Seeing the Glory of God

Seeing the Glory of God

 

Moses had experienced the presence of God as manifested in the plagues that beset the Egyptians before the Children of Israel were allowed to leave Egypt. He had seen the pillar of fire at night and the cloud during the day while he led the Israelites through the wilderness toward the Promised Land. He had great faith in the ability of God to take care of His children. And yet, because of his relationship with Jehovah, Moses asked for an even more intimate experience: He wanted to see, firsthand, the glory of God.

Moses is the only man in the Bible to have made such a simple, yet dynamic request, and with it, he stood head and shoulders above all other Bible characters. It was surely the sincere longing behind the petition that touched the heart of God and moved His hand to grant the desire of Moses’ heart. He had favor with God, and the Creator of the universe responded. How did Moses feel after He had made such a bold appeal? Did he tremble at the audacity of his entreaty? Did he quake in his sandals? Did the hair on the back of his neck stand up at such boldness?

Moses had a sustained track record of favor with God. He knew Jehovah to be faithful. He had seen His glory in the burning bush, in the fire and cloud, in the parting of the waters of the Red Sea, in the salvation of an entire people during the solemn Passover. Moses was sustained by both faith and favor; he knew his God.

Moses’ favor with God had been earned in the fire of adversity and the cloud of spiritual union. He need not fear a close encounter with Jehovah; he knew that he had purified himself and was prepared for the meeting. Moses refused to allow fear to rob him of stepping into the very presence of Jehovah. As the Apostle Paul wrote in I John 4:18: “There is no fear in love; but perfect love casts out fear, because fear involves torment.”

In Exodus 33:13, Moses petitions God to “show me now Your way, that I may know You.” He wanted to know the way of God, before he requested to see the glory of God. He established a bond before he sought a glimpse of the Almighty. Moses was not a beggar who had to grovel at the back door of the throne room, seeking but not expecting an audience with the Lord of the manor. No, he was a son who had access to the front entrance, an open door because he had favor with God.

A place by God, covered by His hand—cherished, protected, blessed, and highly favored! Moses saw, not the God of judgment, not the all-consuming fire; he basked in the presence of a God who loved the man He had chosen to lead His people, the one upon whom rested favor with God. This is the favor God wants you to experience in your life.

 

 

 

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A Meeting with a True Giant of Faith

A Meeting with a True Giant of Faith

 

 

I’ll never forget the first time I met Corrie ten Boom.  Over a cup of soup, she shared her love for the Jewish people with me. I told her a little of my own family’s story of suffering at the hands of people who claimed to be Christians and she said, “You can’t love God without loving the Jewish people.”

You and I know the story of the Hiding Place—how the ten Boom family risked so much to save the lives of hundreds of Jews from the Holocaust…and the incredible price they paid for their faith.  But it’s a story at risk of being forgotten. So many people today are shocked when I share the ten Boom’s amazing story with them—they’ve simply never heard it before. And right now that story is needed more than ever before.

The ten Boom’s story starts with a prayer meeting Willem ten Boom began in the family clock shop in the 1840s…and continues through decades of faithfulness…culminating with a family risking everything to save Jews from the Nazi death camps. Hundreds of Jews passed through the family’s home, staying for days or weeks as they fled certain death at the hands of the Gestapo.

Then came the fateful day when the entire family was arrested. The elderly Casper ten Boom, 84 years of age, was offered his freedom if he would promise to stop helping the Jews. Despite the dire warnings, he refused. He said, “I am too old for prison life, but if that should happen, then it would be for me an honor to give my life for God’s ancient people the Jews.”

Ten days later, he entered the presence of God, receiving the honor due to a faithful servant. Corrie and her sister Betsie were sent to the dreaded Ravensbruck prison camp where Betsie died. But Corrie survived until she was released due to a “clerical error” just days before everyone her age in the camp was executed.

Corrie devoted the rest of her life to telling her story and sharing the Good News with the world. She lived to the ripe old age of 91, and it was one of the great privileges of my life to spend time with her on several occasions.  Her love and courage are an inspiration and example to all of us still today. 

 

 

 

 

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What God Sees in You that No One Else Does

What God Sees in You that No One Else Does

 

 


Judges 6 relates the story of Gideon, a man who was basically a wimp! When we first meet Gideon in this chapter, he is hiding in fear from the Midianites in order to thresh wheat for his family. And yet when the angel of the Lord approached Gideon, his greeting in verse 12 was, “The Lord is with you, you mighty man of valor!” You can imagine that Gideon’s response would be: “Who me?” and it was.

In his own eyes, Gideon was a zero, a nobody, a failure, and certainly not a “mighty man of valor” as he had been addressed. He was pretty sure God could not use him for anything, much less something that required boldness! But God was saying to Gideon: “You don’t know what you can do when you allow yourself to be accompanied by My presence and filled with My power.”

Gideon was slow to warm up to the idea of being a mighty man of valor, to be the one chosen of God to engage the entire Midianite army in battle. He could not comprehend that God wanted him for the task at hand. He was not some superhero, but he had two things in his favor: God’s power and presence.

With God’s assurance that he was the man for the job, Gideon chose to obey God. He quietly issued a call for the people to gather and was astounded when 32,000 showed up! But God had a different plan, one that would further challenge Gideon’s dependence on Him. Imagine his dismay when God told Gideon the army was too large and introduced His plan to streamline the troops to a mere 10,000 men. Even then, God determined that number to be too large and devised one further test that sent 97% of them home as well.

Three hundred men! That was Gideon’s army. The Midianite army was said to be “without number.” (See Judges 7:12.) Yet Gideon obeyed God’s very specific instructions. Each man was to carry a trumpet and a pitcher with a torch inside. The men were divided into three companies of 100 each and spread around the perimeter of the Midianite camp. At the appointed time, they were to blow their trumpets, smash the lamps and yell, “The sword of the Lord and of Gideon” (Judges 7:20b.)

When the cacophony of noise awoke the Midianites, they were seized with panic and fled before the army of the Lord. Gideon pursued the enemy until it was vanquished. Gideon could have walked away from God’s plan at any time. In the natural, it must have seemed totally impossible to win Israel’s freedom from the marauding, murderous Midianites. However, Gideon chose to believe that the power and presence of Jehovah-Mephalti, the Lord my Deliverer, was greater than the multitude of Midianite militia.

 

 

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God Has a Purpose For Your Life

God Has a Purpose For Your Life

 

 

As I was praying for you this morning, my beloved partner, the Lord spoke to me from Jeremiah 1:5: “Before I formed you in the womb I knew you, before you were born I set you apart; I appointed you as a prophet to the nations.”

That’s the word God gave Jeremiah. I’m sure Jeremiah didn’t feel that way when he was beaten and put in stocks and sunk in mud and his scrolls were burned because of the word of the Lord.

Jerusalem’s Mayor Teddy Kollek knew I liked Jeremiah.  Years ago, he told me he wanted to show me Jeremiah’s grotto, his cave. We went to it together. I was totally astonished because the name of that spot is now called Golgotha, the place where heaven and earth met.

Since the age of 11, I’ve learned to put all my faith in God. I’ve also learned to celebrate suffering and sacrifice and that nothing comes without a price. The Apostle Paul says, “For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal” (2 Corinthians 4:17-18).

The price of admission to change the world is high.  Jesus Himself faced unspeakable evil and betrayal.  The Lord told me that when trouble comes, don’t play the victim. He asked me two questions. First, are the things you’re living for worth Christ dying for?  Second, are you living your life in the light of eternity?

I have come to realize that it was in the quiet crucible of my personal suffering that my noblest dreams were born. God’s greatest gifts are given in compensation for what I’ve been through. That goes for you, too.  God has a plan and purpose for your life that is more wonderful and bigger than you can imagine.

I’m sharing this with you today to encourage you because as part of the Jerusalem Prayer Team, you’re doing something truly great for God. You are part of a 100-year plan. Yes, that’s what God told me. Friends of Zion would be a 100-year plan. It is your legacy. It will shine and impact the nation of Israel decades after you’ve gone to heaven.

Daniel 12:3 says, “Those who are wise will shine like the brightness of the heavens, and those who lead many to righteousness, like the stars for ever and ever.” That is your promise. You are one of those stars that will shine in Jerusalem.  The echo of what you are doing will shine over the holy city of Jerusalem and throughout eternity.

Truly, you are living your life in the light of eternity, and the things you’re living for are worth Christ dying for. I want to thank you from the bottom of my heart for your generous Holy Spirit-led offering today. Jesus brought His offerings up to Jerusalem. Just like Jesus, you are bringing yours.

 

The vital work of the Jerusalem Prayer Team is only possible because of friends like you.  The needs are enormous. People are suffering because of the wars in Israel and Ukraine, and we are literally saving lives because of you. Please be as generous as you can. God bless you.

 

 

 

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Standing Confidently in God’s Presence

Standing Confidently in God’s Presence

 

 

Hebrews 4:16 reminds us that as Believers, because of our relationship with Christ, we can “come boldly to the throne of grace, that we may obtain mercy and find grace to help in time of need.”

There are those who place great value in who they know—especially if those persons are considered to be the movers and shakers of the world. Those “in the know” will quickly recite a litany of who’s who and what’s what in order to impress others. But you and I are intimately acquainted with the only One who really matters—God the Father.

We are heirs of God and joint heirs with Jesus Christ and are sealed by the Holy Spirit (see Ephesians 1:13-14.) Because we have a close, personal relationship with the triune Godhead, we have the privilege of entering the throne room any time we choose. Revelation 5:8 says that the prayers of the saints are “golden bowls full of incense.”

Unlike those who may spend great sums of money to hobnob with the “A-listers,” our entrée is a gift freely given, and yet it cost Jesus everything. God’s grace has made it possible for us to have continual access to the throne and He who sits upon it.

In I John 5:14-15, the apostle wrote these words of encouragement to the followers of Christ: 

Now this is the confidence that we have in Him, that if we ask anything according to His will, He hears us. And if we know that He hears us, whatever we ask, we know that we have the petitions that we have asked of Him.

As obedient children, we know that we can approach His throne with the assurance that if we ask according to His will, Jehovah will hear and respond. That, my friend, is the most important relationship you and I can have—one of fellowship and favor with God.

You are not a nobody…God knows you, and He loves you and cares for you. There is no greater evidence of His love than the gift of His Son. As we celebrate together this time of year, I encourage you to be reminded that God knows exactly who you are, where you are, and what you need. Rejoice in His love for you today!

 

 

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The Jerusalem Prayer Team with Dr. Michael D. Evans exists to build Friends of Zion to guard defend and protect the Jewish people and to pray for the peace of Jerusalem. We pray for peace in Jerusalem because the Scriptures tell us to in Psalm 122:6. The Jerusalem Prayer Team was inspired from the 100-year long prayer meeting for the restoration of Israel held in the ten Boom family home in Haarlem, Holland. We are committed to encouraging others to pray for the peace of Jerusalem and God's Chosen People. Jerusalem Prayer Team members are also members of Churches United with Israel, Corrie Ten Boom House, Friends of Zion Heritage Center and Jerusalem World News. The Jerusalem Prayer Team mailing address is PO BOX 30000 Phoenix, AZ 85046 or you can call us at 1-888-966-8472. The Jerusalem Prayer Team is a dba of the Corrie ten Boom Fellowship. The Corrie ten Boom Fellowship is a non-profit 501(c)(3) charitable organization and is registered with the IRS, Fed Tax ID# 75-2671293. All donations to CTBF (less the value of any products or services received) are tax-deductible as allowed by law. Donations made to the Jerusalem Prayer Team are put to work immediately and are not refundable.