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Devotions

Hungry for God’s Word

David Wilkerson

“The joy of the Lord is your strength” (Nehemiah 8:10). At the time these words were proclaimed, the Israelites had just returned from captivity in Babylon. Under the leadership of Ezra and Nehemiah, the people had rebuilt Jerusalem’s ruined walls. Now they set their sights on reestablishing the temple and restoring the nation.

Nehemiah called a special meeting at the city’s Water Gate within Jerusalem’s rebuilt walls (see Nehemiah 8:1). The first thing that happened was the preaching of God’s Word. A hunger for the Word had developed among the people, so they did not need to be urged to listen. And they were fully prepared to submit to the authority of the Word, wanting to be governed by it and conform to its truth.

Amazingly, Ezra preached to the crowd for five or six hours. What an incredible scene. I believe it would be hard to find such an occurrence in the modern church. Yet true restoration can never take place without this kind of all-consuming hunger for God’s Word.

Make no mistake, at the Water Gate in Jerusalem there was no eloquent preaching. Ezra didn’t deliver a sensational sermon. Rather, he preached straight from the Scriptures, reading for hours on end and explaining the meaning. And as the people listened they grew excited.

At times Ezra was so overcome by what he read that he stopped to “[bless] the Lord, the great God” (8:6). The glory of the Lord came down powerfully and everyone raised their hands in praise. In repentance and brokenness, “they bowed their heads and worshiped the Lord with their faces to the ground” (8:6). Then they stood up to experience even more.

There was no manipulation from the pulpit, no dramatic testimony. There wasn’t even any music. These people simply had an ear to hear everything God said to them.

Beloved, I believe the Lord desires to move among his people in the same way today. If we are going to see this type of revival and restoration we must have a hunger and excitement for the Scriptures as Ezra did!

Waiting for Jesus

Gary Wilkerson

I wouldn’t preach a message about “waiting for the power of God” if I didn’t know it to be true. My wife, Kelly, and I have walked through such an experience. I have written before of our son Elliot who was addicted to heroin. At one point he was even homeless. We tried to help him through rehab programs and contacting individuals who might be able to get through to him but nothing ever touched him. Many nights Kelly and I cried ourselves to sleep over; it was one of the most difficult times of my life.

One night Kelly told me she had heard from the Lord and I could see that she truly was clothed with something of God.

“I had a dream that Elliot was lying on the ground, unconscious. Jesus told me to pick him up, and when I did, his body hung limp in my arms. When Jesus lifted him from me, I was so relieved. But then he turned away from me so that I couldn’t see Elliot.

“This disturbed me, but I sensed strongly that the Lord was telling us, ‘You can’t do this yourself. You’ve got to stop interfering. You’re unable to see it, but I’m doing a work in Elliot that’s hidden from you.’”

A few weeks later the Holy Spirit took hold of our son and transformed him. He redeemed Elliot completely and today he is a powerful young witness for God.

Friends, if we’re failing today, is it because we’re not waiting for God’s power? Is it because we’re “showing” ourselves rather than “hiding” ourselves in prayer? I exhort you to wait on Jesus. When his word comes to you through the Holy Spirit, whispering, “Show yourself,” there is nothing in life to compare.

On that day, you’ll see heaven touching earth in ways you never imagined. You’ll speak with more conviction, authority and boldness. And your pleasure in your walk with Jesus will be like nothing you have ever experienced. 

Time in God’s Presence

Jim Cymbala

We see in Acts 6 that the apostles had to choose what many have come to call the first deacons. There was a dispute between the Grecian Jews and the Hebraic Jews about the fairness of the food distribution system. The apostles decided to appoint certain men to handle that task so food distribution would get proper attention while the apostles continued to focus on “prayer and the ministry of the word” (v. 4).

The apostles said, “Brothers and sisters, choose seven men from among you who are known to be full of the Spirit and wisdom” (v. 3, emphasis added). Handing out food was a straightforward menial task, yet the apostles felt that being full of or controlled by the Spirit was a necessary qualification to wisely handle that simple job.

Compare that with some of our contemporary church hiring practices. When selecting people for professional ministry positions, we usually look first for educational qualifications. Folks who have earned a seminary degree become prime candidates to lead Christ’s people, often without anyone first having discerned whether these potential leaders show evidence of being controlled by the Spirit. Then candidates might be given a battery of psychological tests to see if they’re compatible for ministry, as if science were the deciding factor on wisdom. But in the New Testament church, even the job of distributing food to widows required leaders who were Spirit-controlled and full of wisdom.

If all believers were full of the Holy Spirit, if everyone in the community were Spirit-controlled, the apostles wouldn’t have laid down such a qualification. In fact, it would be downright silly. Imagine them saying, “Choose seven people who are breathing.” However, being a Christian does not necessarily guarantee that a person lives a life controlled by the Spirit. One must spend time in God’s presence until he is “endued with power from on high” (Luke 24:49).  

Jim Cymbala began the Brooklyn Tabernacle with less than twenty members in a small, rundown building in a difficult part of the city. A native of Brooklyn, he is a longtime friend of both David and Gary Wilkerson. 

If Only!

David Wilkerson

As Christians we know Jesus is the only hope for the world.

Paul speaks of this hope when he writes: “Remember . . . that at that time you were without Christ, being aliens . . . strangers from the covenants of promise, having NO HOPE and without God in the world. But now . . . you . . .  have been brought near by the blood of Christ. FOR HE HIMSELF IS OUR PEACE” (Ephesians 2:11-14, my caps).

The lost generation today is like the multitude in Jerusalem over whom Jesus wept. The people of Christ’s day lost what he had wanted to give them. They missed true freedom. They lost the peace that comes from the assurance of having all sins forgiven. They missed the healing touch of Jesus. They lost a hiding place from the storm. They missed the abiding, comforting, guiding presence of the Holy Spirit.

It was over these lost masses that Jesus wept and cried, “If only! If only you had known what I wanted for your life. If only you had taken what I offered you. I wanted to shelter you, to spread my wings of comfort over you. If only you had listened. If only you had known my love and mercy toward you” (Luke 19: 41-42, my paraphrase).

Christ was saying, “If only you had known the provision made by my heavenly Father for you, you would have known the peace that passes all understanding.” The Bible offers up this same cry, “If only!” from cover to cover. Today we who believe have this refuge, one to turn to in our deepest struggles. Assured that the same power passed up by those who rejected him is freely given to us who have received Jesus’ offer by faith. 

A Lasting Righteousness

David Wilkerson

Brokenness is to give up all hope of attaining heaven by any measure of personal goodness. It is to lay down all trust in our own efforts. It is turning wholly to the victory of the cross of Christ, believing he is the only way. Finally, it means trusting him to empower us through his Spirit to live up to his claim on our lives.

We need brokenness and humility to keep walking in faith: “The Lord is near to those who have a broken heart, and saves such as have a contrite spirit” (Psalm 34:18).

“Thus says the High and Lofty One who inhabits eternity, whose name is Holy: ‘I dwell in the high and holy place, with him who has a contrite and humble spirit, to revive the spirit of the humble, and to revive the heart of the contrite ones’” (Isaiah 57:15).

No matter how I may feel, Christ is my righteousness. No matter how many doubts may arise, Christ is my righteousness. No matter how many accusations I hear from the devil during the day, I stand on this: God sees me as righteous in Christ!

“On this one will I look: on him who is poor and of a contrite spirit, and who trembles at my word” (Isaiah 66:2).

Where is the Lamb of God now? He is in heaven, seated on his throne, King of Kings, Lord of Lords, Prince of Peace. One day all the religions of the world will bend their knees before Jesus and confess he is the Lord. “Every knee shall bow, every tongue shall confess that he was — he is — the everlasting Lamb of God” (see Philippians 2:10-11). Behold, the Lamb of God!