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WE NEED TO TALK
CHARLO, New Brunswick, January 5, 2024 – When I was an unbeliever, I hated when people would corner me and start talking about Jesus. As a born-again believer, I hate it still. I have found that the people who do this are not graced with God’s Spirit and are only doing it because they’ve been told to do it. Most are in an outreach or evangelical program within their church, and cornering people to tell them about Jesus is part of what they have to do as members of that group. They’re told to say this or that, and so that’s what they say, verbatim, their eyes glazing over while they’re saying it, not reading the room at all. I have, on occasion, had to push past these people with a “thank you, no thank you”, as polite as I could muster. Force-feeding the Gospel to people who aren’t hungry does no-one any good.
Compare what Jesus did with what the glazed-over-eyes people do. First of all, Jesus never imposed himself on anyone. He let people know that he was available, and if they wanted to talk to him or attend his teaching or healing sessions, they did so on their own volition. He never cornered anyone or forced them to listen to him. People sought him out, not the other way around. The only time Jesus specifically went to this or that person was when he was asked to go, either by a loved one or by God himself.
Secondly, when Jesus was approached and asked questions about the Kingdom, he didn’t prattle off a memorized spiel. He read the room and responded accordingly. With the well-educated religious powers-that-be, he referenced points of law and passages in scripture, whereas with the general population he answered questions more generally, acknowledging the limits of their education. He didn’t talk down to anyone and didn’t show off his learning by quoting chapter and verse. He tailored his message to his audience.
Thirdly and most importantly, Jesus understood timing. People are receptive to the Gospel only when the time is right for them to hear it. God will let you know when the time is right. If you try to force-feed the Gospel message to someone when the time isn’t right for them to receive it, you’ll only be wasting your time and their time, and you definitely won’t make a friend in the process. In fact, that person will likely avoid you from thereon in.
How, then, should we preach the Gospel, because preach it we must. It’s part of our job description as born-again believers. The answer, of course, is that we should preach the Gospel like Jesus did, which is how we should be doing everything we do. We let people know we’re available if and when they want to hear about the Kingdom. We do this not directly but indirectly, showing through our words and actions that we’re Christian. People will know who and what we are just by being around us, and if they want to know about Jesus, God will lead them to ask us. When they ask, we can be certain they’re ready to hear.
Sometimes, though, we need to stand in a crowded place and shout from the rooftops, like Jesus did at the festival he attended incognito. One of the few genuine born-again believers I’ve met over the years was doing just that in a crowded transit terminal a few years ago, during the morning rush hour. He was a joy to behold, and I couldn’t help but hang on to his every word. Others also stopped to listen to him. He was telling anyone who wanted to hear how Jesus had healed him from alcoholism from one day to the next, no twelve-step program required. He was telling everyone how happy he was since he became a believer. He preached not just with his words but with the witness of his bright and shining eyes and glowing face. He radiated joy. The Spirit was so strong in him, it spilled over onto all those who stood to listen. This was preaching.
Without the involvement of God’s Holy Spirit, there is no genuine teaching or preaching of the Gospel, whether you’re doing it one-on-one or with a crowd. Yes, you need to take the initiative to make yourself available, but God will decide when the time is right for someone to hear his Word. That decision is not yours. The Gospel cannot be force-fed any more than the Holy Spirit can be forced to perform at will.
So, we let God know that we’re available, and then we wait, patiently, like Jesus waited and like all the prophets throughout the ages have waited, knowing that when the time is right, God will use us. It will likely not be a time and place of our choosing, but it will be the right time and the right place.
You’ll know it when it happens.
And then you’ll really be preaching, like Jesus.
THE NUMBER ONE REASON WHY CHRISTIANS FAIL
CHARLO, New Brunswick, January 1, 2024 – Scripture gives us umpteen examples of people who succeed in doing God’s will and those who don’t. Jesus, of course, is the best example of someone who consistently succeeded, though even Jesus missed the mark on a few occasions. So what is it that Jesus did that most Christians don’t do? Why did Jesus succeed where most Christians fail?
Jesus (nearly) always waited for God to tell him what to do and when to do it. He didn’t rush to do things on his own initiative, no matter how good or “godly” those things looked on paper. After jumping the gun when he was twelve (and learning from his mistake), Jesus didn’t start his ministry work until God explicitly told him it was time. He had to wait 18 more years, and you can imagine the waiting wasn’t easy for Jesus, but he did it. And then, when it was time, God blessed everything Jesus did because Jesus only did whatever God showed him to do and only when God told him to do it.
So the number one reason why Christians fail is not their lack of faith or their inability to do something – it’s that they do things on their own initiative without God’s go-ahead. They embark on something (ministry work, act of charity, act of sacrifice, moving to a new city, starting a new job, starting a new relationship, etc.) and then ask God to bless it rather than wait for God’s invitation to do something. If God invites you to do something, his blessing is baked into the invitation: it’s part and parcel of it. You don’t have to ask for God’s blessing after he’s invited you to do something, you just have to thank him for it and do whatever he guides you to do. But if you instead decide to do something first and then go to God afterwards to get his blessing, he likely won’t give it to you (no matter how much you beg and plead) and you will surely fail or fall short of the mark, because God will not be helping you.
It’s important to understand that failing at something doesn’t mean that you’re out of the race altogether. What it does mean is that you need to examine why you failed so that you learn from your mistake and not do it again. Jesus, as a twelve-year-old, learned that he needed to remain under his parents’ authority and to wait for God to give him the signal that it was time to start his ministry. In the intervening years, Jesus served a sort of apprenticeship under God, learning all the spiritual skills that he later applied in his healings and teachings.
I well know what it means to fail because I’ve failed on many an occasion, wanting to do things that I thought were good in and of themselves (such as starting a Bible study years ago, only to have no-one at all show up). I have learned the difference between humiliation and humility, but more importantly I’ve learned to wait on God and to do nothing without his invitation. I have seen the blessings flow from his invitations, when I accept them, and I have lived the frustration and dead-end of zero blessings. I hope never to live that frustration again.
I love God with all my heart and I want more than anything else to do his will and his will only, like Jesus did during his time on Earth. Still, even loving God as I do, I need to wait for his prompting and guidance and do everything in his time, not mine. The children of the world have no such restrictions, but we’re not children of the world. We’re God’s children and as such we’re under God’s authority, which means we should only do what God says to do and only when and how he says to do it. We can choose not to do that, but then we’ll fail, and if we fail enough, we might not make it Home.
The number one reason why Christians fail is that they don’t wait for God’s invitation but instead rush to do things on their own initiative; the number one reason why Christians succeed is that they do wait.
Wait on the Lord; be of good courage, and he will strengthen thine heart.
Wait, I say, on the Lord.
Psalm 27
UNFORGIVEABLE
CHARLO, New Brunswick, December 21, 2023 – I know a minister who’s been a professional preacher of the Word for over 40 years and yet who’s terrified that he might have committed the unforgiveable sin without knowing it.
It’s impossible to have committed the unforgiveable sin without knowing it. You not only would know that you’ve done it when you’ve done it, you’d know well in advance before doing it, because God would warn you in no uncertain terms. There would be bright red warning signs frantically flashing all over your conscience, and God would personally confront you, one-on-one, in a last-ditch effort to stop you. There is no way you can stumble inadvertently into committing the unforgiveable sin. Let that spiritual fact sink in and comfort whomever it will.
It amuses me and at times exasperates me to read or hear statements by those who claim to have been Christians but who’ve since “left the faith” and lived to tell the tale. No genuine Christian would live to tell the tale once outside the protection of God’s Holy Spirit. Such a person would live about as long as Judas Iscariot lived or as long as Ananias and Sapphira lived, which is to say anywhere from less than a day to less than an hour after the betrayal. Anyone who claims to be a “former Christian” was never a Christian to begin with, unless he or she made a deal with the devil and has come under diabolical protection for a time. I’m not saying post-rebirth deals aren’t made, but they’re rare. And like committing the unforgiveable sin, you’d definitely know if you’d made a deal with the devil: Neither can be done without your full and conscious approval.
The process of spiritual rebirth is first the exorcism of demonic spirits from a soul, followed by the inrush of God’s Holy Spirit. God claims the newly reborn soul as his spiritual turf over which the devil has no authority. In the world, the devil has full authority over all souls not belonging to God (an authority given to him by God), but the devil has no authority over born-again believers any more than he had authority over Jesus during his time on Earth. Only from the time of Jesus’ arrest to his execution did God permit the devil to have limited authority over Jesus physically, and that only to fulfill prophecy and “pay the sin debt”, with Jesus’ full approval. Nothing was imposed on Jesus that Jesus didn’t first agree to, and the devil could only inflict the exact measure of torment as was permitted by God. Jesus stated during his trial that his executioners only had power over him because God gave them power; otherwise, in and of themselves they had nothing on him.
That the devil has no authority over born-again believers doesn’t mean he doesn’t have permission from God to tempt us. God permits him to tempt us in order to see where our loyalties lie. Just like the people who claim to be Christian but are not, many also claim to be God’s people. Martyrdom is the greatest of all tests to determine whether or not someone is indeed a child of God. The history of born-again believers is a history of martyrdom.
The unforgiveable sin is not something you can commit without first being warned by God himself. Certainly, you can commit the unforgiveable sin after God warns you (may you never do that), but you can’t accidentally commit the sin and only afterwards realize what you’ve done, any more than you can accidentally take the so-called mark of the beast and only afterwards realize what you’ve done. God would never permit that to happen. If God did permit such a situation, he would not be God. But we know that our God is God, and being God, he is perfectly just. He also loves us unconditionally and wants us to be with him forever in Paradise. And so, being perfectly just and loving us unconditionally, God would never trick us (or allow us to be tricked) into committing the unforgiveable sin or be remiss about warning us against committing it.
This spiritual fact should be a great comfort to you.
It is to me.
THE RADICAL AND THE LUKEWARM
CHARLO, New Brunswick, December 9, 2023 – The devil invented the term “radical Christian” as a derogatory label to denigrate anyone who’s all-in for God, like Jesus was. That’s because the devil wants you to be anything but all-in; he wants you afraid to be labeled a radical lest you catch the attention of the wrong people. But the term “radical Christian” is actually a tautology, like saying you’re a “Christian Christian” or a “radical radical”. You don’t need “radical” to describe “Christian”, if “Christian” is applied as God intends.
There is no such thing as “Christian-lite”.
A passage in Revelation describes a church that is so unpalatably lukewarm, God has no choice but to spew it out of his mouth. His gut reaction is not to swallow but to spew, to unceremoniously get it out of him as quickly as he can. That lukewarm spew of a church has expanded to encompass most of Christianity today. If this weren’t the case, our world would be entirely different from what it is, as Christians are the main conduits (not the only ones, but the main ones) of God’s blessings. If one-quarter of the world’s population really were Christian (as statistics claim), the blessings would be overwhelming; it would be almost like living in Paradise. But we live in a world that is nothing like Paradise and is daily growing worse and worse as genuine followers of Jesus are taken Home and more and more of the lukewarm grow farther and farther away from God.
I am not afraid to be called a radical, however misapplied I consider the term. If I’m not a radical in the eyes of the lukewarm, I’m not doing my job. Jesus was considered a radical for no other reason than he lived his beliefs: He didn’t just mouth them, he lived them. And his beliefs were not radical; they were and are the only beliefs worth holding in this life – put God first; keep the Commandments; love your neighbours and your enemies; preach the Word; and continue doing all this “to the end”. These beliefs are what made him a radical not to the heathens but to his own people. Like the majority of Christians today, most of the children of Israel in Jesus’ day were also lukewarm spew.
I was born-again from atheism, so the concept of “lukewarm” is alien to me. Being a believer, I can’t imagine not believing; and believing, I can’t imagine being lukewarm. How can you be a believer and at the same time lukewarm? By very definition, a believer can’t be lukewarm because a believer lives his or her beliefs. No-one can make unbelievers of believers, as Jesus says: “no-one is able to pluck them out of my Father’s hand”. Believers can choose to be plucked out by choosing sin (that choice remains open even to believers), but they can’t be plucked out of God’s hand while they’re under God’s protective grace.
So the problem is not that people are choosing to be lukewarm but that they are lukewarm by default because they’re not genuine followers of Jesus. If they were, they wouldn’t be lukewarm: They’d be like Jesus – fiery and “radical”. The solution to this problem is making believers out of the lukewarm.
But how can this be done?
The same passage in Revelation that describes the lukewarm also describes what they must do to become believers before it’s too late for them: they must anoint their eyes with eyesalve so that they see, they must repent, and they must open their heart for God and Jesus to enter in. But first, they need to buy gold that has been tried in God’s fire and white clothing to cover their nakedness. In other words, they need to seek and embrace genuine righteousness and submit themselves entirely to God so that their pride will be broken. Their pride is the main obstacle preventing them from believing. If and when their pride does break, they’ll be able to see their need for God and their need to repent and will do so sincerely. Their cleansed and purified heart will then open wide for God and Jesus to enter in, and they’ll finally believe.
There is no such thing as a radical Christian – there are just believers who are all-in for God, like Jesus was during his time on Earth. These believers may appear radical in comparison to the lukewarm, but the flaw is in comparing believers to what are essentially unbelievers. Thank God there’s a remedy for the lukewarm if they choose to accept it. Pride not only comes before the fall; it blinds people and prevents them from genuinely following Jesus.
EYES OF FAITH
CHARLO, New Brunswick, December 8, 2023 – We have two sets of eyes as believers: the eyes of the world and the eyes of faith.
God wants us to look through the eyes of faith, but the devil wants us to look through the eyes of the world, because if we look through the eyes of the world, faith will be impossible. The world is ruled by fear, so the eyes of the world are the eyes of “I can’t do it” and “be afraid, be very afraid”.
But the eyes of faith are the eyes of “I can do all things through God who strengthens me”.
One year after the exodus, Moses sent twelve leaders, one from each of the houses of the children of Israel, to spy on the land of Canaan, the land stretching from the river to the sea that God had promised he’d give them when it was time. When the twelve men returned, ten were full of fear over what they’d seen, describing the impenetrable fortresses and the mighty warriors guarding them. The other two men – Joshua and Caleb – gave entirely different reports, claiming they were well able to break through the strongholds and overcome the inhabitants because God had promised them the land and God was with them. We can see from their reports how the ten fearful men were looking through the eyes of the world, while Joshua and Caleb were looking through the eyes of faith.
As believers, we cannot afford not to look through the eyes of faith. We can still look through the eyes of the world – we’ll have that capacity for the rest of our time on Earth – but we need to steadily focus through the eyes of faith or we’ll lose our way and maybe even (God forbid) lose our grace. The ten men who chose to view the promised land through the eyes of the world lost the promised land. They perished in the wilderness. Only Joshua and Caleb made it all the way.
David, as a young shepherd, spent a lot of time watching over his father’s sheep. I’m wagering that he spent a lot of that time shooting objects with his slingshot (he might even have used it to keep his sheep in line), and the rest of the hours he wiled away teaching himself how to play the harp and write songs. I’m wagering the sheep responded to his music, too, and that he used it to calm them. But amidst all the sling-shotting and music-making, David was doing something even more important – he was deepening his relationship with God. He was building his faith. And it was his strong faith that then enabled David to take the skills he’d learned during his shepherding years and use them to the glory of God, with God’s timing and guidance.
God’s timing and guidance are critical to the application of our learned skills. We can have faith great enough to move mountains, but if we try to move them at our whim, without God’s timing and guidance, we will fail. After Moses had upbraided the ten fearful men for their lack of faith, they resolved the next day to go to battle against the Canaanites. Moses pleaded with them not to go, but they insisted that because God had promised them the land, God would bring them victory.
But it wasn’t time for the children of Israel to fight the Canaanites, so God wasn’t with them and they lost the battle. Not only did they lose the battle but their defeat inspired fear in the rest of the children of Israel, who then resolved they should return to Egypt and put themselves back under the bondage of Pharoah. This is the fruit of misapplied faith, and we see it today in the many Christians who are falling into disbelief because their presumed miracles and prophecies didn’t come true, or their prayers weren’t answered in the way they wanted them to be answered.
Faith involves not just believing but waiting on God’s timing and guidance. God is not a genie in a bottle that you can command at whim; he tells his prophets the when, the where, and the what, and then it comes to pass with his blessings. Jesus said he always did that which pleased the Father; he didn’t say the Father always did that which pleased him.
We can live in fear, like the world does, or we can live in faith, like believers do. The choice is ours. But if we choose to view life through the eyes of faith, we also need to rely 100% on God, and in relying on God, we need to do everything according to his timing and with his guidance. We don’t direct God, he directs us. Moses well knew this, as did Joshua and Caleb, as did David and all believers throughout the ages.
Your faith might indeed be great enough to move mountains, but the only way that mountain’s going to move is when God says it’s time and then shows you how.
CLEAN
CHARLO, New Brunswick, December 8, 2023 – A few years ago, I rented a furnished condo for a month through airbnb. The pictures on the website showed what appeared to be a sparkling clean unit, neat and tidy, with good furniture and attractive décor. I was looking forward to my stay.
When I arrived, I was not prepared for the smell that greeted me. It was that smell that accumulates over time and is the telltale sign of unwashed floors and a dirty bathroom. You typically get that smell in gas station bathrooms, not in an Airbnb rental. But the best was yet to come.
As per the pics, the place was indeed neat and tidy, so neat and tidy I was afraid even to put down my luggage lest it disturb the neatness. My bedroom was neat and tidy, too, but upon closer inspection, I found that the comforter, which appeared clean in the photos, was covered in cat fur (ditto the pillows and sheets), and the mattress, when I went to change the bedding, looked like a crack-house reject, the kind of mattress that when you see it on the street, you alert public health authorities to remove as a biohazard. It was covered in what looked like blood stains from a series of axe murders but which my offended host shrilly insisted was spilled red wine. In either case, I had no intention of putting my body anywhere near those stains, so I went out and bought several drop sheets to encase the mattress and then covered it over with a new bedding set.
The bathroom I refused to use at all until it was cleaned from top to bottom, which the host, to his credit, immediately did, but which I immediately afterwards had to redo, since he clearly had no idea how to clean. He was very good at doing neat and tidy, but the underlying principle of cleanliness eluded him, probably because he’d never been taught how to clean.
The less said about the kitchen and the complimentary but expired (R.I.P.) contents of the fridge and cupboards, the better.
My purpose in mentioning this unfortunate Airbnb experience is to demonstrate that “neat and tidy” and “clean” are two different though sometimes related concepts. When something is genuinely clean, it shows its cleanliness by its neat and tidy appearance, but something can still be neat and tidy without being clean, as I’d experienced firsthand at that furnished rental.
Our souls can likewise appear to be clean without actually being clean. We can have the “neat and tidy” appearance of a soul in good order – attending church regularly, going to confession, giving to charities, being outwardly nice, wearing the Christian bling and speaking the Christian lingo – even heading a ministry. The majority of Christians are like this. I’m not saying it as a criticism but as a fact, just as it’s a fact that some people are very good at neat and tidy but have no idea how to clean. These “good Christians” have been taught that having a neat and tidy soul by doing “good Christian things” is the same as having a clean soul, though nothing could be farther from the truth.
As born-again believers, we know that our souls were cleaned by God himself during the process of our spiritual rebirth. Were this not true, we wouldn’t have God’s Holy Spirit with us, informing us and enabling us to have a relationship with God and Jesus, as God’s Spirit will not go into a soul that is not clean. We did not do the cleaning of our soul; God did. In fact, we can’t clean our own soul; we can only dirty it and then cover over the filth with neat and tidy “good Christian” deeds. It takes a supernatural act of God to clean a soul, which is done initially through spiritual rebirth and subsequently by sincere repentance. Note that our act of repentance doesn’t clean us; God cleans us when we come to him in sincere repentance.
So, how’s YOUR soul? Is it clean like Jesus said his disciples’ souls were, or is it the spiritual equivalent of a crack-house reject mattress, stained by the blood of a thousand axe wounds? If you’re reading this blog, I’m guessing your soul is clean, though a clean soul can still get dirty again, which is why we need to repent when God gives us the signal. We don’t want to put off repenting or we might end up like the poor man who was cleansed of a demon, only to be later invaded by the same demon, along with seven worse ones. This can happen to us as born-again believers; if it couldn’t, the scripture would be false.
I believe that most neat and tidy but unclean Christians have no idea of their state of uncleanliness or their need to sincerely repent and be genuinely born-again. I also believe that there are genuinely born-again Christians who are either unaware of their need to maintain their spiritual cleanliness through repentance, or are convinced that they are “once saved, always saved”. In all of these cases, the outward appearance may belie what’s underneath.
Followers of Jesus understand that if the soul is clean, the outward show will naturally be neat and tidy. It won’t be an affectation or something learned that we consciously have to put into practice; the neat and tidy will simply flow as a consequence of spiritual cleanliness. So, for instance, we’ll want to spend time with God and Jesus (not feel obligated to); we’ll want to read the Bible (not feel obligated to); we’ll want to follow the Commandments (not feel obligated to); we’ll want to help people (not feel obligated to); we’ll want to be kind to the unkind (not feel obligated to); and we’ll want to do “only that which pleases the Father” (not feel obligated to).
This is the state we should strive to be in at all times, as it is proof that our soul is not merely neat and tidy, but clean.
(Oh, and by the way, I gave the host of that airbnb rental an excellent review, because he honestly didn’t know the difference between “neat and tidy” and “clean”, and he did his best to rectify the problems when I pointed them out. You have to give someone credit for that. I can only hope, now that he knows “neat and tidy” is not necessarily “clean”, that he’ll genuinely clean his condo for his guests, not just tidy it. But that choice is his.)
BAD HABITS
CHARLO, New Brunswick, November 20, 2023 – I know someone, a lifelong Catholic, who once explained to me why she sticks with the Catholic church despite its brutal history and endless scandals. “It’s like a friend”, she said, staring rather pointedly at me, “who does and says some things you don’t agree with, but she’s your friend, so you overlook them.”
As charitable a gesture as that may be in terms of friendship, it doesn’t pass the smell test for the things of God. There should be nothing about God or anything related to God that you overlook or look past because, well, it’s God, so exceptions need to be made. There should never be a sense that you’re compromising some part of yourself to remain loyal to God. With God, there should only be a sense of homecoming and of all parts falling into place and fitting perfectly. With God, there should be no part of you that you hold back or any part of God that you agree to agree to but only while holding your nose.
I could never remain within an organization that alleged to represent God and yet committed crime after crime, most of which went unreported and unrepented. I would think that, after poring over and considering the presented evidence, I would remove myself from such an organization. When I was a practising Catholic for the first three and a half years after my rebirth from atheism, I lived and moved in what I can only describe as a Catholic bubble. Yes, I’d heard rumors about what all those priests had done, but I was sure it was mostly only rumors and if there had been any truth to the rumors, the issue would have been dealt with appropriately.
I trusted the priests in the churches I attended. I trusted the deacons. I trusted everyone who worked in the churches or their affiliated organizations. I attended mass every day, sometimes twice during the weekdays and always twice and sometimes three times on Sundays. I was besotted with God and Jesus, and the heady scent of incense during mass was to me like their aftershave cologne. I was convinced that God lived in the churches I attended because that’s what I’d been taught, as a Catholic, to believe. I wasn’t taught that God was with me – born-again me – through God’s Holy Spirit. No, I was taught that God was only in the Catholic churches and if I wanted God to hear my prayers, I had to go to church to pray, God being (by implication) rather hard of hearing.
God let me labour under the delusions fed to me within my Catholic bubble because at least I had a place to go every day where I could be a believer. At least I had a place to go every day where I could hear God’s Word being preached. The reading of scripture during the mass was always the highlight of my day, and sometimes I was invited to read – never the Gospel (only the priests were allowed to read that), but I could read parts of the Old Testament or Paul’s letters, or better said, God read them through me. The priests and parishioners liked it when I read. They’d say to me: “Something happens when you read.” The priests looked at me strangely sometimes, as if they were trying to figure me out. The parishioners, too, would approach me after mass and ask me why my faith was so strong, and I would tell them I was born-again. At the time, I didn’t realize that talking about being born-again was all but verboten in a Catholic church. One of the priests sniffed at me when I said I was born-again: “We’re all born again at baptism”, he stated curtly and then walked away.
When the evidence against the Catholic church started to present itself to me, my Catholic bubble began to deflate. I ignored the evidence at first, wanting to protect the “Mother Church” that had protected me during my spiritual infancy, but not all parents are loving and not all parents should be parents. The deeper I looked into the long dark history of Catholicism, the more uneasy I grew, and the more uneasy I grew, the deeper I looked into the church’s history. What I found both horrified and outraged me. I finally got to the point where I was even changing the responses I said during mass because I didn’t agree with their content. I remember the priests and deacons glancing at me quizzically when I did that, wondering if they’d misheard or I’d misspoken, but I refused to say something before God that I didn’t believe. It was during this end-phase of disillusion that, in answer to a prayer, God showed me how Catholicism was keeping me from doing his will. The minute he gave me this revelation I walked out of the church, never to return.
____________________
I dreamt last night about the diehard Catholic I mentioned at the outset of this article. She was waiting for an elevator, and when it arrived, she tripped walking into it. Her head was inside the elevator and her body was outside, so when the door closed on her neck, she was decapitated. The elevator then went up and down with just her head rolling around inside. I thought about calling her today and telling her about the dream, but God said no, just write this. She won’t want to hear about the dream.
Just write this.
____________________
Nothing about God should feel like a compromise. Nothing God does or says should make you uneasy or hesitant. God is Truth, and as born-again believers we’ve been given God’s Spirit of Truth that resonates with God’s every Word and Command. Jesus says that we live by every word that comes from the mouth of God. He says “we live” – he doesn’t say we cringe or recoil. He doesn’t say we compromise or look the other way. He doesn’t say we give God a pass because he’s God – he says: WE LIVE by every word that comes from the mouth of God. There is nothing that God says that we should disagree with. Nothing. And if an organization that purports to speak for God makes us feel uneasy, ashamed, or compromised, we need to leave it.
With a friend, you can overlook bad habits, but not with a church.
CIRCUMCISION OF THE HEART
CHARLO, New Brunswick, November 19, 2023 – Lots of people claiming to be this or that these days with very little but their own insistence to back them up. Men claiming to be women, women claiming to be cats, Whites claiming to be Aboriginal. In every case, there’s something to be gained from the claim or it wouldn’t be made. Usually, what’s to be gained is money or a competitive edge. For kids, claiming to be the opposite sex gets them lots of attention. Kids love attention. It’s like emotional candy.
Paul talks about true Jews being those who are circumcised of the heart. Circumcision used to be a big deal in Old Testament days; if you wanted to join one of the 12 tribes, you had to submit to getting a part of your privates chopped off (if you were male). Sometimes, a part of the privates of other cultural adherents was also chopped off, as booty. David chopped off the foreskins of 200 Philistines to win the hand of King Saul’s daughter. I guess people were generally less skittish in those days about chopping things off.
But if true Jews are now those who are circumcised of the heart, then the chopping or non-chopping of this or that body part bears no relevance anymore. This has been the case for nearly 2000 years, ever since the coming of Jesus.
So what exactly is circumcision of the heart? It’s a spiritual state of full repentance and humbling before God. A breaking of the ego, if you will, exposing the soft underbelly of the soul. A circumcised heart enables God’s Holy Spirit to enter into that individual through the process of spiritual rebirth. A soul that is inhabited by God’s Holy Spirit is in a state of grace and has the capacity to know God personally, which means that soul is able to know and speak God’s Truth.
Since the time of Jesus’ resurrection, the spiritual lineage of the children of Israel has come through Jesus. In other words, the true Jews are born-again followers of Jesus and have been for the past 2000 years. Born-again followers of Jesus are the inheritors of the promise made by God to the children of Abraham, as the prophesied promised land is a spiritual realm, not a geopolitical one.
Spiritual rebirth confers circumcision of the heart, which Paul says is what makes a Jew a Jew. Circumcision of the private parts alone no longer makes a Jew a Jew, any more than genetics or a passport does. Yet, as I mentioned, lots of people are claiming to be this or that these days based on little more than their insistence that it be so. If true Jews are those who are circumcised of the heart, then true Jews are born-again followers of Jesus.
Scripture tells us that the children of the promise will inherit a spiritual realm where they’ll be safe from their enemies. This realm was established by Jesus – the deliverer of God’s promise – and goes by the name of Kingdom of God, Kingdom of Heaven, and Mount Zion. It is peopled only by those with circumcised hearts. The world offers a poor facsimile of this realm – a Promised Land™ that is more a mockery than a mimic. The tiny tatter of blood-soaked real estate ripped from the body of Arabia is not the land of the promise, though it is the spoils of war, won fair and square through blood sacrifice and negotiations.
Let whoever wants to fight over it, fight over it. What spiritual value is there in the future throne of the anti-Christ? Do you think that, in Heaven, Jesus is fondly remembering Golgotha, or that Mary and Joseph are nostalgic about the land they had to flee from to save their firstborn? Do you think that God is waxing poetic over a temple desecrated by those claiming to be his own people? That land has no spiritual value, not in a positive sense. It’s been a stronghold of Satan for millennia, with God’s permission. Those who are circumcised of heart well know it.
Let whoever will fight over it. We, the circumcised, shake its dust from our feet, having followed Jesus to a far greater place.
THIS ONE’S FOR THE WOMEN
MCLEODS, New Brunswick, November 16, 2023 – I don’t know about you, but 40 days and 40 nights in the desert sounds like a dream vacation to me.
No cooking, no cleaning, no laundry, no rent, no mortgage, no dependents, no co-dependents, and you’re dang-tootin’ I wouldn’t be dragging a laptop or cell phone with me. Cold turkey on the comms. A rock for a pillow and the blowing sand for a blanket.
And ministering angels for room service.
Jesus’ minimalist lifestyle during his ministry years is an inspiration. God told Abraham that his seed would be as countless as the stars in heaven or the sand on the seashore, but for me God can use the number of dishes I’ve washed over the years. Those are just as countless. Jesus, during his ministry, didn’t bother with mundane housework; anything that needed to be done, the women did it. Cooking, cleaning, shopping, laundry. Jesus didn’t even have to wash his feet; the women did that, too – just showed up out of nowhere and started cleaning and kissing his feet. And perfuming them.
I could use a few of those women right about now.
Before Jesus started preaching, he whittled himself down to just the shirt on his back and the Gospel. That’s the main reason he went into the desert for 40 days and nights – to get whittled down. I’m guessing that after a few nights in the desert, Jesus very quickly learned the difference between wants and needs. And in classic Jesus style he learned that lesson well – so well, in fact, that when the devil pulled up in his stretch limo to make Jesus The Offer™, he was easily able to turn the devil down.
All the power and wealth in the world holds no appeal to someone who’s found freedom in the desert. Even a fresh-baked loaf of bread is no temptation when you live instead by every word that comes from the mouth of God. But you’ve gotta get whittled down for the “no” to come naturally. You’ve gotta do your 40 days and 40 nights in the desert, or the devil will eventually push through your defences. He’ll find a chink in your armour, a gap in your hedge. He’ll bide his time, watching your every move and dissecting your every word until finally making his move.
I don’t think it’s possible to do what Jesus did without first being whittled down. That’s why he made his disciples clean their slate of people and possessions before following him in the ministry. You can’t be burdened with anything but the shirt on your back and the Word of God if you’re to do what Jesus did. When he emerged from the desert, it was like he was living and moving in a parallel universe, which in fact he was, the Kingdom of God being a spiritual realm parallel to the worldly one. But it’s hard to live and move in the spiritual realm when you’re weighed down by cooking and cleaning and laundry and bills.
So 40 days and 40 nights in the desert is more than just a tongue-in-cheek dream vacation for the domestically burdened – it’s a rite of passage. The whittling down that comes from walking away from everything and everyone and throwing yourself fully into God’s hands is the only way to free yourself from worldly distractions and serve God with the power and authority of Jesus. But you don’t head into the desert until God calls you, and you wanna bet he’s going to call you when you least expect it – not when you’re up for the challenge and at the top of your game, not even when you’ve had enough and are at the end of your rope – no, God is not going to call you when it’s convenient for you. He’s going to call you when you least expect it.
Your job, while you’re waiting for the call, is to keep on washing those dishes. I know it’s not very sexy and you were probably hoping for a more inspiring finale than “keep on washing those dishes!”, but that’s what you’ve gotta do when you’re watching and waiting for God: You gotta keep on washing the dishes, and you gotta do it as cheerfully as you can.
Until one day, suddenly and out of the blue –










