Present tense proclamation of the risen Jesus

We need present tense proclamation. Too many sermons teach Christians to look for Jesus in the past and in the future, but neglect to teach Christians to see, encounter, surrender to, and daily obey the continually risen Jesus in the now!

On Easter, Christians like to say, “Jesus is risen.” The truth is, He has been risen for almost 2,000 years! It’s wonderful that Jesus’ tomb is empty. but it’s sad if those who say they’re Christians have hearts empty and unaware of His glorious presence.

The Bible says we can be distracted from the risen Jesus by “another Jesus.” Accept no substitute for the resurrected Jesus. To compartmentalize the Resurrection into one day a year is to miss out on the reality of His continual presence.

The risen Jesus needs to be proclaimed and demonstrated in the present moment, not just referred to in the past or future. The risen Jesus is the now Jesus–not just the “back then” or “someday” Jesus!

If you go to church, take the risen Jesus with you. Don’t just go hear a talk about Him. The body of Christ needs overseers, not over-bearers–people who let the risen Jesus lead instead of trying to control Him.

Though you may believe you are trapped by a behavior, the risen Jesus has opened your prison door. Step out into His freedom!

The living, resurrected Jesus fulfills the Beatitudes:

  • The risen Jesus is the One who comes to those who are “poor in spirit” and aligns them with God.
  • The risen Jesus is the One who sees and cares about those who mourn and comforts them.
  • The risen Jesus is the One who embraces those who are meek, humble, and pliable and leads them into the land of God’s promises.
  • The risen Jesus is the One who feeds the spiritually hungry and fills them with His presence.
  • The risen Jesus is the One who forgives and has mercy on people who forgive and have mercy on others.
  • The risen Jesus is the One who opens the eyes of those who purify their heart and shows them the presence of God.
  • The risen Jesus is the One who calls those who make peace with God and with people “the children of God.”
  • The risen Jesus is the One who gives His kingdom to those who are persecuted for righteousness and empowers them to rejoice.
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“Jesus was” or “Jesus is”?

Some people say, “Jesus was . . .,” but His resurrection declares, “Jesus is . . .!” His story isn’t just history; it continues to be written today in and through the life of millions of people.

Christianity’s not a role that you play when you go to church. It’s being inwardly transformed and empowered by the risen Jesus. The One who left His tomb empty can fill the empty places in your heart!

If you’re ever on TV
And play the role
Of a church attendee,
It’s easy.

God didn't roll
The stone away
So we can play
A religious role
But so we can
Be continually led
By the risen Jesus.
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Who will tell what the risen Jesus is doing?

When I testify
About how
The risen Jesus
Changed my life,
It makes me cry.

To testify about the risen Jesus is to tell people what He has done and is doing in your life. A Christian testimony is the story of how the living Jesus has changed you and the role He is playing in your life. Do you have one?

When churches don’t open the platform to people’s testimonies, members don’t realize what Jesus is doing in each other’s lives. If Christians don’t testify about what the risen Jesus is doing in their life, it makes people think He’s not doing anything. When we neglect to testify about what the risen Jesus is doing, we’re withholding information that can help people.

Sermons focus on religious information. Testimonies focus on how the living Jesus has produced and is producing personal transformation. Hearing ordinary people tell what the living Jesus has done in their life has greatly increased my faith.

When Christianity replaced salvation testimonies with religious ceremonies, it lost much power. Testify about the living Jesus. Show and tell what He has done and is currently doing in your life. Hearing people testify about how the risen Jesus has and is working stirs up faith to believe that God can work in you and in your situation.

If you haven’t personally experienced the living, resurrected Jesus, you don’t have anything to testify about Him. If you know that the risen Jesus has helped you, then you have a testimony. “Let the redeemed of the Lord say so.”

Almost every morning the risen Jesus wakes me up with a stream of creative thoughts flowing through my mind. Recently the risen Jesus told me to “stop trying and start trusting” and He’s been reminding and helping me with that every day. Almost every day the resurrected Jesus brings at least one person my way for me to pray with.

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Your Easter basket doesn’t need to be spiritually empty

Resurrection is good news! There is more of Jesus’ presence and power for every Christian than they have yet experienced.

The Easter holiday is about tradition. The resurrection of Jesus is about shattering tradition and replacing it with life! The resurrected Jesus wants to live in and lead you every day, not just watch you attend an annual Easter service.

Proclaiming the historical resurrection of Jesus should inspire people to experience and obey the risen Jesus in the present. An annual Easter church service seems to trivialize the resurrection of Jesus. If it’s true, we should listen to and obey Him daily. Giving the resurrection a religious name and making it about an annual religious program, we can overlook the reality of the risen Jesus.

When I surrender wholly weak to the risen Jesus, His presence and strength arises in me. If Christians would be led by God’s Spirit instead of by the “holy days” of the “church calendar,” we’d be experiencing the risen Jesus instead of hearing talks about Him!

Painted eggs, candy bunnies, and religious pageantry miss the point of daily experiencing the presence and power of the risen Jesus. Easter sermons lecture people about the risen Jesus but neglect to empower people to daily experience and obey Him.

Instead of just sitting thru another annual Easter sermon we can be continually saturated thru and thru by the risen Jesus! Our Easter basket doesn’t need to be spiritually empty.

Christianity is supposed to be supernatural, not superficial. Learn to experience the risen Jesus all year, not just hear about Him on Easter. Search: The Joy Of Early Christianity book.

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Hype is a mask that humility never wears

Humility consistently aligns with truth. It doesn’t try to twist it, embellish it, or hide it.

Humility thinks outside the lens of self-focus. It sees beyond the box of self-interest.

Hype is a mask that humility never wears. Humility is aware that any self-hype is a dangerous type of deception that sucks honesty down the pipe of pride.

Humility doesn’t live in spin, attempting to create a favorable image of itself. Its honesty is heroic. Humility under promises and overdelivers. All hype and no humility keeps the truth away. Humility has no hype.

Humility freely embraces being “poor in spirit” as the blessing that Jesus declared it to be in the Beatitudes. It denies self in order to seek God’s kingdom and submit to His authority.

Like Paul of Tarsus, humility openly says and believes, “O wretched man that I am,” and “I know that in me, that is in my flesh, dwells no go thing,” and “Consider others better than yourself.” Humility is willing to band together with other Christ-followers in the openness and brokenness of ekklesia under the direct orchestration and leadership of the Holy Spirit.

Christianity that fits nicely within your comfort zone is counterfeit. The nominal Christian life requires no effort or humility.

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Hijacking humans as hostages

Compulsive desire
Can distract
And hijack
Our will,
Then compel us
To get off track.

Hijacking is much more common than we realize. Much in society attacks and hijacks free will turning people into drones commanded and controlled by desire and manipulation. Any thought, feeling, or desire that is bullying you into saying or doing anything against your will has taken you hostage.

Addiction hijacks free will and holds it hostage to self-destructive desires. It’s a tragedy when people allow their free will to be hijacked and held hostage by unrestrained cravings.

A person hijacked and overcome by uncontrolled desire is in bondage. We can’t obey controlling cravings of our desires and the promptings of God’s Spirit at the same time.

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The Russian peace pilgrim who walked through both Ukraine and Russia

In the 1800s an anonymous Russian pilgrim wandered peacefully through Ukraine and Russia. He kept a journal of his journey which was later published under the title The Way of a Pilgrim in English and Candid Narratives of a Pilgrim to His Spiritual Father in Russian.

This Russian pilgrim’s goal was to learn how to practice the “unceasing prayer of the heart.” His method was to continually repeat The Jesus Prayer, “Lord Jesus Christ, Son of the Living God, have mercy on me a sinner,” until it began to automatically and continually run through his heart.

I found his book while browsing in a bookstore several decades ago and it has and continues to strongly impact my life. The Pilgrim’s adventures, struggles, and experiences are both mind-blowing and heart-touching. They fill me with a sense of awe and inner warmth.

His book is so powerful that it inspired me to begin to say The Jesus Prayer. Few days go by that I don’t spend some time saying it over and over and experiencing inner peace and strength. The Pilgrim, himself, was inspired by a 5-volume set of books called The Philokalia which is a collection of writings of ancient Orthodox monks between the 300s and 1800s.

The Philokalia is the most powerful book I’ve ever read (after the Bible). I’m indebted to the Russian Pilgrim for introducing me to it. I wish that every Russian and the whole world would read and follow both it and the Pilgrim’s book.

Now, in the 2000s, Russia has trampled the path of their famous peace pilgrim by invading Ukraine and unleashing cruel death and destruction against both Ukraine’s military and their civilians. They’ve chosen the path of violence rather than The Way of a Pilgrim. Lord Jesus Christ have mercy on us all!

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Powerless Christianity is counterfeit.

True Christianity’s not
What you know.
It’s how you let go
And flow
With God’s Spirit.

Christianity should overflow with power. Counterfeit Christianity doesn’t:

  • Supernaturally change people’s behaviors from the inside out.
  • Heal and restore relationships.
  • Fill people with love, joy, and peace that continually flows from within them.
  • Set people free from addictions and compulsions.
  • Empower people to live in victory over wrongful thoughts and behaviors.
  • Encourage people to openly confess and repent of their sins.
  • Train people to listen to and obey the living Jesus.
  • Clearly demonstrate the power and presence of the risen Jesus.
  • Deliver people from evil.
  • Align its beliefs with the Bible.
  • Love its enemies.
  • Teach people to humble themselves.
  • Cast out demons.
  • Overflow with the gifts of the Spirit.
  • Honor and serve “the least of these.”
  • Join together with other Christians as one body.
  • Train people to “Consider others better than yourself.”
  • Put obeying Jesus far above loyalty to a nation.

For far too long, Christianity has been trying to put the new wine of God’s Spirit into the old wineskins of religious tradition, formality, organization, and control. An honest look at churches would reveal that it’s not working.

“The eye cannot say to the hand, ‘I don’t need you!'” (1 Cor. 12:21) But the pastor says to the congregation (with actions, if not with words), “I don’t need you.”

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What’s a Christian elder?

Christianity today needs leadership that is based on spiritually mature people leading by example instead of by positional authority. We need seasoned people who can demonstrate and train others to be actively and continually led by the Holy Spirit.

When the Bible speaks about elders, I don’t believe that it’s referring to people who hold official authority in an organized religion. I believe it is addressing older, spiritually mature people who are filled with wisdom and spiritual experiences that they have gained from a lifestyle of following and obeying the living Jesus.

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An appeal to free will is often a false flag

Every time
You deny
The truth,
You chain
Your free will
To a lie.

Without the will to be free, free will’s a false flag–an excuse for being imprisoned by desire. In a world of deception and darkness, free will doesn’t just happen. It must be sought and fought for.

There’s no free will in addiction. Addiction is the loss of free will.

Free will isn’t free. It requires that we resist and overcome our inner bondage and deception. When you allow your life to be consumed by cravings and compulsions, you lay down your free will. When you surrender your free will to be dominated by enslaving desires, you give up your right to choose.

Unless we discover and admit the truth, we may claim we have free will, but in reality, our will is in bondage to deception. Our conscience is our inner warning system that alerts us when we begin to surrender our free will to things that enslave it.

Obsession obliterates free will. Addiction annihilates free will. Compulsion crushes free will. Depression deletes free will. Enslavement to destructive desires destroys free will.

Deception dimishes free will. How can you freely choose if you’re deceived about what your options are? Anytime you’re tormented or controlled by feelings that go against your will, that’s a warning that you’re losing your free will.

Every time you’re inwardly coerced into self-enslaving behavior, you walk away from your free will. To win back our free will we must begin with humble honesty and with realigning any deception in us with truth.

An imprisoned will isn’t a free will. When your will is enslaved by deception, desire, addiction, or obsession, you’ve given up your freedom to choose your behaviors. When your will is enslaved to anything, the first step to free will is to freely admit your bondage.

Specks become planks when they’re right in front of my pupils. A speck can block my vision as much as a plank of plywood can. I don’t want to live in delusion. I don’t want my free will to be in bondage to deception caused by my inability and/or unwillingness to see truth. I want to take the planks (those pesky, tiny specks that block my pupils) out of my eyes so I can clearly see the truth and no longer have my free will held in bondage to self-justifications, desires, or ideologies.

When people appeal
To their free will
They're often waving
A false flag
To distract
From their bondage.
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