, go back to the place of victory and where fear gripped your heart, then pursue My purposes.   He had three specific tasks.

God shifted Elijah’s focus from self and fear with the assurance and reminder Elijah, you are not alone!  There are 7,000 others who are standing for Me!

Think about this: if one can put a multitude to flight, think about what 7,000 can do.   That revelation was a source of hope and courage.  It should be to us as well.  We are not God’s only ones.   There are many others.   We are the Body of Christ, the Army of God on the earth.

Don’t look for the visible manifestations (they are wonderful).  Listen for the Voice of His presence; therein is the strength. 

  • The Word of God is our sustenance for life. 
  • The Spirit of God is our power.
  • The Purpose of God is our mission.

If we have been sidetracked by fear, let’s retrace our steps so we can fulfill His call and purpose.  In the strength of His Word, the rest of His Spirit, and the assurance of being linked in the Body, we are more than conquerors.
Don’t focus on the problem.  Focus on the promise.  God is whispering, but if we focus on the threat, the wind, the earthquake, or the fire, we will miss the whisper where the strength lies.

May faith crowd out all fear from your heart, and may you see the demonstration of the Almightiness of God today!

Soar Like an Eagle and Roar Like a Lion


1 Kings 17:1 – Elijah the Tishbite, from Tishbe in Gilead, said to Ahab, “As certainly as the Lord God of Israel lives (whom I serve), there will be no dew or rain in the years ahead unless I give the command.”

Last Sunday morning, as I prayed, I sensed in my spirit that the LORD was calling His church to soar like an eagle and roar like a lion.   Victory is ours for the taking!   I pray for everyone to prosper and be in health, even as your soul prospers.

During my devotional time, I heard in my spirit, “The reason many prayers are not answered is they are prayed in human hope, not divine expectation.”

I have mused on that since it came.    It was prevalent in my heart before my 7 AM Sunday broadcast.   It resurfaced during the praise and worship in church and has resurfaced multiple times.   Therefore, I know I need to reexamine my prayers, heart, and condition.  It has been with me for days!

Human hope is whimsical and fickle.   Human hope is not doggedly persistent.  Human hope is swayed by circumstances and is easily distracted.  In contrast, divine expectation is fixed, unshakeable, and filled with the anticipation of assurance.  It is the heart of faith.

Elijah, in 1 Kings, demonstrated divine expectation.  He prophesied no rain and then explicitly obeyed with a sense of knowing that drought and famine were not only imminent but present regardless of how things looked.

When he challenged the prophets of Baal, he did so with divine expectation and placed his life on the line.  When he prayed for rain, he exhibited divine expectation.  He persistently sent his servant to look for a visible manifestation.  When a cloud as tiny as the palm of the hand appeared, he instructed Ahab to rush to the city because torrential rain was coming.  His only real evidence was his divine expectation based on God’s promise!

Human hope would not have pressed in and obtained, but divine expectation would not let him stop.  How are we praying?   The evidence is in our persistence and actions.

Human hope wishes for a time almost fatalistically.  Divine expectation is so confident in the answer that it has corresponding actions as if it were already a reality.

How are we praying?   Do we pray and allow our words and minds to provide room for doubt?   Do we pray with a lack of confidence or with divine expectancy?   The bottom line is, “Do we believe God’s Word, and do we trust His character?”    If we add, “He’s sovereign and knows best,” That may indicate that our prayers are founded on human hope, not divine expectation.   He is sovereign, but He has declared He wants to give us the kingdom and has given us authority and the privilege of tapping into His limitlessness.

Challenge yourself to expect.  Open your heart to the Holy Spirit, pray God’s promises, and watch divine expectancy develop.   You can be victorious!  Why not today?  Why not soar like an eagle and roar like a lion through God’s promises and provisions?

I pray that today will be a day of soaring and roaring for you!

When God Grabs You


2 Samuel 22:17 – “He reached down from above and grabbed me; He pulled me from the surging water.”

As I read, prayed, and meditated on the Word of God today, I was drawn to 2 Samuel 22 and David’s song of deliverance.   God had delivered David from peril and powerful enemies, and he wrote and sang his song of Thanksgiving!    This reveals another dimension of why God called him a man after His own heart.  His humility and dependence were ever-present.

David’s description of God is incredible.   I was captivated by the thought of God reaching down and grabbing us in verse 17.  The imagery is inspiring!  God’s hand reached down from heaven, grabbed him, and lifted him from the surging water.  (Symbolizing the plight David faced from people and potential death.)  Nothing can stop God’s mighty hand!

In verse 29, David declares, “Indeed, You are my lamp, LORD.  The LORD illuminates the darkness around me.”  There is no night in God!  In verse 30, he shouts, “Indeed, with Your help, I can charge against an army; by my God’s power, I can jump over a wall.”   Nothing is daunting when God is present.

In verses 35-37, David proclaimed, “He trains my hands for battle; my arms can bend even the strongest bow.  You give me Your protective shield; Your willingness to help enables me to prevail.   You widen my path; my feet do not slip.”

What a picture of the relationship between God and David.  A relationship that gave total confidence and enabled total victory.   A relationship that is available to us today!   It was complete trust with humble obedience.  That opens doors otherwise unopenable.    Remember that nothing can stop you if you live out of that relationship!

May the Spirit of God reach down from Heaven and grab you today and lift you into the presence of the Almighty!

Guiltless Conscience


Romans 8:5-8 For those who live according to the flesh have their outlook shaped by the things of the flesh, but those who live according to the Spirit have their outlook shaped by the things of the Spirit. For the outlook of the flesh is death, but the outlook of the Spirit is life and peace, because the outlook of the flesh is hostile to God, for it does not submit to the law of God, nor is it able to do so. Those who are in the flesh cannot please God.“

Today, the Holy Spirit challenged me regarding the need to feed on the Nature and Word of God!   Romans 8 begins with the amazing declaration of complete salvation and a guiltless conscience for all saved.   There are many nuisances, including if we do have condemnation lording it over us, maybe we need to reexamine our relationship with Jesus.

Being “in” Christ is more than praying a little sinner’s prayer, walking the aisles, admitting we have sinned, or joining the church.   It is total surrender.   It is being born again and made completely new on the inside.  It is dying to the flesh and self.     It is believing In The Heart that Jesus is the Christ.    We know that historically, intellectually, and theoretically, but when it gets in our hearts and transforms us into a new person on the inside, we are changed.

If we cling to the world, allowing our emotions, selfish desires, and the flesh to motivate and dominate us, we need to reexamine our relationship.   That is what makes Romans 8:5-8 so powerful for the believer.  Until we totally surrender everything to Jesus, we will battle the desires of the flesh and succumb to its desires and demands.

God gives us grace at salvation to overcome the flesh, but we have to pursue righteousness.

Romans 12:1—2 — “Therefore, I exhort you, brothers, and sisters, BY the mercies of God, TO PRESENT your bodies as a sacrifice—alive, holy, and pleasing to God—which is your reasonable service. DO NOT be conformed to this present world, BUT BE. transformed BY the renewing of your mind, SO THAT you may test and approve what is the will of God—what is good and well-pleasing and perfect.”

Grace comes at the new birth to live holy.  But living holy demands filling the heart and mind with God, His Word, and Spirit.   A glass cannot be filled with air and water simultaneously.   I said, filled!

If we cater to the flesh and allow fleshly desires and emotions to shape our outlook, we will never overcome but will continually deal with the same failures over and over.   We have to change our outlook by filling our hearts and minds with His Word, which produces His character in us.   We seek to be continuously filled with the infilling of the Holy Spirit.   We fill our minds with the things that produce life and that flow to our hearts, which is demonstrated in our actions and characterized by our words.

If we are to be manifestations of Him and overcomers, we must not allow the flesh to overcome us.   We bring every thought and desire captive and make them bow and surrender to the Lordship of Jesus. We do not have to live dominated by the flesh!  It is a choice that demands diligence and constant focus on God, His Word, and His Spirit.

Today is a day of Victory because it is the Day the Lord has made, and we are “in” Him, and He is “in” us; therefore, His Victory is our Victory, and He is totally victorious!

I pray that you will become fully absorbed in the Spirit and Word of God and live with a Guiltless Conscience!