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Devotions

Confidence in Jesus

David Wilkerson

The enemy comes roaring like a flood against saints who have no part in darkness. Satan can make it seem as if everything in their lives is coming apart: their prayers seem hindered, heaven seems as brass, and they suffer afflictions on all sides. At such times their heart might whisper condemnation: “You lack faith. If you only believed more righteously — if you were closer to Jesus, if your thoughts weren’t so evil — none of this would be happening to you. You would be on top, like those you see around you. You would enjoy abundance and hear clearly from God.”

Not so! Those referred to in Hebrews 10 who were under attack had a genuine faith that made them “draw near with a true heart in full assurance of faith” (Hebrews 10:22). Indeed, they are addressed in this epistle as “holy brethren” in Hebrews 3:1. The writer knows there is a war for their hearts in the midst of great affliction.

Simply put, Satan’s main objective is to douse a believer’s light, to dim it or shut it off completely. Show me a Christian who suddenly comes out of spiritual darkness, bursting into the light of Christ and His holiness and purity, and I’ll show you one who is in for the fight of his life.

Does this describe you? Are you enduring a great fight right now? Beloved, it is most likely not because of doubt or sin, but because of the light you have embraced. Light produces confidence in Jesus, and the more light you receive, the greater your trust in Him.

It is your confidence in Christ that Satan is determined to shipwreck. He has aimed the powers of hell at you to drag you down in fear and unbelief. But even now God is taking a great interest in every matter touching your life: job, family, children, relationships, health. It is truly His concern; you matter greatly to Him.

Becoming “Endurers”

David Wilkerson

Why do some people seem to simply breeze through life? They seem to never suffer at all. Everything they touch prospers and they always look happy, as if they have no problems in the world.

You might question how that could possibly be. Indeed, as you look at such Christians, you may wonder, “What’s wrong with me? Why have I had to endure one difficulty after another since I gave my all to Jesus? When I was cold and lukewarm in faith, everything was okay. I didn’t know such hardships existed until I got serious with God.”

Your answer is contained in this verse: “After you were illuminated” (Hebrews 10:32), meaning, “After you saw the light.” So it was after you opened your life to Jesus and were flooded with His light that your great fight of afflictions began.

Satan attacks us according to the measure of light we receive and walk in. Those who walk in a little ray of light are no threat to the devil’s kingdom. He aims his “great struggle with sufferings” at those who love the light with a whole heart, who embrace all that Christ has for them (see Hebrews 10:32).

Such saints have no part in darkness. They have laid hold of a faith that has made them “endurers,” soldiers who do not draw back but walk in the full assurance of faith!

“Therefore do not cast away your confidence, which has great reward. For you have need of endurance, so that after you have done the will of God, you may receive the promise” (Hebrews 10:35-36).

The Prayer of Petition

Gary Wilkerson

In Isaiah 37 we see the story of a king named Hezekiah.

Hezekiah was a good king. He followed after the ways of the Lord, the Bible says, and God honored and blessed him. But he got himself into a difficult situation. He found himself at odds with the King of Assyria, who surrounded Jerusalem so that no food could come in.

In the middle of that, the King of Assyria says in Isaiah 37:10 in a letter to Hezekiah:

“Do not let your God in whom you trust deceive you by promising that Jerusalem will not be given into the hand of the king of Assyria.”

That is exactly the type of thing the devil, the accuser of believers, says to us time and time again.

And so Hezekiah took this letter and bowed low before the Lord. He laid the letter of accusation out on the ground and said, “Please, Lord, do You hear the accusations against Your people? Do You hear his rants and raves against You, a holy God?”

Hezekiah continued to cry out, “God, would You please come? Would You please glorify Your name once again? Would You cause a breakthrough to come against the powers of the enemy that are too strong for us?”

That’s a prayer of petition that we each need in our life. We each need to cry out, “Oh, God, would You heal my body? Oh, God, would You deliver my family from these patterns of addictions? Would you free my mind from fear and doubt and unbelief?”

When we pray like this we are petitioning the Lord. “Do not be anxious about anything, but in everything by prayer and supplication [petition] with thanksgiving let your requests be made known to God” (Philippians 4:6). The Lord loves the petitioning heart of His children!

The Holy Spirit’s Promptings

Carter Conlon

Years ago the Lord impressed upon my heart to start a Bible study in a little country church in a very small town called Pendleton. This was an area of Canada with no Christian testimony for about forty square miles that we were aware of.

I went to the board of the church and told them who I was and the reason I wanted to rent their church. They ended up allowing us to use the building free of charge, and they even provided a caretaker to turn on the heat and shovel the snow in winter.

I immediately put together flyers advertising the Bible study and sent them out. The very first night, there was a snowstorm and nobody came! I ended up at the church with my six-year-old son, Jason, and my brother-in-law, who was the worship leader. My brother-in-law asked, “Should we just go home?”

“No,” I replied. “The Lord has called me to do this, so we are going to have a service tonight!” And we did. We worshiped God, my son shared his testimony, and we all had a great time!

I continued to hold the Bible study week after week. Sometimes there were six people in attendance, sometimes only four. But eventually, over the course of a couple of years, the Bible study grew into a church. One church grew into two, plus a Christian school and a food bank — a testimony that still exists today.

What would have happened if I had just gone home on that first night of the Bible study? I could have said, “This is pointless — it’s not worth the effort.”

How sad it will be for some people when they arrive at the throne of God and realize that the Lord’s promptings were there to do something that would have brought honor to His name, yet they did not obey.

Carter Conlon joined the pastoral staff of Times Square Church in 1994 at the invitation of the founding pastor, David Wilkerson, and was appointed Senior Pastor in 2001. 

God Will Never Leave Us

David Wilkerson

“Put on the whole armor of God, that you may be able to stand against the wiles of the devil” (Ephesians 6:11).

Believers in war-torn Iraq share, “Hard times are not coming — for us, hard times have been here for years.” They have known hardships for generations and they have learned to cling to faith. Because they have put on the whole armor of God, they are equipped to withstand evil and preach the gospel to those around them.

I truly believe the majority of godly people in the world today are under attack from hell, enduring devilish, seemingly hopeless situations. What about you? If you are not presently facing a test of faith, I urge you to be very thankful. But remain humble and be careful that you don’t boast of your own strength or faith.

Satan waits until the tested one is weary, drained of all strength and endurance. He waits until all prayers seem to go unanswered, until everything seems hopeless and we come to our wits’ end. It happened to Peter when he watched his Master being humiliated before the Sanhedrin (see Matthew 26:57-58). And it happened to Job when he was forced to ponder the loss of everything dear to him.

Questions begin to rise: “God, where are You? Why are my prayers not being answered?” Be careful, for right at that point Satan will implant his awful lie: “God has forsaken you. He does not hear you.”

Yet, God has not forsaken you — and He never will. He has instructed us to be prepared by putting on the whole armor of God and then He assures us that He will never leave us. “Lo, I am with you always, even to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20). Right now He is telling you, “I will never leave you.”