Quote for the Day

When sharing in corporate worship like this, people are built up by the message of the Word, ministered to in the realm of the prophetic, are uplifted from the heaviness of the world, and healed and made whole in spirit, soul (mind and emotions), and in their physical bodies.  Becky Dvorak

Reflection on 1 Samuel 8:1-21

Scripture

“We want to be like the nations around us. Our king will judge us and lead us into battle.”

Observation

In his old age, Samuel appoint his sons as judges over Israel. His two oldest son’s, Joel and Abijah, are not like their father, and they accept bribes to pervert justice.

The Elders of Israel meet with Samuel and demand that Samuel appoints a king for them. Samuel is displeased with this request, but the Lord tells him that it is the Lord they are rejecting not Samuel.

So Samuel warns them of the tyranny they can expect at the hands of the king. There will be taxes, conscription, and forced labour.

The people demand to have a king so they can be the same as other nations. Samuel takes it to the Lord, who gives him permission to appoint a king.

Application

The book of 1 Samuel shows us how bad it is to pass on an office to sons who lack the character to fill the role. First it was Eli’s son’s who failed, and now Samuel’s sons fail to live up to the expectations placed upon them.

The response of the people to this problem is to demand a king, which is ironic. The very heart of a monarchy is a system where the sons inherit authority regardless of their character .

The people of Israel wanted to be like all the other nations. It was not enough to have the Lord as their King, they wanted a proper king like everybody else.

Christians often want to be like the world. We want the lifestyle of the unbelievers while holding onto the assurance of salvation. Church leaders sometimes think that embracing the opinions of the world on issues like abortion and homosexuality will make them more popular and effective.

God has called us to be holy, that is different to the world. We must never think that we can take on worldly values and be a witness to the world.

Prayer

Holy Father, I confess my tendency to seek the ways of the world. Please show me any areas of compromise in my life and help me to repent from them. Amen.

Quote for the Day

The fiery furnace we face may not be an actual furnace, it may be a disease raging against us, or family relationships, or a myriad of other issues. But whatever it may be, no matter the intensity of the blazing flames of the ungodly furnace we face, true worship will give us the grace and strength we need to enter into warfare worship and overcome. Becky Dvorak

Quote for the Day

A spirit of fear is the forerunner to a spirit of death. And we have been a witness of a recent pandemic—COVID-19—and how quickly it spread throughout the earth. What caused this pandemic to spread as fast as it did? Fear. It was fuelled by a spirit of fear, but God clearly says, “Do not be afraid.” Becky Dvorak

Reflection on 1 Samuel7:1-17

Scripture

Then Samuel said to all the people of Israel, “If you are really serious about wanting to return to the lord, get rid of your foreign gods and your images of Ashtoreth.. Determine to obey only the Lord, and he will rescue from the Philistines.”

Observation

The Ark of the Lord is taken to Kiriath-Jeairam where it remains for 20 years.

Samuel says to the people of Israel that they must get rid of their idols and obey only the Lord. The whole nation gathers at Mizpah where they consecrate themselves to the Lord.

The Philistines launch an attack on the Israelites. Samuel pleads with the Lord, and the Lord rescues them. The Philistines are subdued and Israel is at peace.

Samuel serves as a judge to the nation.

Application

If we are serious about following the Lord, we will need to get rid of all of our idols – the false gods that we turn to for comfort.

In the times of the Old Testament this was very easy to do. The idols were physical objects that represented a so-called god.

Our idols are very different. We rely on money, family, status, our job, so many intangible and good things.

To get rid of these idols does not necessarily mean to get rid of the things. No, we need to get rid of what they represent.

As christians, our trust is in the Lord, and the Lord alone. When we find ourselves becoming dependent on other things, then we need to repent and turn back to the Lord.

Prayer

Father, please show me the things that I have turned into idols and give me the grace to put them away. Amen

Escaping Radical Islam to Live Life with Christ

From persecution.orgEscaping Radical Islam to Live Life with Christ

11/16/2022 Turkey (International Christian Concern) – Leyla is a loving mother and wife in her forties who grew up in a family that still practices radical Islam. After getting married, her husband became a catalyst for her acceptance of Christ and becoming a believer. Christ is a part of her daily life, but initially, she needed to keep this hidden from her family. They eventually found out, which was the beginning of some tough times in her life.

Leyla’s father learned about her husband’s faith during a visit from out of the city and confronted his daughter. Without giving her a choice, he took her back home with him and told her she was not allowed to see her husband and would divorce him. She compares this to being a hostage with her children, “I was so scared that I couldn’t say anything. I was just praying to the Lord. To help us overcome these problems. I spent three weeks like a nightmare at my father’s house.”

Leyla’s husband, Murat, had to stay away from his wife and children during this time. Leyla and her husband have a loving family, but while separated, they felt their souls were wounded living with the fear, pressure, and uncertainty of the situation. Murat made the decision to speak to his father-in-law, but this frightened Leyla because of the radical Islamic beliefs that she knew could drive her father to harm or even kill her husband. This is all because he chose to leave their religion and become a Christian, which means that he “lost” the right to be her husband and father to her children; in the eyes of her family, he was contaminated. Despite all these risks, he went home where no one spoke to him or ate at the same table with him as it was haram, according to Islam.

Murat wanted his wife and children home and was able to meet with his father-in-law and tell him how he came to know Christ and how his life was changed. He declared he would not give up on Christ, but he would also not give up on his family.

Leyla expresses what happened between her father and her husband as follows; “Thank God the Lord heard my pleas. My father agreed to this on one condition. My husband would never take my children and me to church. My father told my husband that if he heard such a thing, he would sacrifice him with one bullet. Even that was a great miracle for us. Because I knew my father very well. I knew I would never come home again. My husband also accepted my father’s request, seeing how strict my family was and realizing they would no longer give us peace in this country. My husband’s aim was primarily to take me and my children with him. Because if we had stayed with my family, we would never have been able to get together. My children would never see their father again. And they would brand my children as ‘children of the infidel’. If I had stayed with my family, they would have married me to someone else after I divorced my husband. This is unfortunately a common occurrence in our culture. This was going to be a very difficult and heavy situation for me.”

When they were preparing to return home, Leyla’s father told his grandchildren, “If this man, who will be your father, takes you to the church among the infidels again, you will inform me immediately. I’ll come and get you, and you’ll never see your father again.” He instructed and warned the children.

One of their children, afraid of what her grandfather said, cried along the way; “Please let’s not go to church, mom.” she begs her mother.

Leyla had returned to her home, but now that the family had learned about the situation, the pressure to stay in the Islamic faith began to increase. Leyla said, “My family is constantly video-calling me to check where I am. And when they don’t call, my sister sends my nephews to our house. Since we cannot go to church on Sunday, we want to attend our meeting online, but we cannot do that because my family is constantly following us.”

Other family members who learn about the situation continue to pressure this family differently. Leyla’s aunt tells her, “You will send your children to Qur’an courses; you will teach them to read the Qur’an and pray until the semester break!” Her aunt still gets angry with her, and many threats are spoken to them her family is under control.

Leyla and Murat considered moving to another city to be safe but moving would not protect them from the danger they would face. This is because wherever they go, Leyla’s family has enough leverage to find them.

Leyla believes it is too risky for them to live in Turkey now because of her family’s extreme Islamic beliefs. Leyla says, “My family has a point of view that sees anyone who doesn’t think like them as ‘infidels.’ If it is learned by our big family that we are Christian, they can easily reach us even if we change the city we live in. And in such a case, our safety is in serious danger.”

Layla does not want her children to grow up without a father, but if their life continues like this, the whole family will learn that they are Christians in time. For this reason, Leyla and her husband decided they would move out of the country, even though this would be very difficult. They will move to a place where the language and culture are different, and her husband will quit his job and risk their safety so that they can have the right to raise their children in a healthy way with the love of Christ. This move will be painful and disrupt their way of life, but it will be worth it, according to Leyla.

Leyla’s father threatens to kill his son-in-law without caring about his daughter’s future or feelings. He believes he is justified simply because his faith allows him to do so because of his Christianity. He has the will, power, and motive to do so, and until they leave, they will not be safe.

She Lived as a Trans Man — Until a Stunning Encounter With Jesus Exposed the Truth

From  faithwire.com:

‘I Lost 9 Years of My Life’: She Lived as a Trans Man — Until a Stunning Encounter With Jesus Exposed the Truth

Photo: Laura Beth Perry

“I feel like I lost nine years of my life.” That’s how Laura Beth Perry Smalts now sees the nine years she desperately tried to live as a transgender man.

Listen to the latest episode of CBN’s Quick Start podcast 👇

Smalts, a Christian who openly shares her journey of gender confusion, explained the conundrum she once found herself in.

“I just thought [I was a] man born in a woman’s body,” Smalts said during the recent conclusion of the “Generational Indoctrination” podcast. “And I just needed to fix the body.”

Smalts’ quest to transition, though, led her on a search to desperately try to prove she was anything but her biological gender. She took hormones and had surgery to change every aspect of her body — including the removal of her reproductive system — to match her internal feelings.

“There was all the regret, too, of just the things that I’ve done to my body — the fact that I didn’t have breasts anymore,” she explained. “And I ended up getting married, and my husband didn’t know if I’d ever have breasts again. I was able to get breast surgery about three months ago and get implants, but it’s not the same.”

Smalts, who became a Christian while still living as a transgender man and eventually de-transitioned, now ponders why none of the doctors caring for her mentioned the damaging nature of the medical procedures in which she engaged.

“It’s so maddening when I look back … where are the doctors that were willing to say, ‘Hey, wait a second, this is really not good for your body?’” Smalts said. 

She shared how, at one point during her transgender journey, her blood had started to thicken, but rather than urge her to stop treatments, the doctor caring for her reportedly took a different avenue.

“My blood levels were so bad … my blood was too thick,” she said. “[My doctor was] afraid I was in danger of a stroke, but, instead of telling me this wasn’t good for me, she had me going to the blood bank every month or so to do a therapeutic withdrawal, where they would just take a ton of blood out of me to try to spin out the blood.” 

Smalts added, “Why didn’t anybody ever say like, ‘This is just really not good for you, your body?’”  

Tragically, she will never be able to have a biological child with her now-husband — something deeply challenging and heartbreaking.

“Now that I’ve gotten married, that has been a huge regret, and I have shed so many tears over not being able to have a baby with my husband,” she said.

Smalts is just one of the thousands who have become enveloped in the transgender craze. She previously shared her story with CBN’s Faithwire, explaining how she believed many lies that led her on the initial transgender journey.

Her inevitable changes took root as she researched further invasive surgeries and saw some of the potential complications.

“I just realized with horror that I was never going to be a man, no matter what I did,” Smalts told Faithwire earlier this year. “I started to realize … I could have this outer appearance of a man, everyone could think I was a man, but I knew the truth inside.”

Smalts continued, “I was constantly having to override that truth. It’s like in Romans 1, where it says, ‘They suppressed the truth in unrighteousness.’ I knew the truth the whole time, but I was constantly trying to override it.”

Read more about her story here.