The Jesus Zone (aka the kingdom of God)

The Jesus Zone is transformative! Living in the Jesus Zone makes life marvelous (even with all of its troubles). I woke up this morning with these thoughts about the Jesus Zone (aka the kingdom of God):

  • Step out of your comfort zone and into the Jesus Zone. Be led by Christ in you! Let the Jesus Zone come with power and release His presence within you! Once a person is born of the Spirit and surrenders all to the risen Christ, the Jesus Zone becomes a daily, ongoing reality.
  • The Jesus Zone is the kingdom of God where Christ the King is allowed to reign supreme. The Jesus Zone doesn’t operate by human knowledge, effort, and organization, but by the leading of Christ in you. Christ-followers are called to forcefully overthrow all our inner resistance to the Jesus Zone and to let Christ rule within us.
  • Seek first the Jesus Zone and Christ-led living and everything you need will be added to you. The Jesus Zone is within you. The Jesus Zone is not in word but in power! Use the keys of the Jesus Zone to unlock your heart for Christ and to lock out and bind all wrongful thoughts, feelings, and desires.
  • Align your thoughts and actions with Christ for the Jesus Zone is at hand! Blessed are those who are persecuted for Christ-led living for theirs is the Jesus Zone. Unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the Jesus Zone.
  • The Jesus Zone is the straight gate and narrow way. To enter the Jesus Zone you must receive it like a child. It is the Father’s good pleasure to give to you the Jesus Zone. Will you enter in? Let God lead you out of the dominion of darkness and into the glory and delight of the Jesus Zone.
  • You’re never alone when you’re living in the Jesus Zone. Christ-followers are led into the Jesus Zone. It’s their spiritual home. The Jesus Zone is like a mustard seed. It seems insignificant, but when it is cultivated and allowed to grow inside a human heart it becomes huge!
  • In the Jesus Zone no one throws the first stone. Blessed are the poor in spirit for theirs is the Jesus Zone. The Jesus Zone isn’t about eating and drinking. It’s about Christ-led living, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit. The Jesus Zone is the pearl of great price.
  • Christ still sends out His followers to proclaim the good news of the Jesus Zone. Let Him send you! The good news of the Jesus Zone needs to be proclaimed as a testimony throughout the whole world.
  • Religious Pharisees shut the Jesus Zone in people’s faces. They neither enter themselves nor allow those who would enter to go in. Open wide the door of your heart to the Jesus Zone. Do it for yourself and for others.

When Christians begin to live in the Jesus Zone that’s called revival. Come Lord Jesus!

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Christ’s call to be uncomfortable

Jesus doesn’t call people to be comfortable and entertained. He calls His followers to go beyond the conventional religious wisdom and church structures of our age and to become a living demonstration of His presence and power.

I woke up this morning with these thoughts about Christ’s calling stirring in my heart before I got out of bed:

* The best pastor (shepherd) is Christ in you. He will lead, guide, and disciple you from the inside if you will let Him.

* The risen Jesus is the most effective Bible teacher. He makes the words burn in your heart.

* When people are aware of Christ’s presence, they don’t need a program about Him.

* Jesus is the best worship leader. Awareness of His presence releases spontaneous adoration!

Calling all Christ-followers: Let’s begin to continually notice, appreciate, surrender to, and obey the presence of the risen Jesus. Sermons make people an audience. Christians are called to make disciples.

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I sing because I’m happy.

Daily writing prompt
What would your life be like without music?

Before there was music
In my soul
I never felt whole.
I had no real goal.
I was only
Playing a role.
It took a toll
Until I began to hear
The sound of Jesus
Singing in my soul.
Earbuds never
Brought me such joy!

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For me, every day is a holiday!

Daily writing prompt
How do you celebrate holidays?

The word “holiday” came from the Old English word “hāligdæg,” which means “holy day.” Today “holiday” means a special day set aside to celebrate something and to focus on having as much fun as possible.

Of course, every day can’t be focused on maximizing our level of fun. We all have needs and responsibilities that we have to tend to. But every day can be seen as holy — as a gift from God of another 24 hours of life and opportunity.

Someone has said: “Every day above ground is a good day.” I concur and I choose to celebrate each one of them with gratitude, hope, and adventure as I rejoice in the presence of the risen Jesus.

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Who was Stephen in the Bible?

Who was Stephen in the Bible? The apostles (sent ones) tried to put him in the role of a “table server.” But in reality, Stephen, the first Christ-follower to be killed for his faith, was a Spirit-led man of God who refused to be defined by a religious role. In spite of the assignment that he had been given, Stephen was so “full of God’s grace and power” that he “performed great wonders and signs among the people.” Even though he had been confined to the role of “table server,” the Spirit gave him wisdom “as he spoke.”

Today “layman” is a religious role that creates multitudes of passive Christian spectators. They sit in rows on Sunday mornings waiting to receive wisdom from one man’s talk. However, if they would speak up in the meeting, as they are told to in 1 Corinthians 14:26, like Stephen, the Spirit would also give them wisdom as they speak.

I’ve heard a lot of Sunday talks, but I remember almost nothing about them. However, when I have preached, the Spirit has given me much wisdom as I spoke. My wife and I have hosted hundreds of Christ-focused meetings where anyone present could speak as they felt led by the Spirit (as in 1 Corinthians 14:26). We have witnessed amazing wisdom being given to people “as they speak” and we have seen their faces shine like an angel’s.

Stephen was on to something! It’s time to step beyond any religious role that you have been assigned and to boldly speak up about Jesus as you allow His Spirit to lead and direct you. “Let the redeemed of the Lord say so.”

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Why wait for persecution? (Break out of passive religious formalism now!)

Is getting people to faithfully attend a Sunday morning Christian meeting planned and directed by one man, and to passively listen to a sermon by him each week, effectively inspiring people to be filled with the Holy Spirit and wisdom? Is the word of God spreading? Are the number of disciples in increasing rapidly? Are a large number of religious people becoming obedient to the faith? If the answer to any of these questions is no, perhaps we need to change the way we present Christianity.

The traditional methods of presenting Christianity target the mind. Perhaps it’s time we aimed for the heart. Presenting church attenders with religious information isn’t filling them with wisdom. Running church people through a weekly religious routine isn’t filling them with the Holy Spirit.

We need to go beyond church as usual. We need to train people to open their heart and to “hear what the Spirit is saying to the ‘ekklesias.'” It’s time to shift from the human programming and control of church services to Spirit-led gatherings where anyone present can say and do what the Spirit tells them to.

After the apostles (sent ones) had all the rest of the Christ-followers choose 7 “table servers” (see Acts 6) who were “full of the Spirit and wisdom,” the Holy Spirit took over and two of those waiters (Stephen and Phillip) begin to boldly proclaim the risen Jesus and to do signs and wonders among the people. Suddenly all the Christ-followers (except the apostles/sent ones) were being scattered everywhere preaching as they went, and the Christian movement was launched from Jerusalem and sent to the ends of the earth.

I believe that if Christians in America and other Western countries continue to hold back and box up God’s Spirit with our religious traditions, programming, control, and comfort zones, we will begin to experience persecution that will shake us up to such a degree that we will cry out to the living Jesus like never before. Then Jesus will begin to show up with great grace and great demonstrations of His presence and power.

Here are my questions: Why wait for persecution? Why not break out of passive religious formalism now?

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Beyond the recipe

Daily writing prompt
Write about your most epic baking or cooking fail.

When I try to follow a recipe, I get nervous because I feel like I’ve got to be 100% accurate with all the measurements. Then I get frustrated, and what comes out of the oven or off the stove is usually bad. It’s hard to say which cooking flop was my “most epic” failure. (It was probably when I tried to cook spaghetti sauce in a pan with no led on it and it splattered all over the wall and the ceiling.)

I’m not big on precisely measuring the things I say and do. I’m more of a spontaneous, go with the flow guy, than an adhere-to-a-method-man, so my attempts to cook by an instruction book usually don’t look like the pictures in the book (or taste like the descriptions of the dishes). Thus, I’ve never been that motivated to cook or bake.

My wife recently bought an air frier. She also bought a cookbook for it. I’ve intentionally ignored the book but experimented with the air frier. I throw something into it, push a few buttons, and then closely monitor what happens. When it looks done, I take it out and taste and see how it’s doing. I’ve been amazed at how good things taste when I do that.

That’s also my approach to life. I’m not good at following an instruction sheet or book. I prefer to follow my hunches and to see what works. If I get stuck, I like to ask someone for help.

I grew up with a misconception. I believed that the Bible was a recipe book for life, full of instructions that needed to be precisely followed. It made me nervous to try to read it, so I avoided it. Then one day I asked Jesus for help and my heart was full of joyful insight. I began to read the Bible with an open heart and discovered that it is a love letter from Jesus, not a law book to rule me in. Now I read it every day with delight and the love I receive through it guides me in Christ-led spontaneity.

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A tale of seven table servers

Jesus washed His disciples’ feet doing the job of a lowly servant. His example of frequently taking the lowest place is sometimes called “servant leadership.” However, in the book of Acts, Jesus’ first disciples were given a special title “the Twelve” and gathered “all the disciples together” to announce: “It would not be right for us to neglect the ministry of the word of God in order to wait on tables.” That has always seemed to me like “the Twelve” were acting contrary to Jesus’ example.

Then “the Twelve” told “all the (other) disciples” to choose seven men to be responsible for the lowly job that they didn’t want to do. (Notice that the Bible doesn’t say that God told “the Twelve” to do this. It just says they did it. Also notice that “the Twelve” didn’t pray about which men should do the lowly job of serving widows. They simply told all the other Christ followers to pick them.)

What was the motive of the apostles? It was so that they could spend their time giving “attention to prayer and the ministry of the word.” However, it appears that the Holy Spirit had a different intention.

One of the chosen seven “table waiters,” Stephen, rather than waiting tables, quickly began to focus on “the ministry of the word” and to work miracles among the people. His preaching was so bold and anointed that it stirred up such a storm that Stephen was stoned to death. Before he was murdered, this “table waiter” preached a powerful message that takes up almost the entire chapter of Acts 7.

Then at the beginning of Acts chapter 8 we are told that because of Stephen’s preaching a great persecution broke out “and all except the apostles (the Greek word means “sent ones”) were scattered throughout Judea and Samaria” and “those who had been scattered preached the word wherever they went.” So, the “sent ones” stayed in Jerusalem but all the rest of the Christians (including the widows) were scattered to “minister the word” around Judea and Samaria (the two places Jesus told the “sent one” to go after Jerusalem to be His witnesses. See Acts 1:8).

Acts chapter 8 tells how Philip (another man who was picked to be one of the 7 “table waiters”) went to a city in Samaria and “proclaimed Christ to them.” It says: “The crowds gave their undivided attention to Philip’s message and to the signs they saw him perform. With loud shrieks, unclean spirits came out of many who were possessed, and many of the paralyzed and lame were healed. So there was great joy in that city.” (It looks like Philip the “table waiter” was doing the job that Jesus had told his apostles/sent ones to do in Acts 1:8, but they were hiding out in Jerusalem).

I believe that this account of choosing seven “table waiters” to free up the “sent ones” is included in the book of Acts to show us that all believers are anointed to do the work of the ministry, to preach the Gospel, and to work signs and wonders everywhere. Let’s get going for Jesus, even if we have to leave church leaders behind.

The living Jesus is reliant, but few fully rely on Him. Instead, we rely on our religion, our pride, and our self-effort. Throughout the book of Acts the risen Jesus acts in and through people. Now let Him act in and through you!

Mature Christians cry. The Bible says: “Weep with who weep.”

The three lights in the picture represent the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit shinning in and through those who truly and humbly serve. Let God’s light shine in and through you!

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Disappointments lead to better appointments

Daily writing prompt
Share a lesson you wish you had learned earlier in life.

Disappointments are often heart-breaking. If we’re not careful they can entrap us in a lifestyle of sadness, regret, and bitterness.

However, the truth is, as long as we are still living and conscious, our disappointments don’t need to have the final word. We can leave them behind and move forward with hope and positive expectation.

I’ve spent too much time in my life wallowing in disappointment and heartbreak when I could have moved on. Instead of grieving over a closed door I could have searched for an open one.

I have finally learned that closed doors aren’t final. When I look back on my earlier life, I notice that the truth is just the opposite. I see that closed doors protected me from many disasters and directed me to amazing relationships and opportunities. The closed doors in my life were gifts to guide me to great blessings.

My favorite book puts it this way: “We know that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him, who have been called according to His purpose.”

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O taste and see!

Daily writing prompt
What are your favorite types of foods?

My favorite book says that human beings can be “partakers of the divine nature.” (Partake means to “eat or drink something.”) It also says, “O taste and see that the Lord is good.”

Once Jesus’ disciples encouraged Him to eat something, but He replied saying, “I have food to eat that you know nothing about.” His disciples asked each other: “Could someone have brought him food?” Then Jesus said: “My food is to do the will of Him who sent me and to finish His work.”

My favorite food is letting my heart partake of, feast on, and savor the amazing presence of the living, resurrected Jesus. He turns the water of my daily existence into the wine of actually experiencing His presence living and working in and through me.

When I surrender to Christ in me and do His will as He prompts me, He leads me and empowers me to partake of the gifts and the fruit of His Spirit. That’s how I taste and see that the Lord is good!

Here’s how to partake of Jesus. Open your heart and let Him fill you up with His presence and power. (The Christian sacraments can be helpful, but they’re no substitute for partaking of the real presence of the risen Jesus. Too often people eat the wafer and drink the juice without actually taking in the living Jesus.)

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