Good Seed, Crowded Soil

Luke 8: 7, 14: Behold, a sower went out to sow.  And as he sowed, … some fell among thorns, and the thorns sprang up with it and choked it. Now the ones that fell among thorns are those who, when they have heard, go out and are choked with cares, riches, and pleasures of life, and bring no fruit to maturity.

For the past two weeks, we have been discussing the characteristics of the virtuous woman, the woman of valor. But I feel the need to pause in our explorations and minister to some women who do not see themselves as virtuous, victorious, or strong. I want to minister to my sisters who feel as if they have tried and tried but keep on failing. Those whose prayer lives seem to be a cycle of prayers of confession and pleas for forgiveness, because they seem to be always stumbling and falling down.

As I re-read some of my many journals that I have written over the years, I came across an entry where I had penned at the top of the page, “The environment (condition) of my heart determines the productivity of my life.” At the time, I was studying The Parable of the Sower, and the verses that talked about the seed that fell on thorny ground captured my attention. Let’s look at the verse from Luke’s account of that parable.

Notice a few things about what we learn in this parable:

1. The thorns, although not visible to the naked eye, were present in the soil/ground at the time that the sower scattered the seed on the ground.
2. The good seed fell on and germinated next to already existing thorn seeds.
3. The good seed produced a plant.
4. The plant became an adult plant; a plant capable of reproducing or bearing fruit.
5. While the plant was growing, the thorns were also growing.
6. Soon the area of land where they were both growing became overcrowded.
7. Eventually the thorns began to choke the plant that sprang up from the good seed. It deprived the plant of resources through crowding.
8. The thorns diverted the nutrients the plant needed to, not only produce fruit, but to sustain the growth of the fruit until it came to a place of maturity.

My sisters, part of our self-discovery involves a search for pre-existing thorns in our lives. We must identify those things that were deep-seated in our heart before we heard the call of God. Note, those thorns do not negate the fact that God called us and spoke the seed of His word into our hearts. However, those thorns will limit what we can do with what God has given to us.

For some, the thorns have been growing alongside the word of God in our hearts for years. Now that we have grown to a place in God where He wants to use us to reproduce, that is to make disciples, we are finding that we are not as mature as we thought. We are finding ourselves void of strength and stamina, making it difficult to bear fruit.

According to this passage of scripture, the thorns represent cares (worries and anxieties), deceitfulness of riches (going after making money), and the pleasures of life (going after just having fun). If our lives revolve around these three main areas, then we are causing the strength and life that comes from the word of God in our lives to be depleted, leaving us unable to come to maturity and reproduce much fruit.

As women, if we are not careful, we can allow the cares of life to so fill our days and eventually our hearts that the good seed of God’s word, will not be allowed to do its full work in us. What He says about who we are and what He has given to us will be choked out and not be able to bear any fruit in our lives.

My sisters, know that what God says about us as women is truth. What He has promised to do in us and through us is a certainty. Paul said in 1 Thessalonians 5:24, “He who calls you is faithful who also will do it.” The problem isn’t with the seed, with His word or what He said. The problem is if we received His word in hearts that have not been cleared of the remains of the thorns that were there previously, then what His word produces in us will eventually die out.

You don’t have to allow your life and consequently your heart to become overcrowded with the cares of life. You can be all that God says you are and bear fruit that testify to the same. Take some time to weed out the thorns from the soil of your heart and make room for the word of God spoken in your heart to grow and bring forth fruit, some thirty, some sixty, and some one hundredfold.

DIG DEEPER:
Prayer Room – Be Rid of the Thorns

Achsah: A Virtuous Woman

And the daughter of Caleb was Achsah. – 1 Chronicles 2:49

Who can find a virtuous woman? for her price is far above rubies. The heart of her husband doth safely trust in her, so that he shall have no need of spoil. – Proverbs 31:10 – 11

The moment I read these verses, Proverbs 31: 10-11, one woman’s name came to mind – Achsah.

According to 1 Chronicles 2:49, Achsah was the daughter of Caleb. This Caleb was Caleb the son of Jephunneh the Kenezite (Joshua 14:6), the companion of Joshua, and one of the 12 spies (leaders of the tribes of Israel) who Moses had sent to spy out the Promised Land.

As I stop and revisit what the Bible shares with us about Achsah, I find myself pondering these questions?

What must it have been like to grow up as the only daughter of a national hero? The daughter of one of the only two men of their generation that God permitted to live long enough, not only to enter the Promised Land but, to fight in the battles of conquest?

What must it have been like to be raised by the man who withstood and quieted a mob of hundreds of thousands of people with the words, “Let us go up at once, and possess it; for we are well able to overcome it” (Numbers 13:35) and of whom God Himself testified, “my servant Caleb, because he had another spirit with him, and hath followed me fully, him will I bring into the land whereinto he went; and his seed shall possess it” (Numbers 14:24)

Achsah was a part of the “so-called victims” of whom God promised, “…. your little ones, whom you said would be victims, I will bring in, and they shall know the land which you have despised.But as for you, your carcasses shall fall in this wilderness. And your sons shall be shepherds in the wilderness forty years, and bear the brunt of your infidelity, until your carcasses are consumed in the wilderness. According to the number of the days in which you spied out the land, forty days, for each day you shall bear your guilt one year, namely forty years, and you shall know My rejection.  I the Lord have spoken this. I will surely do so to all this evil congregation who are gathered together against Me. In this wilderness they shall be consumed, and there they shall die.” (Numbers 14:31-35)

Achsah was a part of that generation who grew up witnessing the results of the 40-year sentence their parents had received from God. However, unlike her peers, Achsah and her three brothers grew up in a household that was waiting in anticipation for the 40-year promise of God to be manifested in their life: the promise of a bonus inheritance for her father’s wholehearted devotion to God; a family who were waiting for “the war”.

Achsah grew up as the daughter of the warrior Caleb, whose name meant “dog” or “dog-like”. He was a man of faith, courage, and tenacity, even in his old age. Forty five years after God made that promise to him and his descendants, Caleb said to Joshua, “And now, behold, the Lord has kept me alive, as He said, these forty-five years, ever since the Lord spoke this word to Moses while Israel wandered in the wilderness; and now, here I am this day, eighty-five years old. As yet I am as strong this day as on the day that Moses sent me; just as my strength was then, so now is my strength for war, both for going out and for coming in. Now therefore, give me this mountain of which the Lord spoke in that day; for you heard in that day how the Anakim were there, and that the cities were great and fortified. It may be that the Lord will be with me, and I shall be able to drive them out as the Lord said (Joshua 14: 10-12)

 How did growing up in such an environment help shape Achsah into becoming the virtuous woman that we see in those two short passages of the Bible? Although all we have to instruct us are a total of 12 verses, we can surmise that she grew up with an understanding of what it meant to be a warrior; what it meant to be a military ally. The portrait that I see of her is that of a woman of valor, strength, might, wisdom, efficiency, wealth, and ability; a virtuous woman.

Come with me as I dig deeper into the historian’s account of Achsah and use this snapshot of her life to unveil more of who we are as women, our assignment/purpose and what we have been equipped with for this mission.

DIG DEEPER:
1. Devotional – When Asking Secures His Spoil
2. Bible Study – ACHSAH: Daughter, Wife, Mother

ishah chayil: A Virtuous Woman

Who can find a virtuous woman? for her price is far above rubies. – Proverbs 31:10

I first read this verse years ago as a teenager. Back then I was an avid reader, who was fascinated with words. I had not yet discovered the ideas that

(1) the Bible was originally written in another language; therefore, the translated English word may not do justice to the meaning that the original authors intended to convey;
(2) an understanding of the context in which a verse or passage was written (to whom was it written, what was the culture of the time, etc.) was needed to have an accurate understanding of what was being conveyed; and
3) a comparison of how that word was used in other passages gives a clearer picture of what it means.

In my youthful zeal, my first thought was that virtuous came from the root word virtue and so had something to do with being morally good. Consequently, I walked away with the idea that this passage was about how to be a good woman (wife and mother) or a woman with excellent values or character.

Now years later, as I am studying the Bible with the view of discovering more of who I am as a woman, my assignment/purpose, and what I have been equipped with to aid in this end time war, I am realizing that I had a flawed understanding of those verses in Proverbs 31:10-31.

In my search, I read about 50 different Bible translations of that verse. The majority translated ishah chayil as a good or excellent wife. Here are the English words that they translated chayil to mean:

WORDS FOR chayil

Virtuous              
Worthy                
Noble character               
Competent        
Superior
Excellent             
Spiritual               
Capable               
Intelligent
Good                    
Perfect                
Strong character              
Accomplished
Valiant
Woman of valor
Woman of strength and mighty valor

Of the 50 Bible translations, only 3 translated the phrase ishah chayil as what it really means in the Hebrew.

  • Who shall find a valiant woman?
    – (Douay-Rheims 1899 American Edition – DRA)
  • Who can find an aishes chayil (a woman of valor)?
    – (Orthodox Jewish Bible – OJB)
  • Who could ever find a wife like this one—
    she is a woman of strength and mighty valor!
    She’s full of wealth and wisdom.
    – (The Passion Translation – TPT)

I like The Passion Translation’s best, because it utilizes all the definitions of chayil as used in the Bible. This word chayil cannot be limited to one meaning, because it has multiple meanings as seen in various passages of the Bible. Most frequently occurring bible usage definitions are as follows: strength, might, ability, efficiency, wealth, force, army. The word chayil then implies warlike strength, power and might. It presents the idea of showing oneself strong or displaying valor. Finally, it infers a capacity for uprightness and integrity.

When taken as a whole, the picture that comes to mind of this woman that is being described is somewhat different than what I visualized when I was a youth. As a youth, I saw the Proverbs 31 woman as a superhero mother and wife. This depiction of a superior and morally good homemaker has been replaced in my mind by the image of a warrior woman; a woman who, because of her fear of God, is endowed with the power of a mighty warrior in all spheres of life. Look at how the footnotes from the TPT translation describes it:

The Hebrew word used to describe this virtuous wife is khayil. The meaning of this word cannot be contained by one English equivalent word. It is often used in connection with military prowess. This is a warring wife. Khayil can be translated “mighty; wealthy; excellent; morally righteous; full of substance, integrity, abilities, and strength; mighty like an army.” The wife is a metaphor for the last-days church, the virtuous, overcoming bride of Jesus Christ. The word khayil is most often used to describe valiant men. See Ex. 18:21, where it is used for the mighty ones Moses was to commission as elders and leaders among the people. Because many of the cultural terms and metaphors used in this passage are not understood or even used in today’s English-speaking world, this translation has chosen to make them explicit.

Join me over the next few weeks, as I deepen my exploration into this warrior woman using characters like Jael, Achsah, and Zeruiah, among others. I pray that you would be challenged to find her buried deep within and awaken her to experience the victories for which she was destined.

DIG DEEPER:
1. Devotional FOUND: A Virtuous Woman
2. Bible StudyProverbs 31:1-10 – A work of Poetry

Tactical Disposition: LISTEN UP!

As some of you know, I am a special education teacher. I teach students with varying exceptionalities. One such exceptionality is ADHD. Students with ADHD have a difficult time staying focused. Consequently, they struggle with LISTENING UP! Unfortunately for them, they miss a lot of the instruction that is given in their general education classes, not because they were not present but, because they could not focus enough to listen. Thus their achievement at the end of the semester does not accurately reflect their potential.

As I think of my students, I wonder about myself. How many battles have I lost? How many blessings have I forfeited? How many opportunities have I missed? How are my life ‘s achievements much less than my God-given potential? All because I am having difficulty focusing on God’s voice; all because I fail to LISTEN UP!

Life can be really noisy and distracting. The Merriam-Webster dictionary defines noisy as, “accompanied by or introducing random fluctuations that obscure the real signal or data.” Noisy! Noisy! Noisy! So many noises; so many loud, sometimes confused and senseless sounds, both on the inside and on the outside. So much noise that we can’t hear the voice of God. But thanks be to God, He has made provision for us to hear, to move past those signals intended to obscure his voice and enter a space where we can hear him clearly.

Jesus modeled this for us: escaping the noise and finding that space. Mark 1:35 states, “And in the morning, rising up a great while before day, he went out, and departed into a solitary place, and there prayed.” The time of prayer and the place of prayer are important for how well we are able to hear. Jesus chose a time when the hustle and bustle of life was at a minimum. He also chose a place where he could be alone and undisturbed; a place where noise-infiltration will be reduced.

There is something about the time of prayer. The prophet Isaiah also spoke of this time of prayer, in the morning. He was referring to the Messiah in this passage, but it is also instructive for us. He says, “The Lord God hath given me the tongue of the learned, that I should know how to speak a word in season to him that is weary: he wakeneth morning by morning, he wakeneth mine ear to hear as the learnedIsaiah 50:4. The NIV says it this way, “He wakens me morning by morning, wakens my ear to listen like one being instructed.”

In the morning, I awake with a blessing, an anointing, with favor on my ears to hear God clearly; to hear His instructions so that I can be guided for the day. Notice what Isaiah was saying. When I hear as a student, as one being taught, then I am able to know what to say, how to respond in season, that is, what is the appropriate word or action for the occasion. When I hear as a student then God is able to fulfill this promise in my life – “ I will instruct you and teach you in the way you should go; I will guide you with My eye” – Psalms 32:8.

When we position ourselves to LISTEN UP, by choosing our time and place of prayer, we position ourselves to receive instructions for battle, for blessings, and to discern opportunities. If we were to read further in Mark 1, after Jesus came out of that early morning prayer, He was empowered to preach and do miracles. Luke 6:12-13 provides us with another example of Jesus being selective about his time and place of prayer. “And it came to pass in those days, that he went out into a mountain to pray, and continued all night in prayer to God. And when it was day, he called unto him his disciples: and of them he chose twelve, whom also he named apostles….” We see that within that space he was able to hear clearly and receive instructions about who should be on his leadership team.

Position yourself to hear God’s voice; to be instructed!

Be selective about your time and place of prayer!

Make a choice to stop incurring avoidable losses. Make a choice to not forfeit any blessings. Make a choice to put an end to missed opportunities!

LISTEN UP!

What a friend we have in Jesus, all our sins and griefs to bear!
What a privilege to carry, everything to God in prayer.
Oh, what peace we often forfeit; oh what needless pains we bear.
All because we do not carry everything to God in prayer!

Don’t just carry them to Him in prayer. Create the environment (that time and place of prayer) that will allow you access to hearing His voice so that you can leave with instructions for the manifestation of your victory.

In the morning, Lord, you hear my voice; in the morning I lay my requests before you and wait expectantly Psalms 5:3LISTEN UP!

DIG DEEPER: Bible StudyDid you hear that?

God’s Choice: Custom-made Battles

Victory in warfare is a function of superiority of strategy.”Pastor Sam Adeyemi

Exodus 13:17 – 14:31

God chooses our battles. He chooses when, where, and how we fight. Because the choice is His, if we follow His leading and guidance, we are assured to win.

Jeremiah 10:23 states, “O Lord, I know that the way of man is not in himself: it is not in man that walketh to direct his steps.” The wise man Solomon further explains that, “A man’s heart deviseth his way: but the Lord directeth his steps”Proverbs 16:9.

God, in choosing our battles, considers our frame. He will not allow you to be tempted above that ye are able…. 1 Corinthians 10:13. Our battles are proportional to our strength.

God is not only able but He will. He will use the things in our environment that only He has control of (like the strong east wind) to make a way when none is visible. Solomon says that this ability of God is not just confined to nature, but even the king’s heart is in the hand of the Lord, as the rivers of water: he turneth it whithersoever he will (Proverbs 21:1).

The God that divided the waters and made a road in the sea can surely make a way of escape, a way of forward mobility for you. The way that God makes for you is yours. Your battles are custom-made for you, designed just for you. They were made to individual specifications. No one else can fit like you can. When they try to walk where you have walked in battle, they will experience defeat and destruction.

The sea represented the roadblock/obstacle/hindrance to their deliverance. But the sea also became their way of escape. What was their way of escape was the tool of destruction for their pursuers, their enemies. The way that God makes for you is for you. For others, it may be a tool of destruction, but for you a means of deliverance. WALK INTO THE MIDST OF THE SEA!

Your victory is assured this day. All that is required of you is great trust in God and expeditious movement.  Will you trust that God has the superior strategy for your life today?

MOVEMENT + TRUST = VICTORY

DIG DEEPER:

  1. Devotional All for His Glory!
  2. Bible StudySuperior Strategy

Something Worth Fighting For

I live in a patriarchal society. I should leave the fighting, conquering, and building to the men. Nevertheless, I can’t ignore the legacy that pumps within my veins. While I was in the loins of my ancestor Joseph, I received an anointing as a ruler and preserver of nations. Additionally, while I was in the loins of his son Ephraim, I heard the prophetic utterance of greatness to found many nations. My father, brothers, cousins, and uncles are not the only ones to whom this blessing of favor belongs. I am Sherah, a near kinswoman, and I will seize that which was promised to us by God.”
– Sheerah, ~1400BC

The first nine chapters of the book of 1 Chronicles is a compilation of lists of genealogies or historical records of the family lines of the Israelites. Occasionally, the chronicler interrupts the lists of family names to elaborate on an individual in a family line. One such interruption occurs in 1 Chronicles 7:20-24. The author zones in on a tragedy that transpires in the family of Ephraim, during the pre-exodus time period. Then he fast forwards generations later, to the time period of Joshua’s conquest of Canaan and zooms in on a daughter (descendant) of Ephraim, Sherah, also known as Sheerah.

Sherah would have grown up hearing stories about her (many times over great grandfather) ancestor Joseph and also of her many times over grand uncles, Ezer and Elead. On one hand was a story of triumph over impossible odds and, on the other hand, a story of defeat that led to tremendous despair, depression and discouragement.

Which story should she allow to inform her future, to shed light on the path before her? Should she choose to sit in the sidelines and let life happen or should she grab hold of her legacy; that which God had promised her family? Were God’s promises worth fighting for?

I read the story of Sherah in 1 Chronicles 7:20-25 and imagined that the self-talk above might have been the thoughts running through her mind as she watched her kinsman, Joshua son of Nun lead the conquest of Canaan. I imagined that this reflection on who she was motivated her, a woman in a patriarchal society, to fight for her legacy. The story she wrote with her fight was recorded in verse 24 –

“And his daughter was Sherah, who built Bethhoron the nether, and the upper, and Uzzensherah.”

This was unheard of in these times; a woman being the foundress and builder of not one city/town but three, one of which was named after her. For generations after her death, one of these towns, Beth-Horon would be strategic in many battles fought in and by Israel. I am sure if I could sit with Sherah today, she would tell me, that all of that, though difficult, was something worth fighting for!

Do you have something worth fighting for?

DIG DEEPER:
1. Devotional Hold on to Your Promise!
2. Bible Study Sherah: Daughter of Ephraim

TACTICAL DISPOSITION: Being Still

In my previous blog posts, I have been emphasizing the need for strategy as we engage in warfare in the kingdom. When I referred to strategy, I defined it as a plan of action to achieve an overall goal. So, for example, if our goal is the salvation of our spouse or children, our strategy will describe the plan of action that we are putting in place to achieve this. We would ask questions like: What approach will I take? Or What is the general direction I intend to take to achieve this goal?

However, it is not enough to have a strategy or overall plan for our warfare. After we have identified our strategy for warfare, we must then pinpoint the tactics needed to carry out that plan. Tactics are those specific actions that we employ to implement the strategy or plan.

It is important to note that this word, actions, may be misleading in that it implies (1) the process of doing something or (2) an active response or resistance. Scripture reveals a tactical position of seeming inaction or passivity (without active response or resistance). I call it the Tactical Disposition of Being Still.

As women, we often find it hard to “Be Still”. We wear so many hats that, without thinking, we often find our hands dipping in many things simultaneously. Consequently, there are times when our victory lies not in actively doing something or “waging warfare”. There are times when the tactical position for victory is just “being still”.

But what does it mean to be still? Psalms 46:10 as stated in the Amplified Bible says, “Let be and be still, and know (recognize and understand) that I am God”. Being still is leaving off or abandoning our own attempts and allowing God to be God in a situation; trusting that, without our help, He will be exalted in the situation. He will win and so will we.

Being Still is about ceasing from our labors, refraining from making inputs, relaxing our hold, and letting go so that God can show His might and His deliverance in the battle. When we are directed by the Holy Spirit to employ this tactic, we are afforded an opportunity to see God as the King of glory, the Lord strong and mighty, the Lord mighty in battle.

I must confess that, for me, this has been one of the most difficult tactical dispositions in my warfare: being still. But thanks be to God, through His precious Holy Spirit, I am learning that quietness and confidence can be my strength (Isaiah 30:15). I am learning that as a wife and mother, I have been given a grace of influence that works best in an environment of stillness. I can choose to build my home with this grace, resting confidently in the Lord, or tear down what I am seeking to build by charging loudly and aggressively ahead.

I invite you to come with me as we discover The Power of Quiet Influence (Devotional) and how to be A Wise Builder (Bible Study).

Do You Have a Strategy for Your Warfare?

To Fight or Not to Fight? That is the question.

Like Goliath, for some of you, the adversary has been challenging you in an area of your life for some time now. For others there is an issue or problem confronting you that you find difficult to overcome or solve. Still for others there is that goal that you want to achieve, but it presents a huge challenge.

In all of these cases, warfare is required. But what do you do? You have two options: To Fight or Not to Fight. Whatever your choice, you will need to decide on a strategy, choose a tactical position for your warfare.

Recently, I have been reading the book, The Art of War by Sun-Tzu, and it confirms so much that I have learned from the word of God as it relates to waging a good warfare. As I read it, I constantly hear the questions ringing in my spirit – Do you have a strategy for your warfare? What is your strategy for your warfare?

Read and ponder on some of what I have been reading from this book:

EXCERPT FROM The Art of War by Sun-Tzu

He will win who knows when to fight and when not to fight. If he can fight, he advances and takes the offensive; if he cannot fight, he retreats and remains on the defensive. He will invariably conquer who knows whether it is right to take the offensive or defensive.

Hence the saying: If you know the enemy and know yourself, you need not fear the result of a hundred battles. If you know yourself, but not the enemy, for every victory gained you will also suffer a defeat. If you know neither the enemy nor yourself, you will succumb in every battle. Knowing the enemy enables you to take the offensive, knowing yourself enables you to stand on the defensive.

On the one hand we have ability to protect ourselves; on the other, a victory that is complete.

To secure ourselves against defeat lies in our own hands. Security against defeat implies defensive tactics. The opportunity of defeating the enemy is provided by the enemy himself. The ability to defeat the enemy means taking the offensive.

It is imperative to have a strategy for your warfare. Your choice of strategy will be determined by your knowledge of yourself and your adversary. Until you are able to come to grips with both yourself and the adversary, your strategy for warfare will not result in victory.

This week’s Bible Study and Devotional focus will be on three women (Rebekah, Rachel, and Hannah) who faced a similar adversary but made 3 different decisions on whether To FIGHT or Not To FIGHT. Join me as we use their testimonies to learn how to wage a good warfare against the challenges before us.

DIG DEEPER:

  1. Devotional To Fight or Not To Fight?
  2. Bible StudyWatch Your Warfare!

Symptoms

This past weekend I went to get my nails done. I sat on the chair in front of the nail technician and held out my right hand to her. She took my hand, paused, looked at me and asked, “Is something wrong? Why are your hands shaking?” My reply was, “It’s my thyroid.”

You see, I suffer from a condition called hyperthyroidism, where my thyroid produces excessive amounts of the thyroid hormones, which results in the speeding up of some of my body’s processes. Tremors/shakiness is one of the symptoms that I experience as a result of this condition.

Year ago, at the onset of this condition, I was terrified by the symptoms. The heart palpitations, muscle weakness, nervousness, tremors, dizziness, fainting spells, and drastic weight loss were all so inexplicable to us. We spent lots of time, energy, emotions, and finances trying to figure out what was going on. It seemed as if I was on a pathway to death until we found a doctor who could provide us with answers. We now knew what the cause of the fight was and so could now draft a strategy to combat that adversary.

So as I witnessed my nail technician’s concern at the tremors, I was not alarmed or fearful of what I was seeing. I knew that nothing was wrong with my hand. The tremors were simply an indication of what was going on in the “unseen realm of my body”. The tremors and the other symptoms are my indicators of how successful my body is at this point in the fight for wholeness and health. They inform the next steps that should be taken in my progress towards wellness.

Similarly, we must always be mindful of the truth that what we see in our environment every day are indicators and results of what is going on in the unseen realm. Hebrews 11:3 teaches that what we see (the visible) was actually created from what we cannot see (the invisible).

Our current symptoms, the physical or mental features of our lives, are indicative of where we are, at this point in the fight for eternal salvation. Instead of becoming alarmed or fearful, we must investigate the cause or root, then allow the symptoms to inform our strategy for warfare. That is why Paul admonishes: Although we live in the world, we don’t fight our battles with human methods. (2 Corinthians 10:3 – CEB)

Join me over the next few weeks as we explore how to formulate effective strategies for warfare.

DIG DEEPER:

  1. Devotional Be Sober, Be Vigilant!
  2. Bible StudyOur Adversary: Satan
  3. Prayer RoomA Cry for Discernment

It Just Might Be An Illusion!

What animals do you see?

Have you ever been discussing an issue or topic with someone and was baffled as to why it was so hard for them to see the obvious? The discussion begins to get out of hand. It deteriorates into a disagreement and then to a full-blown heated argument.

At the beginning of the dialogue, you both started out with the same goal; to exchange ideas so as to reach a decision, but instead you leave the conversation, not focused on the issue at hand, rather on the hurt and offense that you feel. Nothing was achieved; you did not reach a consensus because of your difference in opinion.

WHAT HAPPENED? You saw a horse, while he saw a frog. She saw a rabbit, but you saw a duck. You saw 3 bricks; he saw 4. You were both perceiving the same reality differently because of where your eyes [your mind’s eyes] were focused.

The pictures of the animals above are optical illusions. An Optical Illusion is an experience of seeming to see something that does not exist or that is other than it appears.

That situation you’re facing right now, the one for which you’ve been asking God for an answer or direction, what are you seeing? Can you trust your sight? May I submit that what you’re seeing might just be an illusion? Or it might just be partial sight?

Our perceptions and perspectives aren’t truth. We live by faith [in God’s word] and not by our sight (2 Corinthians 5:7). His thoughts and ways are higher than ours (Isaiah 55:8-9). If we are going to become the W.O.M.E.N. we were created to be, then we have got to learn how to guard our sight.

DIG DEEPER:
1. The Bible Study Change of Focus = Change of Perspective
2. Prayer RoomLord Guard My Focus (1); Lord Guard My Focus (2)